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Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith? [Re: asygo] #129400
12/06/10 03:19 PM
12/06/10 03:19 PM
Mountain Man  Offline
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Originally Posted By: asygo
Originally Posted By: Mountain Man
Where there is no sin there is no guilt. Guilt is incurred by sinning.

Since the topic is about Jesus, let's pull it back a bit. Since Jesus did not sin, can we say that He had no guilt?

I believe that Jesus had the guilt of the world placed upon Him, not because He sinned, but by a different mechanism.

I agree with you. I also believe the "mechanism" involved Him becoming human and taking our fallen, sinful, guilty, condemned nature. In this way He bore the sins of the world from the moment He became human. The same "mechanism" enabled Him to be tempted the same way we are, and for the same reasons we are.

Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith? [Re: asygo] #129401
12/06/10 03:27 PM
12/06/10 03:27 PM
Mountain Man  Offline
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Originally Posted By: asygo
M: Guilt is not inherited.

A: I say that we receive from Adam guilt and the sentence of death. You disagree with that. Right?

M: Ellen, as you know, wrote both of the above. In light of everything she wrote about it (see copious quotes posted earlier), I believe we receive hardware and software from our parents and grandparents, dating all the way back to Adam, that results in us sinning naturally, instinctively from the moment we are consciously capable of reacting and responding to inside and outside stimuli (which begins in the womb), and we thereby incur guilt, condemnation, and the death sentence.

A: I agree with what you said. Yes, we receive bad equipment at birth, and we receive bad programming. And when one uses the bad equipment to execute the bad programs, guilt and condemnation and death are incurred.

But I also agree with what EGW said, as she said it. We receive from Adam guilt and death. She didn't say we receive the possibility to earn guilt and death. She didn't say we receive the inclination toward guilt and death. She said we receive them.

Which form of guilt condemns us in final judgment - inherited or cultivated? Quotes please. I looked long and hard for a quote from the Bible and the SOP to support the idea that we inherit the sin and guilt Adam incurred when he ate the forbidden fruit, and that we must, therefore, repent of his sin so that God can pardon and save us.

Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith? [Re: asygo] #129404
12/06/10 04:18 PM
12/06/10 04:18 PM
Mountain Man  Offline
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Originally Posted By: asygo
Originally Posted By: Mountain Man
I do not believe guilt is inherited. Guilt is the direct result of sinning. Parents cannot sin and incur guilt and bequeath it to their children. Instead, what happens is children inherit the traits and tendencies their parents cultivated and strengthened, and the children in turn are predisposed and more likely to repeat the same types of sins and thereby incur guilt.

Do you agree?

No, I do not. And here is the crux of the relation between our understanding of human nature - ours and Christ's - and RBF.

Let me try to summarize our difference, and tell me if I got it right.

I believe that we were made sinners by one man's disobedience - Adam's. You believe that we become sinners when we individually sin for ourselves. I am a sinner because Adam sinned, while you are a sinner because you sinned like Adam sinned.

Here's the flip side. I believe that we are made righteous by one Man's obedience - Christ's. To remain consistent, you must believe that we become righteous when we individually obey for ourselves. I am righteous because Jesus obeyed, while you are righteous because you obey like Jesus obeyed.

For you, sin and righteousness are earned by the person copying his father. For me, sin and righteousness are inherited by the person from his father.

For you, the key is to emulate the right father. For me, the key is to have the right father.

So what should we do if we find that we are born of Adam, and inherit from him nothing but guilt and the sentence of death? Switch to a new Father by being born again, born from above, and inherit life and holiness. The old man dies, and the new man walks in newness of life. That's RBF, IMO.

I like how you compared and contrasted the two views you articulated. And, I agree with your conclusions. However, my view is different in key ways.

1. "The soul that sinneth, it shall die."

2. "The son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the son: the righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him."

3. "The wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him."

3. "Sin is the transgression of the law."

4. "All have sinned."

5. "The wages of sin is death."

6. No one can sin for another. Sin incurs guilt. No one can incur guilt for another. Neither sin nor guilt is inherited or transferred.

7. Righteousness is the result of rebirth and right doing. No one can experience righteousness for another. In judgment "they shall but deliver their own souls by their righteousness."

8. Salvation involves three separate, but interrelated, steps: 1) justification, 2) sanctification, and 3) glorification.

9. Justification frees us from the penalty of sin. It accommodates past sins repented of and pardoned. The benefits of Jesus' shed blood is applied to satisfy the just and loving demands of law and justice. His righteousness takes the place of their sinfulness.

10. Sanctification frees us from the power of sin. It is the lifelong process of growing in grace and maturing in the fruits of the Spirit. It has nothing to do with sinning and repenting and pardon or gradually outgrowing sinful habits and practices. "Christ in you" results in righteousness by faith and is new, original, and unborrowed.

11. Glorification frees us from the presence of sin. In judgment Jesus will blot out our record and memory of sin and place them upon the head of Satan, the scapegoat, who will perish with our sins and second death in the lake of fire.


12. "He came unto His own, and His own received Him not. But as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on His name: which were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God." This grace is not inherited. {16MR 100.4}

13. The old nature, born of blood and the will of the flesh, cannot inherit the kingdom of God. The old ways, the hereditary tendencies, the former habits, must be given up; for grace is not inherited. {Mar 237.1}

14. But while God can be just, and yet justify the sinner through the merits of Christ, no man can cover his soul with the garments of Christ's righteousness while practicing known sins or neglecting known duties. {FW 100.1}

15. God requires the entire surrender of the heart, before justification can take place; and in order for man to retain justification, there must be continual obedience, through active, living faith that works by love and purifies the soul. {FW 100.1}

Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith? [Re: Mountain Man] #129411
12/06/10 05:49 PM
12/06/10 05:49 PM
asygo  Offline
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Just a quickie.

Originally Posted By: Mountain Man
1. "The soul that sinneth, it shall die."

Did Jesus sin? Did Jesus die?


By God's grace,
Arnold

1 John 5:11-13
And this is the testimony, that God gave us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life. I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life.
Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith? [Re: Mountain Man] #129412
12/06/10 09:00 PM
12/06/10 09:00 PM
Rosangela  Offline
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Quote:
I did a search of the SOP and couldn't find where she said Adam was created with "a character".

?
Mike, you yourself posted the quote:

"In the beginning, man was created in the likeness of God, not only in character, but in form and feature." {GC 644.3}

Also, there is the quote I posted in my post #129282:

"God gave our first parents a pure and upright character, in harmony with His law; and had they remained obedient, they would have bequeathed the same character to their posterity." {BEcho, July 29, 1895 par. 2}

Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith? [Re: Mountain Man] #129415
12/06/10 09:52 PM
12/06/10 09:52 PM
Tom  Offline OP
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Originally Posted By: asygo
In any case, he said what he said. You think he would agree with Jones, but that contradicts his own words, which he has published and not recanted. So the current status is that LK teaches that Jesus was like us from the neck up, as Gregory taught.


I don't think this is correct. That is, LK is not disagreeing with what Jones said. Also, Gregory is not disagreeing with what Jones said either. Gregory was dealing with a different issue.

Gregory was dealing with the question of whether or not Christ had a human mind. Nobody in our present discussion is taking the point of view that Christ did not have a human mind, so this is a moot point, as far as our discussion is concerned.

When A. T. Jones spoke of Christ's not being made in the likeness of sinful mind, he wasn't arguing that Christ had a human mind, and that it would be incorrect to say that Christ did not.

Gregory, in his comments regarding Christ's having a human mind was directed against the idea that Christ didn't have a human mind, which he made clear by arguing that the Scripture says that Christ grew in wisdom. He (Gregory) said it wouldn't make sense to say that Christ's body grew in wisdom. Therefore it must have been referring to Christ's mind, and Christ therefore had a human mind.

LK was making the argument that Christ could not have had an advantage over us, by being omniscient, which was spoke about in his "loaded gun" analogy. So when LK spoke of Christ's being like us "from the neck up" he was speaking in terms of Christ's not being omniscient.

It's not clear to me why LK would link Christ's not being omniscient to what Christ's assumed human nature was like. The SOP spoke of Christ's taking "our sinful nature" upon His sinless nature, and also of Christ's not being able to be tempted as God, but was tempted as we are as man. So it seems to me entirely possible that one could believe that Christ was omniscient, but chose not to use that omniscience, while He lived here in the flesh, but had an assumed human nature which was like our own. Also it seems to me possible that one could believe that Christ had a sinless human nature, such as Adam had before the fall, yet was not omniscient.


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.
Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith? [Re: Mountain Man] #129419
12/06/10 11:41 PM
12/06/10 11:41 PM
Tom  Offline OP
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Posts: 14,795
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Quote:
R: To me it’s obvious she is talking about sinful tendencies passed through birth inheritance from Adam to his offspring.
T: She refers to Adam, but that's not the subject of her statement, right?

R:The statement says, "The tendencies thus cultivated are transmitted to the offspring, as Adam's disobedience was transmitted to the human family.” {ST, May 27, 1897 par. 8}
How are cultivated tendencies transmitted to the offspring? How was Adam's disobedience (a cultivated tendency) transmitted to the human family?


Tendencies are passed by means of influence and DNA.

When Adam and Eve sinned, it did something to their DNA, which was passed on to their descendants. If I develop the ability to play the piano or learn a foreign language, that's not passed on genetically to my offspring, although whatever genetic abilities I had could be. This is correct, isn't it? Assuming so, Adam's case would seem to be a special case.

Quote:

R: Is it your contention that Adam transmitted sinful tendencies to his children only through his example?
T: No. And similarly for parents today. Both cultivated and potential tendencies are passed from parent to their children, the former by influence and the latter by DNA.

R:This one is new to me.


I think this is a pretty standard idea. That is, through DNA attributes are passed genetically, and by influence they are passed non-genetically.

Quote:
Could you define "potential tendencies"?


A tendency towards something that one might or might not act on. For example, one could have perfect pitch, but never become a musician.

Quote:
T:We don't pass cultivated tendencies by our DNA, right? For example, your former infatuation with soaps isn't passed through your children my means of your DNA, is it?

R:Curiously, some affirm there is a genetic linkage:
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/162833/the_7_warning_signals_of_soap_opera.html?cat=39


How did you find this? This was an interesting article!

Quote:
Because this addiction is generally passed genetically through the mother- a son can be involved -but is often more afraid to admit the problem and so will not seek help as soon as their female counterpart.


This was an interesting sentence. Kind of makes one question how accurate the rest of the article is.

Quote:
Anyway, yes, I believe cultivated tendencies are transmitted as a birth inheritance, although I don’t see how this can be done by means of the DNA.


I can see how if the mother has a drug addiction, or is nervous, or angry, etc., that things like this would be passed on, but a cultivated tendency like playing the piano or learning a language; I don't see how that could be passed on as a birth inheritance, other than that one is born into a family of musicians.

Quote:

T: Neural pathway is developed. It's not DNA.
R: ??? What you are affirming does not make sense. I’ve just affirmed that there are innate neural pathways. A classic example is instincts. And, of course, when you inherit a sinful tendency, the kind of behavior correspondent to it is instinctive to you.
T: What's an example of what you're talking about? You quoted covetousness in the case of Judas, but I don't know what you're thinking. My understanding, in regards to human behavior, is that current scientific thought is that very little is instinctive. Did you learn differently?

“There is a lack of consensus on a precise definition of instinct and what human behaviors may be considered instinctual. More confining definitions argue that for a behavior to be instinctual it must be automatic, irresistible, triggered by environmental stimuli, occur in all members of a species, unmodifiable, and not require training. Based on these rigorous criteria, there is no instinctual human behavior. Likewise, some sociologists consider instincts to be innate behaviors that are present in all members of a species and cannot be overridden (Robertson 1989), but since even the drives of sex and hunger can be overridden, this definition also leads to the view that humans have no instincts. On the other hand, other individuals consider certain human behaviors to be instinctual, such as instinctive reflexes in babies (such as fanning of the toes when foot is stroked), since they are free of learning or conditioning, as well as such traits as altruism and the fight or flight response. The concept is still hotly debated.”
http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Instinct

However, I’m using “instinct” just in the sense of “the inherent inclination of a living organism toward a particular behavior.” In this sense, inherited tendencies are instinctive.


I have been asking for an example.

I believe the tendency in the genetic/environment controversy has been swinging more towards the environmental side, and this has been the trend for awhile.

Quote:

T:The suffering is a good example. If you lose a child, that could help you sympathize with someone else who lost a child, or other relative or friend. However, if one was only tempted on the basis of being tricked, I don't see how that would lead one to sympathize with others who are tempted more deeply than that.

R:All temptations involve tricks, since a temptation is inherently a trick.


It sounds like you're using "trick" to mean "lie." One can be tempted to do something, knowing what's involved, and choose to do so knowing the consequences, without trickery being involved.

Quote:
And, as I said in previous discussions, the strength of a temptation has to do with several factors.


This is certainly true. And among those factors are genetic factors.

Quote:

...because of our sinfulness, hereditary and actual, which was laid upon Him and imparted to Him—He was of Himself in that flesh exactly as is the man who, in the infirmity of the flesh, is laden with sins, actual and hereditary, and who is without God....

R:Again, feeling the guilt and sinfulness of sin is something completely different from facing a temptation.


Of course, but I don't see why this needs to be pointed out. Jones wasn't arguing these were the same.

Quote:
R:The wicked will be feeling enormous guilt for their own sins on the great judgment day, but they will be facing no temptation.


I don't understand why this comment either.

Quote:

R: He didn’t have evil desires as I have. The desire I had of watching soap operas is evil in itself, but Christ had no evil desire. The impression I get is that post-lapsarians think that the more evil the desire, the stronger the temptation.

T: The stronger the desire to do the thing being tempted, the strong the temptation. How evil the desire is isn't relevant. I don't think anyone thinks along the lines of what you're suggesting.

R:Sinful tendencies involve evil desires.


Accuracy is important here. What Haskell said was:

Quote:
"Christ is the ladder that Jacob saw, the base resting on the earth, and the topmost round reaching to the gate of heaven, to the very threshold of glory. If that ladder had failed by a single step of reaching by a single step of reaching the earth, we should have been lost. But Christ reaches us where we are. He took our nature and overcame, that we through taking his nature might overcome. Made ‘in the likeness of sinful flesh,’ he lived a sinless life. Now by his divinity he lays hold upon the throne of heaven, while by his humanity he reaches us."

This is fallen humanity with all its hereditary inclinations. He who was as spotless while on earth as when in heaven took our nature, that he might lift man to the exaltation of himself by his righteousness.(RH 10/02/00)


The first paragraph is from "The Desire of Ages," the second from Haskell. I think his comment "this is fallen humanity with all its hereditary inclinations" is accurate, and is the issue involved. I think "sinful tendencies" is, at best, vague. If "sinful tendencies" means "hereditary inclinations," and nothing more, then OK, but in that case, why not say "hereditary inclinations"? "Sinful tendencies" gives the impression that Christ did something sinful. That's an impression that's best avoided.

Similarly with "evil desire." That sounds sinful on the face of it. Whereas to be tempted to do some act which is a sin is not sinful, if one resists it. If one is only tempted to do things which one has no desire to do, how is that temptation?

Quote:
So, if you think Christ must have had sinful tendencies in order to understand the true force of temptation, it’s because you think that evil desires are stronger than non-evil desires.


I've never said that Christ had sinful tendencies. This is an area where accuracy is important, and I've tried to be as accurate as I can be. Certainly, to my mind, to say that Christ had sinful tendencies would have a implication that Christ was somehow sinful or did something sinful. Christ was sinless, but took our sinful nature. He was tempted as our human nature is tempted, and had the inherited inclinations that we have, but was in no way sinful.

To put it another way, if one looked at His DNA, it would look like our DNA, not like Adam's DNA; this is how I understand things.

That is, when Adam and Eve sinned, their human nature changed, which impacted their DNA, which was transferred to their offspring. Their pre-fall DNA would look different under a microscope than their post-fall DNA. Jesus' DNA would look like Adam and Eve's post-fall DNA. This is my understanding. Otherwise, I don't see how it could be said that Christ took our sinful nature, or that He accepted the result of the working of the great law of heredity.


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.
Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith? [Re: asygo] #129440
12/07/10 05:42 PM
12/07/10 05:42 PM
Mountain Man  Offline
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Originally Posted By: asygo
Just a quickie.

Originally Posted By: Mountain Man
1. "The soul that sinneth, it shall die."

Did Jesus sin? Did Jesus die?

No. Yes. It is called a mystery:

The incarnation of Christ is a mystery. The union of divinity with humanity is a mystery indeed, hidden with God, "even the mystery which hath been hid from ages." It was kept in eternal silence by Jehovah, and was first revealed in Eden, by the prophecy that the Seed of the woman should bruise the serpent's head, and that he should bruise His heel. {6BC 1082.4}

To present to the world this mystery that God kept in silence for eternal ages before the world was created, before man was created, was the part that Christ was to act in the work He entered upon when He came to this earth. And this wonderful mystery, the incarnation of Christ and the atonement that He made, must be declared to every son and daughter of Adam. . . . His sufferings perfectly fulfilled the claims of the law of God (ST Jan. 30, 1912). {6BC 1082.5}

Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith? [Re: Rosangela] #129441
12/07/10 05:48 PM
12/07/10 05:48 PM
Mountain Man  Offline
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Originally Posted By: Rosangela
Quote:
I did a search of the SOP and couldn't find where she said Adam was created with "a character".

?
Mike, you yourself posted the quote:

"In the beginning, man was created in the likeness of God, not only in character, but in form and feature." {GC 644.3}

Also, there is the quote I posted in my post #129282:

"God gave our first parents a pure and upright character, in harmony with His law; and had they remained obedient, they would have bequeathed the same character to their posterity." {BEcho, July 29, 1895 par. 2}

When considered in the context of all the quotes I posted concerning traits, tendencies, and character, it seems clear to me that Ellen believed we are conceived with traits and tendencies that enable us to cultivate a character through repetitious choices and actions, and that it is this very character that will determine our eternal destiny in judgment.

Re: Is there a relation between Christ's assumed human nature and rightesousness by faith? [Re: Mountain Man] #129442
12/07/10 06:16 PM
12/07/10 06:16 PM
Tom  Offline OP
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Lawrence, Kansas
Originally Posted By: asygo
But I also agree with what EGW said, as she said it. We receive from Adam guilt and death. She didn't say we receive the possibility to earn guilt and death. She didn't say we receive the inclination toward guilt and death. She said we receive them.


Did you look at the context? The context of the entire article from which this is taken, and especially the immediate context, is dealing with issues of choice.

From a corporate standpoint, one could make the argument that in Adam we receive guilt, since we were all "in Adam", as we were all "in Christ." So, as Levi paid tithes in Abraham, so we sinned "in Adam" and were redeemed "in Christ." This was a much elaborated theme by Prescott. Jones and Waggoner also discussed this. Ellen White made statements dealing with this as well, for example, by Christ's life the entire race of men was restored to favor with God (1SM 343 or 1SM 353, from memory).

However, this wasn't the context of this particular article.


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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