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Ultra Member
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Jun 27, 2010, 04:56 PM
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 Originally Posted by JoeT777
My point was that Christ was both God and man. Therefore what can be scripturally applied to man can be applied to Christ. Beyond bringing the Kingdom of God to us, his life is a testament to man achieving holiness through his works in faith.
In regard to sin we can apply temptation to the man that is Christ. Christ speaks to temptations, “you are they who have continued with me in my temptations , i.e. inspite of temptations. Christ knows how man is tempted, “Watch and pray that you enter not into temptation” (Matt 26:41). In the vein of Why should we watch if we are saved simply by believing. And once we believe how could we be tempted, that is being ‘always saved’? And once saved why would the Lord need to know how to deliver the “godly from temptations” (2 Peter 2:9)? We know that He was tempted as every man is tempted.
Your right our salvation isn’t based on performance. Rather we preserve working out our salvation with fear and trembling. If salvation were assured as some believe then hope has been realized, and we have no further need of hope. Yet we’re told, “we are saved by hope!” (Rom 8:23-24)
What does the birth certificate have to do with it? Is the suggestion that we are born Christian?
JoeT
Grumpy JoeT,
No. We aren't born Christians.. we are suppose to be born again. Remember what Jesus said to Nicodemus? I meant your birth certificate spirtually speaking.
We will have to agree to disagree on exactly what the Apostle Paul meant by "working out your salvation"... he isn't talking about trying to keep something we can't lose. If he were, he would be contradicting himselfand other parts of the Bible. We are SEALED with the Holy spirit of promise, we are ALREADY seated in heavenly places. ( check out Ephesians) There is too many verses to support the Lord Jesus is indeed the AUTHOR and FINISHER of my faith. Good thing Noah was put in that ARK and not left hangin on a tree limb "hoping" to be saved from the flood.. don't you think? :D
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Ultra Member
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Jun 27, 2010, 05:10 PM
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 Originally Posted by TUT317
Unfortunately for ClassyT her idea is difficult to sustain from a Christian point of view.
Regards
Tut
Tut,
But Jesus, even in his humanity, was born different than we are. He wasn't born with a sinful nature. We WERE. Therefore he had NO sinful desires and then you top that with the fact he is also God.
He was never the man in Romans 7 that the apostle paul describes... thats my story and I'm sticking to it.
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Jobs & Parenting Expert
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Jun 27, 2010, 05:13 PM
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 Originally Posted by classyT
But Jesus, even in his humanity, was born different than we are. He wasn't born with a sinful nature. We WERE. Therefore he had NO sinful desires and then you top that with the fact he is also God.
He was never the man in Romans 7 that the apostle paul describes...thats my story and i'm stickin to it.
Adam in his humanity was created differently from how we are. He didn't have a sinful nature. He had no sinful desires. He did have free will.
So Jesus was like Adam -- perfect, sinless, had no sinful desires, had no clue what sin was.
Did Jesus have free will like Adam did?
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Senior Member
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Jun 28, 2010, 03:03 AM
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 Originally Posted by classyT
Tut,
But Jesus, even in his humanity, was born different than we are. He wasn't born with a sinful nature. We WERE. Therefore he had NO sinful desires and then you top that with the fact he is also God.
He was never the man in Romans 7 that the apostle paul describes...thats my story and i'm stickin to it.
Hi classyT,
I would say that you above statement amounts to this...
Jesus was a person like us in every way except he lacked a sinful nature. He also had something we don't have, i.e.. Divinity.
When Jesus was tempted to sin he might act like he was tempted but in reality he wasn't tempted. This was because he didn't have the capacity to sin. Put in a different way, he does not have the ability to feel tempted.
Is such a person possible? There could have been such a person and maybe there is such a person. However, in the end we need to ask ourselves is such a person within the bounds of what we understand as a human being?
Regards
Tut
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Jobs & Parenting Expert
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Jun 28, 2010, 07:52 AM
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 Originally Posted by TUT317
When Jesus was tempted to sin he might act like he was tempted but in reality he wasn't tempted. This was because he didn't have the capacity to sin.
So you're saying Jesus didn't have free will, i.e. He would not have been able to sin no matter how big the temptation.
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Ultra Member
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Jun 28, 2010, 09:17 AM
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WG,
Adam was created innocent. It is true he didn't have a sin nature but he also wasn't God either. AND... Jesus did know what sin was. He knew good and evil unlike Adam.
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Ultra Member
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Jun 28, 2010, 09:40 AM
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 Originally Posted by classyT
Grumpy JoeT,
No. We aren't born Christians..we are suppose to be born again. remember what Jesus said to Nicodemus? I meant your birth certificate spirtually speaking.
We will have to agree to disagree on exactly what the Apostle Paul meant by "working out your salvation"...he isn't talking about trying to keep something we can't lose. If he were, he would be contradicting himselfand other parts of the Bible. We are SEALED with the Holy spirit of promise, we are ALREADY seated in heavenly places. ( check out Ephesians) There is too many verses to support the Lord Jesus is indeed the AUTHOR and FINISHER of my faith. Good thing Noah was put in that ARK and not left hangin on a tree limb "hoping" to be saved from the flood..don't ya think? :D
Ephesians 3:10
That the manifold wisdom of God may be made known to the principalities and powers in heavenly places through the church,
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Ultra Member
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Jun 28, 2010, 10:29 AM
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My friend grumpy JoeT:
These are the exact verses I was thinking of in Ephesians:
<< Ephesians 2 :4-9 NIV
But because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions—it is by GRACE you have been saved. And God raised US up with Christ and SEATED US with HIM in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, in order that in the coming ages he might show the incomparable riches of his grace, expressed in his kindness to us in Christ Jesus. For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by works, so that no one can boast.
It has it all in there... I'm already seated in heavenly places AND my salvation is a free gift, not of works.
BTW... CHURCH = the body of Christ = all true believes in the Lord Jesus and his FINISHED work at calvary.. :)
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Ultra Member
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Jun 28, 2010, 10:46 AM
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Tut,
Lol.. you make me laugh. You must talk to me like I am a confused blonde.. because I am. Sad to say I can't tell where you stand from your posts... so which side do you take... could he have sinned if he chose to?
WG.
Jesus' free will would be to do the will of his Father. Some of the things the Lord Jesus actually said.. "Ii and my father are one" John 10:30 "If anyone haas seen me, they have seen the Father". John 14:9 "Before Abraham was,I AM. John 8:58 His will was identical to the Father's will.
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Jobs & Parenting Expert
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Jun 28, 2010, 10:57 AM
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 Originally Posted by classyT
WG.
Jesus' free will would be to do the will of his Father. some of the things the Lord Jesus actually said.."Ii and my father are one" John 10:30 "If anyone haas seen me, they have seen the Father". John 14:9 "Before Abraham was,I AM. John 8:58 His will was identical to the Father's will.
But Jesus was also fully human. What does that mean?
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Senior Member
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Jun 28, 2010, 02:09 PM
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 Originally Posted by Wondergirl
So you're saying Jesus didn't have free will, i.e., He would not have been able to sin no matter how big the temptation.
Hi Wondergirl and ClassyT,
No. I am saying this is what ClassyT's position amounts to.
"But Jesus, even in his humanity, was born different than we are. He wasn't born with a sinful nature. We WERE. Therefore he had no sinful desires and you top that with the fact that he is also God". Quote ClassyT
ClassyT has said that Jesus is different to a normal man. What I am saying is that this difference amounts to Jesus not having the experience of being tempted.
Regards
Tut
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Senior Member
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Jun 28, 2010, 02:13 PM
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Sorry Wonder girl I didn't answer your question.
My position is that Jesus had free will.
Regards Tut
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Ultra Member
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Jun 28, 2010, 02:35 PM
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 Originally Posted by classyT
My friend grumpy JoeT:
These are the exact verses I was thinking of in Ephesians:
<< Ephesians 2 :4-9 NIV
But because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions—it is by GRACE you have been saved. And God raised US up with Christ and SEATED US with HIM in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, in order that in the coming ages he might show the incomparable riches of his grace, expressed in his kindness to us in Christ Jesus. For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by works, so that no one can boast.
It has it all in there...I'm already seated in heavenly places AND my salvation is a free gift, not of works.
BTW...CHURCH = the body of Christ = all true believes in the Lord Jesus and his FINISHED work at calvary..:)
Christ started the work at Calvary ~ God ends it on the "last day".
But, where is the guarantee of salvation, of “once saved always saved”? I don’t see it in these verses. These verses are simply declaration the merit of ‘just’ fruits? Furthermore, by what means do we achieve our seat ~ believe? Isn’t salvation through baptism (a work) and isn’t salvation eternal life through communion, as commanded by Christ “unless you eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, you shall not have life in you? How can you render, all I got to do is believe, from these verses. (By the way ~ I’ve always wanted to ask ~ does one click their heels together like Alice when they ‘believe’?) If we hold the heel clicking true, and John 6:52 is true and John 3:5 is true, what good is it to be seated next to Christ? We could never get to heaven to claim our seat; without baptism the Kingdom’s portal is never opened, nor will we ever have an eternal life with which to enjoy our seat.
Our salvation is found in two things, God’s love and the hope he gives us. There is no salvation in an Alice like heel clicking belief; there are no assurances, guarantees, or warranties outside of 'hope’. The first hope is found in John’s Gospel, “unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.” Christ teaches that any man who enters the “Kingdom of God” must be baptized of water and of the Holy Spirit. The ‘Kingdom’ has different meanings, a place, a certain holiness transcending life to the next, or the Church herself. Knowing the road to the “Kingdom” we can enter gate through Baptism. The water is the cleansing that lathers away sin; the Holy Spirit instructs and strengthens our faith, as we just heard, through the Church. John the Baptist tells us that we will be baptized in the Holy Ghost and fire (Cf. Matthew 3:11). Over a life time, the Holy Spirit stokes the our passions for Christ with fire with a faith that can be likened to flux, smelting away impurities into a lump of pure golden holiness; whereby the created comes to yearn for the Creator wherein for deliverance. (Rom 8)
In Christ the chains of concupiscence are broken away, freeing the faithful from corruption (death); liberating man, making him eligible to be adopted as the children of God. “We ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption of the sons of God, the redemption of our body” Paul shows us how this happens, “we are saved by hope!” (Rom 8:23-24). It’s here in the mournful groans that we are invited to be consumed in communion with Christ.
The second offer of hope is found in the Eucharist; you might say sustenance for the Body of Christ. “For my flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed.” The blood signifies a ‘real’ sacrifice of meat for the first born on Pasch.
What then are we to make of the Christ saying he was the ‘meat’; why wouldn’t he feed us manna? You may recall that when the manna fell from heaven, it needed to be collected, processed and cooked in short order, or it would spoil – this bread had a 24 hour shelf life. Christ proposes something more substantial than the Twinkie food – a worthless cake surrounding a sweet pasty center with little real nutritional value. How long would such sustenance last? Christ reminds us that our “fathers ate manna in the desert, and are dead. (John 6:49), sounds like all bun without any filling meat. However to Israel the Shew Bread of the temple was eaten by the high priest to receive Divine Wisdom. This bread of a Divine knowledge is a worthless empty burger without the meat of faith hope and charity provided by the Church.
Why is it that Moses’ bread didn’t save? The bread of the intellect isn’t meat enough to last an eternity; intellectual word of God is only good for this world. Christ, however is telling us He’ll provide the beef, he says “I am that bread of life”. I am the meat that an eternal death must pass over, I am the meat of everlasting life, a flesh for the life of the world; a meat for the first-born in His Kingdom. The simple fact of the matter is that “unless you eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, you shall not have life in you.” A sacrificial meat for the first born of His KIngdom is given us all so that death will pass over.
Why labor “for the meat which perishes;” why not work for “that which endures unto life everlasting, which the Son of man will give you.” So where’s the beef? Christ tells us where, and flat out too, and it ain’t in the Wonder bread! “For my flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed. (Cf. John 6:26, 55).
Grumpy JoeT
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Ultra Member
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Jun 29, 2010, 09:31 AM
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 Originally Posted by JoeT777
Christ started the work at Calvary ~ God ends it on the "last day".
But, where is the guarantee of salvation, of “once saved always saved”? I don’t see it in these verses. These verses are simply declaration the merit of ‘just’ fruits?
No, they're a plain description of how salvation comes.
Furthermore, by what means do we achieve our seat ~ believe? Isn’t salvation through baptism (a work)
No.
and isn’t salvation eternal life through communion,
No.
(By the way ~ I’ve always wanted to ask ~ does one click their heels together like Alice when they ‘believe’?)
Alice who? If you're trying to reference the Wizard of Oz, you have the wrong girl. Not a very effective attempt at ridicule! ;)
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New Member
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Jun 29, 2010, 03:54 PM
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so... a lot of people think it is possible that Jesus could have sinned... but that then acknkowledges that there is a higher order above god... it goes like this:
Is something wrong because god knows it is wrong? Or is it wrong because it is not of god? (in other words does god acknowledge goodness because it is good, or because all that is good is godly) The later has to be the answer if you believe that god is the ultamate being, the end all- all pwerfull, all knowing creater that we as christains profess to believe in.
It is impossible that god is something he is not... if he sinned then he would have been and since we know he never changes there is no way that sin could ever have become part of who he is... It's just funny that saten tried to tempt him... just imagine that- how foolish must one be to tempt God or to think that one would be able to prevail over God... wow that's lol worthy
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Ultra Member
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Jun 29, 2010, 04:59 PM
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 Originally Posted by dwashbur
No, they're a plain description of how salvation comes.
No.
No.
That’s not very informative; nothing much to chew on.
JoeT
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Jobs & Parenting Expert
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Jun 29, 2010, 05:03 PM
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 Originally Posted by JoeT777
That’s not very informative; nothing much to chew on.
JoeT
There was nothing fed to us. What about Alice?
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Senior Member
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Jun 29, 2010, 08:35 PM
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 Originally Posted by boogers
so..
Is something wrong because god knows it is wrong? or is it wrong because it is not of god? (in other words does god acknowledge goodness because it is good, or because all that is good is godly) The later has to be the answer if you believe that god is the ultamate being, the end all- all pwerfull, all knowing creater that we as christains profess to believe in.
Hi Boogers,
Your question has been debated for about 3000 years and there is still no agreement. It is better known as the Euthyphro Dilemma...
Is something morally right because God commands it? It is claimed that it makes no difference what God commands. By simply commanding something it is by definition morally correct.
Opposed to this is the claim that God only commands what is good. If we are aware that something is obviously morally wrong then we can be assured that God would not command it.
I certainly don't know the answer.
Regards
Tut
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Ultra Member
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Jul 1, 2010, 06:11 AM
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 Originally Posted by JoeT777
Christ started the work at Calvary ~ God ends it on the "last day".
But, where is the guarantee of salvation, of “once saved always saved”? I don't see it in these verses. These verses are simply declaration the merit of 'just' fruits? Furthermore, by what means do we achieve our seat ~ believe? Isn't salvation through baptism (a work) and isn't salvation eternal life through communion, as commanded by Christ “unless you eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, you shall not have life in you? How can you render, all I got to do is believe, from these verses. (By the way ~ I've always wanted to ask ~ does one click their heels together like Alice when they 'believe'?) If we hold the heel clicking true, and John 6:52 is true and John 3:5 is true, what good is it to be seated next to Christ? We could never get to heaven to claim our seat; without baptism the Kingdom's portal is never opened, nor will we ever have an eternal life with which to enjoy our seat.
Our salvation is found in two things, God's love and the hope he gives us. There is no salvation in an Alice like heel clicking belief; there are no assurances, guarantees, or warranties outside of of 'hope'. The first hope is found in John's Gospel, “unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.” Christ teaches that any man who enters the “Kingdom of God” must be baptized of water and of the Holy Spirit. The 'Kingdom' has different meanings, a place, a certain holiness transcending life to the next, or the Church herself. Knowing the road to the “Kingdom” we can enter gate through Baptism. The water is the cleansing that lathers away sin; the Holy Spirit instructs and strengthens our faith, as we just heard, through the Church. John the Baptist tells us that we will be baptized in the Holy Ghost and fire (Cf. Matthew 3:11). Over a life time, the Holy Spirit stokes the our passions for Christ with fire with a faith that can be likened to flux, smelting away impurities into a lump of pure golden holiness; whereby the created comes to yearn for the Creator wherein for deliverance. (Rom 8)
In Christ the chains of concupiscence are broken away, freeing the faithful from corruption (death); liberating man, making him eligible to be adopted as the children of God. “We ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption of the sons of God, the redemption of our body” Paul shows us how this happens, “we are saved by hope!” (Rom 8:23-24). It's here in the mournful groans that we are invited to be consumed in communion with Christ.
The second offer of hope is found in the Eucharist; you might say sustenance for the Body of Christ. “For my flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed.” The blood signifies a 'real' sacrifice of meat for the first born on Pasch.
What then are we to make of the Christ saying he was the 'meat'; why wouldn't he feed us manna? You may recall that when the manna fell from heaven, it needed to be collected, processed and cooked in short order, or it would spoil – this bread had a 24 hour shelf life. Christ proposes something more substantial than the Twinkie food – a worthless cake surrounding a sweet pasty center with little real nutritional value. How long would such sustenance last? Christ reminds us that our “fathers ate manna in the desert, and are dead. (John 6:49), sounds like all bun without any filling meat. However to Israel the Shew Bread of the temple was eaten by the high priest to receive Divine Wisdom. This bread of a Divine knowledge is a worthless empty burger without the meat of faith hope and charity provided by the Church.
Why is it that Moses' bread didn't save? The bread of the intellect isn't meat enough to last an eternity; intellectual word of God is only good for this world. Christ, however is telling us He'll provide the beef, he says “I am that bread of life”. I am the meat that an eternal death must pass over, I am the meat of everlasting life, a flesh for the life of the world; a meat for the first-born in His Kingdom. The simple fact of the matter is that “unless you eat the flesh of the Son of man and drink his blood, you shall not have life in you.” A sacrificial meat for the first born of His KIngdom is given us all so that death will pass over.
Why labor “for the meat which perishes;” why not work for “that which endures unto life everlasting, which the Son of man will give you.” So where's the beef? Christ tells us where, and flat out too, and it ain't in the Wonder bread! “For my flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink indeed. (Cf. John 6:26, 55).
Grumpy JoeT
Grumpy JoeT,
That isn't what the bible records. Christ FINISHED the work at calvary...
Also would like to add that in the bible when Paul used the word HOPE it is a sure thing... not like when we use the word hope. He says so himself. Check out Romans 5:5 Now hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit who was given to us.
HOPE Doesn't disappoint.. it is a SURE thing
Also check out Colossians 1:27 Because Christ is in you, the hope of glory
Also : In Ephesians we are told when we BELIEVED the gospel of our salvation we were sealed with the Holy Spirit. I didn't have to click my heels.. I simply believed and I was born again, sealed with the Holy Spirit, my name written in the lambs book of life where no man could pluck me out of HIs hand and I was immediately seated in heavenly places. (That is my position spiritually) I didn't say it... the Bible did.
Now if it wasn't true that I was sealed with the Holy Spirit after I believed.. why did Paul say such a thing? AND... my question for you is... what sin could I commit where the Holy Spirit would leave me after I believed? The Bible says we can quench the Spirit and we can grieve the Spirit.. but I find nothing to say the HOLY SPIRIT will ever leave. I'm sealed. I'm safe, I'm secure.. not because I deserve it... but because the Lord Jesus redeemed me and I rest completely in HIM by faith plus NOTHING. For HE is truly enough. This is what makes Christianity different from every other religion.. I don't have to do ANYTHNG other than believe. Then because I am sealed with the HOLY SPIRIT.. I want to do good works now because of the HOLY SPIRIT who lives in me. I don't do them for my salvation.
There is no where in the bible that says I have to take communion to be saved. The Lord Jesus asked us to do it in remberence of HIM and His death. I WANT to do it... I love to do it.. but it has nothing to do with my salvation.
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Ultra Member
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Jul 1, 2010, 06:18 AM
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 Originally Posted by Wondergirl
But Jesus was also fully human. What does that mean?
That he had all the physical needs of a man, he felt hunger, thirst, pain, happiness, sadness. It is true he had a free will.. but his free will was the same as God the Father. Perhaps it isn't fruitful to debate this... but I'm really surprised that not one person has agreed with me.
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