OzSpen
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- Oct 15, 2005
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Zeena,
1. Lit. of the material that cove3rs the bones of the human animal body.
2. The body itself, viewed as substance.
3. A man of flesh and blood.
4. Human or mortal nature, earthly descent.
5. Corporeality, physical limitation(s), life here on earth.
6. The external or outward side of life.
7. In Paul's thought esp. the flesh is the willing instrument of sin, and is subject to sin to such a degree that wherever flesh is, all forms of sin are likewise present, and no good thing can live in the sarx.
8. The sarx is the source of the sexual urge, without any suggestion of sinfulness connected with it.
Therefore, sarx as sinful nature would harmonise with #7 given by Arndt & Gingrich.
Arndt & Gingrich's Greek lexicon (pp. 750-752) gives these meanings for sarx:Hrrm? Are you defending the use of 'flesh' rendered as 'sinful nature' in the NIV?
Because that's is not the meaning, nor the Spirit of the Author.
If it were many passages would read totally differently!
1. Lit. of the material that cove3rs the bones of the human animal body.
2. The body itself, viewed as substance.
3. A man of flesh and blood.
4. Human or mortal nature, earthly descent.
5. Corporeality, physical limitation(s), life here on earth.
6. The external or outward side of life.
7. In Paul's thought esp. the flesh is the willing instrument of sin, and is subject to sin to such a degree that wherever flesh is, all forms of sin are likewise present, and no good thing can live in the sarx.
8. The sarx is the source of the sexual urge, without any suggestion of sinfulness connected with it.
Therefore, sarx as sinful nature would harmonise with #7 given by Arndt & Gingrich.
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