Gukkor said:You misunderstand me, threeinone. The fact that we are saints does not mean that we don't feel remorse or that we shouldn't (at least in my mind it doesn't). The difference is that because we know we have already been forgiven, we don't have to dwell on that remorse. Instead of simply wallowing hopelessly in our own iniquity, we can learn from our mistakes and move on, having become all the better for it. We know that though we will make mistakes and sin in the future, it will not stop us because we have the ability to learn from it and grow spiritually in God. Were we not saints, the prospect of future sin would simply leave us either careless and unrepentant, or hopeless and miserable, neither of which would allow us to grow closer to God.
I guess you and I just have different perceptions of what it means to be a saint. To me, sainthood doesn't mean we're perfect. It simply means that the gap between us and God is permanently bridged, and our sin is powerless to burn that bridge down. Because our sin no longer condemns us to death, we are free to turn our mistakes into learning and growing experiences, rather than despairing over being condemned by them.
It doesn't make sense to me. I don't despair over my sins, I learn from my mistakes and all that you say. But I do commit sins and that makes me a sinner, not to dwell on but to remember who I am. To think of myself as a saint who cannot in any way be separated from God is to leave myself unguarded and more open to sin. If you are a saint then we cannot be friends for you are above me because I am a good person but I do sin which makes me a sinner. Saints are free of sin and do not sin and are extra holy beyond the rest of us ordinary people. Would you like to be called Saint Gukkor. If not, you need to rethink. Why not use a word less edifying befitting of a human being.
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