cyberlizard
the electric lizard returns
- Jul 5, 2007
- 6,268
- 569
- 56
- Faith
- Messianic
- Marital Status
- Married
Originally Posted by cyberlizard
this is true the righteous live by faith, they did it before Jesus, and they do it afterward. The soul that lives does die.... i expect to die sometime soon, I expect you do too, this proves we are both sinners. The commands cannot give eternal life, but they can certainly bring about your death by not keeping them (as the soul that sins will die), sure some people keep the commands, just that no one person can keep them all.

Let me start again with simple yes or no questions.
1. Will keeping the commandments give you eternal life (Y/N)
The righteous live-- but the soul that sins shall die (Ezekiel 18:2). The commandments can't give eternal life (John 3:16), because n.one keeps them (Romans 3:23)!1. Will keeping the commandments give you eternal life (Y/N)
this is true the righteous live by faith, they did it before Jesus, and they do it afterward. The soul that lives does die.... i expect to die sometime soon, I expect you do too, this proves we are both sinners. The commands cannot give eternal life, but they can certainly bring about your death by not keeping them (as the soul that sins will die), sure some people keep the commands, just that no one person can keep them all.
cyberlizard2. Will keeping the commandments prove your obedience to God's standards for holiness (Y/N)[/quote said:Romans 3:20.
cyberlizard2. Will keeping the commandments prove your obedience to God's standards for holiness (Y/N)[/quote said:Originally Posted by cyberlizard
Romans 3.20 - Jesus said 'if you love me you will keep my commandments - the bulk of Jesus' teaching is based on quotes which he saw as authoritive regarding the Torah. Jospeh is described as a righteous man - Torah observant.
3. As a believer in Christ is obedience a good thing (Y/N)Galatians 5:18.
Which law are we not under, Torah, elders traditions, elders halakhah, circumcision, which law exactly do you think this one refers too.
Originally Posted by cyberlizard4. Do you believe Paul kept the commands after 'conversion' to 'improve' his righteousness (Y/N)Galatians 2.
choose a verse
Originally Posted by cyberlizard5. Do you believe Paul kept the commands after his 'conversion' as he was a hypocrite?Galatians 2.
choose a verse
Originally Posted by cyberlizard6. Open ended - Why do you think Paul continued to observe and encourage some commands after his 'conversion'?Verse?
Read Acts 21 where, he was encouraged by the apostles to accompany some believers (christians) who had taken a vow (nazarite) and to join them in their purification process (this involved ritual washing, blood sacrifice, amongst other things), also note how Paul encouraged believers to continue to celebrate Passover (1 Cor. 5), and how he looked forward to being back in the land (of israel) so he could celebrate shavuot (the giving of the Torah) (1 cor. 16 & Acts 20.)
Originally Posted by cyberlizard7. Do you believe that heaven and earth has yet passed away (Y/N). If No, what then do you make of Jesus commands regarding the authority of the law?The Law was fulfilled-- Jesus said that it would not pass away till "all was fulfilled"-- it was (Matthew 5:17-18).
when exactly was the law fulfilled, was it at his baptism, or when he said this comment, or was it at his crucifixion, or was it at shavuot? When was it, and why did heaven and earth not pass away?
I and others have answered these before, I think it's time to find a new argument or plain concede that you can't defend your position with Scripture.
this works both ways, you have to sweep the scriptures i give under the rug, so to speak.
Originally Posted by cyberlizard
the very idea of a christian sabbath is a non-starter and completely unprovable from the scriptures....When you ignore the Scriptures, it sure is (Acts 20:7, Revelation 1:10).
'on the first day of the week we came together to break bread' - spot on.... the first day of the week. In jewish tradition, a family would celebrate Shabbat at home of friday evening, on saturday daytime they would visit the synagogue for prayer and worship, and as they sun set they would begin to visit their friends (who lived more than a sabbath days walk), and begin a futher period of celebration by 'breaking bread' - a hebrew idiom for sharing a meal together. This getting together is called havdalah and it is a communal celebration that another week has gone, and the next sabbaths on the way. Incidentally, the first day of the week began Saturday evening (not sunday, though sunday becomes a part of it), therefore the verse in Acts which you cited does not prove the case - sorry!
'on the lord's day i was in the spirit' - this does not prove a sunday - the term 'the lord's day' never appear in the NT except here. However, the OT which should be the key to unlocking the NT (the key should not be the church fathers), mentions the 'lord's day' and the 'day of the lord' all of the time. It just means the day God showed his power or revealed himself in some way. There is nothing in the verse again to prove this refers to sunday (you are simply interpreting it according to tradition, not the scriptures). - let me recommend this very short web page from the blog of the International Standard Version editors.
Originally Posted by cyberlizardOkay, let's remember this, as you just essentially called us hypocrites (we say we honor God but don't).
As to honouring God on one day, I will hedge my bets that most people who keep sunday as their 'sabbath' do not treat it the way the early church fathers say the apsotles and early believers kept it... this would be seen as far too legalistic.
Originally Posted by cyberlizardthere are also many who do not honour the day and do all those things.No.
what are you doing with your faith.... mmm.... faith without works is dead. Jesus said depart from me you who work lawlessness (from the greek word 'nomos' - so could be translated depart from me you who work against the Torah.
"Works" is repentance, not the law. Faith without REPENTANCE is dead (2 Peter 3:9).
No, lawlessness means "sin". "Depart from me, you who work sin."
lawlessness does not mean sin at all, if the writer had wanted to use sin, they would have used the word for sin. They didn't. They used a composite word anomia - (a-nomia) - the 'a' denotes in opposition too, nomia is from the root word nomos, law/torah so yes its not sin but against Law/Torah.
Originally Posted by cyberlizardp.s. please don't try and tarnish us all as hypocrites when you do not know us.
Didn't you do that here:
Originally Posted by cyberlizard
As to honouring God on one day, I will hedge my bets that most people who keep sunday as their 'sabbath' do not treat it the way the early church fathers say the apsotles and early believers kept it... this would be seen as far too legalistic.
? Is that a double standard?
Sincerely,
Joe
Upvote
0