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VociMike
Guest
moondweller, will you begin to sin again in heaven when you are united with your resurrected body? Why or why not?
No, Rinnie, you’re sadly missing the point. WORKS, and REWARDS rendered for them, have NOTHING to do with Catholic Purgatory. But you’re applying 1 Cor. 3:10-15 to your doctrine of Purgatory.You my friend must read it again and again. Lets address the simple question you never seem to answer. What are good works and bad works.
Works are not sins, period. There are works done in this life that have value (figuratively referred to as gold, silver & precious stones; materials that are noncombustible). Contrasted with works that have no intrinsic value (figuratively referred to as wood, hay, straw; combustible materials). But there are no such things as “good” sins and “bad” sins, or the idea that good sins receive rewards and the bad do not. Can you grasp the absurdity of your argument??Are you saying that a persons bad works are not sins?
Christ will judge a true believer’s LABORS! That is, how he BUILT upon the foundation, which is Christ Himself: the message of His Person and sacrificial work. But the true believer Himself “does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life” (Jn. 5:24; cf Jn. 3:17-18).And are you saying that God does not judge us on our good works and bad works?
I, and Paul, already told you. Those works that are not compatible with the foundation of Christ. Those which do not conform to the gospel of GRACE. IOW, if you’re a true believer and preach works (of course I, personally, would doubt if you’ve actually believed) as a part of salvation, your “works” will burn and no reward is rendered. Why? Because your teaching does not conform to the foundation Paul laid, which is Christ and salvation “by grace through faith” in Him. But this appraisal of works is only for those who have already been “saved by grace through faith.”Then you are saying that the fire reveals the quality of the Christains workers works? You keep saying its all about works works what in your opinion are bad works,
Of course not. Why? Scripture itself answers your questionmoondweller, will you begin to sin again in heaven when you are united with your resurrected body? Why or why not?
I walk by faith, just as my father Abraham did. Does that mean he never sinned? No. But I, like Abraham, have been reckoned righteousness based on faith alone (Gen. 15:6; Rom. 4:4-5).How are you able to walk with the Lord moon? sounds like your given to much credit to yourself. It just sounds like YOU YOU YOU![]()
To walk by faith is to walk by the Spirit; and when a true believer walks by the Spirit he won’t carry out the desire of the flesh (Gal. 5:16).would you be walking with the Lord if you murdered?
Heb 5:11 At the time, all discipline seems a cause not for joy but for pain, yet later it brings the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who are trained by it.
This has to do with God’s dealings with believers here on earth, in this life. It has nothing to do with Purgatory. Can you show me in the CCC where it references Heb. 5:11 to its teaching on Purgatory?Read up on your scripture moon:thumbsup:
So you just provided more evidence of purgatory. “transform the body of our humble state into conformity with the body of His glory”.Of course not. Why? Scripture itself answers your questionhil 3:20-21 "For our citizenship is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ; who will transform the body of our humble state into conformity with the body of His glory, by the exertion of the power that He has even to subject all things to Himself."Jesus redeemed the whole man: body, soul and spirit. The future redemption of our body (Rom. 8:23) is the consummation of our divine redemption and the final act of divine adoption (see 1 Jn. 3:2; Col. 3:4).
This uniting of the believer with his resurrected, or, for some, translated, body is yet future (1 Thess. 4:14-18).
No change? Nothing at all, eh?You can water baptize someone all day long and no change will occur. If you’ll take an honest look at the Scriptural accounts only those who first believed were subsequently water baptized: “For by grace you have been saved through faith…”
Moondweller-It’s all part of believing, my friend. You’ll notice that those Jews Peter was preaching Christ to were “pierced to the heart” (Acts 2:37). IOW, convicted of their sin. And the account goes on to say that those who received (i.e., believed) his word were subsequently baptized (2:41). They believed Peter’s word concerning the bodily resurrection of Jesus their Messiah whom they knew was crucified, and God saved them by GRACE through FAITH.
Why is this so difficult for you to understand? Unbelief?
If not, then why the tears?Yea but you don’t suffer loss in heaven. So we catholics say![]()
What does this have anything to do with Catholic Purgatory? From where do you get the teaching that those in your Purgatory have glorified, resurrected or transformed bodies?So you just provided more evidence of purgatory. “transform the body of our humble state into conformity with the body of His glory”.
Thank you for pointing out that confirmation in scripture.
Purgatory is all about the process of our transformation from sinful creatures to perfected, purified creatures. You have supported that doctrine by noting in scripture that our bodies will be included in this transformation, when they are resurrected. This of course makes perfect sense, since we are corporeal beings, and cannot be perfected unless our bodies are perfected. You support our doctrine even as you think you are disproving it.What does this have anything to do with Catholic Purgatory? From where do you get the teaching that those in your Purgatory have glorified, resurrected or transformed bodies?
Anyway… Scripture tells us that this event occurs at the coming of Christ for His church in the air. You’re very confused, my friend (1 Thess. 4:13-18).
No, Randy, what I said in my post was not hypothetical. But yours is clearly is.Moondweller-
This is hypothetical, but I’d like to ask what would Peter have thought of someone who might have said, “I believe Jesus is Lord, but I just had my hair done, and I don’t want to get it wet.”
How would the Church have reacted to a “believer” who refused baptism for any reason?
But you have not yet presented anything that supports your doctrine of Purgatory. So, what you’re presenting here is first an assertion and then a rationalization. :tiphat:Purgatory is all about the process of our transformation from sinful creatures to perfected, purified creatures. You have supported that doctrine by noting in scripture that our bodies will be included in this transformation, when they are resurrected. This of course makes perfect sense, since we are corporeal beings, and cannot be perfected unless our bodies are perfected. You support our doctrine even as you think you are disproving it.![]()
You have the doctrine of Purgatory backwards. The perfection is caused by God alone while HE is doing the cleaning. The suffering is a consequence, a result of what is happening in Purgatory. It is not a cause of anything. God is causing the cleansing, the cleansing is painful. This does not in anyway make the pain the cause of the perfection.Paul does not teach that the true believer’s body will be resurrected or translated into conformity with a perfection caused by one’s own suffering .
Nope, no change at all. You’re confused with the baptism of the Holy Spirit (see 1 Cor. 12:13; Eph. 4:4-6). All who personally believe in Christ are baptized by the Holy Spirit into the body of Christ, sealed by Him to the day of redemption, and regenerated. Water has no power to do any of this.No change? Nothing at all, eh?![]()
Are you asserting that in this entire thread no support of the Catholic doctrine has been provided?But you have not yet presented anything that supports your doctrine of Purgatory. So, what you’re presenting here is first an assertion and then a rationalization. :tiphat:
You confuse the “what” and the “how”.Paul does not teach that the true believer’s body will be resurrected or translated into conformity with a perfection caused by one’s own suffering in a place called “Purgatory,” but in conformity to the risen Christ’s own glorified body (Phil. 3:20-21). You read into the passage something that’s not even remotely there.
You’re rationalizing.You have the doctrine of Purgatory backwards. The perfection is caused by God alone while HE is doing the cleaning. The suffering is a consequence, a result of what is happening in Purgatory. It is not a cause of anything. God is causing the cleansing, the cleansing is painful. This does not in anyway make the pain the cause of the perfection.
You wrote this in post #68:Nope, no change at all. You’re confused with the baptism of the Holy Spirit (see 1 Cor. 12:13; Eph. 4:4-6). All who personally believe in Christ are baptized by the Holy Spirit into the body of Christ, sealed by Him to the day of redemption, and regenerated. Water has no power to do any of this.
How does something in your innermost makeup change, and yet there is “no change at all”?Something in my “innermost makeup” DID change. But it changed at the moment of personal belief in Christ.
Nice argument, that was impressive.You’re rationalizing.![]()
I already answered all of this. Please refer to my previous posts.You wrote this in post #68:
How does something in your innermost makeup change, and yet there is “no change at all”?