Well, I agree with your answers. What I do not understand is how you do not appear to accept that this means that the Law of Moses played a part in Paul "dying". If you provide an opportunity, for the law of sin to do its thing, you indeed played a part.
If that which is good played any part in bringing death to Paul, then it would not be that which is good and he would not have been able to truthfully deny that that which is good brought death to him. In Deuteronomy 30:15-20, obedience to the Law of Moses brings life and a blessing while it disobedience to it that brings death and a curse, and there are many other verses that confirm that it brings life, so it does not bring death. The reason why the Law of Moses plays no part in brining death to him is that there is nothing in innate to it that brings death. For example, there is nothing about the command to love our neighbor as ourselves that brings death. The fact that there is something within us that leads us to do the opposite of what we are told to do is not part of or a side of the Law of Moses, though it takes the opportunity to act through the Law of Moses by leading us to do the opposite of what it instructs.
And as the other text says, without the Law of Moses, sin is dead.
Without the thing that is within us that leads us to do the opposite of what we are told to do, we then would have no difficulty obeying the Law of Moses and sin would be dead, so that is referring to the law of sin, and I see no justification for you continuing to insist that if refers to the Law of Moses.
So how is it that the Law of Moses, while of course not the real problem, did not play a part in Paul "dying"? I am not saying the Law of Moses is bad - you should know that I take Paul at his word, as I do in Mark when he says that nothing that goes into a man defiles him. But I am accepting what Paul is saying - that the Law of Moses was one factor that led to Paul's dying. I do not see how one can read these texts and believe otherwise.
Again, the the Greek word that is used in that verse for "defiled" is not the Greek word that is used very consistently by the Bible to refer to eating unclean animals. Both Greek words can accurately be translated as "defiled" because both refer to a type of defilement, but they refer to two different types of defilement that are never spoken about interchangeably, but you are taking what Jesus said using one of those words and are applying it as through Jesus had used the other word, so you are mixing and matching different concepts.
And I happen to believe that God intended to use the Law of Moses in this way, that is, to enable the power of sin to reach full expression in Israel. But that is for another post.
I never said this, or anything that could be reasonably understood as implying this. Please read my posts carefully.
It is the law of sin enables the power of sin to reach full expression in Israel, so I don't see how you can say that this is true of the Law of Moses, you are saying that it is the law of sin, so I don't see how you can say that while also denying that you are saying the Law of Moses is the law of sin.
Likewise, you said in Post #394 that the Law of Moses has a dark side that energizes and empowers Paul's sinful nature, but it is the role of the law of sin, so again you are saying that the Law of Moses is the law of sin rather than the thing that acts upon the Law of Moses to energize and empower Paul's sinful nature. If there something other than the Law of Moses that acts upon it to energize and empower Paul's sinful nature, then that thing is not a dark side of the Law of Moses. Something that is holy, righteous, and good can't also be something that energizes and empowers Paul's sinful nature or that sits up sinful passions in order to bear fruit unto death, so there is not a dark side of the command to love our neighbor as ourselves that produces sin.
Well, I am indeed saying that "what is good" played a part in bringing death to him - the text clearly says this.
Paul denied that what is good brought death to him, so the text clearly contradicts you saying that what is good played a part in bringing death to him.