You contend that Jesus and or the Holy Spirit enables one to comply with the law. I disagree and request you to name any individual that has done so outside of Jesus Christ. You do this to prove obligation to the law. No Deal.
bugkiller
God, alone, knows who's been victorious and has overcome sin; He only tells us that no sinners enter heaven.
I maintain that communion with God enables man to fulfill the law-because it enables man to love as he should-and love fulfills the law. This is a work of God, and this is the manner in which He places His laws on our hearts and writes them in our minds, as He truly becomes the God of man again as per Jer 31. This is a
process, of justifying man; this is God's work of salvation-of restoring harmony, order, and justice to His creation. But He won't force us to obey any more than He forced Adam to obey. He informed Adam of his obligation to obey Him, but He didn't force Adam to obey Him. Man is still obligated to obey, or to "do the right thing" to put it in more general terms.
.
But as we come to progressively know, trust, and love God, with the help of His grace, the law loses its power, because we then begin to obey
willfully, with or without obligation-
regardless of obligation- as our wills become aligned with His, no longer enemies but now friends with God again.
God didn't create sinners, then give them laws they couldn't possibly obey, then blame them for not obeying them anyway, then decide later to save a few in spite of their worthless wormy selves. God loves man with a love so deep and profound we can't begin to fathom it. He created us for greatness despite the fact that we all fall way short. But he created us knowing that we were going to fall short, and with a plan to bring good out of that evil, to create something even better out of the rubble: beings who've experienced-who've literally
known-good and evil, who've known
sin, and who choose to run to the good alone, to the ultimate good and source of all other goods, God, Himself. This is actually a process of His
creating; creation isn't over until He brings it to perfection, as all become wholly subjugated to Him and to
His perfection, but
willfully subjugated to Him; then He'll be all in all again.
This means, for one, that no sinners enter heaven. And why would they? Sin is opposition to the very will of God, after all. If we're still attracted to lesser things, to things other than Him first above all else, then we're not even sold out enough to be capable of "seeing" Him, which is what heaven is all about. Can this freedom from sin happen? It
will happen, because 'with God all things are possible'. But apart from Him, we don't even have a chance.
The law is powerless to the extent that we live in the Spirit. But scripture is full of admonitions-obligations themselves-to continue to do so, lest we fall again.
We're obligated to simply do the right thing, to become reconciled with God and remain in communion with Him -anything else is outside of His justice, His natural order for man. To the extent we do that, sin is excluded. The law challenges us to obey but it can't
cause us to, i.e. it can't justify us, because it can't cause us to be in communion with God. The obligation is ours:
12Therefore, brothers, we have an obligation—but it is not to the sinful nature, to live according to it. 13For if you live according to the sinful nature, you will die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the misdeeds of the body, you will live, 14because those who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God. Rom 8:12-14
Sin is lawlessness; we either attempt to obey by the letter of the law, on our own (the Old Covenant), obey by the Spirit, through grace (the New Covenant), or we don't bother at all.