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You ever wonder how the actual wicked got wicked? Like maybe at some point they did something wicked?God is a just Judge; and God is angry with the wicked every day.'
The problen is not the actions of the wicked but the actual wicked.
The reason I know that @JonC knows he is losing the discussion is that he is becoming more and more shrill and personal, and less and less Biblical.The reason @Martin Marprelate rails against Scripture is all he wants is for Christ to have taken away his accountability for his actions.
The truth is we remain accountable. We bear our sins bodily and "die in the body because of sin". We must die to sin. We must "die to the flesh". We must "put away our old self".
And we must "live in the spirit because of righteousness", be "conformed into the image of Christ", be "made new creations in Christ", have "a new heart" and a "new spirit".
God has predestined us in Christ to be justified, to be glorified.
@Martin Marprelate prays with all of his heart that the cross was Jesus experiencing His punishment from God to remove his accountability because the biblical atonement requires something he is unwilling to surrender.
@Martin MarprelateThe reason I know that @JonC knows he is losing the discussion is that he is becoming more and more shrill and personal, and less and less Biblical.
I do indeed thank God with all my heart that the Lord Jesus has taken away my sin by paying the full atonement for them on the cross. One reason for this is that I know that I am a sinner, saved at terrible cost by the grace of God.
I am not the only sinner on this board. If @JonC has not joined with John and Charles Wesley in subscribing to their belief in 'sinless perfection,' he will know that he is one also. Due to the atoning death of Christ, His resurrection and ascension, believers receive the Holy Spirit (John 16:7; Acts 2:33 again!) and we are born anew. But that does not make is sinless. 'If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us, but if we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another and the blood of Christ cleanses us from all iniquity' What cleanses us from iniquity? Walking in the light? No! Because we don't do it perfectly. It is the blood of Christ that cleanses us from all iniquity.
We are saved by the blood of Christ. 'There is now therefore no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus.' But for that very reason, Paul tells us, 'Put to death therefore your members which are on the earth: fornication, uncleanness, passion, evil desire and covetousness which is idolatry' (Col. 3:5). But however imperfectly, we do this not in order to be saved, but because we are saved! Read Romans 7:7-25. Paul ends up, 'For I delight in the law of God according to the inward man. But I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. O wrethched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death? I thank God - through Jesus Christ my Lord.'
Now there's stuff in those verses that would be good to discuss on another thread, but now, long after my bedtime, I just want to point out what debters to mercy we are. We all fall short in many ways (James 3:2), and it is no use saying as @JonC does, " We must die to sin. We must "die to the flesh". We must "put away our old self". We cannot do these things perfectly, and it is only because the Lord Jesus has paid for all our sins, past, present and future, that we shall be kept out of He. I repeat what I have said many times before: if Christ has not paid in full for our sins, we shall have to pay for them ourselves.
No, the wicked did not become wicked when they did wickedness. The Bible addresses this.You ever wonder how the actual wicked got wicked? Like maybe at some point they did something wicked? Jon, hopefully this thread and the other one's where you rant on the atonement will be soon closed. Everyone should go back and review all the stuff said.
First of all, you shouldn't start a new thread using a quote from someone else as the first post. That is misleading and I thought against the rules. But anyway:This thread is discussing two disagreements.
No. And this is your constant technique. Take something someone else says, remold it into a different meaning, and then brilliantly attack the new meaning you gave it. You said "the problem is not the actions of the wicked but the actual wicked". My point, and it is correct, is that the actual wicked do wicked deeds. I was not saying that the actions of the wicked are not preceded by wicked intentions coming from a wicked heart. Nor did I say that God is not going to judge wickedness as a sin also. But, if you read Puritans, or ever looked at a confession, you would have known that because those things are addressed. You bring up Galatians 5 which in verse 21 does list character but ends by saying " those who practice such things will not inherit the kingdom of God". Galatians 6:7 says "whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap".@DaveXR650 holds that men become wicked when they sin. Therefore the problem of man is man's actions.
I believe that our sins are fruits of our wickedness (Gal 5), that we sin because we are wicked. Therefore the problem of man is man.
So this is not what we need to discuss professor. It's not what I was talking about (which you have misrepresented in the original post) and it is clearly put in scripture and in confessions that man is a sinner, and man is a "doer" of sins, which have direct consequences. Both are taught. And therefore you were incorrect when you said "it is not the actions of wicked men" that is the problem. Let's stop the rabbit trails and address the fact that scripture explicitly says Jesus bare our sins in his own body on the tree. Either stick to the point, start another thread of your own origin, or explain how that verse does not include deeds.Given these two positiins we need to discuss whether our actions make us who we are or whether who we are dictates our actions.
We need to discuss whether the problem of man is the things we do (sins) or our very nature (of the flesh rather than of the Spirit).
Isn't starting "a new thread using a quote from someone else as the first post" what YOU just did?First of all, you shouldn't start a new thread using a quote from someone else as the first post. That is misleading and I thought against the rules. But anyway:
One of the stranger features of @JonC's theology is that he seems to be clearer on what other people believe than he is about what he himself believes. I don't recall using the word "accountability" in any of my posts but that has not deterred him from claiming that I believe it.This thread is discussing two disagreements.
@Martin Marprelate views the cross as God as transferring our accountability for our actions to Christ, Christ suffering the punishment, and thus clearing man.
This is quite right, but only because Christ has taken away our sins.I view the cross as God reconciling man to Himself, not counting our sins against us, Christ being this reconciliation of God and man, the guarantor of a better covenant. In Christ we are predestined to be made like Him, predestined to righteousness and glory.
I have been looking for the post where I wondered if you were into Wesleyan perfectionism, but I can't seem to find it. But what led me to wonder was your statement that "We must die to sin. We must "die to the flesh". We must "put away our old self". This seemed to me to be a form of prectionism, not to mention salvation by works.@Martin Marprelate views my view, that at Judgment God will have accomplished a work in us that conforms us to Christ's image, as Wesleyan theology.
No doubt @DaveXR650 will answer for himself, but I think you are in error to try to separate sins too far from sinfulness. We sin because we are sinful; we are sinful because we sin. But as I wrote above, 'And the LORD has laid our iniquities [sins, not sinfulness] on Him.' 'He Himself bore our sins [not sinfulness] in His own body on the tree.'@DaveXR650 holds that men become wicked when they sin. Therefore the problem of man is man's actions.
I believe that our sins are fruits of our wickedness (Gal 5), that we sin because we are wicked. Therefore the problem of man is man.
No Deacon. This is why I'm complaining. I did not start this thread.Isn't starting "a new thread using a quote from someone else as the first post" what YOU just did?
One thing I have noticed is that when I try to be open minded and read theologians who like to explore all the inclusive and multifaceted aspects of the atonement you get into the problem @JonC illustrates on these threads. It seems that when we do that there is a danger of neglecting the actual taking of our sin upon Christ. Most don't go so far as denying this to be true, but there is a preference for the more ethereal and corporate aspects to be emphasized. Blood being shed of the most Holy One for our actual sins is gut wrenchingly humbling, especially when you are forced to take it personally, not corporately, and not with a theological or cosmic vagueness, that keeps us all in the same boat.No doubt @DaveXR650 will answer for himself, but I think you are in error to try to separate sins too far from sinfulness. We sin because we are sinful; we are sinful because we sin. But as I wrote above, 'And the LORD has laid our iniquities [sins, not sinfulness] on Him.' 'He Himself bore our sins [not sinfulness] in His own body on the tree.'
I didn't. I started it with post #5.First of all, you shouldn't start a new thread using a quote from someone else as the first post.
I actually was trying to discuss a point he and Martin brought up.Isn't starting "a new thread using a quote from someone else as the first post" what YOU just did?
You are distracting from the actual subject.One thing I have noticed is that when I try to be open minded and read theologians who like to explore all the inclusive and multifaceted aspects of the atonement you get into the problem @JonC illustrates on these threads. It seems that when we do that there is a danger of neglecting the actual taking of our sin upon Christ. Most don't go so far as denying this to be true, but there is a preference for the more ethereal and corporate aspects to be emphasized. Blood being shed of the most Holy One for our actual sins is gut wrenchingly humbling, especially when you are forced to take it personally, not corporately, and not with a theological or cosmic vagueness, that keeps us all in the same boat.
I urge everyone on here, to look up and read theologians who are against penal substitution. Read what they say, and even more importantly, read what else they say about other Christian theology and decide for yourself where you think they are coming from. You will become very concerned if you do this and understand why John Owen said that denial of penal substitution is a damnable heresy and why J. C. Ryle said it is the "core" of Christianity.
Where we end up on the Atonement is directly related to where we are on other things. I still have not found any theologian who denies PSA and is sound otherwise. That is not changing the subject or ad hominem attack.You are distracting from the actual subject.
Where we end up on our view of Atonement depends on where we start.
After all your lecturing on how you only use the Bible this is astounding. Jesus bore our nature in his own body on the cross I guess. Except that's not what it says. If you would humble yourself enough to realize that previous generations may have actually thought through some of these things you would realize that if you looked at a systematic theology, or if you just would keep all the other scriptures in your mind at the same time, you would understand that we indeed are given new natures, that we indeed must consciously repent and believe and avoid sin and pursue holiness or else we will not be saved - and, that at the Atonement Christ bore our sins in his own body on the cross. One being true does not make the other false.I believe that sins are manifestations of our wickedness . So I believe the problem addressed by the Atonement is our nature.
OK. I notice it was Ken who used accountability (he presented this as imputation also). Sorry if I took his comments as yours.One of the stranger features of @JonC's theology is that he seems to be clearer on what other people believe than he is about what he himself believes. I don't recall using the word "accountability" in any of my posts but that has not deterred him from claiming that I believe it.
However, let's get to the Scriptures. Isaiah 53:6. 'All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned, every one, to his own way; and the LORD has laid on Him [Christ] the iniquity of us all.' Note that it is not our "accountability," nor, in the light of @JonC's post #4. our sinfulness that is laid upon our Lord, but the sins themselves. Now this is Scripture; it is not @JonC's philosophy. Our sins were laid upon the Lord Jesus, and according to 1 Peter 2:24, He bore them in His own body. This can only mean that He paid the penalty for them (c.f. Isaiah 53:5, of course).
Now that does not change our sinful nature, but it does ake away our sins and enables God justly to see us as sinless (Heb. 10:17-18).
But God does not leave us where He finds us. Once His justice has been satisfied, Christ returns to heaven, and the Holy Spirit is poured our giving us that new heart and new spirit. But we are not made sinless. @JonC wrote on the previous thread, "We must die to sin. We must "die to the flesh". We must "put away our old self". This is an error. It has already happened through our union with Christ (Romans 6:1-2; Gal. 2:20). However, there is a remnant of sin that dwells, not in the essential us (Rom. 7:17, 20), but in our bodies, our flesh (v.18), and this sin is what is constantly seeking to bring us down, and we have to be utterly ruthless in putting it to death (Col. 3:1-10). But battle as we will, we will never put this sin utterly to death. In this life, we shall always be debtors to mercy (1 John 1:7-2:2). When Christ returns, of course, and we receive our new resurrection bodied, we shall, of course be finished with sin forever. I explained all this in more detail in the previous thread.
This is quite right, but only because Christ has taken away our sins.
I have been looking for the post where I wondered if you were into Wesleyan perfectionism, but I can't seem to find it. But what led me to wonder was your statement that "We must die to sin. We must "die to the flesh". We must "put away our old self". This seemed to me to be a form of prectionism, not to mention salvation by works.
No doubt @DaveXR650 will answer for himself, but I think you are in error to try to separate sins too far from sinfulness. We sin because we are sinful; we are sinful because we sin. But as I wrote above, 'And the LORD has laid our iniquities [sins, not sinfulness] on Him.' 'He Himself bore our sins [not sinfulness] in His own body on the tree.'
Exactly. That is why it is so important a topic. And that is why I believe we have to believe God's actual words on this one.Where we end up on the Atonement is directly related to where we are on other things.
Did you even read my post? Here it is again, from above:What evidence do you have that the "problem" of man is not man's nature but man's behavior (that one becomes wicked when they do wicked things)?
No one is denying that our sins are a manifestation of what we are. That's why I don't like the way you started a new thread with me appearing to take that position, falsely, when I was answering an incorrect post you had made where you specifically denied that what we do matters. I get tired of you trying to obscure things with side arguments. Both things are in play. You do because of what you are and what you are is blameable because of what you do.
1 Corinthians 15:22, For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.You ever wonder how the actual wicked got wicked? Like maybe at some point they did something wicked?