L
linus
Guest
Nope! It is “applied” at the time of personal belief. The cross did not prevent me, nor you, nor Mary, from being born with “original sin.”All who we (true believers) were “in Adam” WAS crucified WITH CHRIST on the cross (Rom. 6; Col. 3:1-3; Eph. 2:6).
Really!? You mean the application of the eternal sacrifice was applied prior to my birth? Hmmm, that sounds familiar…
The phrase “sin nature” is not really in the Bible. It does speak of the “old man” (some translate it, “old-self”, Rom. 6:6). "My “old man” is all who I was in Adam. God has no program for all WHO I was in Adam except death. He does not have a program to rehabilitate the “old man”: “…knowing this that our old man was crucified with Him…” (Rom. 6:6).Anyhow, your statement in its intended context is confusing. My sin nature is not gone entirely - do you honestly believe yours is?
Since my faith in Jesus Christ I am no longer IN ADAM, but IN CHRIST, raised to new life IN HIM. That’s why Paul asks the logical question, "What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin that grace might increase? May it never be! How shall we who died to sin (i.e., our “old man,” all who we were in Adam - crucified with Christ) still live in it?" (Rom. 6:1-2). These are “identification truths” taught by Paul - i.e., Paul’s gospel.
Every true believer is now a partaker of the divine nature (2 Pet. 1:1-4), being no longer “in Adam,” but “in Christ.” Can we sin? Certainly! Should we sin? Certainly not. But instead we are exhorted to “walk by the Spirit and you will not carry out the desire of the flesh” (Gal. 5:16; cf. Gal. 1:1). “The flesh” is not synonymous with the “old man,” or what you call the “sin nature.” Obviously it is not the true believer’s “nature” to walk in the flesh, or Paul would not exhort him not to. He would have no choice but to walk in the flesh, it being his “nature.”
What is not right is your application of Christ’s words. Only the one time, once for all, literal sacrifice of Christ could forever take away sins. It was through Christ’s cross that the “old man” was once for all crucified. Jesus says to take up one’s cross in order to FOLLOW Him, not to literally crucify oneself. That would do no one any good. Taking up one’s cross is explained and defined, figuratively, by Christ in Matt. 16:24:And Christ explicitly tells us to “take up your Cross daily” Luke 9:23 Something is not right.
MAT 16:24 Then Jesus said to His disciples, “If anyone wishes to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me.” Men are full of self-serving, worldly ambitions. But Jesus says in the context of the Luke passage you quote: “For what is a man profited if he gains the whole world, and loses his soul?” (Lk. 9:25). One cannot seek the self-serving ambitions of this world system and follow Christ at the same time.
“Original sin” is not something you’re forgiven of, it’s something you’re redeemed from: death, judgment and condemnation through Adam.Really? I have not “committed” original sin - is it not forgiven me?
The real question is where does Scripture say it does? Where does Scripture teach us that Mary was prevented from original sin through Christ’s cross???I said: A sin-sacrifice does not “prevent” or “prohibit” one from original sin. In order to do that one must circumvent the normal birth process (Mary had a normal birth). You replied: Really? Where does Scripture state this?
You really think the only reason Christ was born of a virgin was merely to fulfill Scripture?No, he was born of a virgin to fulfill Scripture.
Salvation has always been “through faith” in the living God. The means of salvation has always been the sin-sacrifice of Jesus Christ. The effects of His sacrifice are eternal, but the sacrifice itself was accomplished in time. Jesus, 2000 years ago, took upon Himself the sins of the whole world, even Elijah’s. Elijah was a man of faith, and by faith he was saved before Christ and His sacrificial death actually purified him of his sins. Just as long after the cross, by faith, I am saved and I am purified of all my sins through the once for all time - in time sacrifice of Jesus Christ.Nope. The merits or the eternal sacrifice of Christ can be applied at any point in time: past, present or future. How else could Elijah be taken up into heaven?
Blessings,
L.
P.S. We’ve got to stop meeting like this Philthy!