Fervent
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- Sep 22, 2020
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How can He give us a new nature if the old is left in tact? Did Christ not put the old man to death? How has Christ dealt with sin and condemned sin in the flesh, without taking on the nature corrupted by it?"The result of one trespass was condemnation for all men." (Ro 5:18)
"No one can see the kingdom of God until he is born again." (Jn 3:3)
"we were by nature (Ps 51:5) objects of wrath. (Eph 2:3)
Whatever it is, it is our nature, we are born with it--it is a condition from birth.
It is not Jesus' death that deals with that fallen nature, it is the rebirth of our spirit into eternal life; i.e., God's life being imparted into our spirit, giving us a new nature to deal with, subdue our continuing fallen nature, not to totally eliminate it. We won't enjoy its elimination until the resurrection.
You do realize that assigning any kind of sin to Jesus himself in any way is historical Christian heresy, right?
Jesus, the second Adam, was born without a fallen nature as was the first Adam.
The first Adam acquired his fallen nature in his disobedience (the fall).
Jesus never disobeyed, and never acquired a fallen nature.
Being tempted is not sinful. It is yielding to the temptation that is sinful.
Jesus was tempted--by Satan, to disobey the Father (Mt 4:1-11), and constantly tempted to retreat from the cross, demonstrated from examples reported in Mt 16:21-23; Lk 22:40-44.
And being human like us, he did not conquer temptation without a struggle (Lk 22:40, see 11:4).
And being divine, it was his nature to do his Father's will (Jn 5:19), not a fallen nature which prefers oneself over God (Jn 5:30).
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