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Re: Understanding Temptation
#48175
03/17/06 02:24 PM
03/17/06 02:24 PM
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SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 22,256
Southwest USA
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Tammy, this is MM. You were responding to my post in your last post, not Tom. My questions about Jesus and jealousy and pride have more to do with me than Pastor Preibe. I believe Jesus possessed and manifested godly pride and jealousy. I also believe He was tempted from within, in the same way we are, to satisfy His innocent and legitimate needs is sinful ways. Do you agree?
My questions are based on the idea that all temptations are, in one way or another, a distortion of innocent and legitimate needs. Our appetites and passions are gifts that God gave us to be employed unto His honor and glory. But our sinful flesh nature perverts them. We become consciously aware of them as temptations to satisfy our innocent and legitimate needs in sinful ways.
Here’s how Sister White describes it:
3T 84 You are of that age when the will, the appetite, and the passions clamor for indulgence. God has implanted these in your nature for high and holy purposes. It is not necessary that they should become a curse to you by being debased. They will become this only when you refuse to submit to the control of reason and conscience. (3T 84)
Do you believe Jesus was born with the same appetites and passions that God implanted in us for high and holy purposes? Or, do you believe He was somehow different than us, that His sinful flesh never perverted His appetites and passions, that His sinful flesh never clamored for sinful indulgence?
Please understand that I am not implying that Jesus was ever guilty of wanting to fulfill the sinful desires or clamorings that His fallen flesh communicated to His pure and holy mind and conscience. All that I'm asking is if you believe Jesus' appetites and passions ever clamored for indulgence in the same way ours do? Or, was He somehow different than us in that regard?
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Re: Understanding Temptation
#48176
03/17/06 02:28 PM
03/17/06 02:28 PM
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SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
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Rosangela, I agree. There is no such thing as godly selfishness. But do you agree that there forms of pride and jealously that are godly?
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Re: Understanding Temptation
#48177
03/17/06 02:37 PM
03/17/06 02:37 PM
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Posts: 6,154
Brazil
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Mike, quote: Rosangela, I agree. There is no such thing as godly selfishness. But do you agree that there forms of pride and jealously that are godly?
All of these are human passions: love, hate, pride, jealousy, ambition; and they can be positive or negative. Adam possessed them, in the same way as we do. The problem is that in Adam all of them were positive, while in us they are by birth negatively affected, in a greater or lesser degree.
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Re: Understanding Temptation
#48178
03/17/06 02:38 PM
03/17/06 02:38 PM
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Active Member 2012
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Lawrence, Kansas
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quote: But I cannot agree that any pride or self was in Him.
In regards to the self part:
Christ had to deny Himself, just like we do.
quote: For even Christ did not please Himself;(Rom. 15:3)
quote: Then Jesus said to His disciples, “If anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me.(Matt. 16:24)
quote: I do not seek My own will but the will of the Father who sent Me. (John 5:39)
quote: We are to look to Christ for an example and imitate the humble pattern. You do not feel reconciled to the discipline you need and do not exercise and practice that self-denial which Christ requires of those who are truly heirs of salvation.(1T 431)
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Re: Understanding Temptation
#48179
03/17/06 02:41 PM
03/17/06 02:41 PM
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Active Member 2012
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Lawrence, Kansas
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Is there even a single usage in inspiration where "pride" is used in a positive sense?
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Re: Understanding Temptation
#48180
03/17/06 02:46 PM
03/17/06 02:46 PM
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Active Member 2012
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quote: Obviously, having an inclination toward the negative is something you should mourn over, so is that something you think was in Jesus? Something we should “mourn over”? I sure hope not!
This is an interesting question. There's actually more to this than meets the eye.
Christ mourned over these things, because He repented in our behalf. He had no need for anyone to testify as to what is in man, because He took our nature and bore our sin. He was the Lamb of God, bearing the sin of the world (not just at Gethsemanee or Calvary, but His whole life; actually from the time Adam first sinned).
The sin that dwells in mankind, whether in its heredity or its commission, is something we should mourn over. The sin of another is our sin, but for the grace of God. We are to repent for those who cannot repent, and lead them to repentance, if possible.
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Re: Understanding Temptation
#48181
03/17/06 02:52 PM
03/17/06 02:52 PM
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Brazil
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Tom,
As I said in the past, Christ denied Himself in heaven. He didn't want to leave His Father, He didn't want to leave the purity of heaven and come to a world full of sin and misery, and become subject to suffering and finally die, but He denied Himself because He loved us.
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Re: Understanding Temptation
#48182
03/18/06 03:04 AM
03/18/06 03:04 AM
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5500+ Member
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Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 6,154
Brazil
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It is possible to feel proud of children or another relative who has noble traits of character. It is possible to be proud of something beautiful you've made. I think God was proud of His creation after He finished it. I've found two positive references in Ellen White:
I am going to the convention in Tasmania," wrote Ellen White to her son Edson," and to witness and participate in the marriage of my son Willie to a noble Christian woman. . . . If Providence favors, you will have a sister of whom you will be proud."--Letter 92b, 1895. {4BIO 188.1}
You cannot think how pleasant it is to have my family once more reunited. I have not seen more capable, ready, willing, obedient children than Ella May and Mabel. . . . Dear little children. May is proud of them.--Letter 124, 1895. {4BIO 198.3}
Of course pride could also be taken only in the negative sense, as the opposite of humility.
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Re: Understanding Temptation
#48183
03/17/06 09:59 PM
03/17/06 09:59 PM
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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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quote: As I said in the past, Christ denied Himself in heaven. He didn't want to leave His Father, He didn't want to leave the purity of heaven and come to a world full of sin and misery, and become subject to suffering and finally die, but He denied Himself because He loved us.
I'm not aware of any evidence that Christ did not want to leave Heaven to save us. I'm aware of evidence to the contrary however.
There's a huge difference between the denail of self required by us and that "required" by God, if such a thing even makes sense to say. Remember Christ said, "follow me," so whatever the denial of self that is involved must be something we have in common with Him.
By the way, I was responding to Tammy, who was denying that Christ even had a self to be denied. So you're coming at this from an entirely different angle than she is.
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Re: Understanding Temptation
#48184
03/17/06 10:05 PM
03/17/06 10:05 PM
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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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Rosangela, good job on finding those references. However, these speak of "proud" not "pride." One could argue, of course, that if one can be proud in a positive sense, one can have pride in a positive sense. But I would still be interested in "pride" could be found in a positive sense. EGW wrote millions of words, and I'm sure she used the word "pride" many, many times. Her lack of use in a positive sense might be significant.
OTOH, it might not be. "Pride" is custumarily used by her as a sin, and the worse of sins at that. One could say something like "I take pride in God's acheivements," and that would certainly be positive. Perhapse she wrote something like that.
Well, thanks for finding that and sharing your thoughts.
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