Brother Bob said:
Try this one Ed; The reason I remembered so was the fact that you would agree with that. If you supported something you didn't really read carefully, then I can accept that Ed, as a matter of fact, I hope you did misread it.
EdSutton
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: KY
Posts: 2,670
RE: Under Grace or Under Law?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
DHK
Please Bob don't take anything personal. i was writing as objectively as possible using the word "you" generically, meaning anyone, not you personally.
I use the sin of adultery as an example because I know that it is a horrid sin in the eyes of most here. Your definition of a sin unto death and my definition of the same are quite a bit different. Adultery is not a "sin unto death," and one cannot prove it to be so. Perhaps another thread should be started on "sin unto death" or even a bit broader as "types of sin." But adultery does not fall there. Adultery is the same as lying. It is a transgression of the law. They are both breaking the Ten Commandments. So what is the difference in God's sight? None. It is just as bad to die with an unconfessed lie as it is to die with unconfessed adultery or in the act of adultery. What is the difference?
My sins are paid for. They were paid for at the time of salvation. They are under the blood. The minute I put conditions on the work of Christ--like saying that the sin must be confessed before I die, then I take away from grace, and my faith turns into a religion of works. It is no more of grace but of works. One cannot impose conditions on the salvation that Christ provided without any conditions.
Well said, Preach on!
Ed
This was in a now closed thread, so that is why I did not see it. I did not misread it, And I do agree with this (DHK's) post, fully.
Adultery is breaking the seventh commandment. That is certainly clear. Lying which is bearing false witness is breaking the ninth commandment. That is certainly clear, as well. What is the difference, there? Did I miss it?
Let's try this, since you seem to keep bringing up someone dying while physically in the act of adultery. Still adultery. Would that be different from dying while physically in the act of bearing false witness? Still bearing false witness. Again, if so, how do the two differ?
Could adultery be a "sin unto death"? Maybe, I guess, but Scripture does not declare that that is the sin unto death, anywhere I have seen. Could bearing false witness be a "sin unto death"? Again maybe, I guess, but Scripture does not declare that it is the sin unto death, anywhere that I have seen.
Let's try one more. One person dies while physically 'engaged' in the act of adultery. At the same time a second person dies shortly after commiting the same act, and before ever "confessing" it. A third person at the same time, again, dies after over sixty years since his or her one and only act of adultery, but that person was a teenager who was/is saved when he or she were twelve, committed the act when they were 18, and died at 80, "re-dedicated" (whatever that means) their life at 20, but because of 'shame' did not 'confess' to anyone that sin from two years prior, and apparently 'served the Lord' faithfully for 60 years, having basically forgotten that one-time adulterous episode. And a fourth, some faithful Christian for thirty years, who had never enen entertained such a thought prior, was driving down the road past the beach, and the most magnificent physical specimen they had ever seen, walked by wearing a hankerchief sized tight bathing suit, and for the first time, in their life, was tempted and actually looked on another with lust, and simultaneously was hit and killed in a car accident, all at the same time as the first three.
It is your contention, according to your posts, that all four of these individuals would be lost individuals. I guess that the blood of the risen Lord, the second two were trusting in, was not really sufficient or able, alone, to take away their sin. God must have needed some help with that, I guess.
What is the basis for salvation, if the blood doesn't take away our sin? What is left but a "religion of works"? According to what you believe, one could never hope to know if they were saved until after they died, and then Scripture tells us it is too late. This teaching is just as arbitrary as the so-called "Calvinism" you often decry, and that rightly, BTW, but it is in fact, no different. There can be no such thing as knowing you are saved. And in the final analysis, you or I are the one responsible for being saved.
And unless one is the biggest egotist I've ever seen, one cannot say that they have loved the Lord with all the heart, all the mind, all the soul, and all the strength, and their neighbour as theirself, since that would be the sinless perfection you advocate, regardless of how you chose to word it. "And if we say we have no sin, we decieve ourselves and the truth is not in us." (I Jn. 1:8)
So which is it? I cannot speak for DHK; I cannot speak for Claudia; I cannot speak for Mike; I cannot speak for BrotherBob; I cannot speak for any but Ed, and like Paul, "I know Whom I have believed and am persuaded that He is able to keep that which I have committed unto Him against that day." Even if I were to die with some "unconfessed sin."
Ed