This is where you and I disagree:
But we are not “under” the Ten Commandments as Israel was under the Law.
No one, including Ray Comfort, says or believes this.
The Ten Commandments reflect God’s eternal nature and his eternal moral law (but are not that law themselves).
And this is the crux of Comforts point.
But Comfort is wrong that God has placed the world under the Law. Based on a previous conversation, I am surprised that you advocate this position.
Neither I nor Comfort has said such a thing.
Second, sin is much more than breaking a commandment. As I said before, our sins are but manifestations of the problem. With the fall, we are not what we should be (ontological). We need a rebirth. It is not a matter of “you’ve broken this commandment so…..” I disagree with your interpretation that sin is “breaking one of the Ten Commandments,” although I certainly agree that breaking a commandment is a sin.
And I believe that this characterization is a misrepresentation of what Comfort teaches.
Third, I disagree with your assessment that at the final judgment the world will be judged under the Ten Commandments.
I have never said anything such as this. What comfort teaches is that the Ten Commandments represents God's holy nature and it is that nature, that holiness that we will be held too. Comfort is trying to deal with lost people. He is not trying to deliver all theology in great detail. In some areas he goes so far and stops.
I do not think that Scripture bears this out, but that you (and Comfort) have come to this conclusion by reading into the text.
Neither one of us have come to the conclusions you are purporting.
It is through Christ that God is reconciling the world to Himself. I believe that you have mistakenly inflated the role of the Ten Commandments when you determine that it actually encompasses what sin is, that the Ten Commandments themselves are God’s moral law, and that men are judged in the end by the Ten Commandments.
I believe you have mistakenly inflated Comforts words.
Fourth, I disagree with your interpretation that James 4:6 is a command to us that we are to place those who are prideful under the Law (the Ten Commandments), but we are to show grace to those who are humbled. It is a poor interpretation of that passage.
No one says this.
Fifth, I believe that you and Comfort have read into Acts 17:16-21 that Paul was indeed placing the people of Athens under the Law. What seems to come through to me is that Paul is speaking with the people of Athens and trying to relate the gospel to them where they are.
You need to stop saying that I have read this into acts. You will not find a post where I have said such a thing. Further you continue to inflate Comforts words into meaning beyond his intent.
I understand that Comfort (and perhaps you as well) adamantly rejects the idea of dialogue in terms of relational evangelism as it is much easier to witness to strangers. I simply do not find biblical support for your conclusions.
I have never said this nor is it a correct representation of anything I have said.
I hope this helps clarify our disagreement thus far. There are many more points I could make about the book, and if you think it appropriate we can move forward once we dispense with these five points. But for now, I’d appreciate an explanation of how you justify those few observations.
I do not justify your personal characterization of anything I have said or Comfort.
I will add that I also believe his use of the Ten Commandments to explain sin is a good idea. But it is not people like John MacArthur, and Phil Johnson (and me) who are taking Comforts words too far. He is talking WOM too far....and it is just bad theology. I know that some believe we can dismiss Scripture if the premise is correct, but I am simply not one of those people.
Well you are taking them too far.