C
Church_Militant
Guest
sonseeker says:

If you tell me that no Christian can live a sinless life as commanded by God in His word, then I would have to say why waste time with Christianity since it lacks the power to do what God wants us to do?
That is why works of the law, and works by the law cannot save us. No one is suggesting that she (or any of us) attain heaven by virtue of compliance with the works of the law alone, and that is what St. Paul is talking about. But for Christians…the sinless life is available through the power of the Holy Spirit and the finished work of Christ isn’t it? That’s where all the power for the Christian life comes from is it not?
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rejecting what St. Paul has said. I’m saying that perhaps there is more to it than you are willing to accept and live out.
Pax tecum,
Why? Are you telling me that a Christian, in cooperation with the grace and power of God, that He has promised us in the very Bible that you say is the sole source of the deposit of faith, cannot live a sinless life in obedience to what God has clearly commanded us?Church Militant,
In answer to your question, no, Mary could not have lived a sinless life.
The faith is in the power and superabundant graces of God and I know that you have no issues with that (If one is a believer at all). The point is that she is the best example. Have you another candidate in mind perhaps? Her faith as expressed in her “fiat” really tells it all. You are confused in that you think that we think she wasn’t in need of a savior, but that uis not true at all. We simply offer that her sinless life was the result of her continued cooperation with the grace that God gave her. There are plenty of examples of her abundant faith. The annunciation is a prize winning case, as well as the wedding miracle at Cana.Church Militant, if you can show me, from God’s word, where we are called to have faith in Mary’s sinlessness, I’ll agree.
If you tell me that no Christian can live a sinless life as commanded by God in His word, then I would have to say why waste time with Christianity since it lacks the power to do what God wants us to do?
We’re not talking about the law…though the Blessed Virgin and St. Joseph were both called righteous before Jesus was born…which suggests that God accepted them as such… (This of course gets complex because of the timeless nature of Christ’s sacrifice on the cross…“Slain before the foundation of the world.”)Romans 3:20
20 …for through the Law comes the knowledge of sin.
How does the knowledge of sin come through the law? You can’t keep it. God does command us to, as you say “to do the impossible,” (keep his law) in order to show us that we can’t keep it, and so, we learn that we are sinners.
, so that we may be justified by faith.Why is it necessary for the law to teach us that we are sinners?
Galatians 3:22-24
24 Therefore the Law has become our tutor to lead us to Christ
That is why works of the law, and works by the law cannot save us. No one is suggesting that she (or any of us) attain heaven by virtue of compliance with the works of the law alone, and that is what St. Paul is talking about. But for Christians…the sinless life is available through the power of the Holy Spirit and the finished work of Christ isn’t it? That’s where all the power for the Christian life comes from is it not?
So you concur with Martin Luther’s misbegotten view of mankind as nothing more than dung heaps covered in snow?No. You are born fallen. You sin because you are a sinner; you are not a sinner because you sin.
The fact then negates the power and the graces of God? And the commands of God are just rules that we cannot meet EVER even with the promised power of the risen Christ in our lives? So then our failings, even as Christians mean that God’s grace and power are not sufficient for us to obey Him? St. Paul might wonder at that and disagree.It is literal. The truth of de facto (and everything else) is found within DEO—a fact.
I’m anything butYour rejection of what Paul says is “the result of a serious lack of faith.”[/font
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rejecting what St. Paul has said. I’m saying that perhaps there is more to it than you are willing to accept and live out.
No problem there…You are free to reject what I have said.
Pax tecum,