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Tell them the story of Mary as she was brought to Jesus so that He would condem her as they wanted it to be. Then Jesus just bent down and wrote in the sand. It was not too long and the accusers had went.
GypsyBella said:Anyway, some Sabbatarians say would tell you that you can't work in your yard on Saturday, because that would be breaking the 4th commandment. Well, what if you enjoy working in the yard, and you consider enjoying God's creation a part of your communion with Him? Then it's not work, right?
holo said:Ah, but Jesus said a lot of things, like to gouge out your eye if it led you sin, and bless those you hate you and that if you call your brother a fool, you're guilty of hell. I, for one, won't be too worried about the sabbath as long as I break basically all the rules Jesus laid down. Jesus summed it up like this, "be perfect as your Father is perfect." To make it real simple, He gave two new(!) commandments - love God and love your neighbour.
Are we so good at loving each other that we can now take a break to argue about the law?
You who insist on keeping the 4th and the rest of the commandments and living according to law, is it because you love God so much?
TheDag said:Your response does not include anything about new testament law. So my question still stands as valid.
Romans 4:15 which you quoted is part of a passage that points out that those who have the law and those who don't have the law are both heirs of the same promise (promise being the promise of salvation) through faith.
The passage in 1 John 3:4 isn't talking about the 10 commandments. If so then it would be impossible for any christian to break any of the 10 commandments when this verse is taken in context of verse 6. (It is believed that it is actually talking about the hold of sin on us is broken because of what Jesus did on the cross and that sin is actually talking about the anti-christ.)
In Romans7:7 Paul seems to be talking about his own experience. That is the law taught him right from wrong but he made the law to be so important that he forgot about God and worshipped the law instead.
Caissie said:Point taken. That reminds me......
I have a friend that is in jail. He told me that some S.D.A.s came and visited the jail to "witness". Before he said anything else, I cut him off and said..."I bet they talked about keeping the Sabbath". He confirmed that this was the main topic of the sermon.
I figured....These guys are in jail....probably a better commandment to preach to them would be, "thou shalt not steal", "thou shalt not murder", or "love thy neighbor".
Most religions get hung up on their doctrine and they do spend a lot of effort in convincing people that their religion is right that they do not perform the weightier matters of the law.
rstrats said:My guess is that "these guys" pretty much know that they should not steal, and murder, but they might not be aware of the requirement to observe the seventh day.
GypsyBella said:Regarding 1John 3:4- So you're saying that if I murdered someone, and someone murdered me immediately afterward, that when I stood before Christ, he would say to me, "You died murdering someone, and breaking one of My commandments, but since you are "saved", you get to come to heaven anyway, because My death covered that sin."?
Linux98 said:See, this is a question that should be answered by understanding the Sabbath. The reason you observe the Sabbath is to remember that Christ did the work. As soon as you start intertwining Salvation with YOUR works you begin to break the Spirit of the 4th commandment.
Your salvation is not by what you do, it is by what He already did. If you observe the Sabbath you should consider the spirit of the law. What is the Christian really remembering by observing the Sabbath: we do not work because he did ALL the work.
rstrats said:GypsyBella,
snip
The point of the quote by Caissie that I referenced seemed to be that it made more sense to preach about the commandments against murder and stealing, than to preach about the keeping of the seventh day. I was merely commenting on that specific issue.
Oblio said:
Where do you get Mary out of the Scriptures ?? Or are you talking about the Western tradition (RCC IIRC) that equivocates St. Mary Magdelena with the woman caught in adultery ??
I'm talking about commands in the bible in the new testament AFTER the death of Jesus on the cross. That is what you haven't addressed hence my commentGypsyBella said:What question still stands valid? Do you cover your head during prayer, or do you wear mixed blend clothing? I just answered your question by telling you that the ten commandments have nothing to do with the law of moses, so the answer is probably no. Christ was the ultimate sacrafice. He hung Moses' law on the cross.
Your response does not include anything about new testament law
Actually no what you say isn't straight forward to me. On the one hand you seem to say if we sin then we're obviously not a christian (If this isn't what your saying then I'm not sure what your point is). Then you also say Abraham was saved even though he wasn't perfect. These two views you put forward seem to be opposites. Also remember abraham is under the old covenant not the new so that does also make a difference (please note I'm not saying to ignore the old testament here). Our sin makes no difference as to if we go to heaven or not. As you said we were told that if we love God then we should keep his commandments. Of course this is impossible to do because as you quoted Our best efforts are like filthy rags. Naturally I don't believe (and never have said) that this means we can sin all we like. To believe this would mean I would have to believe repentance is not neccesary for forgiveness and that would clearly go against the bible.GypsyBella said:1John 3:6 says,"No one who lives in him keeps on sinning." That doesn't sound like a simple "he took the weight of our sins away" to me. Think of Abraham. He obviously wasn't "perfect", but God commended him for keeping His laws, commandments, and statutes. When Christ came, he taught "If you love me, keep My commandments". What do you think He meant by this? It looks pretty straightforward.
GypsyBella said:I'm not sure you understand exactly what my belief is, because you seem to have it a little backward. I do not believe that anything that I do saves me.
TheDag said:Actually no what you say isn't straight forward to me. On the one hand you seem to say if we sin then we're obviously not a christian (If this isn't what your saying then I'm not sure what your point is). Then you also say Abraham was saved even though he wasn't perfect. These two views you put forward seem to be opposites. Also remember abraham is under the old covenant not the new so that does also make a difference (please note I'm not saying to ignore the old testament here). Our sin makes no difference as to if we go to heaven or not. As you said we were told that if we love God then we should keep his commandments. Of course this is impossible to do because as you quoted Our best efforts are like filthy rags. Naturally I don't believe (and never have said) that this means we can sin all we like. To believe this would mean I would have to believe repentance is not neccesary for forgiveness and that would clearly go against the bible.
GypsyBella said:I'm terribly sorry. It seems I am not very good at covering all my points.
Please make note first and foremost that, as we all believe, salvation is through Christ alone. I don't believe it is impossible to keep all of the Commandments. With Christ living in us, and Him forming us into what He wants us to be, we should be able to! Our best efforts may be humble... God wants those efforts! He does not see an effort that is out of a love for Him as filthy. What is filthy is when we seek a righteousness through these efforts without His Son.
I suppose I don't understand how observing the commandments out of love for Jesus is considered "under the law". It is not done out of fear or guilt, but out of love.
Abraham wasn't under the old covenant... he was before the old covenant. The point I was trying to make there, was that God obviously had a moral code long before He wrote it in stone on Mt. Sinai.
So if we accept Jesus as LORD and SAVIOR, then should we not TRY to keep the commandments? I mean, out of all of the commandments, doesn't it seem like the 4th is the easiest to keep?After all, it was "made for man"!
TheDag said:I'm talking about commands in the bible in the new testament AFTER the death of Jesus on the cross. That is what you haven't addressed hence my comment
Cliff2 said:I believe this to be the same Mary that as caught in adultery as the same person who annointed the feet of Jesus. Also the same Mary who came to the garden tomb.
Oblio said:The Orthodox Church has no such belief.