Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
The Law was never intended to save anyone. By grace are we saved,,Old and New Testament....The Law is more of a mirror for to see and see our failure in relation to God....Our mirror cracks every glance.
Cheers,
Jim
The Law was never intended to save anyone. By grace are we saved,,Old and New Testament....The Law is more of a mirror for to see and see our failure in relation to God....Our mirror cracks every glance.
Cheers,
Jim
Yes there was something wrong with the law. It was not able to atone for sin and all sinned.
I think I understand what FAL is saying.
God did not give Israel commandments that were impossible to keep looking at each individually.
i.e. Every new moon you shall swim the length of the Mediterranean Sea.
Clearly impossible without divine intervention.
To pay a tithe of the increase of the land was entirely possible.
However, if we look at the 613 commandments of the Law of Moses as a collective then sooner or later we fail.
Thus the law provided for that expected failure through the sacrifices.
No one can keep the law perfectly.
Besides a (if not the) major function of the law is to produce evidence of that moral failure of the human race called sin.
Romans 3:19 Now we know that what things soever the law saith, it saith to them who are under the law: that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God.
HankD
It's that one cannot help but do it. The Commandment says, Thou shalt not covet. Covetousness is a desire like hunger. Now try to tell us that you have not coveted anything that is thy neighbor's, or that when you did (and do) it's only when you sat down and thought, "Hmm. I think I'll desire such and such."
Well Brother, the Law could, and did atone sins, but it(Law) could not blot them out. Every year, the High Priest would have to make an atonement for all of Israel, and if it was found pleasing, their sins were pushed ahead another year, but not blotted out. The next, the High would have to make an atonement for all of Israel.............
Jesus' blood blots out sin, the blood of bulls and goats(Law) never could. Gimme Grace every time!!
Well, even as great a man Paul was, he couldn't keep the Law.
Romans 7:7 What shall we say then? Is the law sin? God forbid. Nay, I had not known sin, but by the law: for I had not known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not covet.
The Law was our schoolmaster(teacher) that brought us unto Christ. Notice the word unto; it wasn't written into Christ, because Grace is what brings us into Christ.
In Hebrews Paul wrote about Abraham's two sons, Ishmael and Isaac. Ishmael was a child of the bondwoman(Law), and Isaac was the a child of the freewoman(Grace). We who are CHRISTians, are sons by the freewoman(Grace), and not of the bondwoman(Law).
The Law could never bring eternal life, but Grace does. If the Law could have saved anyone, then Jesus wasted His time dying for us. So even if you could keep the Law(commandments), this would never save you.
If anyone can keep the Law, then they are self-sufficient, and they do not need any help whatsoever. Keeping the commandments for salvation is a works based salvation, and Grace was tossed out the window. Give me Grace over Law anytime.
Thank you Salty as this is a much needed discussion. We have far too long made excuses for our sins by claiming we cannot keep the commandments.
I know of no rational parent that would give their child chores that they could not possible carry out and then discipline them for failing. Yet most of the church today accuses God fo doing just that. That means we think more of ourselves then we do God as we live by higher standards.
To hold a doctrine that we cannot keep the commandments is to suggest that we have a God who holds us accountable for things we cannot do. The truth is we have been commanded to keep them and we can, but we make willful choices to not keep them. There is no person alive who can name even one sin they have ever committed that they had to do. Every sin is a willful choice to go against the Lord.
It is not that we cannot keep them, it is that we choose not to. Until we can accept this truth we will never see just how sinful our hearts really are. I am afraid that we think too much of ourselves and too little of God.
There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man: but God [is] faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able; but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear [it].
Perhaps one could keep the law, on the outside, perfectly. I really doubt it. Paul, evidently did because he did claim that he was blameless. .
Oh Wreched man that I am, who shall deliver me from this body of death
Perhaps one could keep the law, on the outside, perfectly. I really doubt it. Paul, evidently did because he did claim that he was blameless. But, I'm not sure that signifies perfection on his part. No one is perfect. I think the question more so is about the heart. That puts the law on an entirely different matter. It's not enough to keep it on the outside. More so, one must keep it on the inside as well. There's not a man who has lived, is living now, or ever will live who can do this except for Jesus.
If we can make it 1 minute without sinning then we can make it an hour. If an hour then several hours and if several hours a day.
And if a day, why not a week? And if a week, why not a year? And if a year, why not a lifetime? Why haven't you lived a perfectly sinless life freeatlast?