L
lanman87
Guest
So to are the analogies of Mary being the Ark.The analogies are types.
So to are the analogies of Mary being the Ark.The analogies are types.
The Deposit of Faith is the Gospel of Christ.Please define the term in your protestant understanding
And the analogy is true.
Do you then, need to follow perfectly, what He said?steve-b:![]()
The Deposit of Faith is the Gospel of Christ.Please define the term in your protestant understanding
My perfection comes from the work of Christ on the Cross, not in anything I have or have not done.Do you then, need to follow perfectly, what He said?
So IOW, you don’t have to obey the one who died on the cross?steve-b:![]()
My perfection comes from the work of Christ on the Cross, not in anything I have or have not done.Do you then, need to follow perfectly, what He said?
I don’t have to, I get to. There is a big difference.So IOW, you don’t have to obey the one who died on the cross?
Addressing the first part of your answer "Don’t have to"steve-b:![]()
I don’t have to, I get to. There is a big difference.So IOW, you don’t have to obey the one who died on the cross?
Why is the analogy of the Ark being Mary true and the analogy of the Ark being Christ not true?And the analogy is true.
I’ve answered you on this many times. There is no need to do it again.That’s a massive QPQ statement… agreed?
Reading his BioHere is a broader answer from Professor Michael Horton article “Yes, God Required Obedience for Salvation”
Are Christians under the Ten Commandments or are we only responsible to keep New Testament commands?
There are two ways of being “under” the 10 Commandments. The first is being under the moral law as the basis for our salvation. This is the principle of “Do this and you will live; break it and you will die.” But Christ fulfilled this law in our place perfectly. When we place our faith in Christ, we are given his status as the faithful law-keeper even though we are far from it ourselves. That’s why the New Testament tells us that we are no longer under the law but under grace (Rom 6:14).
In the gospel, we’re told not only that Christ lived and died for us but that he rose again for us and that we are baptized into his victory over sin’s guilt and tyranny. He sent his Spirit to us to give us a new heart and to unite us to Christ through faith, which itself is his gift. So we’re not under the law as a way of being accounted righteous before God. It can’t condemn us. “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus” (Rom 8:1).
There’s a second sense of being “under the law” and that’s being obligated to what the law requires. Jesus taught that we’re still obligated to the law: loving God and our neighbor is the summary of the Ten Commandments (Mat 22:40). Paul similarly teaches that the “law of Christ” is this command to love (Gal 6:2). But now this comes to us as those who are justified, free of the terrors of the law, who now spontaneously—from the heart—long to love God and our neighbor. The content of God’s moral will for our lives hasn’t changed. The Ten Commandments still summarize that moral will. Now the moral law can’t condemn us but it does guide us. It still tells us what God requires even though it’s no longer the taskmaster telling us, “Do or die!” for Jesus has done and died for us.
So you know it is a must do and not just some suggestion to do.steve-b:![]()
I’ve answered you on this many times. There is no need to do it again.That’s a massive QPQ statement… agreed?
Not really. Jesus drew from her flesh, not her heart, mind and soul.You just answered your own question.
Mary wasn’t corrupt in any of that
Yes, I eat the Body of Christ continually.So you know it is a must do and not just some suggestion to do.
We were talking about Marysteve-b:![]()
Why is the analogy of the Ark being Mary true and the analogy of the Ark being Christ not true?And the analogy is true.
Yes, and I showed you were people in the Early Church said the Ark represented Christ. My question is why does the Ark represent Mary and not Christ? As both typologies were taught. That the Ark was Christ seems to have been taught earlier and that the Ark was Mary seems to have been taught later.We were talking about Mary
You say you’re a Protestant. Nowhere in Protestantism is there valid ordinations…ergo no valid consecrations…ergo no valid Eucharist.steve-b:![]()
Yes, I eat the Body of Christ continually.So you know it is a must do and not just some suggestion to do.
I eat His Body every moment I have faith and every time I put my faith into action…Ergo, you can’t say or believe you actually eat His body… in Protestantism.
You were denying Mary was the ark.steve-b:![]()
Yes, and I showed you were people in the Early Church said the Ark represented Christ. My question is why does the Ark represent Mary and not Christ? As both typologies were taught. That the Ark was Christ seems to have been taught earlier and that the Ark was Mary seems to have been taught later.We were talking about Mary