You are entitled to your opinion but you are not entitled to your facts. Deuteronomy 29:4; Rom. 8:7; 1 Cor. 2:14; Eph. 2:1-3; 4:18 and many more speak directlty to the inabilityof the natural man in regard to spiritual abilities.
I don't dispute the facts regarding natural man's inability in regard to spiritual abilities. This is true even of the believer who has attained their salvation. Even a saved believer has no power or holiness but that which God works through them. They are equally depraved as an unsaved person if they choose to walk in the flesh rather than the spirit. What I am at odds with is the TULIP position on the matter, which is also at odds with your point of view, that states that man is so deprived that he is entirely unable to have the free will to choose God.
Deuteronomy 30 states:
Deu 30:19 I call heaven and earth to record this day against you, [that] I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing: therefore choose life, that both thou and thy seed may live:
Scripture explicitly states that he has placed before us a choice - life or death. Then he commands us to choose life.
As I read each of the scriptures you presented I am pressed with the notion that all of them deal with someone who has been transformed or "saved" but none of them explicitly deal with how that salvation is attained or instituted. They speak only of the distinction between the flesh and the spirit. The inability of natural man in regard to spiritual abilities has never been the point of the dispute with Calvinism and TULIP... what is in dispute is whether as human beings we have the free will to choose God or initiate the human side of the covenant. The Bible tells me that if I believe in God, God will renew me and give me life. Not that I was able to do anything, but in my choosing Jesus, who is the way the truth and the life, God does a mighty work in me to transform me from the kingdom of darkness to the kingdom of light.
You are born with a sinful nature, it is not something added after birth.
I agree... because all of us are born in a world marred by the death that was the result of Adam's sin (Rom 8:22). James says (James 1:14-15) we sin because we are drawn away by our own lusts. And when lust has conceived it brings for sin, and when sin is accomplished it brings forth death.
Ps 58:3 The wicked are estranged from the womb: they go astray as soon as they be born, speaking lies.
The term "estranged" means SEPARATED and that is what spiritual death is - separation from God. The words "go astray" is the concept of "sin" and the proof is the following words "speaking lies" and this is their condition/nature "from the womb" not from any experiential "fear"!!
So "the wicked are separated from the womb." Well anyone who has been born has been separated from their mother's womb. How does this verse explicitly state that Adam's sin is passed on, and not that death (death is simply separation from God) is passed on?
Additionally, do you honestly expect me to believe that you take this literally? That you believe a child can come out of the womb speaking -- and lies no less? In fact, this verse supports my view that death is passed because it says that they are separated, and then points to their own sin as the means to that separation.
Furthermore, how then would you reconcile Psalms 22:10?
Psa 22:10 I was cast upon thee from the womb: thou [art] my God from my mother's belly.
Rom. 5:19 For as by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous.
Paul speaking explicitly and clearly about how sin, death, condemnation entered into the human reace says it was BY ONE MAN'S DISOBEDIENCE many were "MADE SINNERS" not by fear!!!!!
Are you simply going to ignore this evidence and find some scripture that is not clear and not explicit but has to be INFERRED to contradict these plain scriptures that speak right to the point of this issue????????????
I could very well ask you the same questions in regard to ignoring explicit scripture. Do you ignore Romans 5:12 when it says explicitly "Death is passed" rather than saying that "Sin is passed"? Do you ignore Hebrews 2:15 which explicitly states that those were all their lifetime subject to bondage through their fear of death?
The verse says they were "made" sinners. "Made" is the same word as "charged" or "appointed". I can be charged with a crime and then be justified at the time of my hearing. Or I could be condemned at the time of the judgement.
Furthermore that a difference exists -
by one many are made sinners is NOT the same as
by one many are righteous within the latter half of the verse. We know from the previous context that it means by one man,
everyone has had death passed to them, and by one man,
some will have life passed to them (not everyone). You can take an explicit meaning from the verse, but you MUST explicitly take it in context and constrain it's explicit meaning by what has already been stated.
I agree, if you take it out of context, the verse explicitly states sin came from the one (meaning Adam). Had the meaning not been constrained by the context informing us explicitly that death is passed and not sin, we could misunderstand the verse.
No one disputes that Adam did not have a FALLEN nature BEFORE THE FALL!!!!!!
I, too, do not dispute the fact that Adam did
not have a fallen nature before the fall, and I am confused as to how you got the impression that this was my argument? Since there was no death before the fall, I don't see how a fear of death could have existed. Your argument demonstrates there has been a misunderstanding of my point somewhere.
Tell me, how many human beings were virgin born? ANSWER? None but Christ.
He still had a human mother. He called himself the "son of man". If he wasn't descended from Adam, then he wasn't qualified as a human being and couldn't die in our place.
Tell me was he "estranged" and did he tell lies "from the womb"????? Did he "go astray" AS SOON AS he was born? ANSWER: ALL but Christ. So are you going to tell us that the birth of Christ was no different than the birth of all other men??????
If he isn't a descendant of Adam then he isn't human and has no right to die for us. Do you think the genealogies in the scripture that clearly show Jesus heritage back to Adam are there for their entertainment value? Obviously his birth was unique, but clearly the Bible shows he is descended from Adam.
You said, you believed that he did not sin, knew no sin and neither could anyone find sin in him? How about all other human beings born into this world?????? Yet, he is said to have "FEARED":
Indeed, and his lack of sin made him special and unique in all of history. He was still tempted and tried with all the same temptations as every other man. The difference was, he didn't sin.
Heb 5:7 Who in the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death, and was heard in that he feared;
Now you say the sin nature is derived from FEAR not birth right? So Christ had no sinful nature until he "feared"?????????
No, I say sin nature is derived from our sin. We sin because we fear the death that has already corrupted us. We are slaves to sin through our feath of death. We do the things we do not want to do because sin is our master. We obey sin and subject ourselves to it's lusts and desires because of our fear of death.
In other words, we do not come into the light because our deeds are evil. We fear the judgement for our deeds... we fear death. So we are slaves to the darkness because we are afraid of our deeds being exposed by the light.
This is why John says,
1Jo 4:18 There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear: because fear hath torment. He that feareth is not made perfect in love.
You say one man's offence did not make all men sinners (calling Paul a liar) but it is fear that makes men sinners by nature right??????? If that is so, the Paul is a liar, and so is David a liar.
No so, Dr. Walter. I take them at their word - their full word - not just one phrase cherry picked out of context.
You say that men are not sinners until they actually sin. Whereas Paul say by one mans offence many were made sinners rather than by their own sin many were made sinners! Who do we believe? Paul or You?
Paul says "death is passed" not "sin is passed" therefore, I must accept that "by one mans offense many were made sinners" must be interpreted through that lens.
You ignored the evidence! It is PETER who is speaking of specific gentiles at the house of Corneilus of whom the church at Jerusalem speaks of in Acts 11:16! That is the context that precedes verse 16 in every verse of Acts 11:1-15!!!!!!! So your generic gentile interpretation is completely and totally contextually false!
So it is your contention that Peter's vision of the sheet being let down and God commanding him to eat was specific to a couple of individuals? What lengths you will go to in order to prove a point - you would desecrate this passage that gives hope to all gentiles who believe. Wow.