RE: Biblical Christianity 101, a study of the book of Romans
November 18, 2015 at 11:35 am
(This post was last modified: November 18, 2015 at 11:36 am by Drich.)
What Paul is doing here is answering the question that people who lived their whole lives under the law would have. (Good works= The only way to righteousness before God) And even to the legalist who think the same way. Because remember in Chapter 4 Paul just dropped a bomb shell saying our 'righteousnees before God is not determined on a life lived under the law. That the Law now (after Christ/cross) was about pushing people to identify sin in their lives. Paul was showing in Chapter 4 that no one could be found righteous before God by trying to just obey the law. That Redemption through Jesus' sacrifice was the only way to redemption separate and apart from how one acts.
So the question is: "If the Law and obeying is not the way to be found righteous before God then is it ok to sin?" Paul answers:
In essence What is being communicated here is if we truly die to our self and live For/In Christ in such away to be given the atonement we need for salvation, we will not want to sin any more. Not that we will/can stop completely, but we will come to hate and want to distance ourselves from it.
What is said above, Many Legalist take to mean that we can live sin free lives because 'we have been set free from the control if sin. Problem with that interpretation is that it is not consistant with the context of the whole passage. let alone with what Paul shares with us about his own struggles in coming chapters.
The context starts in verse 3 Speaking to the Resurrection of Christ and Paul telling us that we too will share in this bodily resurrection. That upon the death of Christ our sinful nature was also put to death. Sinful nature not being our sinful desire/carnal part of ourselves, but our whole being/any part of our nature that sinned. (Remember in chapter 4 He quotes OT scripture that says all are sinful all the time.) Meaning, before if apart of our selves sinned whether we wanted to or not, our whole being (Mind/Body, Spirit, Soul) would be punished in Death. Death of the Mind and body at the end of this life, and death of the Spirit Soul in Hell. Now our sinful half will die upon our physical death and like Christ be resurrected with out sin.
So a bit of a recap, If we die in Christ, then we die to our selves our sinful desire to live for self and all the trapping of what the 'self' wants. We are to live or want to live as Christ lived.
Paul Asks, and answers:
Does that make sense? The legalist says: We must follow the law of God to earn Heaven. Romans/Paul says We can not earn Heaven, we have sinned to much/We are ALL Sin All The Time None are or ever will be deserving.
Then Paul asks if we are not derserving anyway, and God grants us grace for the sins we have commited, why not just live a life of sin... He answers by saying if we look at ourselves as a slave to sin or a slave to God, we know our old master/sin would have killed us. while our new master gives us an eternal good life. So in earnest gratitude we inturn life our lives as best we can in accordance to His will. Again not as a means to try and pay back what we were bought and paid with, but a show or sign of respect for giving us a life that we could never afford to live or deserve to live.
So the question is: "If the Law and obeying is not the way to be found righteous before God then is it ok to sin?" Paul answers:
Quote:So do you think we should continue sinning so that God will give us more and more grace? 2 Of course not! Our old sinful life ended. It’s dead. So how can we continue living in sin? 3 Did you forget that all of us became part of Christ Jesus when we were baptized? In our baptism we shared in his death. 4 So when we were baptized, we were buried with Christ and took part in his death. And just as Christ was raised from death by the wonderful power of the Father, so we can now live a new life.
In essence What is being communicated here is if we truly die to our self and live For/In Christ in such away to be given the atonement we need for salvation, we will not want to sin any more. Not that we will/can stop completely, but we will come to hate and want to distance ourselves from it.
Quote:5 Christ died, and we have been joined with him by dying too. So we will also be joined with him by rising from death as he did. 6 We know that our old life was put to death on the cross with Christ. This happened so that our sinful selves would have no power over us. Then we would not be slaves to sin. 7 Anyone who has died is made free from sin’s control.
What is said above, Many Legalist take to mean that we can live sin free lives because 'we have been set free from the control if sin. Problem with that interpretation is that it is not consistant with the context of the whole passage. let alone with what Paul shares with us about his own struggles in coming chapters.
The context starts in verse 3 Speaking to the Resurrection of Christ and Paul telling us that we too will share in this bodily resurrection. That upon the death of Christ our sinful nature was also put to death. Sinful nature not being our sinful desire/carnal part of ourselves, but our whole being/any part of our nature that sinned. (Remember in chapter 4 He quotes OT scripture that says all are sinful all the time.) Meaning, before if apart of our selves sinned whether we wanted to or not, our whole being (Mind/Body, Spirit, Soul) would be punished in Death. Death of the Mind and body at the end of this life, and death of the Spirit Soul in Hell. Now our sinful half will die upon our physical death and like Christ be resurrected with out sin.
Quote:8 If we died with Christ, we know that we will also live with him. 9 Christ was raised from death. And we know that he cannot die again. Death has no power over him now. 10 Yes, when Christ died, he died to defeat the power of sin one time—enough for all time. He now has a new life, and his new life is with God. 11 In the same way, you should see yourselves as being dead to the power of sin and alive for God through Christ Jesus.
So a bit of a recap, If we die in Christ, then we die to our selves our sinful desire to live for self and all the trapping of what the 'self' wants. We are to live or want to live as Christ lived.
Quote:12 But don’t let sin control your life here on earth. You must not be ruled by the things your sinful self makes you want to do. 13 Don’t offer the parts of your body to serve sin. Don’t use your bodies to do evil, but offer yourselves to God, as people who have died and now live. Offer the parts of your body to God to be used for doing good. 14 Sin will not be your master, because you are not under law. You now live under God’s grace.12-14 Paul is telling us not to live for the evil we wanted to do the evil our bodies want to do, but rather offer ourselves to God. 14 is profound because Paul again states that we are no longer under the law as a means to Righteousness, that it is through God's grace in the way of the atonement offered by Christ that we now find righteousness. Which again begs the question (for the legalist and OT worshipers alike) if we are under grace and not the law then why not sin, if we are no longer defined by the law to be worthy before God?
Paul Asks, and answers:
Quote:15 So what should we do? Should we sin because we are under grace and not under law? Certainly not! 16 Surely you know that you become the slaves of whatever you give yourselves to. Anything or anyone you follow will be your master. You can follow sin, or you can obey God. Following sin brings spiritual death, but obeying God makes you right with him. 17 In the past you were slaves to sin—sin controlled you. But thank God, you fully obeyed what you were taught. 18 You were made free from sin, and now you are slaves to what is right. 19 I use this example from everyday life because you need help in understanding spiritual truths. In the past you offered the parts of your body to be slaves to your immoral and sinful thoughts. The result was that you lived only for sin. In the same way, you must now offer yourselves to be slaves to what is right. Then you will live only for God.20 In the past you were slaves to sin, and you did not even think about doing right. 21 You did evil things, and now you are ashamed of what you did. Did those things help you? No, they only brought death. 22 But now you are free from sin. You have become slaves of God, and the result is that you live only for God. This will bring you eternal life. 23 When people sin, they earn what sin pays—death. But God gives his people a free gift—eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.Paul says here that we are slaves to whatever we give ourselves over to. Meaning if we wish to stay in sin then the laws does indeed condemn us, however if we Give our selves to God as slaves bought by the blood of Christ then we live under rule of Christ, not as payment for being saved from the consenquence of sin, but because we wish to serve our Master respectfully. Now keep in mind their are no free men in Paul's analogy. One is either a slave to Death/Sin or s Slave to God/Eternal life. If we choose life we will earnestly want to live in the way the living live (under God's rules/Laws)
Does that make sense? The legalist says: We must follow the law of God to earn Heaven. Romans/Paul says We can not earn Heaven, we have sinned to much/We are ALL Sin All The Time None are or ever will be deserving.
Then Paul asks if we are not derserving anyway, and God grants us grace for the sins we have commited, why not just live a life of sin... He answers by saying if we look at ourselves as a slave to sin or a slave to God, we know our old master/sin would have killed us. while our new master gives us an eternal good life. So in earnest gratitude we inturn life our lives as best we can in accordance to His will. Again not as a means to try and pay back what we were bought and paid with, but a show or sign of respect for giving us a life that we could never afford to live or deserve to live.