Quote:
Originally Posted by shazeep
well i agree with that, but it assumes that one could not think of when.
|
Most who claim we sin every day and believe we are kidding ourselves if say we do not, are of the same ilk who believe we may not know what sin we committed, but surely we must have committed one, since it is impossible not to sin.
If you feel the inclination as a result of my recommendation, please read the book, TURKEYS AND EAGLES, by Peter Lord. It addresses this issue quite nicely.
Quote:
Imagine a world where you are raised believing that you must learn a trade in order to earn "money " to eat and clothe yourself, and that "church" is a place you go to a couple times a week, and you are taught all the various other compromises that we assume from the cradle to be true--that might keep one from VS's description of accessing the divine--which all seem completely acceptable to us.
It's perfectly acceptable to drive a car, for instance; disregarding that it is not possible for every adult on the planet to have a car, and that oil extraction is contaminating the water, and burning fuel is contaminating the air. But it is of course ridiculous to suggest that owning a car is a sin.
|
I am speaking from the perspective of
Romans 6's explanation or walkthrough of how we have dominion over sin through Christ. We died with Him, and He died to sin. That means we also died to sin. And when one died to sin, one is no longer under its dominion. God sees us as dead to sin and alive to Himself as much as Christ is. It;s more than proxy, but actually real in benefits. Christ's benefits of having died and resurrected is that sin has absolutely no dominion over Him. And that is shared by us. The same power of the Spirit animating Him since then is upon us. But we need to faith to experience that. Without faith it is nullified.
Once we understand that, we realize, "What on earth have I been thinking I have to sin everyday for? I died with Christ to that sin! Sin cannot dominate me any more."
And then we go to God as those who really are alive from the dead (Ro 6:13). And the faith God sees in us as we present ourselves to Him in that manner, causes Him to empower us. Faith pleases Him and moves Him to bless. And the blessing in this case is empowerment to not sin. THAT is what
Gal 5 meant when it said those who walk after the Spirit will not fulfill the lusts of the flesh. In other word, will not sin.
The Calvinists never understood that, and think
Romans 6 is an IDEAL, and not a dominion we can actually experience.