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Here is the link to this week's Sabbath School Lesson Study and Discussion Material: Click Here
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Re: Lesson #6 - Expounding the FAITH
[Re: Daryl]
#126638
08/04/10 05:41 PM
08/04/10 05:41 PM
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I like the following EGW quote taken from Thursday's material: “The second Adam was a free moral agent, held responsible for his conduct. Surrounded by intensely subtle and misleading influences, He was much less favorably situated than was the first Adam to lead a sinless life. Yet in the midst of sinners He resisted every temptation to sin, and maintained His innocency. He was ever sinless.”—Ellen G. White Comments, The SDA Bible Commentary, vol. 6, p. 1074.
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Re: Lesson #6 - Expounding the FAITH
[Re: Tom]
#126660
08/09/10 03:32 PM
08/09/10 03:32 PM
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Posts: 6,154
Brazil
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What was the position before the 1950's and what is the position now? In fact, I wonder if there is any position now.
I don't think Paul is being made to deal with an issue he is not dealing with. In fact, Ellen White expands on Paul in quotes like the following ones:
"The inheritance of children is that of sin. Sin has separated them from God. Jesus gave His life that He might unite the broken links to God. As related to the first Adam, men receive from him nothing but guilt and the sentence of death." {9MR 236.1}
"Christ volunteered to come to this earth and stand at the head of fallen human beings, who were heirs of guilt, under sentence of eternal death. We must have perished had He not borne our guilt and the wrath of God." {12MR 61.1}
"We have reason for ceaseless gratitude to God that Christ, by His perfect obedience, has won back the heaven that Adam lost through disobedience. Adam sinned, and the children of Adam share his guilt and its consequences; but Jesus bore the guilt of Adam, and all the children of Adam that will flee to Christ, the second Adam, may escape the penalty of transgression." {FW 88.3}
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Re: Lesson #6 - Expounding the FAITH
[Re: Rosangela]
#126667
08/09/10 09:51 PM
08/09/10 09:51 PM
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Active Member 2012
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Lawrence, Kansas
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What was the position before the 1950's and what is the position now? In fact, I wonder if there is any position now. Before the 1950's, it was basically what Jones and Waggoner taught. "Bible Reading for the Home" quoted from Waggoner in regards to the questions related to Christ's humanity. I think the Palmdale Conference in around 1976 said that either pre or post positions were acceptable. How that works out varies from place to place. In the U.S., I would say one could hold either position as an employee without a problem. In Brazil, it appeared to me that if you were a post, you'd better be very careful. Since you're living there, I'd be interested in your perspective. At any rate, opinion in the U.S. is much more divided than there. In Brazil, what I perceived, rightly or wrongly, was that many of the posts were negative in regards to the organization. I don't see that so much here. There are some like that, but there are many just "regular" SDA's who are posts, who have no issues with leadership. I don't think Paul is being made to deal with an issue he is not dealing with. I think most people have very little idea, if even that, as to what the culture was like in Paul's time, or the issues he was dealing with. He is interpreted with post-reformation lenses, and pretty much totally without regard to historical considerations. I don't see that the EGW quotes have anything to do with either Paul's culture or the issues he was facing. I don't think it was her function to do this (to be a Pauline scholar) however. If you recall what Kevin wrote (Kevin H.) in regards to EGW's ministry and writings, I thought he did a good job explaining it.
Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
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Re: Lesson #6 - Expounding the FAITH
[Re: Tom]
#126682
08/10/10 01:54 PM
08/10/10 01:54 PM
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Brazil
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R: What was the position before the 1950's and what is the position now? In fact, I wonder if there is any position now. T: Before the 1950's, it was basically what Jones and Waggoner taught. ... I think the Palmdale Conference in around 1976 said that either pre or post positions were acceptable. In fact, I was just taking issue with their assertion: One point they argue over is: in what way was Adam’s sin passed on to his posterity? Did Adam’s descendants share the guilt of Adam’s sin, or are they guilty before God because of their own sin? Though folk have tried to get the answer to that question from this text, that’s not the issue Paul was dealing with. To me, trying to evade the implications of what Paul is saying is, as we say here, trying to block the sunlight with a sieve. It's obvious we share Adam's guilt. Ellen White says this clearly. I hadn't yet realized why SDA theologians stay on the fence about this subject, but what you said opened my eyes. If sin is just an act of the will, nobody is born in sin, and if theologians assume the position that man is born in sin they will automatically be assuming the pre-fall position, and they can't do that, since the Church allows for both positions. Therefore, they contradict themselves all the time. In the section on "Sin" in the Handbook of Seventh-Day Adventist Theology, for instance, John Fowler says that sin is a state (p. 246), a state of rebellion, and then says that "tendency to sin ... is not sin" (p. 257). But of course tendencies to sin are rebellious tendencies. In Brazil, it appeared to me that if you were a post, you'd better be very careful. Since you're living there, I'd be interested in your perspective. At any rate, opinion in the U.S. is much more divided than there. In Brazil, what I perceived, rightly or wrongly, was that many of the posts were negative in regards to the organization. I don't see that so much here. There are some like that, but there are many just "regular" SDA's who are posts, who have no issues with leadership. I would say your assessment of the situation is correct. Since most posts are negative in regards to the organizations, those in the post camp are viewed suspiciously.
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