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Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith?
[Re: Tom]
#127988
10/04/10 09:51 PM
10/04/10 09:51 PM
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T:No, they're not just made on the basis of our DNA. There are also external forces which impact the decisions we make, which is why parental influence is so important. If DNA were the only thing that mattered, it wouldn't matter how one was raised.
R:I said this happens at a very young age, by which I mean few weeks/months after birth. As children begin to interact more and more with others, they are more and more subject to external influences. Prenatal influences are important as well. Our decisions are not just made on the basis of our DNA.
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: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith?
[Re: Tom]
#127989
10/04/10 09:57 PM
10/04/10 09:57 PM
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T:If by "nature" you mean "flesh," that's not the case, in addition to not being obvious.
R:Didn't Christ assume human nature? And doesn't human nature include the mind? Or are you affirming that human nature doesn't include the mind? What this talking about? Please quote enough to know what the context is. I've said on many occasions that "nature" can be ambiguous. That's why I'm explaining what "nature" means when I'm using the word. I don't believe that "sinful flesh" includes the mind. Here's the passage:
What she says in the passage is that flesh = fleshly lusts = carnal lusts. She also says that the flesh embraces "the lower, corrupt nature." Are you saying that the body is in itself the corrupt nature? Fleshly lusts or carnal lusts are perverted physical habits, and a habit does involve the mind.
"He [Paul] charges the Galatians, 'Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh.' He names some of the forms of fleshly lusts,-- 'idolatry, drunkenness, and such like.' And after mentioning the fruits of the Spirit, among which is temperance, he adds, 'And they that are Christ's have crucified the flesh, with the affections and lusts.'" {HR, November 1, 1882 par. 13}
I think that "sinful flesh" has to do with one's DNA. I think that "mind" has to do with the decisions one makes. I think when EGW says that the flesh, of itself, cannot act contrary to the will of God she means that the mind controls the temptations which come to us by means of the flesh, probably from the brain stem, the "lower passions" she refers to. Christ had the same DNA we have, the result of 6,000 years of sin, the same heredity that we share, the results of which are shown in the history of Christ's earthly ancestors. But Christ used His mind, which is capable of acting contrary to the will of God, to never do so, but to always say "no" to the temptations of His assumed fallen, sinful nature.
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: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith?
[Re: Tom]
#128000
10/05/10 02:24 PM
10/05/10 02:24 PM
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T: To disconnect from Jesus, one must resist the Holy Spirit, who is constantly seek to draw our attention to Jesus Christ. So disconnecting from Jesus is itself sin.
M: Tom, I disagree. Unconsciously, unwittingly neglecting to abide in Jesus is not a sin. However, immediately after we neglect to abide in Jesus we end up committing a sin. The two separate things happen nearly simultaneously.
T: As I pointed out, the Holy Spirit is constantly seeking to draw our attention to Christ (AA 52). Therefore to "disconnect" one must resist the Holy Spirit. Resiting the Holy Spirit is sin. Please note, I didn't write that "unconsciously, unwittingly neglecting to abide in Jesus is a sin," but that resisting the Holy Spirit is sin. Tom, does this mean you agree with me when I say - "Unconsciously, unwittingly neglecting to abide in Jesus is not a sin. However, immediately after we unconsciously, unwittingly neglect to abide in Jesus we end up committing a sin. The two separate things happen nearly simultaneously." By the way, I agree with you that consciously, deliberately resisting the wooing influence of the Holy Spirit is a sin. But I do not believe this happens while people are actively, aggressively abiding in Jesus. Do you agree?
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Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith?
[Re: Mountain Man]
#128015
10/05/10 07:28 PM
10/05/10 07:28 PM
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My point was that because the Holy Spirit is actually doing something, which is to constantly calls one's attention to Christ, in order to disconnect, one must resist the Holy Spirit, which is sin. So one cannot disconnect without sinning. That doesn't make sense to me.
Here's a problem with this idea. Who's responsible for our maintaining a connection with Christ? Under your view, we are, right? I suppose we do this by prayer, Bible study, etc. So this is a work that we do. So as long as we do this work, we are OK. So our abiding in Christ is dependent upon our works, which sounds like righteousness by works.
What I believe is that the Holy Spirit is constantly seeking to draw our attention to Christ, and our choice is either to His work, which is a faith response, or to choose to resist, which is unbelief. There are only two choices: faith (which keeps the connection) or unbelief (which is sin). ("Whatsoever is not of faith, is sin").
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: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith?
[Re: Tom]
#128031
10/06/10 09:05 PM
10/06/10 09:05 PM
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Brazil
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T:If by "nature" you mean "flesh," that's not the case, in addition to not being obvious.
R:Didn't Christ assume human nature? And doesn't human nature include the mind? Or are you affirming that human nature doesn't include the mind?
T: What this talking about? Please quote enough to know what the context is. I've said on many occasions that "nature" can be ambiguous. That's why I'm explaining what "nature" means when I'm using the word. I don't believe that "sinful flesh" includes the mind. However you define "nature," when Christ assumed the human nature He possessed a human mind, for every human being has a mind. And when we say that He had a divine mind, what we mean is not that He had a mind as God, but that He had a human mind controlled by divinity (as Adam's mind was, and as ours can be). However, human beings are not naturally born with a mind controlled by God, but with a mind in opposition to God. This mind is part and parcel of our sinful nature - and of course it's that mind - not our body - which leads us to sin. The duty of intelligent souls is to hold to the truth, to practice virtue. We are born with a disinclination to both. It is sad to find in one's own constitution an opposition to virtues that are commendable in the sight of God, as submission, charity, sweetness of spirit, and patience that will not be provoked. {TDG 34.3}
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Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith?
[Re: Rosangela]
#128034
10/06/10 09:38 PM
10/06/10 09:38 PM
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However you define "nature," when Christ assumed the human nature He possessed a human mind, for every human being has a mind. And when we say that He had a divine mind, what we mean is not that He had a mind as God, but that He had a human mind controlled by divinity (as Adam's mind was, and as ours can be). However, human beings are not naturally born with a mind controlled by God, but with a mind in opposition to God. This mind is part and parcel of our sinful nature - and of course it's that mind - not our body - which leads us to sin. I think the following makes the distinction well: He was made in the likeness of sinful flesh. Don't go too far. He was maade in the likeness of sinful flesh; not in the likeness of sinful mind. Do not drag His mind into it. He flesh was our flesh; but the mind as "the mind of Christ Jesus(A. T. Jones, GCB 237) The mind and flesh are two different things. That Christ took sinful flesh does not mean that He had a sinful mind. It means He had flesh like ours, which of itself cannot act contrary to the will of God, but which can, and does, tempt us, as it tempted Him. Nobody I am aware of who speaks of Christ's taking our sinful nature has the idea that this includes the mind. Can you cite even one person who has this idea? I can see why you would be against the idea that Christ would take our sinful nature if you include His mind as part of sinful nature, but nobody else has this idea, certainly not Jones or Waggoner, or Ellen White, or Prescott, or any one else of that era; nor have I heard of any postlapsarians (or even prelapsarians) that have this idea.
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: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith?
[Re: Tom]
#128036
10/07/10 10:14 AM
10/07/10 10:14 AM
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Brazil
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Tom, Most of the sinful tendencies we are born with are in our mind - not in our body. And, apart from physical impulses, what generates inward temptations are defective character traits.
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Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith?
[Re: Rosangela]
#128040
10/07/10 04:01 PM
10/07/10 04:01 PM
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Most of the sinful tendencies we are born with are in our mind - not in our body. And, apart from physical impulses, what generates inward temptations are defective character traits. Is a defective character trait a genetic thing? Would this be covered under the description of "sinful flesh"? In other words, I said "X has sinful flesh," would that mean that X has defective character traits?
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: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith?
[Re: Tom]
#128042
10/07/10 05:46 PM
10/07/10 05:46 PM
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Brazil
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Does "sinful flesh" include inherited sinful tendencies?
As I've said many times, character traits and tendencies are synonymous.
Each soul inherits certain un-Christlike traits of character. It is the grand and noble work of a lifetime to keep under control these tendencies to wrong. It is the little things that cross our path that are likely to cause us to lose our power of self-control. {HP 231.2}
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Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith?
[Re: Rosangela]
#128049
10/08/10 03:28 PM
10/08/10 03:28 PM
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OP
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Does "sinful flesh" include inherited sinful tendencies?
As I've said many times, character traits and tendencies are synonymous. Does this mean yes? It is your position that "sinful flesh" includes defective character traits and inherited sinful tendencies?
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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