If Christ chooses obedience then his nature never takes over to prevent him from sinning.
His nature is what would be controlling him. So we don't want to deny that we do things based on or nature.
Paul makes this point in Romans that we are influenced by two different natures.
Christ is not influence from without but within.
We may be talking past each other using the same word “nature”, but defining it different ways.
Did nature create Deity or did Deity create a spiritual nature?
Can Deity control the spiritual nature He created?
God/Christ will always do what is absolutely the very best thing, so it is “natural” for God/Christ to do the very best thing, but it is still by their choice.
Christ is not controlled by His flesh but He is 100% fleshly human and 100% Spiritual, so it is by choice, the same choice Christians can make by allowing themselves to be controlled by the indwelling Holy Spirit.
No I'm not saying that at all. The whole point of the attached discussion was to disprove that assertion. If he chooses A he is freely obeying.
But are you saying: Christ does not have the power to control this “nature” and do otherwise, so it was not a true choice.
None of my arguments are based on personal feelings. Is this some way of creating a strawman you can attack?
Give me the scripture for Christians ability not to sin, because they cannot choose to sin or do they not have that power?
Theodore of Mopsuestia introduced or at least wrote most broadly about Dyophysitism found in the Ephesian and Chalcedonian creeds. Theodore insisted that Christ has a complete human nature, flesh and spirit, indwelt by the divine Word. Theodore claimed that the human soul is a source of sin, and so Christ had to assume and redeem it also. Finally, Theodore likened the unity of Christ to the “one flesh” of husband and wife: each spouse is distinct, and yet together they compose a single person. So the two natures in Christ.
His Christology is what is founding my arguments as well as the last two of the seven primary creeds in Christianity.
Christ is not two different personalities within one person, but is one person with two different “abilities” where Christ allows only the spiritual ability to control His every action.
No not if Christ chooses option a in my post (which again you seemed to misunderstood)
So Paul certainly doesn't make this type of distinction when he tells his audience to operate under or new nature not our old one. Robots wouldn't have the option now would they?
Again, it is not a real choice if Christ does not have the power to choose option B.
There are several misrepresentations and false conclusions drawn from my comments. Before continuing to respond to the rest of your comments please give my position a fair read and ask clarifying questions rather than straw assertions.
The context is the conundrum: Christ has essential attributes of God and of Man.
P1. God can't sin as an essential (as opposed to accidental) property of his nature.
P2. Jesus has all the essential properties of God
A. Therefore Jesus can't sin.
This statement:
“God can't sin as an essential (as opposed to accidental) property of his nature”
This statement gives the only alternatives to God not sinning to be, by His nature or by “accident”, which eliminates by His choice? Why could God not have the power and Love to not sin by choice?
The second premise was developed over the first 350 years by the Church Fathers in their credal formulations.
Theodore of Mopsuestia is one of the most important contributors. However, there are many.
Jesus has a human nature but remember that sin is an accidental (in the philosophical ontological sense) not an essential property of man.
Jesus could have decided not to obey in his human will, but that would have been overridden by his divine nature. If Jesus freely chooses not to sin using only his human nature then he has fulfilled the reformation of man mind, body and soul. But to suggest that Jesus doesn't have the same nature as God is a significant issue.
That will need some justification and may get this conversation moved to a different forum altogether.
I am not suggesting any human (even Christ) by his own human power and human will can chose to never ever sin. That is not the choice Christ was making nor the choice Christians can make. Christ made the choice and continued to make that choice to be led by the Spirit (24/7) and Christian can make the same choice, but have to do it constantly, to not ever sin again.
Can you explain how “ sin is accidental” even philosophically?