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Is following the 10 commandments required for salvation?

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Jim Langston

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Then Jesus went on to explain that one who is born again does not sin.

And for the thousanth time i am not saying that it is not sinning that saves us. I am saying that it is one of the requirements to be saved not to live in sin.

So, do not answer the question what saves us, for every cgristian knows that it us the grace of God that saves us. Yet Jesus said for Him to save us we muat follow his commandments.

Let me put it a different way, is someone saved allowed to sin freely?
 
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Basil the Great

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Yes, there would appear to be a conflict here. Jesus did emphasize the Ten Commandments or at least some of them. He certainly strongly implied that those who do not keep said commandments will not be saved. Now this does not mean that we are perfect and cannot be forgiven if we break one of the Ten Commandments. However, it does raise a question about those who habitually commit adultery or habitually steal or habitually treat their parents in a dishonorable manner.
 
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morse86

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It's impossible for us to do all of God's commandments. All have come short.

Romans 3:23: For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God;

Through one man's sin (Adam), death entered into the world. Through one man (Jesus), life was given unto all that believe. Jesus overcame death for us. Jesus did kept all of the commandments for us. Jesus took our place on the cross and took all of God's wraith. If you stand in front of God, do you want to be judged by your righteousness or his righteousness (Jesus)?

This is what God says about our righteousness:

Isaiah 64:6:
But we are all as an unclean thing, and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags; and we all do fade as a leaf; and our iniquities, like the wind, have taken us away.

Romans 5:12:
Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned:

Romans 5:19:
For as by one man's disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous.

Salvation is by grace through faith.

Grace means you do not deserve it.
Faith means you believe in things not yet seen.

Ephesians 2:8 - For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: [it is] the gift of God:

Do you have to work for a gift?!?!?!?
 
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Basil the Great

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My Great Grandfather was a devout Baptist and he probably would have answered you "no". Before he died I asked him if God would forgive us if we kept sinning the same sin over and over again. He told me "no", implying that apparently God would know in such cases that our repentance was not real. Now I told this story to his daughter many years later, my Great Aunt, also a devout Baptist for most of her life, until she joined the Disciples of Christ very late in life, and she told me that she did not believe that her father's response was Scriptural. I can see both of their points. I think my Great Aunt was basing her position on Jesus talking about the 70x7 or 490 times we should forgive someone, implying there is no end to the number of times that we should forgive.

I am not sure where you are coming from with this thread, but I am guessing that you are referring to Christians who continue to break one or more of the Ten Commandments on a habitual basis. Have such Christians truly given their lives to Jesus or not? Now I do not like to judge others and I do not feel it appropriate for me to say that someone's conversion was real or not. That is up to God to say. I do believe that we can lose our salvation if we do not persevere. I totally reject this "once saved, always saved" doctrine.
 
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Jim Langston

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This comes from the point of view I see in the world with reguards to sin and salvation.

A few months back I met a man who I gave money to so we could rent an apartment together. I realized rather quickly that he was a con man, yet I continued to lend/give him money when he asked for it under the guidance of Luke 6:30.

After this man left town after failing on every one of his promises I simply sent him a message God bless you. For me the cost of giving him the money was worth the fact that maybe I could set an example to him.

Now, this is where the question comes up. Someone who also knew the man and knew he ripped ofg someone else asked if he swindled any money from me and I said yes and told him how much and explained I figured out early he was probably a con man. He asked why I gave him the money then. I responded with Luke 6:30 but I also explained that I was a christian hoing to heaven for eternity. The swindler was a habitual sinner bound for hell and the little comfort he got from my money he needed because he was going to suffer for eternity. The man who asked didn't think the swindler was neccessarily going to hell because even if we sin God forgives us.

This is the message the world is getting from christians. Go ahead, accept jesus and you can continue to sin as much as you want because Jesus will forgive you. This is the lawlessness that had crept in unawares because we preach Jesus forgives our sins but are silent when Jesus says do not steal. These are the ones who teach men to break the commandments and will be called least in the kingdom of God.

This same man I was talking too is now living out of wedlock with a women and he had yet to get divorced. Why should he? He is being told he doesn't have to follow the commandments. He is being told lies.

This is what tbe bible talks about when it becomes worthless for a man to try to follow God because all he hears is the doctrine of men, not God.

God said do not steal. Jesus said do not steal. The apostles said we are saved if we are in christ and we are in christ if we follow him and don't live in sin. But so many teach you don't have to follow the ten commandments, you can break them all you want and still be saved. You are leading men to hell.
 
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bbbbbbb

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The problem is that of faith. You have genuine faith and it has fruit. I know your faith by your fruit. The con artist does not have genuine faith in Jesus Christ. He is deceived himself and many others are equally deceived. We know him by his fruit. America is filled with deceived people who have never been born again by the Spirit of God.
 
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Ken Rank

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The answer is no. He was clear, "Go and sin no more." The question is, "What is sin?" The answer is in 1 John 3:4 which states:

1 John 3:4 Whoever commits sin also commits lawlessness, and sin is lawlessness.

Sin is, in the Greek, "anomia" which is "without law" or "outside the law" or idiomatically, "breaking the law." The question is, "What law?" Caesars? Of course not, while the bible isn't necessarily telling us to become social anarchists, the "law" that John is writing of is God's Law, God's commandments.

In the end it comes down to this... Yeshua walked out the commandments perfectly. In doing so He didn't relieve us of having to follow commandments, after all, he said, "If you love me keep my commandments." Rather, in doing so he SHOWED US how God expects us to do the same. He is the model we are to follow, we follow in His steps... and his steps were firmly planted in obedience. NOT UNTO SALVATION, but because, as a child of God, this is simply what He expects of those who are His.
 
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Basil the Great

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Jim - None of us know for certain at what point a Christian puts their soul in jeopardy. However, I believe that the thesis that you are presenting here is a valid one and should be a wake up call to many Christians. It kind of looks like you are thinking along the lines of my Great Grandfather. You know, we dare not forget the warning of Jesus in Matthew. Jesus warned that not everyone who calls Him, "Lord, Lord" shall enter the Kingdom of Heaven, but he who does the will of God.
 
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Major1

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Jim, In John 8:11 which I am presuming you are referring to, Jesus did tell the woman in adultery.....
"I forgive you, go and sin no more".

Literally said......"Go and do not continue the adultery that you have been caught in".

He was NOT talking about never committing any sin again, but stop what you have been guilty of.

As for the requirements of salvation being that we do not live in sin, I have to disagree with you.
Was the prodical son his fathers child while in the far country???? YES!
Did the prodical son ever stop being his fathers son ??? NO!

Again, I say to you that not committing sin is not a requirement of salvation.

You my friend are agreeing with the theology of the Judizers that Paul condemned in Galatians.

The person who says that he is a Christian and then continues to live a life of sin was never saved to begin with.
 
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Major1

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God bless you Jim and that your heart is right. However you thinking not correct in your theology.
When you say that we can not break the laws of God and still be save, you are Biblically wrong my brother.

You said...........
"so many teach you don't have to follow the ten commandments, you can break them all you want and still be saved. You are leading men to hell."

With all due respect my brother, you are adding what we must do to what Christ has done for us. You are mixing grace with works and that is not correct in any way whatsoever.

It sounds good and it speaks to our flesh but it is not Biblical. We are saved by grace, and we are kept saved by grace and we do not have to keep the commandments to stay saved.

We want to and should keep the commandments because we love God and have a desire to follow Him and obey Him, but He does not disown us because we fail in one way or another.

Jim, there is nothing said in the N.T. about "keeping the Law" in order to stay out of sin. The Law condemns. The Law cannot produce righteousness; it can only reveal sin and show that we are sinners. The Law stirs up the sin nature and intensifies the awfulness of sin. One way it does this is by religious pride which is normally manifested in condemnation of others whom you feel are not living up to the Law as you are.

Jim, a careful reading of Romans shows us many things. Paul hammers away at Grace by faith and nothing else. WHY???

So why does Paul keep hammering on this truth that God’s righteousness is credited to us by faith alone? I think it’s because he knows how deeply embedded in the fallen human heart is the idea that we can do something to commend ourselves to God. The last two millennia of human history prove him to be right. All religions, including the major ones that go under the label of “Christian,” are works oriented. They teach what Paul explicitly and repeatedly denies here, that at least in part, we are saved by keeping religious rituals and by our good deeds.

That is the old old theology of the Judizers which Paul condemned.
 
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Jim Langston

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The person who says that he is a Christian and then continues to live a life of sin was never saved to begin with.

So, let's rephrase that, shall we?

If someone is saved they will not live in sin.

If someone is living in sin they are not saved.

If we are to be saved we can not continue to live in sin.

Do you disagree with any of those because that is the question you keep saying "no" to. You are saying the same thing I am, yet you refuse to acknowledge it and that's the thing tbat gives the world the wrong message about salvation.

You are saying if we are saved we will not conrinue to live in sin. Rephrased again, if we are saved we will follow the ten commanments. I already hear you saying "no" but once you admit that is your true belief because that's what the bible teaches you should be able to answer the question of this thread in the afirmative.
 
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tatteredsoul

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We are not under the law. That means if you sin, or fail to follow one of the least of the commandments, you will not be damned as an imperfect hell-bound sinner whose soul will be condemned. That is it.

Not being under the law doesn't mean you become a disobedient child, and stop foowing God''s law. He, nor Christ never said the Law was done away with, null, void, inert, or to be ignored. In fact, He says as per the NEW COVENANT that the Law will be written on our hearts such that you won't even have to ask your neighbor do they know God.

What the New covenant promises is, through faith in Christ, a confession of sin, repentance and work toward righteousness you will not be condemned to die if you break a law. Your repentance, and faith vindicate you before God, and your sins are forgiven: SIN NO MORE.

How can you sin if there are no rules to fall short of ?

Being under the Law does not negate or cancel ANY of God''s Law, and Christ never suggested such a thing, nor would He ever suggest such a thing especially seeing as He is the Literal Word of God that lives forever.

When Heaven and Earth pass away, so will the Law. Until then, not one tittle or iota of the law is removed. Christ plainly teaches this.
 
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tatteredsoul

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Following the Law does not determine salvation. But, you have to ask: how does a parent deal with a child that refuses to follow their rules - even making excuses for the disobedience? How can we claim to be children of God if we throw out His rule book, and claimed we don't have to do it since our Big Brother was able to do it perfectly? I thought we were suppose to "die daily," "crucifying the flesh" that wants to be evil. We are called to perfection, but what is perfection without the boundaries to contain and define it? How can we be followers of Christ when we don't do what He did - follow His Father''s Law. He certainly didn't do it to be saved; He did it out of love.

Following the law and being obedient is about love - that is what you do when you love your parents. It doesn't determine salvation, but it is certainly a very large part of the "works" of faith, and obedience to God. God doesn't like stiff-necked folk.
 
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Ken Rank

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We are not under the law. That means if you sin, or fail to follow one of the least of the commandments, you will not be damned as an imperfect hell-bound sinner whose soul will be condemned. That is it.

That is not what it means. Under the law and under grace are idiomatic phrases that were understood well in the day they were penned but not so much in this 21st century, Western, slightly anti-Judaic culture we are born into. In that day, "under the law" meant you were guilty and worthy of death. "Under grace" meant you were declared to be innocent, no more guilt found in you.

So Yeshua comes into this world without sin, is tempted and withstands it, and dies perfect. Since the grave was not designed for perfection but rather for sin and death, the grave could not contain him and he rose, resurrected. In the process those who live in faith are not longer guilty of their sins (they are no longer under the law) they are now free of sin, innocent, they are under grace.
 
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tatteredsoul

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As per the OP, there is NOTHING in the bible said by Christ, or God that says any of us who claim to be Children of God - gentile or Hebrew - can opt out, or neglect to follow any laws of God. Nothing.

Does that mean you can't sin in order to be a child of God? Yes, and no. No one can be of God, and be of sin. Clearly. Yet, Christ allowed for us to be under "grace" so that IF we do sin, it no longer has the power to condemn us to hell.

But, to say you can break the 10 commandments and still call yourself a child of God is categorically incorrect. Both Christ and God make this very clear.

Any bloke can claim to be Christian. So, what is the difference between those who claim to be, and those who are actually accepted by Him?

Why would God want you to continue calling yourself a child of God with the mentality that you can break any of His laws when He says they are founded forever?

I have been seeing this confused topic a lot lately, and it is actually quite frightening so many believe they can reap all the benefits of heaven without any of the work.
 
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Ken Rank

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I think you better go back and read some of my older posts. All I said was, "under the law" does not mean how most use it. Yeshua said, "if you love me keep my commandment." James said, "faith without works is dead," and John said, "this is the love of God that we keep His commandments." We are saved by grace but the saved obey/work or their faith is not faith.
 
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tatteredsoul

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Well if I am understanding this post correctly, it is much clearer than what I responded to (in my opinion.) But now I don't think we disagree (much, if at all.)
 
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Hallstone

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I would say, in response to your main question, that it is necessary to follow the commandments as defined by Christ, since He is the Prophet that was foretold that would define everything. Moses said that God would raise up a Prophet like him and that everyone would have to obey His word or die. So Christ is the definition for all commandments. which means since there is no Temple anymore, and each one of us makes up the Temple of God, and that we no longer live for ourselves, then I would say that means that those who are in Christ fulfill the requirements of the 'Sabbath Commandment each and every day of their life. So really to the Saints that particular Commandment no longer applies in the way it used to. Jesus fulfilled it.
 
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Soyeong

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It is indeed impossible for us to keep all of God's commands perfectly through our own efforts, but with God, nothing is impossible. Or do you think that God causing His people to obey His commands is the one thing that God can't do? God found fault with the Mosaic Covenant, but the fault was not with the terms of the covenant, or with God's laws according to His holy, righteous, and good standard, but rather He found fault with the people because of the hardness of our hearts (Hebrews 8:7-8). So God made a New Covenant, where He would take away our hearts of stone, give us hearts of flesh, put His law in our minds and write His law on our hearts so that we will obey it (Jeremiah 31:33), send Spirit to cause us to obey His law (Ezekiel 36:26-27), and send His Son to give himself to redeem us from all lawlessness (Titus 2:14) so that might be free to obey God's law and thereby meet its righteous requirement (Romans 8:4). Jesus summarized the law as being instructions about how to love God and how to love your neighbor (Matthew 22:36-40), so saying that Jesus kept the commands so that we don't have to is like saying that Jesus loved God and others so that we don't have to. Rather, Jesus set a perfect example of how to walk in obedience to God's law, and we are told to follow his example (1 Peter 2:21-22) and to walk in the same way that he walked (1 John 2:3-6).

The difference between our righteousness and God's righteousness is not in the particular action, but in who gets the glory. The same righteous action, such as helping the poor, might be like filthy rags because they were giving glory to themselves and because it was about what they legalistically were owed in return for their obedience. On the other hand, the righteous action of someone else helping the poor might be like fine white linen (Revelation 19:8) because they were giving glory to God and because it was about demonstrating their love for God and their faith in God about how they should live. In Deuteronomy 10:13, God said that what He commands was for our own good, so if you believe that, then demonstrating that you trust God about the way to rightly live through obedience to His commands is the way to live by faith, for the righteous shall live by faith (Habakkuk 2:4). Living by faith does not refer to living in some other manner that is not in obedience to God's instructions. We are saved by grace through faith, not by works, but for the purpose of doing good works by grace through faith (Ephesians 2:8-10). According to Titus 2:11-14, our salvation entails God's grace training us to do what God has instructed to be godly, righteous, and good, and to renounce doing what God has instructed is ungodly, sinful, and lawless. It might be best to think of it like someone paying your insurmountable student loans and your college tuition for the rest of your life as a free gift, so it is yours, but you still need to attend classes and do homework in order to fully receive it.
 
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Ken Rank

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