Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve Epley
YOU know I am NOT saying that. I certainly need His justifying Blood to accounted worthy to approach Him. My Adamic nature has a HISTORY!!!
A baby has NO history of wrong choices. I am NOT a baby and neither are you.
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Steve, focus on what I've said. I've tried to get you to address the fallen nature of man itself and you continue to focus on its engendered by-products without getting the point.
The nature exists....... you admit this.
You also admit that the fallen nature of man (infant or otherwise) will not enter heaven.
Steve, the fallen nature is not physiological, it is spiritual. The fact that an infant receives a glorified physical body is irrelevant. The fallen nature is not physical, it is of the spirit.
To say the fallen nature will not be allowed into heaven means it must be eradicated from our spirit.
Why, Steve, must the fallen nature of man be eradicated?
When you admit it must be eradicated because it stands at
spiritual enmity against God you have to also admit that it needs to be covered by the blood of Christ while here on earth
even if it has not yet produced a sinful deed. The antagonistic spirit itself must be dealt with even if it has not yet manifested itself through sinful deeds because it is a spiritual abomination to God.
Because man possesses spiritually something at enmity against God at birth, he is, therefore, born depraved. He is not depraved only because of what he does, but because of what he is. He is a child of Adam.
Since all depravity is in need of justification, all men are born in need of salvation. All men need to be spiritually justified, not only of their sinful deeds, but of their sinful nature.
Will infants be damned? I've already said, no, and you can go back to earlier posts as to why I believe they are not.
BUT....
If our very nature needs justification in order to stand right before God, there is nothing we can do of ourselves to remedy this depravity except place our faith in the finished work of Christ.
The doctrine of original sin underscores the doctrine of justification by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone.