We are clear passed through the Red sea [a picture of baptism] Pharoah and Egypt are behind us forever.
....only in their minds could the Jews go back.
....only in their minds could the Jews go back.
Captures the daily struggle Paul and all believers struggle with every day.
I like it. Takes me back a few years, too.
http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?p=1562708#post1562708
The thread then goes sideways for a while with other non-relevant topics, and picks back up here:
http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?p=1564503#post1564503
More interludes occur, then there is this:
http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?p=1565384#post1565384
Afterwards the thread degenerates. Those were the days.
AMR
Of COURSE you are presumptious in saying that I embrace sin willingly....really you ought to apologise, I never would have said such a thing to you.
If you honestly believe that you are no longer struggling with sin, your only recourse is to admit you willingly embrace your sin without a shred of repentance, for you sin daily. Your sin wells up from your not yet perfected principle of life initially given from God from your regeneration and walk of faith. To say your volitional act of sinning is "dead" or "dormant" denies the reality of your current and very active (not dormant or dead) state of being. Further your view denies the Mediatorial role of Our Lord who advocates for us in our repentance as we cling to the Cross in repentance of our sins. The Chief of Sinners, Paul, disagrees with you.
Oh dear, can I change my username?
You have not read carefully what I have done:
In particular, that portion in red above is not saying you do this. It is saying, via reductio ad absurdum, that if you believe you are no longer struggling with sin, then to be consistent you must also embrace sin without seeing a need for repentance and all that entails from the rest of my post.
Of course it is absurd, which is the point of my use of the reductio ad absurdum argumentation—to point out to you what your view ultimately implies when taken to its logical conclusion. It should shock the senses and drive you study the matter more fully. I am not saying you actually do believe this, rather I am hoping that what I noted as the logic of such a view will cause you to re-examine what you are claiming.
AMR
Hush child
I have only the greatest regard for AMR....this is good debating
Oh dear, can I change my username?
I would not look to Paul's physical affliction as you caricatured. It was not a sin of Paul's but rather the hard providence of God serving to keep Paul humble.No
No AMR it is YOUR doctrine which embraces sin, it is your doctrine which accepts besetting sin as the standard Christian experience.
The life long struggle without ever attaining the victory. Your doctrine holds up Romans. 7. as your excuse..."see" you say "even the great Apostle struggled mightily against his besetting sin...he had a pet [you say] which he besought the Lord three times" [when people do not use this scripture to mean sin it comes in handy for sickness too]
But the Lord smiled upon Paul's sin and said "My grace is sufficient for you"
Well you say and I have often heard people reason away their sin using Romans.7. if Paul struggled thus and failed we may certainly allow ourselves a few minor peccadillos.
more to come
I would not look to Paul's physical affliction as you caricatured. It was not a sin of Paul's but rather the hard providence of God serving to keep Paul humble.
Persons that use this passage we have been discussing to reason away sin are sinning by so doing no matter what one's view of the passage may be. In other words, using how folks may pervert Scripture as a reason to interpret Scripture this or that way is error.
I have provided extensive interpretation of the passage in links previously given. Your disagreements have not interacted with my position at the textual level. How is my iron to be sharpened when all I have to work with from you is your assertion I am wrong without engaging my provided analyses of the passage?
AMR
I have given you PLENTY scripture....but my opening one should have been enough.
*When an interpretation is put forward along with conclusions if you disagree you need to deal with them in particular and substantively. To do otherwise is but what intellectual freeloaders like Arminians, etc., do in the waving off of material presented and just basically retorting, "no, I disagree because I think a verse here and there says otherwise".
If you are inclined and want the discussion to proceed, please dig in and interact with my exegetical analysis of the passage versus a quote salad of other verses. If we are to learn together you need to show in detail how your position can mount a defense against my analysis versus just telling me you disagree with my conclusions (which are drawn from my exegesis of Romans 7:14-25).
AMR
*
No, you expound the scripture...
Captures the daily struggle Paul and all believers struggle with every day.
I like it. Takes me back a few years, too.
http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?p=1562708#post1562708
The thread then goes sideways for a while with other non-relevant topics, and picks back up here:
http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?p=1564503#post1564503
More interludes occur, then there is this:
http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?p=1565384#post1565384
Afterwards the thread degenerates. Those were the days.
AMR
In summary,
0. We must look to the Greek text for difficult passages in the NT. For the passage in question, the differences in the Greek versions of "good" being used between the two passages in question. (v. 12, v. 15) clearly indicate a shift in context. Likewise, the Greek reveals that the "law" being described in verses 21-23 is not the Mosaic Law referred to (capitalized 'Law'); instead this law or principle is the reality of ever-present evil in an individual whenever he wants to do good. See also the numerous literal Greek renderings of some of the key phrases above.
1. You ignore the explicit change of tense between verses 7-13 (imperfect and aorist tense) and 14-25 (present tense). The former section (7-13) relates to Paul's pre-Christian experience and the rest of the chapter to his post-conversion experience. Obviously Paul was describing his present conflict as a Christian with indwelling sin and its continuing efforts to control his daily life.
2. The progress of thought in Romans needs to be taken into consideration. Paul has passed beyond his description of the unsaved state and is now giving attention to sanctification and its problems; so the theme is really relevant only to believers.
3. That conflict of the sort described here can and does characterize the Christian life is apparent elsewhere in Paul, especially in Galatians 5:17.
4. The power of self-diagnosis at the penetrating level found here (see verses 22, 23) is beyond the capacity of the natural man.
6. A person desiring holiness of life, as pictured here, could only be a believer, for the unsaved person does not long for God but is hostile toward him.
7. The close of the chapter, in terms of the text as it stands and without attempted rearrangement, acknowledges the deliverance in Christ, yet goes on to state the very problem sketched in verses 14-24 as though it continues to be a problem for one who knows the Lord.
So you believe that it was Paul the Apostle who
23-25
delighted in the law of God after the inward man but saw another law at work in his members
bringing him into captivity to the law of sin which was in his members
What a wretched fellow...thank God through Jesus he was delivered from such a body of death
All the fancy footwork in the world would not persuade me......
I agree. Paul was explaining the purpose of the law...how it worked and what's it's purpose was. He was replying to the Jews who claimed he wanted to do away with the Law. The purpose of the Law was never to make men holy....in fact sin (took occasion) used the law as a means of "forbidden fruit"...actually causing men to lust the harder they tried not to.
Paul thanks God that we WERE servants of sin..."
Romans 6:17-18
But God be thanked, that ye were the servants of sin, but ye have obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered you. Being then made free from sin, ye became the servants of righteousness.
How could Paul say we had been made free from sin, became SERVANTS of righteousness, and then turn around and say he served sin with the flesh? AND then turn back around and say in Romans 8 that believers are not in the flesh?
When Paul says, "I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord", it was because he was overcome by thankfulness that we have been freed from the law of sin and death...not that he served the law of sin with his flesh. Not possible.
Romans 7
(24)O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death? (25) I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord.
(25b) So then with the mind I myself serve the law of God; but with the flesh the law of sin.
Then he makes clear why he went to such lengths in Romans 7....What the LAW COULD NOT DO. Righteousness could never come through the law...it's why those who tried to keep the law for righteousness did what they hated and couldn't do what they wanted. Paul was speaking as one who was using the law unlawfully....not as one who was no longer in the flesh, but in the Spirit.
Romans 8:3
For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh.
Romans 8:9
But ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his.