Practice righteousness, yes. That has nothing to do with being in submission to the law. Sin was before the law and so was righteousness (Romans 4 and 5).
God has always been holy, righteous, and good, so He has always had such a conduct, and His law is holy, righteous, and good (Romans 7:12) because it based on God's character and it is His instructions for how to have such a conduct. So the way to have such a conduct has existed from the beginning, exists independently of any covenant, and did not change between any of God's covenants any more than His character has changed. In other words, even if God had made no covenants with man and never gave the law to Moses, it would still be unrighteous to not act in line with God's righteousness. So the fact that righteousness existed before the law was given to Moses doesn't change that the law is still God's instructions for how to have a righteous conduct and how to avoid a sinful conduct.
True and the righteous live by faith and not the law. Romans, Galatians, I Timothy.
If you have faith that God knows how to live righteously, then you will live in obedience to His instructions in His law for how to do so. If you don't have faith that God knows how to live righteously and think you know better than God how to live, then you will disregard His law. In Habakkuk 2:4, it is not talking about the righteous living in some other manner that is distinct from obedience to God's law, but rather God's law is the way to live by faith. However, God's law can be obeyed legalistically rather than by faith, which is what is being criticized in those books.
God's law yes, however that doesn't mean the covenant given to Israel alone.
bugkiller
At no point was the covenant made with anyone outside of the house of Judah and the house of Israel.
Another very lovely passage. My guess is that you don't love Jesus, but then maybe you mean God the Father when you refer to the commandments. Personally I understand you and John to be talking about different commandments.The above passage isn't about keeping the law. And you preach something you refuse to do.
bugkiller
1 John 2:4-6 Whoever says “I know him” but does not keep his commandments is a liar, and the truth is not in him, 5 but whoever keeps his word, in him truly the love of God is perfected. By this we may know that we are in him: 6 whoever says he abides in him ought to walk in the same way in which he walked.
I love Messiah so I obey his commands. These verses associate obedience to Messiah's commands with walking in the same way that he walked, and he walked in perfect obedience to the law, so that is also the way to obey his commands. Jesus did command one thing and live out another, but rather he practiced what he preached and preached what he practiced. I also disagree that I refuse to practice what I preach and would appreciate it if you would refrain from slander.
So then how can one willfully and habitually practice sin and be a saint ( a righteous person)?
A righteous person is someone who does what is righteous by grace through faith, which is in accordance with God's instructions in His law for how to do so.
Then you confess/admit one must keep the law to be saved. No sin is also (not only) a transgression of the law. But to transgress something one must be obligated to it/under its jurisdiction. The Christian (even an ethnic Jewish Christian) is delivered from the law Rom 7:6.
bugkiller
Again, I have never suggested that you have the obey the law in order to be saved, that was never the reason why God gave the law in the first place. The law was given to point out our sin and our salvation is from sin, so our salvation is from transgressing the law. The law is not an exhaustive list of everything that is sinful, but the law is spiritual (Romans 7:14), so transgressing the law includes transgressing its spiritual principles, which do cover everything that is sinful.
In Romans 7:1-5, when the woman's husband died, she was not released from having to obey any of the laws so that she was free to commit adultery, murder, theft, etc., but rather she was only released from the aspect of it that would penalize her if she were to live with another man while her husband was still alive. In the same way, we haven't been released from the law so that we are free to commit adultery, murder, theft, etc., but rather we have only been released from the aspect of the law that would penalize us for breaking it. In other words, if we abide in Messiah, we are not free to sin, but we are not condemned if we do. Someone who abides in Christ, is again someone who obeys his commands and walks as he walked, which is in obedience to God's law.
No God didn't send HIS only begotten Son (Jesus) to lead us in obedience/submission to the law.
bugkiller
God's law requires obedience and Christ was sent that we might meet the requirement of the law (Romans 8:4). It is those who have a carnal mind who refuse to submit to God's law (Romans 8:7).
No one must understand I John 3:23 and other verses using the word (commandment(s)."
bugkiller
Again, Christ was not in disagreement with the Father about what conduct we should have, but rather he said his teachings were not his own, but that of the Father (John 7:16) and that he only came to do the Father's will (John 6:38). God's law is His instructions for how to love Him and how to love our neighbor, so saying that Messiah's command is to love is essentially the same thing. The way that he loved us was in perfect accordance with the way that God's law instructs us to love, so if we love others in the way that he loved us, then we will also live in accordance with God's law.[/QUOTE]
How so? What exactly does "not according to" mean to you?
According to Deuteronomy 13, someone is a false prophet if they teach against following any of God's commands, so if you think that Jesus did so, then he was a false prophet and not the Messiah.
What is the bolded blue? what I understand is the law is called the law of sin.
Romans 7:22-23 For I delight in the law of God, in my inner being, 23 but I see in my members another law waging war against the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members.
Paul directly said that he delighted in God's law and then contrasted that with the law of sin, so they are opposites. He said that the law was good (Roman 7:16), so that is the good that he seeks to do, but he struggles with the law of sin causing him to not to do the good that he wants to do.
The more the law is preached, the more one dwells on it and its concepts placing it in the mind to disobey. I'm sure you don't understand what I've just said. I' don't really believe you understand the nature of man. There is so much more in Romans to understand what is beings said here. This post would be a really long post and I'd lose you and others.
This is the reason why reverse psychology works. The law increases our sin because we want to do the opposite of what we are told to do, but God's primary purpose in giving the law was to bring about obedience, not disobedience. Throughout the Bible God wants His chosen people to turn from their disobedience to obedience to His law.
Nope!!! a thousand times NOPE!!! just like I told BobRyan.
bugkiller
God's holiness, righteousness, and goodness didn't change, so the way to live according to His character also didn't change. Repeating "NOPE!!!" as many times as you want won't change that either.