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Re: Hidden Character Defects! What?
#13674
08/11/05 05:08 PM
08/11/05 05:08 PM
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OP
SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 22,256
Southwest USA
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quote: 3:12 Not as though I had already attained, either were already perfect: but I follow after, if that I may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus. 3:13 Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended: but [this] one thing [I do], forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, 3:14 I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. 3:15 Let us therefore, as many as be perfect, be thus minded: and if in any thing ye be otherwise minded, God shall reveal even this unto you.
The phrase “as many as be perfect” refers to morally perfect Christians. As you know, there is a difference between being morally perfect and moral maturity. Eternity isn’t long enough to exhaust our potential to become more perfect, more like Jesus. That’s what Paul meant when he wrote he hadn’t yet himself attained unto perfection. We will never reach a point where we can no longer become more perfect. Sanctification is a progressive work, and an advance from one stage of perfection to another.
This “work of progression will not cease, but will continue throughout eternity.” (HP 186) “‘The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul.’ Through obedience comes sanctification of body, soul, and spirit. This sanctification is a progressive work, and an advance from one stage of perfection to another.” (ML 250)
“Sanctification is a state of holiness, without and within, being holy and without reserve the Lord’s, not in form, but in truth. Every impurity of thought, every lustful passion, separates the soul from God; for Christ can never put His robe of righteousness upon a sinner, to hide his deformity. . . . There must be a progressive work of triumph over evil, of sympathy with good, a reflection of the character of Jesus. We must walk in the light, which will increase and grow brighter unto the perfect day. This is real, substantial growth, which will finally attain to the full stature of men and women in Jesus Christ.” (OHC 214)
quote: I noticed in the verse right after my main quote there is an interesting statement - "forgetting those things that are behind." Since our theology in one area tends to integrate with others, maybe you could also comment on your views of 'memory purging/correction' - if you think it has a bearing.
Personally, I don’t think this insight has to do with Jesus blotting out our record and memory of specific sins during the investigative judgment of the living. As I read it, in this context, it simply means we should not dwell on past mistakes.
quote: If the church was already perfect at conversion what would it need to overcome?
As you know, corporate and individual perfection are two different aspects of the plan of salvation. It is not until the church is purified by the shaking and the latter rain that it is considered perfect and fit for translation.
quote: There are many Christians who loose out on the best aspects of life by living morally but not sacrificially.
I believe both are necessary in order to have right to the name – Christian. “All such who claim to be Christians, have no right to assume this name; for a Christian is one who is Christlike.” (TE 68)
quote: Can we say we are perfect at conversion when we may have hardly begun to minister unselfishly to others?
Perfection is progressive. Like a plant we are perfect at each stage of development. The part of the plant that has not yet bloomed, however, is not sin, but inherent perfection. "This sanctification is a progressive work, and an advance from one stage of perfection to another.” Not from one stage of imperfection to a lesser stage of imperfection.
We are not saved based on our fitness for heaven. Rather, we are saved based on our title to heaven. As such, the thief on the cross and the mighty apostle Paul are no different. Good works are good and required, but they do not save us. They merely reflect the fact we are saved. The longer we live in a saved state the more and mightier will be our corresponding good works.
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Re: Hidden Character Defects! What?
#13675
08/11/05 09:26 PM
08/11/05 09:26 PM
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Active Member 2012
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quote: At that precise moment we are without sin, we have no known sin, no hidden moral imperfections or uncrucified character defects.
If sins or ignorance are not hidden moral imperfections, then what is? Just what did you have in mind by the phrase "hidden moral imperfections?" What could this possibly mean besides unknown sin? You tell me, since you wrote the phrase.
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Re: Hidden Character Defects! What?
#13676
08/11/05 09:32 PM
08/11/05 09:32 PM
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Active Member 2012
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quote: Biblical perfection involves more than not consciously sinning by doing evil. The more crucial aspect of perfection is sacrificial service to God and mankind. There are many Christians who loose out on the best aspects of life by living morally but not sacrificially. Those who are on the right hand of Christ when the sheep are separated are the ones who loved their fellow man. They are perfect within the meaning of the final verses below – ‘perfect in every good work’. Can we say we are perfect at conversion when we may have hardly begun to minister unselfishly to others?
Very nice thoughts Mark. But is it possible to live morally without living sacrifically? I don't think so, because morality means being like God, and God is self-sacrificing.
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Re: Hidden Character Defects! What?
#13677
08/12/05 01:46 AM
08/12/05 01:46 AM
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OP
SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
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Southwest USA
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quote: If sins [of] ignorance are not hidden moral imperfections, then what is? Just what did you have in mind by the phrase "hidden moral imperfections?" What could this possibly mean besides unknown sin? You tell me, since you wrote the phrase.
Tom, at the beginning of this thread a bunch of quotes was posted. If you haven’t read them lately then you might want to consider doing so. The following two quotes are the last ones posted there:
4T 55, 56 Many who have never been placed in positions of trial appear to be excellent Christians, their lives seem faultless; but God sees that they have traits of character that must be revealed to them before they can perceive and correct them… In the providence of God we are placed in different positions to call into exercise qualities of mind calculated to develop character under a variety of circumstances. “Whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all." Professed Christians may live unexceptionable lives so far as outward appearance is concerned; but when a change of circumstances throws them into entirely different positions, strong traits of character are discovered, which would have remained hidden had their surroundings continued the same. {4T 55.2}
TDG 16 The nearer the Christian lives to God, the more he advances in divine illumination of mind. He has more distinct sense of his own littleness, discerns his defects of character, and sees his duty in the light in which God presents it. The more closely he draws to Jesus, the more he has a near and clear sense of his own defects which had before escaped his notice, and he sees the necessity of humbling himself under the mighty hand of God. If lifted up it will not be because he lifts and exalts himself, but because the Lord exalts him. Having his eye fixed upon the purity and perfection of Christ Jesus, and acknowledging and obeying God in all his ways, he is not blinded to his own failures and imperfections. When his deportment in the eyes of men is unblamable and irreprovable, God reads the intents and purposes of the heart. {TDG 16.2}
At first glance these quotes seem to say we are riddled with unconquered moral imperfections. But in truth that’s not what she’s saying. As you know, all of us inherit a host of unlovely traits of character from our parents. It’s important to note that we inherit only their traits, we do not inherit their character. We are not, as you know, guilty of these traits until we ourselves turn them into character. Character traits are converted into character by repeatedly acting them out in thought, word, or deed.
None of us live long enough to develop everyone of the defective traits of character we inherit from our parents. We only develop the ones that agree with our unique talents and personality and predispositions. The rest remain dormant and unknown, never to surface in our lifetime. But there comes a time when God wants to employ us in new situations where certain circumstances will bring to light one or more of these dormant defects.
To prepare for us service in new fields, God arranges things ahead of time that draws our attention to the very dormant defects that have the potential to cause us trouble and to bring reproach upon the cause if not held in subjection to a sanctified mind and will. These are some of those hidden traits of character we never knew about and, consequently, never cultivated.
It is not necessary to sin first before we become aware of them. That’s not how God works. He will not allow us to be tempted above His ability to empower us to recognize and resist it unto His honor and glory. Nor are we guilty of possessing an uncrucified cultivated trait of character. We didn’t know it existed because we never cultivated it. Neither are we guilty before God because dormant defects reside within us. We are not guilty of them unless or until we cultivate them.
This is what I mean when I say “hidden moral imperfections” are not sins of ignorance. Instead, they are unknown, dormant defective traits of character we inherited from our parents, but never cultivated or turned into character. Sins of ignorance, on the other hand, are things we know we are doing but have no idea we are sinning. It’s not considered a moral imperfection because we are not violating our conscience or convictions.
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Re: Hidden Character Defects! What?
#13678
08/12/05 02:48 AM
08/12/05 02:48 AM
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Mountain Man,
Your name wouldn't happen to be Mike, would it?
Anyway, just back from Costa Rica, here. Let me know if it's you.
Dick
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Re: Hidden Character Defects! What?
#13679
08/12/05 03:57 PM
08/12/05 03:57 PM
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OP
SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
20000+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 22,256
Southwest USA
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Yep, that's me. See ya later.
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Re: Hidden Character Defects! What?
#13680
08/12/05 07:40 PM
08/12/05 07:40 PM
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Active Member 2012
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Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 14,795
Lawrence, Kansas
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Previously you wrote: quote: At that precise moment we are without sin, we have no known sin, no hidden moral imperfections or uncrucified character defects.
Now you wrote:
quote: This is what I mean when I say “hidden moral imperfections” are not sins of ignorance. Instead, they are unknown, dormant defective traits of character we inherited from our parents, but never cultivated or turned into character. Sins of ignorance, on the other hand, are things we know we are doing but have no idea we are sinning. It’s not considered a moral imperfection because we are not violating our conscience or convictions.
I underlined the part where you defined the meaning of the phrase "hidden moral imperfections" -- which is "unknown, dormant defective traits of character we inherited from our parents, but never cultivated." Notice in your above quote you assert that when is born again, we have no hidden moral imperfections.
So this means, using your own definition, that at the moment a person is born again, said person no longer has unknown, dormant defective traits of character which are inherited from one's parents.
If when one is born again one no longer has these traits, where did they go? Does one's genetic code instantly change at conversion?
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Re: Hidden Character Defects! What?
#13681
08/12/05 11:15 PM
08/12/05 11:15 PM
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OP
SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
20000+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 22,256
Southwest USA
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quote: At that precise moment we are without sin, we have no known sin, no hidden moral imperfections or uncrucified character defects.
My bad. It is confusing. Let me reword this sentence.
When we are born again we are born without our former cultivated traits of character. They are crucified. Nothing survived that needs to be crucified later on, except, of course, if we were born again with sins of ignorance, which do not count as known moral imperfections.
We are also born again with all of our inherited, yet dormant, defective traits of character (aka, hidden moral imperfections, which now I realize is a bad choice of words), which may or may not rear their ugly head in the form of temptations. We are not guilty of them until or unless we cherish them in thought, or act them out in word or behaviour. Neither do they count against us as moral imperfections or cultivated defects of character.
There. Hopefully that eliminates the confusion my first sentence caused.
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Re: Hidden Character Defects! What?
#13682
08/13/05 03:08 AM
08/13/05 03:08 AM
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Active Member 2012
14500+ Member
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Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 14,795
Lawrence, Kansas
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Here are you original questions: quote: What is the truth about "hidden" defective traits of character? Are they sins of ignorance? Does Jesus choose not to reveal them to us until we're better able to deal with them? If we die before they are revealed will Jesus remove them when He returns?
According your definition, hidden defective traits of character are inherited traits which are lying dormant. So they are not sins of ignorance. Jesus does reveal them to us when we're better able to deal with them. To the last question, yes(?)
I'm tring to answer your questions from your perspective. Was I correct? The one I'm most uncertain about is the last one.
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Re: Hidden Character Defects! What?
#13683
08/13/05 04:50 PM
08/13/05 04:50 PM
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OP
SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
20000+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 22,256
Southwest USA
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It might be helpful to place inherited and cultivated defective traits of character side by side and compare them together, and then study them separately. We receive from our parents, as a legacy, defective traits of character. Many of them date back three or four generations, if not more. These inherited traits do not, obviously, constitute character. Character is not inherited. Rather, character is the stuff of choices and consequences.
Character is what we ourselves develop and cultivate as we act out the traits, which we inherited from our parents, in thought, word or deed. Through repetition specific traits of character are transformed into corresponding character traits. The traits of character we inherit and the character traits we cultivate are mirror images of one another.
Sinful character is the manifestation or personification of sinful flesh. Paul wrote, “Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which are these …”, and then he goes on to list 17 nasty character defects. He ended his list by saying, “… and such like.” (Gal 5:19-22) Again, cultivated character traits and inherited traits of character are essentially twins.
However, as mentioned earlier, we will never cultivate all of the traits of character we inherited from our parents. Many traits will lie dormant or hidden until the day we die and, when Jesus returns, we will be resurrected without them, that is, if we are a part of the first resurrection. Our uncultivated, dormant, hidden defective traits of character do not count against us in judgment.
There is no such thing as an unknown cultivated character trait. Character is the result of doing the same thing over and over again, and, as such, we are not ignorant of it. All of us are aware of our basic strengthens and weaknesses. Latent within every child of Adam is an inborn, inherent, instinctive knowledge of what is morally right and wrong, except, of course, for biblical insights like, for example, the Sabbath and diet reform, which are morals issues that must be intellectually learned later on in life.
Again, innate within all of us is a conscious knowledge of what is right and wrong. For instance, no one has to be told that lying, stealing, cheating or murder is wrong. Since we, the human race, were originally created in the image and likeness of God, we just know naturally that these types of things are morally unacceptable. Paul made this point clear when he wrote:
“For not the hearers of the law are just before God, but the doers of the law shall be justified. For when the Gentiles, which have not the law, do by nature the things contained in the law, these, having not the law, are a law unto themselves: which show the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and their thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another.” (Rom 2:13-15)
In the case of born-again believers, however, our knowledge of our moral imperfections is transformed by the cross. During the process of conversion, before we experience the miracle of rebirth, before our “old man” (a.k.a., our cultivated defective character traits) is crucified and buried, the Holy Spirit gingerly and gradually reveals to us, little by little, in light of the cross, our individual moral imperfections.
As we behold our sinful character traits in light of the cross we are motivated to confess them. When we confess our final defect, when we confess the last one revealed to us, our “old man” dies and is buried. At that precise moment we experience a transformation that is nothing less than miraculous. God implants within us the sinless seed or mind of the new man. It comes complete with all the righteous fruit and character attributes of God. Not one is missing.
We begin at rebirth where Jesus began at birth, that is, we begin with a clean slate. Sister White describes it this way: “The new birth consists in having new motives, new tastes, new tendencies. Those who are begotten unto a new life by the Holy Spirit have become partakers of the divine nature, and in all their habits and practices, they will give evidence of their relationship to Christ.” (LHU 123) “When we live by faith on the Son of God, the fruits of the Spirit will be seen in our lives; not one will be missing.” (DA 676)
If, before we are born-again, we refuse to confess a character trait revealed to us by the Holy Spirit, if we choose to retain it, even if it is only one trait, then we will not and cannot experience the miracle of rebirth. “If one sin is cherished in the soul, or one wrong practice retained in the life, the whole being is contaminated.” (DA 313) No one is truly born again if, during the process of conversion, they refuse to confess a cherished sin.
Again, there is no such thing as an unknown or hidden cultivated moral imperfection (a.k.a., developed defective character trait). Even before we are converted and born again we are aware of what is morally right and wrong with our character. And when we are converted and receive the divinely implanted mind of the new man we are endowed with the “eye salve” of spiritual discernment, which empowers us to see with crystal clarity, as never before, our crucified habits of sin. Nothing can escape our notice.
We are not left to our own unaided human powers and abilities to detect and discard our moral imperfections. Once confessed and crucified we are empowered by God Himself to prevent ourselves from ever resurrecting them again, which requires a continual, constant connection to Christ. “No renewed heart can be kept in a condition of sweetness without the daily application of the salt of the Word. Divine grace must be received daily, or no man will stay converted.” (OHC 215)
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