Heavenly Pilgrim
New Member
Strictly speaking, nothing is sin that is not a willful transgression of a known commandment of God.
Hows that? Better?
Hows that? Better?
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Strictly speaking, nothing is sin that is not a willful transgression of a known commandment of God.
Hows that? Better?![]()
I would say, yes, if in fact the omission is willful. Sin is not an omission of something not known and not willfully omitted. Disagree? Possibly you might have a Scripture?
Strictly speaking, nothing is sin that is not a willful transgression of a known commandment of God.
Hows that? Better?![]()
Strictly speaking, nothing is sin that is not a willful transgression of a known commandment of God.
Hows that? Better?![]()
Pastor David: You seem to believe a person can act apart from their will.
PD: All acts are acts of our will, i.e. willfully committed, or not.
PD: So, yes. I would reference James 4:17, "Therefore to him that knoweth to do good, and doeth it not, to him it is sin."
Pastor David: Sin is missing the mark of God's prefect righteousness. And since no man, save Jesus, was or is perfect, every person sins in thought, word and deed. Or as the old saying goes, there's a pound of flesh in all we do.
HP: Absolutely one can act against apart from ones will. Have you ever heard of an accident? I can remember waking up one morning and sticking a cue tip in my ear, when I had a quick muscle spasm and sent the cue tip right though my ear drum. Trust me, that was an act apart from my will.
HP: Simply not true. The above is a clear illustration of an act I did that in no way was a product of my will. It was an involuntary act due to a muscle spasm. Legion are the illustrations I could give.
HP: Not so fast,. You have not proven in any way that all acts are acts of the will as you claim they are. Establish that point first. The Scripture you cite does not establish your point in the least.
Pastor David:Ok, this is getting a little immature. Obviously, if I sneeze I have acted in an involuntary manner. When any rational adult speaks of 'acts of the will' they are speaking of moral actions; those capable of being judged morally right or wrong. I think I'll bow out of this, and let the kids play.
Sin, "hamartia" - "to miss the marlor wander from the path of uprightness and honour, to do or go wrong"
Pastor David: All acts are acts of our will, i.e. willfully committed, or not.
HP: If it is getting immature, it is a direct result of your comment. You cannot blame anyone but yourself, unless you were under some coercion to make the comment you did. You said:
HP: Take this discussion to a level you see as mature. You need to say what you believe or change what you say. :wavey:
Post your Scripture that states sin is missing the mark.
HP: Your comment show clearly that you have not or will not separate moral issues from involuntary actions. You cannot say what you said and then say 'but I am only referring to moral actions,' because there is a stark contradiction between you first remark and your last. Involuntary acts of the sensibility are acts but do not involve the will nor are they moral. Choosing to wipe your runny nose is indeed and act of the will but not a moral act. Even though such an act is not morla, it certainly does involve the will.Pastor David: All acts are acts of our will, i.e. willfully committed, or not."
Pastor, from your comments as to what you see as sin in your own life, you simply do not understand what morality entails and the principles that define it. Your statement that said:
HP: Your comment show clearly that you have not or will not separate moral issues from involuntary actions. You cannot say what you said and then say 'but I am only referring to moral actions,' because there is a stark contradiction between you first remark and your last. Involuntary acts of the sensibility are acts but do not involve the will nor are they moral. Choosing to wipe your runny nose is indeed and act of the will but not a moral act. Even though such an act is not morla, it certainly does involve the will.
You need to tell us how you separate acts of the will that are moral and acts of the will that are not moral, and both of those from involuntary acts. You might just start with defining what you mean by moral.
This is not childish Pastor. If you are going to speak of moral actions you better be able to define what you mean by that term and what you do not mean. To just make a blanket statement as you did serves only to confuse and camouflage the truth.
Pastor David: Moral actions are defined by God's law. We sin when we fail to meet the standards of God moral law. Your failure to grasp basic biblical doctrine is disconcerting. I.m willing to help you but you need to display a teachable spirit in ord er for me to do so.
Pastor David: : Moral actions are defined by God's law.
Pastor David: We sin when we fail to meet the standards of God moral law.
I personally like Wesleys definition which I most often use. He defined sin as I did several times above.
Strictly speaking, nothing is sin but willful disobedience to a known commandment of God.