Frogster
Galatians is the best!
- Sep 7, 2009
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Okay, we will use what you have posted here...
"erasing the record that stood against us (this is the charge) with its legal demands." What is the legal demand?
You should know this... Rom 6:23 "For the wages of sin is death.." Death is the "legal demand". Death is the payment for sin!!!
That is what was nailed to the cross! Not the law (which Paul calls Holy, Just and Good) The law is not against anyone. The law simply serves as a guideline and tells us what sin is. The law cannot be against anyone. One does not write a law that is against a person. If so, then it could not be Just or Good!
It is the person who goes against a law. If you break the 55 mph speed limit, it would be you who went against the law, NOT THE LAW GOING AGAINST YOU! There would be no logic in this approach. The law just states a fact. It would be you who would face the charge and you who would pay the fine. Take for instance:
"Thou shall not commit adultery" The law just sets limits or guideline. Would you think this a good law? How many marriages would be safe if people followed it? How many children would be born into good homes with both a father and a mother, if followed?
If one goes against the law and is charged then he or she must pay the penalty. What is against the transgressor? The record that stands against the individual (the charge) and the legal demand (the penalty).
So see, the verse does not read that the ten commandments were nailed to the cross. It reads that the charge and the penalty (legal demand) were nailed to the cross. This is for those who repent and turn from sin!
Dude, the law was nailed, for the Christian, through the body, not for the unsaved, they have not gone to the cross. I have no problem thinking the law stands to condemn, and kill, and arouses sin, as it's purpose, for the unsaved, the way Paul used in in Rom 1-3, and 7, and the way he told Tim, the law was not for the church, the just, but for the UNsaved, in chapter 1. But once we die to flesh and law, we are not under it, it is abolished for the Church.
THE CROSS...THE BODY, THE BELIEVER...see col 2;14, the twin epistle.
Eph 2:14 For he himself is our peace, who has made us both one and has broken down in his flesh the dividing wall of hostility 15 by abolishing the law of commandments expressed in ordinances, that he might create in himself one new man in place of the two, so making peace, 16 and might reconcile us both to God in one body through the cross, thereby killing the hostility
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