Odell:
What is sad moon is that you fail to realize that we have a tendency to sin and that is an obstacle to complete sanctification. What is sad is you fail to understand the power of the cross. It actually transforms us we have the grace to do Gods will. You fail to see this therefore God covers you. You stay covered moon. As for me I desire no longer to be dung. yes I accept the power of the cross.
What is sad, Odell, is that you completely fail to understand what is revealed in the Scriptures about God having dealt with our sins, once for all, through the sacrifice of His beloved Son on the cross. Such is the power of the cross. The cross doesn’t “transform” anyone to do the will of God. It’s the means by with God now completely, and finally, judicially forgives all the sins (past, present and future) of those who believe in Christ, and
saves them, once for all, according to His
GRACE (Eph. 2:8-9).
In
unbelief of this glorious truth Catholicism has
added to Christianity its own doctrine of “
temporal punishment.” Based wholly on its equally unbiblical doctrine of “
sactifying grace” which, it teaches, is “
infused” into the soul at the time of water baptism (infants or adults) making the soul “
holy” and inherently pleasing to God. Teaching then that other sacraments and good works further “
justify” the soul, making it increasingly attractive to God.
Therefore, the goal of Catholicism (through its sacramental system) is to transform the essential character of the soul into something which is in itself
objectively good (
VociMike refers to this as a process of making the soul “unfallen”). And based on this human reasoning (not Divine Revelation) the soul would require the complete cleansing of every vestige of sin before it can come into the presence of God. Purgatory being the the humanly logical extension of this Catholic
process of salvation. It being an integral part of its
penitential system. Teaching (based on its
unbelief in what God has revealed concerning sins and the, once for all, blood sacrifice of Christ) that every sin (venial) credits “
temporal punishment” to the baptized one’s account. And that acts of
penance,
suffering, and
indulgences debit his account. And the fact that, as a norm, the baptized may not make full satisfaction for sins in this life, “Purgatory” in the afterlife is necessary to balance the ledger.
But according to Biblical salvation (Divine salvation as revealed in the Scriptures) there is no need of such a place as “Purgatory.” And for this reason you don’t find it taught in Scripture.
Biblical salvation doesn’t at all rely on the works or sufferings of “penitent” sinners, but solely upon Christ who “
made purification of sins” on the cross - once for all. Therefore, no such thing as “
temporal punishment” remains for which the believer must atone. But it’s Scripturally revealed that Jesus Himself is the
propitiation for our sins (1 Jn. 2:2; Rom. 3:25; Heb. 2:17; 1 Jn. 4:10). IOW, the sacrificial death and shed blood of Christ completely
satisfied (propitiated) the offended holiness of God because of man’s sins. That is, through the
propitiatory work of Christ on the cross God IS
propitiated. God looks to only one Man, and ONE alone, as the satisfaction of His offended holiness because of sin: the Man Christ Jesus.
The Catholic doctrines of “
temporal punishment” and “
Purgatory” were
added out of
unbelief in this glorious, Scripturally revealed truth.