You asked, "why do believers still sin?" My answer was (from Romans 7) that their fleshly desires entice them to sin. For completeness, I didn't limit my answer to the source of our sin, but I also pointed to the effect sins have in the hearts of believers (it makes them feel wretched). Not wanting to state only the problems, I also pointed to the solutions. The first part of the solution is the provision of a new heart/mind that is rightly aligned with God, and the second part of the solution is forgiveness for the sins of the flesh. In summary, I made 4 points:
- The flesh is the source of our sins,
- Our sins and the sinfulness of our flesh makes us feel wretched,
- With our minds we serve the law of God, and
- Right now, at this very moment, there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ.
I answered your question thoroughly. The only response you gave was to refute my final point that the forgiveness of our sins results in ther being no condemnation. In your view, a person avoids condemnation... how did you put it before... not by being perfect, but by being just good enough (sorry, I can't recall your actual words, but it was something like that).
Do you have an answer for your question (reworded a bit) -- why do people who have been given the means to actually overcome unrighteousness always fail in some way to overcome unrighteousness? Nobody's perfect, right?
Another poster asked the similiar question: "Who has not sinned since they were saved?" And I answered it in the second half of post #120 in this thread. But to put it simply, yes, nobody's perfect and yet nobody was created to be
imperfect, to sin, either. Man
fell, becoming alienated from God, and as he did so he lost the self-control that was natural to him as long as he was still
subjugated to God and not in the disordered or unjust state of alienation from Him that we're all born into now. This is why
reconciliation with God is at the heart of the gospel and Jesus' work. The branch must be connected to the Vine first, before anything else of value can take place.
The
will of man is the source of our sin, whereas the flesh just provides much opportunity and fodder for
temptation to sin. Sin
should make us feel wretched; guilt is a healthy reaction to sin even for unbelievers-but there's a real-life cure for it and
that is the deliverance spoken of in Rom 7. God wants
every part of us to serve Him, and being in Christ means that we now have the power, the righteousness, to do so. Meanwhile concupiscence, that source of temptation, continues to draw and test and, hopefully, refine us even as it also causes us to stumble at times, potentially to the extent of being distanced from God all over again-and for one simple reason: we're not yet "perfected in love", love being the
only thing that can ultimately result in a will that is completely obedient to
His will. Our pride, itself, continues to oppose God as it did in Eden, tempting and prompting us to carry on the family tradition of rebellion initiated by Adam. Pride overrides and opposes love by its nature.
It's a journey, a molding, a work of God's that He's very much patient in bringing to fruition, but without absolutely forcing Himself or His ways upon us, meaning that we can jump ship at any time. Either way it's a journey all humans are intended to be on and must be on, the journey from "nobody's perfect" to everybody's perfect-who they were created to be-even if that won't be completely consummated until the next life.
My opinion, FWIW: read Rom 6, 7, and 8 objectively, for yourself, and you'll see that being on that journey, now led by true righteousness, of God, that means the overcoming of sin, is the path we now can and must be on. The new covenant is much more than solely the forgiveness of sin for those who believe, or taking forgiveness for granted, or making us quasi-comfortable in remaining in or returning to sin, especially the kinds of sin that Scripture tells us will definitely exclude us from God's family and kingdom.