F
fhansen
Guest
Maybe imputed righteousness is the problem, since it removes the obligation to be truly righteous from the equation-no fear and trembling necessary. As it is though, we’re made just but the tendency to sin and whatever attraction we have to it isn’t removed-so we must struggle and in that struggle we prove ourselves, working out our salvation with the continuous help of grace and this new life of God in us-or we do not. Justification makes us new creations and equips us for battle, but we aren’t forced to remain in that state of justice let alone grow in it and Scripture is replete with this understanding as it exhorts believers over and over to remain in the faith, do good works, persevere, strive, be holy, etc, etc with the loss of place in the kingdom at stake.And this is why I asked about “empirical experience”. How do we square God’s requirement for perfection (His son), and our slow metamorphosis? How do we hold being a “new creation” in tension with our temporal state? For me, imputed righteousness makes sense.
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