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Re: Lesson #9 - Freedom in CHRIST
[Re: Tom]
#127619
09/18/10 12:19 AM
09/18/10 12:19 AM
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Tom, What I’m saying is that love and selfishness are principles - principles which determine the way we act or react, which govern our unconscious impulses, which influence our feelings, which control our passions, which rule our character. If newborns have feelings, impulses, actions, reactions, they must be controlled either by love or by selfishness. The problem is not seeking to feed oneself, but your feelings, impulses and reactions when you wish your needs met and when they are not immediately met. Selfishness, or love to self, is just the principle of “me first.” And “me first” is the principle every human being, except Christ, was born with. Animals are also governed by the principle of “me first.” But, of course, they do not have a carnal mind. To mention just one thing, our sinful flesh tempts us, and this was true of Jesus Christ as well. Internal foes are generated by the carnal nature, and they occur because of idols and darling sins present in the heart. “Every obstacle, every internal foe, only increases your need of Christ. He came to take away the heart of stone, and give you a heart of flesh. Look to Him for special grace to overcome your peculiar faults. When assailed by temptation, steadfastly resist the evil promptings. . . . Cry to the dear Saviour for help to sacrifice every idol and to put away every darling sin. “ {AG 84.5} “There are idols within and idols without; but God sends the Holy Spirit as the reprover of sin, that his people may be warned of their apostasy, and rebuked for their backsliding.” {NPU Gleaner, April 21, 1909 par. 5} “In the battle with inward sin and outward temptation, even the wise and powerful Solomon was vanquished.” {PK 82.2} We must strive daily against outward evil and inward sin, if we would reach the perfection of Christian character. {RH, May 30, 1882 par. 1} R: But He overcame because of His divine mind - and this is our hope. T: Only if He overcame what we have to face. He didn’t face any idols and darling sins which posed inward temptations.
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Re: Lesson #9 - Freedom in CHRIST
[Re: Rosangela]
#127620
09/18/10 12:50 AM
09/18/10 12:50 AM
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That's fine: the point is..., that it's by choice and not by nature alone. It's the nature which produces the choices. As I use to say, there is no way a thornbush doesn't produce thorns. The physical nature of Jesus was weak like ours; He was a real man. The difference was in His moral nature - i.e., in His mind. Christ was born with a divine mind - a mind none of us is born with. But He overcame because of His divine mind - and this is our hope. "Divine mind"?...: He lived a human life despite his joint nature; that's no divine mind, but the Holy Spirit given him from his Father indwelling him, the Son of man. Submitting daily to the Spirit means that he possessed a sinful human mind which he daily equally denied. "The mind of Christ" is the exercise of opting for the spirit rather than the sinful mind & flesh of human existence. Christ teaches us to put that old man to death as we opt for the Spirit. This was a positive requirement of salvation he fulfilled in his own life, of course. As for "it's the nature that produces the choices": We are not born sinners! We were created with free choice, and God offers the power of salvation from sinful choices: Jesus took that offer and lived a perfect life as our Saviour. Sinful nature does not obligate us to sin...! Gal 5:17 spells doom for our sinful flesh, and Jesus perfected the formula before we experience it, too.
Last edited by Colin; 09/18/10 01:17 AM.
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Re: Lesson #9 - Freedom in CHRIST
[Re: Colin]
#127621
09/18/10 10:12 AM
09/18/10 10:12 AM
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Submitting daily to the Spirit means that he possessed a sinful human mind which he daily equally denied. Tsk, tsk... Christ with a sinful mind? This is absurd. Colin, what part of Christ was His divine nature? Sinful nature does not obligate us to sin...! It does. Sinful nature delights in sin. That's why you have to be born again.
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Re: Lesson #9 - Freedom in CHRIST
[Re: Rosangela]
#127624
09/18/10 04:00 PM
09/18/10 04:00 PM
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He didn’t face any idols and darling sins which posed inward temptations. If that be the case, then he did not save us from them in us, and so he failed in the mission of his name's meaning...! "...Jesus, for he shall save his people from their sins." In other words, attaining perfect Christian character is ruled out, and Adventism is dead.... ...if that be the truth. But, that is not the truth of the Bible and original Adventist teaching on Jesus, as we all know , there being now confusion and at least two schools of thought. Adventism needs the original position of the church restored to have the full gospel truth - amen! - as I've presented from the beginning of my posts on this Sabbath School lesson.
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Re: Lesson #9 - Freedom in CHRIST
[Re: Colin]
#127625
09/18/10 07:22 PM
09/18/10 07:22 PM
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Tom, What I’m saying is that love and selfishness are principles - principles which determine the way we act or react, which govern our unconscious impulses, which influence our feelings, which control our passions, which rule our character. If newborns have feelings, impulses, actions, reactions, they must be controlled either by love or by selfishness. If this were true, it would apply to fetuses as well (let's say age 6 months, to use your guess, which is fine). So, under this hypothesis, any impules, action, or reaction that a 6 month old fetus would have must be controlled by love or selfishness, but this doesn't make sense. Many of the impulses and reactions we have, even at our advanced age, are unconscious, like reflexes, digestion, all sorts of things. The brain conrolls all of these things, and it take a long time before a moral aspect enters into play. I don't see how one could reasonably ascribe a moral aspect to anything a 6 month old fetus does. Similarly with cats and other animals. They act on the basis of instinct. It's not immoral for a cat to meow because its hungry. The problem is not seeking to feed oneself, but your feelings, impulses and reactions when you wish your needs met and when they are not immediately met. The feeling would be one of hunger, for a cat, or newborn, and the impulse or action would be to try to attract the attention of the one who could provide food to provide it. Selfishness, or love to self, is just the principle of “me first.” And “me first” is the principle every human being, except Christ, was born with. A 6 month old fetus does not love at all. Whether you use Webster, or Ellen White, to define "love," the 6 month old fetus does not have it. Animals are also governed by the principle of “me first.” "Me first" is a moral principle. Animals have no concept of morality. The are guided by the instinct of self-preservation. But, of course, they do not have a carnal mind. But a 6 month old fetus does? What's the difference? (between the 6 month old fetus and the cat, in terms of morality) M:To mention just one thing, our sinful flesh tempts us, and this was true of Jesus Christ as well.
R:Internal foes are generated by the carnal nature, and they occur because of idols and darling sins present in the heart. You're conflating different concepts. One concept is "sinful flesh." "Carnal mind" is another concept. The flesh, of itself, cannot act contrary to the will of God. The mind can. "Carnal nature" involves the participation of the mind. "Sinful flesh" (or "sinful nature") does not. It's very important that we be careful and precise in our use of terms! For example, Christ took our sinful nature; we can say that. However, Christ did NOT take our carnal nature. Never does inspiration state this, although many times we are told that Christ took our sinful nature, or sinful flesh. Our flesh generates temptations, and our mind serves as an inbetween. The flesh, of itself, cannot act contrary to the will of God because the higher powers of the mind are involved whenever we make moral decisions. Christ had the same flesh we have, with the same generated temptations, but when these temptations passed by the higher powers of His mind, He always said, "No." So Christ never participated in sin, and so did not have a carnal, or sinning, nature. “Every obstacle, every internal foe, only increases your need of Christ. He came to take away the heart of stone, and give you a heart of flesh. Look to Him for special grace to overcome your peculiar faults. When assailed by temptation, steadfastly resist the evil promptings. . . . Cry to the dear Saviour for help to sacrifice every idol and to put away every darling sin. “ {AG 84.5}
“There are idols within and idols without; but God sends the Holy Spirit as the reprover of sin, that his people may be warned of their apostasy, and rebuked for their backsliding.” {NPU Gleaner, April 21, 1909 par. 5}
“In the battle with inward sin and outward temptation, even the wise and powerful Solomon was vanquished.” {PK 82.2}
We must strive daily against outward evil and inward sin, if we would reach the perfection of Christian character. {RH, May 30, 1882 par. 1} We have all (other then Christ) sinned, so we have temptations based on both the fact that we have sinful natures and sinful pasts. We need to overcome both types of temptations. R: But He overcame because of His divine mind - and this is our hope. T: Only if He overcame what we have to face.
R:He didn’t face any idols and darling sins which posed inward temptations.
If this were true, we would have no hope in overcoming these things. Our only hope in overcoming is in Christ. We cannot hope to do more than He did!, to overcome in areas where He didn't overcome. We're not asked to do what Christ did, and more, in addition to that, but rather, to make His victory ours.
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 #9 - Freedom in CHRIST
[Re: Colin]
#127629
09/19/10 02:51 AM
09/19/10 02:51 AM
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If He were not of the same flesh as are those whom He came to redeem, then there is no sort of use of His being made flesh at all. More than this: Since the only flesh that there is in this wide world which He came to redeem is just the poor, sinful, lost, human flesh that all mankind have; if this is not the flesh that he was made, then He never really came to the world which needs to be redeemed. For if he came in a human nature different from that which human nature in this world actually is, then, even though He were in the world, yet for any practical purposes in reaching man and helping him, he was as far from him as if He had never come, for, in that case, in His human nature He was just as far from man and just as much of another world as if He had never come into this world at all....
The faith of Rome as to the human nature of Christ and Mary and of ourselves springs from that idea of the natural mind that God is too pure and too holy to dwell with us and in us in our sinful human nature; that sinful as we are, we are too far off for Him in His purity and holiness to come to us just as we are.
The true faith--the faith of Jesus--is that, far off from God as we are in our sinfulness, in our human nature which He took, He has come to us just where we are; that, infinitely pure and holy as He is, and sinful, degraded, and lost as we are, He in Christ by His Holy Spirit will willingly dwell with us and in us to save us, to purify us, and to make us holy....
"When the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth His Son, made of a woman." Gal. 4:4.
"And the Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all." Isa. 53:6.
We have seen that in His being made of a woman, Christ reached sin at the very fountain head of its entrance into this world and that He must be made of a woman to do this. Also there was laid upon Him the iniquity, in the actual sins, of us all.
Thus all the sin of this world, from its origin in the world to the end of it in the world, was laid upon Him--both sin as it is in itself and sin as it is when committed by us; sin in its tendency and sin in the act: sin as it is hereditary in us, uncommitted by us; and sin as it is committed by us.
Only thus could it be that there should be laid upon Him the iniquity of us all. Only by His subjecting Himself to the law of heredity could He reach sin in full and true measure as sin truly is. Without this there could be laid upon Him our sins which have been actually committed, with the guilt and condemnation that belong to them. But beyond this there is in each person, in many ways, the liability to sin inherited from generations back which has not yet culminated in the act of sinning but which is ever ready, when occasion offers, to blaze forth in the actual committing of sins. David's great sin is an illustration of this. Ps. 51:5; 2 Sam. 11:2.
In delivering us from sin, it is not enough that we shall be saved from the sins that we have actually committed; we must be saved from committing other sins. And that this may be so, there must be met and subdued this hereditary liability to sin; we must become possessed of power to keep us from sinning--a power to conquer this liability, this hereditary tendency that is in us to sin.
All our sins which we have actually committed were laid upon Him, were imputed to Him, so that His righteousness may be laid upon us, may be imputed to us. Also our liability to sin was laid upon Him, in His being made flesh, in His being born of a woman, of the same flesh and blood as we are, so that His righteousness might be actually manifested in us as our daily life.
Thus He met sin in the flesh which He took and triumphed over it, as it is written: "God sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh." And again: "He is our peace,...having abolished in His flesh the enmity."
And thus, just as our sins actually committed were imputed to Him that His righteousness might be imputed to us, so His meeting and conquering in the flesh the liability to sin and in that same flesh manifesting righteousness, enables us in Him, and Him in us, to meet and conquer in the flesh this same liability to sin and to manifest righteousness in the same flesh.
And thus it is that for the sins which we have actually committed, for the sins that are past, His righteousness is imputed to us, as our sins were imputed to Him. And to keep us from sinning His righteousness is imparted to us in our flesh as our flesh, with its liability to sin, was imparted to Him. Thus He is the complete Saviour. He saves from all the sins that we have actually committed and saves equally from all the sins that we might commit dwelling apart from Him.
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 #9 - Freedom in CHRIST
[Re: Tom]
#127630
09/19/10 03:33 AM
09/19/10 03:33 AM
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Thus, both by heredity and by imputation, He was "laden with the sins of the world." And, thus laden, at this immense disadvantage He passed triumphantly over the ground where at no shadow of any disadvantage whatever, the first pair failed.(A.T.Jones, The Consecrated Way to Perfection) This brings out that *both* by heredity and imputation Christ was "laden with sin." It's true that Christ had no "darling sins" or "idols" of His own to overcome, but He had ours! Many look on this conflict between Christ and Satan as having no special bearing on their own life; and for them it has little interest. But within the domain of every human heart this controversy is repeated. Never does one leave the ranks of evil for the service of God without encountering the assaults of Satan. The enticements which Christ resisted were those that we find it so difficult to withstand. They were urged upon Him in as much greater degree as His character is superior to ours. With the terrible weight of the sins of the world upon Him, Christ withstood the test upon appetite, upon the love of the world, and upon that love of display which leads to presumption. These were the temptations that overcame Adam and Eve, and that so readily overcome us.
Satan had pointed to Adam's sin as proof that God's law was unjust, and could not be obeyed. In our humanity, Christ was to redeem Adam's failure. But when Adam was assailed by the tempter, none of the effects of sin were upon him. He stood in the strength of perfect manhood, possessing the full vigor of mind and body. He was surrounded with the glories of Eden, and was in daily communion with heavenly beings. It was not thus with Jesus when He entered the wilderness to cope with Satan. For four thousand years the race had been decreasing in physical strength, in mental power, and in moral worth; and Christ took upon Him the infirmities of degenerate humanity. Only thus could He rescue man from the lowest depths of his degradation.
Many claim that it was impossible for Christ to be overcome by temptation. Then He could not have been placed in Adam's position; He could not have gained the victory that Adam failed to gain. If we have in any sense a more trying conflict than had Christ, then He would not be able to succor us. But our Saviour took humanity, with all its liabilities. He took the nature of man, with the possibility of yielding to temptation. We have nothing to bear which He has not endured.
With Christ, as with the holy pair in Eden, appetite was the ground of the first great temptation. Just where the ruin began, the work of our redemption must begin. As by the indulgence of appetite Adam fell, so by the denial of appetite Christ must overcome. "And when He had fasted forty days and forty nights, He was afterward an hungred. And when the tempter came to Him, he said, If Thou be the Son of God, command that these stones be made bread. But He answered and said, It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God."
From the time of Adam to that of Christ, self-indulgence had increased the power of the appetites and passions, until they had almost unlimited control. Thus men had become debased and diseased, and of themselves it was impossible for them to overcome. In man's behalf, Christ conquered by enduring the severest test. For our sake He exercised a self-control stronger than hunger or death. And in this first victory were involved other issues that enter into all our conflicts with the powers of darkness.(DA 117) 1.With the terrible weight of the sins of the world upon Him, Christ withstood the test upon appetite, upon the love of the world, and upon that love of display which leads to presumption. Elsewhere EGW points out that it was this very fact, that Christ had the weight of the sins of the world upon Him, that made these temptations so difficult. Christ had *two* important aspects of temptation to overcome, "laden with sin" by "imputation and heredity" as Jones put it. 2.If we have in any sense a more trying conflict than had Christ, then He would not be able to succor us. The "in any sense" portion of the quote we wish to take notice of. For example, if we had "darling sins" and "idols" to face that in now way impacted Christ, that would be a sense that we have a more trying conflict than Christ had.' "We have nothing to bear which He has not endured." This makes the same point. Nothing to bear (including "darling sins" and "idols") 3."From the time of Adam to that of Christ, self-indulgence had increased the power of the appetites and passions, until they had almost unlimited control. Thus men had become debased and diseased, and of themselves it was impossible for them to overcome. In man's behalf, Christ conquered by enduring the severest test. For our sake He exercised a self-control stronger than hunger or death." This brings out that self-indulgence had increased the power of the appetites and passions. This is in the context of the temptations that Christ overcame and the nature that Christ assumed. Christ's assumed human nature thus involves far more than trivial factors such as being weak physically, or getting tired. It gets to the actual nitty-gritty that impacts us, and makes our temptations so difficult.
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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