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I asked you why sin would not be a persons master(and they would not be sins slave) because they are not under law but under graceActually it does. That is because you don't, cant or won't understand...
It is hard to believe you are not intentionally evading. Look at the language in the Romans 7 text - over and over again it, through various images, puts the Law in the role of empowering sin.He says it right there in the scripture you quoted. You break the law you pay the consequence...death. The law is good and holy and righteous...but...
I asked you why sin would not be a persons master(and they would not be sins slave) because they are not under law but under grace
You responded:
Because when you sin (transgressing the law), the wage is death and without grace you remain guilty.
That has nothing whatsoever to do with overcoming sin/sin not being your master and you not being sins slave for you are not under law but under grace
It is hard to believe you are not intentionally evading. Look at the language in the Romans 7 text - over and over again it, through various images, puts the Law in the role of empowering sin.
Wanting it to be otherwise changes nothing.
Yes, if you break the Law you pay the consequences - we all know that. But that one truth does not give you license to sweep other material from the passage under the rug.
Let me try to pin you down: Please explain the followings words of Paul - don't tell me about other stuff - explain exactly what you think Paul is saying here:
or while we were in the flesh, the sinful passions, which were aroused by the Law, were at work in the members of our body to bear fruit for death.
Yes the law condemned you, now you have grace, but that doesn't answer the question. Its good to move beyond head theology and be able to discern the message contained in the letterReally LOL? You are blind...the law just condemned you, yet now you have grace...you don't understand that? I CAN'T HELP YOU SORRY...
Yes the law condemned you, now you have grace, but that doesn't answer the question. Its good to move beyond head theology and be able to discern the message contained in the letter
This objection of yours deserves a reply because, without thinking things through, one can easily see a contradiction between these two claims:What shall we say then? Is the Law sin? May it never be! On the contrary, I would not have come to know sin except through the Law...
Not an answer! I asked you a clear question. You can invoke the context if you want. Again:YOU HAVE TO UNDERSTAND IT WITHIN THE ENTIRE CONTEXT OF THE PASSAGE...
Incorrect. For the upteenth time he addressed the rabbinical tradition - not the written law - that addressed washing of hands. The Levitical law never addressed washing one's hands before eating. The Levitical food law does address clean/unclean food - which is not addressed in the passage. You have eisegeted the passage instead of exegeting it.I carefully read this post. I find nothing here that I believe I have not already addressed. Again, for others who may be reading: If Jesus is only concerned specifically with the addition of man-made traditions to Levtical food laws, why is He challenging the very premise of the Levitical food laws, which is that foods that go into the man defile him?
And what is your interpretation of this text (if you have already addressed this, please point me to the particular post):
But now we have been released from the Law, having died to that by which we were bound, so that we serve in newness of the Spirit and not in oldness of the letter.
Incorrect again. The believer's state of "wretchedness" is determined by v.25 which you have quoted but ironically fail to understand. In this verse, Paul states that he has the choice whether to serve the law with his mind (which he should do) OR serve the law of sin with his flesh (which he should not do). Guess which choice would cause him to live in wretchedness??This has already been addressed in detail by me, if not by others. You, conveniently, do not continue on into Romans 8. Interested readers, please see post 51 for the details.
But I offer the following as a complementary argument to post 51. Here the end of Romans 7 and the beginning of Romans 8:
Wretched man that I am! Who will set me free from [r]the body of this death? 25 Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord! So then, on the one hand I myself with my mind am serving the law of God, but on the other, with my flesh the law of sin. Therefore there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. 2 For the law of the Spirit of life [a]in Christ Jesus has set you free from the law of sin and of death. 3 For what the Law could not do, weak as it was through the flesh, God did.....
Note the "wretched man I, yes, am". Present tense. You are arguing that from the use of the present tense in verse 25 ("I myself with my mind am serving the law of God"), we can infer the Law of Moses is still in force. Well, there is a problem with this. Is Paul still "wretched" at the end? Of course not! He has been set free from his wretched state. So here is the clincher: Even though Paul uses the present tense in declaring he is wretched, he does not want us to think he is still wretched. Likewise, we cannot assume that because he "serves the Law of God" - present tense - that he is still doing so by the time we get to Romans 8.
The use of the present tense is arguably confusing, but the overall logic of the passage places the Romans 7 stuff in the past.
I have already fully addressed this. There is no point to repeat what has already been written - readers will just have to evaluate the relative merits of both of our arguments.Incorrect. For the upteenth time he addressed the rabbinical tradition - not the written law - that addressed washing of hands. The Levitical law never addressed washing one's hands before eating. The Levitical food law does address clean/unclean food - which is not addressed in the passage. You have eisegeted the passage instead of exegeting it.
I don't believe I ever said the law no longer exists. I am only repeating Paul - the Jew has been "released" from the Law and no longer serves it. Instead, all Christians - Jew or Gentile - now look to the Holy Spirit, not the Law.Why do you presume the law no longer exists? This verse certainly does not say so. If you are in jail and are released from it, do you believe that the jail no longer exists?
Nothing to add to what I wrote - let the reader evaluate our respective positions.Incorrect again. The believer's state of "wretchedness" is determined by v.25 which you have quoted but ironically fail to understand. In this verse, Paul states that he has the choice whether to serve the law with his mind (which he should do) OR serve the law of sin with his flesh (which he should not do). Guess which choice would cause him to live in wretchedness??
That is why the very next verse in Rom 8:1 states "There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus, who do not walk according to the flesh [present tense], but according to the Spirit [present tense]." All believers have the choice whether to live according to the flesh or according to the Spirit. If one habitually chooses to live according to the flesh, the result is wretchedness or more precisely, spiritual death as spelled out in Rom 8:13.
Of course I believe the Mosaic law is still in force. Have you not understood my argument all along? You should read more carefully. In obeying the law, we exceed it by also living according to the Spirit of the law. It is both - not one or the other. Comprende??I have already fully addressed this. There is no point to repeat what has already been written - readers will just have to evaluate the relative merits of both of our arguments.
I don't believe I ever said the law no longer exists. I am only repeating Paul - the Jew has been "released" from the Law and no longer serves it. Instead, all Christians - Jew or Gentile - now look to the Holy Spirit, not the Law.
And in case you are making this argument:
- adultery is sin;
- adultery is against the Law of Moses;
- therefore, unless you believe the Law of Moses is still in force, you have to deny that adultery is sin.
....it is not a valid argument for the obvious reason that the Spirit tells us that adultery is sin.
Indeed. The one thing I agree with you.Nothing to add to what I wrote - let the reader evaluate our respective positions.
Do you ever read my replies or Scripture for that matter? I suggest you start comprehending as this is a colossal waste of time. He do you reconcile your false view with Jesus' own words that he did not come to abolish the law but to fulfill it. Thus Eph 2 must be interpreted in light of what Jesus stated about the law rather than the other way around. You have the poor habit if eisegeting the scriptures instead of exegeting them. Pray tell how do you reconcile Eph 2 with Jesus' own statement regarding the existence of the law. Shall I wait for your answer or do you have no answer as usual? If you admit that you have no answer, then I'll answer since you can't come up with one.Here is a text from Ephesians 2:
Therefore remember that formerly you, the Gentiles in the flesh, who are called “Uncircumcision” by the so-called “Circumcision,” which is performed in the flesh by human hands— 12 remember that you were at that time separate from Christ, excluded from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers to the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world. 13 But now in Christ Jesus you who formerly were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. 14 For He Himself is our peace, who made both groups into one and broke down the barrier of the dividing wall, 15 by abolishing in His flesh the enmity, which is the Law of commandments contained in ordinances, so that in Himself He might make the two into one new man, thus establishing peace
What is this Law of Commandments? I suggest it is obvious that it is the Law of Moses precisely because the Law of Moses was exclusive to the people of Israel. And abolishing it would remove the very thing that separates Jews from Gentiles.
And what else could it possibly be? If not the Law of Moses, what?
Man-made additions to the Law? Well, if that is so, prithee explain how man-mKO ade additions separate Jew from Gentile. As much as I suspect you will try to dodge this question, it must be addressed since Paul so clearly connects the abolition of this "Law of commandments" to the breaking down of the barrier between Jew and Gentile.
Because, of course, fulfillment can entail abolition. If I fulfill the requirements for admission to Harvard, do I continue my efforts to gain admission? Of course not - the application process comes to an end.He do you reconcile your false view with Jesus' own words that he did not come to abolish the law but to fulfill it.
What a ludicrous example. Yes you fulfill the REQUIREMENTS for admission but the REQUIREMENTS still exist - they don't vanish just because you happened to apply. How ridiculous which demonstrates the fallacy of your argument. Care to take another shot at it??Because, of course, fulfillment can entail abolition. If I fulfill the requirements for admission to Harvard, do I continue my efforts to gain admission? Of course not - the application process comes to an end.
Since you have just been handed your hat on this matter, I suggest you consider backing down on the snark - it only makes you look worse when you are shown to be in the wrong (as in this particular instance).
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