Clare73
Blood-bought
- Jun 12, 2012
- 30,182
- 7,780
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- Christian
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- US-Republican
Yes, and a declaration of righteousness can be the result of a person acting rightly. The act of faith, driven by grace, is a right act that pleases God immensely, and obviously not a work of the law. Faith must precede any other act because we must first turn to God before we can attain to any righteousness that we were created to have. Again, Adam thought he could go it alone just fine, with his "own" morality. He was wrong. So, again,
Made righteous by bothRom 5:19 spells out the dynamic clearly enough:“For just as through the disobedience of the one man the many were made sinners, so also through the obedience of the one man the many will be made (katastathēsontai) righteous (dikaioi).” (NIV)
declaration, imputed (Romans 3:21, Romans 3:28, Romans 4:2-3, Romans 5:18-19), as well as
sanctification, imparted, which leads to righteousness leading to holiness (Romans 6:16, Romans 6:19).
The noun dikaiosis is a declaration, pronouncement of justification (righteousness) by imputation, based on nothing but faith (Romans 3:21, Romans 3:28, Romans 4:2-3).
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