Do you accomplish that? Yes? No? Not quite sure?Loving God with all one's might, and loving one's neighbor as one loves themselves. (Luke 10:25-28)
Do you accomplish that? Yes? No? Not quite sure?Loving God with all one's might, and loving one's neighbor as one loves themselves. (Luke 10:25-28)
The Vatican clearly states certain works by people can do what Christ's Blood supposedly cannot do.Can you tell us which group has ever taught or abided that?
I have never heard of it before.
Legalistic double talk.A Christian's works flow from the Holy Spirit within and those who have no fruitful evidence of the indwelling Holy Spirit have no evidence they are saved.
It isn't true, Jefferson not in the way he means it. Connecting your work to salvation is legalism - period. Confirming or questioning a man's salvation based on his works is legalism. A man is saved by faith - period. Works do NOT come into it.True, but if said Christian performs good works because he believes Christ's blood is not sufficient, he has fallen away from grace.
Only Catholics and cults would have the temerity to teach such a thing outright. Even the most legalistic sects of Protestant Christianity don't typically teach such thing outright. It isn't that they teach it verbatim its that they imply it, its that they live their lives as though that's what they believe and they teach others to do the same. Indeed, it is the double mindedness of it that makes it so difficult to combat because the idea sounds foreign to their own ears and they're too close to their own actions to see what they are doing.Can you tell us which group has ever taught or abided that?
I have never heard of it before.
What do you mean by "honoring the words of Jesus Christ"?I fail to see how honoring the words of Jesus Christ constitutes "law".
Then why bother with them?Rules/laws don't, can't, force love.
Says who? You?Thankfully the reborn get a new, divine nature wherein love comes naturally.
Note how instinctively the legalist runs to the law! Why did you pick murder? The law forbidding murder is the sixth of the laws given to Moses on Mt. Sinai. How about those who make idols or fail to honor the Father and Mother? Will thieves inherit eternal life? Is there none of the Ten Commandments that you've broken? Will you inherit eternal life?Will murderers inherit eternal life?
Weren't you just asking someone to show you where anyone taught or abided this?To imagine for a second that there are no guidelines inherent in Christianity is folly.
NO! Salvation is the result of conversion!It is the result of conversion.
Of course but neither will we!The unconverted will not be able to accomplish the two, nor the six.
Agreed?
Clete,It isn't true, Jefferson not in the way he means it. Connecting your work to salvation is legalism - period. Confirming or questioning a man's salvation based on his works is legalism. A man is saved by faith - period. Works do NOT come into it.
"Things Which Gracious Souls Discover:
"To ‘hope to be better’ [hence acceptable] is to fail to see yourself in Christ only. "To be disappointed with yourself, is to have believed in yourself.- "To be discouraged is unbelief,—as to God’s purpose and plan of blessing for you.
- "To be proud, is to be blind! For we have no standing before God, in ourselves.
- "The lack of Divine blessing, therefore, comes from unbelief, and not from failure of devotion…
- "To preach devotion first, and blessing second, is to reverse God’s order, and preach law, not grace. The Law made man’s blessing depend on devotion; Grace confers undeserved, unconditional blessing: our devotion may follow, but does not always do so,—in proper measure."
Have we been afraid to really believe God? Have some even been afraid to allow others to really believe Him? We must never forget that "God’s ways are not always man’s ways. To some men constant peril is the only spur to action, and many religions and psychologies are dependent on fear to keep their disciples in line. Fear, too, has a place in Christianity, but God has higher and more effective motivations than fear, and one of these is love. Often fear after a while produces only numbness, but love thrives on love. To promise a man the certainty of his destiny may seem, on the human level, like playing with fire; but this leaves God out of the picture. Those who have the deepest appreciation of grace do not continue in sin. Moreover, fear produces the obedience of slaves; love engenders the obedience of sons" (J. W. Sanderson, Jr.).
This is probably going to sound evasive and I don't mean it to be but I really don't think in these kinds of terms and so I'm not sure what you're asking me. The time I spent writing those posts this morning is one thing that I think might qualify but, like I said, I'm not sure exactly what sort of "things I've done" that you've got in mind.Clete,
Can you share with us a few things you recently have done which have been engendered by the Love from God? All believers need to hear edification and Godly spurrage.
Matt. 5:16 "Let your light shine before men."
Yes, I accomplish that.Do you accomplish that? Yes? No? Not quite sure?
You are correct, I had forgotten all about them.The Vatican clearly states certain works by people can do what Christ's Blood supposedly cannot do.
-Penance.
-Monetary Payments to The church.
-Speaking to Mary.
-Observing Supernatural Occurrances.
-Parroting Doctrines.
-Doing Mass.
-Looking at Icons.
-Going into a Certain Building.
-Reading Theology.
-Fumbling With a Rosary.
-Making Pilgrimage Journies.
-Repeating Scripture.
-Speaking Prescribed Prayers.
-Accepting a Human Priest.
-Burning Candles.
You two are talking about two different kinds of "works".Legalistic double talk.
Romans 4:5 But to him who does not work but believes on Him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is accounted for righteousness,
Again you have a different POV of what legalism is than myself.Only Catholics and cults would have the temerity to teach such a thing outright. Even the most legalistic sects of Protestant Christianity don't typically teach such thing outright. It isn't that they teach it verbatim its that they imply it, its that they live their lives as though that's what they believe and they teach others to do the same. Indeed, it is the double mindedness of it that makes it so difficult to combat because the idea sounds foreign to their own ears and they're too close to their own actions to see what they are doing.
But whether they teach it outright or not, the real answer to the question, "Which group has ever taught or abides one form or another of legalism?" is, "Practically all of them!" It cannot be avoided by the vast majority because they fail to rightly divide the word of truth. The result is an inevitable mixture of law and grace. If you teach the gospel according to Jesus, you're a legalist. If you think you can learn the gospel through any one (or all) of the synoptic gospels, then you're a legalist. If you think Paul was the 13th Apostle, you're a legalist. If you think that Paul and Jesus taught the same thing, you are a legalist.
Clete
I mean, Love God above all else, and love your neighbor as you love yourself.What do you mean by "honoring the words of Jesus Christ"?
Only in those ways that honored His Father.Jesus was born under the law, obeyed the law and taught others to do the same!
I don't.Then why bother with them?
Says the bible...(2 Peter 1)...or is trusting the word of God allowable at your church?Says who? You?
This is the most false thing I've ever seen you type, Hoping! Where did you get this from?
Thanks for citing Paul's recollection of his preconversion state.Romans 7:14 For we know that the law is spiritual, but I am carnal, sold under sin. 15 For what I am doing, I do not understand. For what I will to do, that I do not practice; but what I hate, that I do. 16 If, then, I do what I will not to do, I agree with the law that it is good. 17 But now, it is no longer I who do it, but sin that dwells in me. 18 For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh) nothing good dwells; for to will is present with me, but how to perform what is good I do not find. 19 For the good that I will to do, I do not do; but the evil I will not to do, that I practice. 20 Now if I do what I will not to do, it is no longer I who do it, but sin that dwells in me.
Rom 7:23 was answered in Rom 8:2, and Rom 7:24 was answered in Rom 6:6.21 I find then a law, that evil is present with me, the one who wills to do good. 22 For I delight in the law of God according to the inward man. 23 But I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. 24 O wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death? 25 I thank God—through Jesus Christ our Lord!
He has made the transition of both his past lament and past to future in this verse.So then, with the mind I myself serve the law of God, but with the flesh the law of sin.
Amen to that !!!Then Romans 8 goes on to explain that it is the Spirit that works righteousness in us, not our flesh! Don't you get that the law is fleshly? Just as circumcision is a cutting off of the physical flesh, the law is a cutting off of the deeds of the flesh and you have NO POWER to overcome the flesh - period. No amount of you loving God will overcome your flesh. No amount of you loving your neighbor will overcome your flesh. The ONLY remedy for your flesh is DEATH!
How did the Law kill "the man"?Galatians 2:17 “But if, while we seek to be justified by Christ, we ourselves also are found sinners, is Christ therefore a minister of sin? Certainly not! 18 For if I build again those things which I destroyed, I make myself a transgressor. 19 For I through the law died to the law that I might live to God. 20 I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me. 21 I do not set aside the grace of God; for if righteousness comes through the law, then Christ died in vain.”
So what more does the law have to say to the man who it has killed? Nothing!
Great, you have picked out the REAL Law Paul wrote against.Then why pay ANY attention to it? Why make any effort to abide by it? You do NOT need it! Get rid of it! All its good for is conviction and death! Indeed! The ministry of the law is precisely the same as the ministry of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. Both have a ministry of death! Paul even explicitly called the law "the ministry of death" and "the ministry of condemnation" (2 Corinthians 3:7 & 9).
Romans 7: 8 But sin, taking opportunity by the commandment, produced in me all manner of evil desire. For apart from the law sin was dead. 9 I was alive once without the law, but when the commandment came, sin revived and I died. 10 And the commandment, which was to bring life, I found to bring death. 11 For sin, taking occasion by the commandment, deceived me, and by it killed me.Galatians 3:1 O foolish Galatians! Who has bewitched you that you should not obey the truth, before whose eyes Jesus Christ was clearly portrayed among you as crucified? 2 This only I want to learn from you: Did you receive the Spirit by the works of the law, or by the hearing of faith? 3 Are you so foolish? Having begun in the Spirit, are you now being made perfect by the flesh?
Is that not the nature we have after our baptism into Christ? (Rom 6:3-7)In short, there is no "divine nature" aside from God's own nature which we only have access to through faith, not our flesh and therefore not through following any list of rules.
It is one of the most obvious sins.Note how instinctively the legalist runs to the law! Why did you pick murder?
Mother?The law forbidding murder is the sixth of the laws given to Moses on Mt. Sinai. How about those who make idols or fail to honor the Father and Mother? Will thieves inherit eternal life? Is there none of the Ten Commandments that you've broken? Will you inherit eternal life?
I believe all that, and if I continue therein I will find my name in the book of life on the last day.You (and they) will if you believe the following...
- God exists and is the Creator of all things and He is perfect, holy, and just.
- We, having willfully done evil things and rebelled against God, who gave us life, deserve death.
- Because God loves us, He provided for Himself a propitiation (an atoning sacrifice) by becoming a man whom we call Jesus Christ.
- Jesus, being the Creator God Himself and therefore innocent of any sin, willingly bore the sins of the world and died on our behalf.
- Jesus rose from the dead.
- If you confess with you mouth, the Lord Jesus Christ (i.e. openly acknowledge your need of a savior and that He is that Savior) and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, YOU WILL BE SAVED.
Agreed.Inheriting eternal life hasn't anything to do with the severity of your sin!
Different topic.Weren't you just asking someone to show you where anyone taught or abided this?
That is what I said.NO! Salvation is the result of conversion!
You are wrong.No one ever promised you a sinless life post conversion! Your flesh has not yet been redeemed nor will it be before either your physical death or Day of Redemption, whichever comes first. Until then, you are saddled with the flesh and are utterly incapable of being righteous.
But I do, and so do all those reborn of Gods seed. (1 John 3:9)Of course but neither will we!
Yes you are.Look, I am not here trying to tell you that it's okay to sin.
We can do it, but you need to quit ignoring the how-tos.Nor am I saying that it isn't good to do rightly nor that we aught not love our neighbor as ourselves. What I'm telling you is that we cannot do it. You - YOU - cannot live the Christian life! Until you figure that out and it becomes reality in your own heart, you'll find yourself constantly back at the Tree, eating more of it's fruit, which is the law, and the result will just be more confusion, frustration, sin and death.
Yes we can, but you need to quit believing those who say you can't.The secret you need to learn is to stop trying to be righteous. You cannot do it.
Are you saying Sanderson is in error to state "Love engenders obedience from [God's] sons?"This is probably going to sound evasive and I don't mean it to be but I really don't think in these kinds of terms and so I'm not sure what you're asking me. The time I spent writing those posts this morning is one thing that I think might qualify but, like I said, I'm not sure exactly what sort of "things I've done" that you've got in mind.
Basically, I'm just a normal guy who gets up every morning and works for a living in order to support my family and finance my life. I support a ministry that I believe is worthwhile and I am constantly trying to learn and to grow my own understanding and I try to teach my kids and anyone else within my circle of influence how to think biblically and to not lean on experiences and emotions in their search for truth.
I conduct my business affairs with integrity and put a lot of effort into trying to make my clients feel like they've under paid me. I am generous when I see an opportunity to be but do not consider anyone's need as a claim check on my life or money and I do not finance laziness or stupidity. A grumbling belly is the proper compensation for either.
In other words, I don't think in terms of "What good deed shall I do today?" or "What have I done this week for God?". I have nothing to offer God. Any good I do is accidental and in spite of myself. If anyone is blessed because of my relationship with God, that's entirely on God, not me. I am nothing. I have no light to shine. Christ is the only light.
Clete
How do you love your neighbor as yourself? Pay their mortgage and insurance? Yard work? Entertainment? Buy them a car? Buy them new clothes? Paint their house? Buy appliances? Gifts? What do you actually do for them on a routine basis beyond occasional tokenism?Yes, I accomplish that.
Thanks be to God.
I have done most of those things, because of the grace of God in me.How do you love your neighbor as yourself? Pay their mortgage and insurance? Yard work? Entertainment? Buy them a car? Buy them new clothes? Paint their house? Buy appliances? Gifts? What do you actually do for them on a routine basis beyond occasional tokenism?
Your pride is astounding.I have done most of those things, because of the grace of God in me.
Because of the new nature God has provided for me.
Routinely?
I work at a food bank.
I wouldn't be able to call myself a Christian with a straight face if I didn't do those things.
What do you routinely do to glorify God and manifest both the life and death of our Savior?
You are the one making the distinction. Paul makes no such distinction. The only ones who do, teach law - by definition!You two are talking about two different kinds of "works".
You seem to be referring to the works of the Law for salvation, ie., circumcision, dietary rules, feast keeping, tithing, etc.
Marke is referring to the naturally occurring deeds of converted believers who love God and others.
Only one of us is right.Again you have a different POV of what legalism is than myself.
Salvation and sanctification are achieved the same way, by faith. (Galatians 3:3)Paul and myself see it as a return to the Jewish ways of the Law, ie., circumcision, dietary rules, feast keeping, tithing, etc. for salvation.
I see legalism as any good deed done for the purpose of improving one's relationship with God.You see legalism as everything done naturally by a Christians after their conversion.
Not consciously.That is nothing I want to be a part of.
Jesus, Peter, James, at al. All of the disciples, apostles and biblical authors, save one, were all called into relationship with God through the law of Moses. They followed the law, were zealous for the law and taught their followers to do the same (Acts 21:20) and they did so until their natural death.If you want to make me feel guilty for obeying Jesus, Peter, Paul, and others, you will be wasting your time.
I've been clear. It is your own doctrine which clouds your vision.So in the future, please elaborate on which sort of legalism you refer to.
Jesus IS NOT your King! Not in the manner you mean it, anyway. Your every thought has Israel and the church entangled in such a tight knot that confusing the two is intuitive and impossible to avoid.Paul's, or those who don't want to obey the One they call their King.
This post was mostly an unresponsive waste of time. I'll respond to two points mostly for the sake a clarity as the other posts I've responded to already covers most of this anyway....I mean, Love God above all else, and love your neighbor as you love yourself.
Only in those ways that honored His Father.
Others, He saw as just the works of men.
I don't.
The ability to live soberly, with pure hearts, with meekness, and wisdom, is the product of submission to God and to our Lord Jesus Christ.
Says the bible...(2 Peter 1)...or is trusting the word of God allowable at your church?
Thanks for citing Paul's recollection of his preconversion state.
It is good to know he was given the road map to leave it behind.
Rom 7:23 was answered in Rom 8:2, and Rom 7:24 was answered in Rom 6:6.
Both the Rom 7 verses, and others too, were from his narrative of his past state trying to live the Jewish ideal, and failing therein.
That is why they are called the "past-narrative tense".
He has made the transition of both his past lament and past to future in this verse.
The flesh is gone, and he now walks in the Spirit.
Rom 8 goes into more detail.
Amen to that !!!
Thanks be to God for providing the way to, as Paul wrote in 1 Tim 5:24..."Some men's sins are open beforehand, going before to judgment; and some men they follow after."
My death has already occurred.
How did the Law kill "the man"?
You lost me there.
Great, you have picked out the REAL Law Paul wrote against.
We may be back in harmony now.
Is that not the nature we have after our baptism into Christ? (Rom 6:3-7)
Yes, it is !!!
It is one of the most obvious sins.
Is murder tolerable to you, Christ, God?
Mother?
I am not catholic.
And I don't murder or steal because the Law said not to, I do it because I live with love.
I believe all that, and if I continue therein I will find my name in the book of life on the last day.
Thankfully, God has given me all I need to manifest Him on the earth now.
Most importantly, His Spirit.
Agreed.
Fibbers will end up in the same lake of fire as mass murderers.
Different topic.
That is what I said.
You are wrong.
Paul wrote in Rom 6:6-7..."Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin.
7 For he that is dead is freed from sin."
I believe it.
But I do, and so do all those reborn of Gods seed. (1 John 3:9)
Yes you are.
We can do it, but you need to quit ignoring the how-tos.
Yes we can, but you need to quit believing those who say you can't.
I have learned otherwise.
Context is everything!Says the bible...(2 Peter 1)...or is trusting the word of God allowable at your church?
The context was the Ten Commandments therefore my typo was an obvious mistake that you definitely noticed.Mother?
I am not catholic.