The Letter to the Romans...

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Yahshua

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Sep 22, 2013
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No problem.

Romans 2:6-11
He will render to each one according to his works...

If we start from a foundation that all scripture is true we have to reconcile this passage. So this is what Romans 2:6 says. God will render judgment to each one according to that person's works. Simply because the word "works" is used doesn't mean it means the same thing whenever it's reference. We can update the word "works" to "actions" or "deeds" to better understand what's being said from one passage to the next. These are two generic term that depend upon context to understand what they're referring to.

God will judge us based on our deeds, what we do. So the question is "what actions do we do?" Well we (1) have faith in his Son and (2) we obey God's commands...these are the two actions we're required to perform.


This is why Paul covers:

a) How God will judge the world...

b) To the necessity of having faith (which is confirmed by one's actions as "faith without action is dead"; James 2:14-26)

c) To that faith giving two gifts to the believer: justification & grace

d) That Justification is "right standing" with God (i.e. Which is Christ's death paying for PAST sins; and Christ's life blood as resurrected high priest covering the believer)

[This merely starts the journey out of our Egypt...but it's not the destination.]

E) That Grace is God's power for salvation (Romans 1:16-17); salvation from God's judgment. The power that one will be saved. This is Christ's Spirit within the believer guiding them through the wilderness journey; the cloud leading us to the promise land (God's glory/Salvation/Sabbath Rest). But it's a journey we must "walk" (an action) by being obedient. We are no longer weak.

F) That God will judge the world based on obedience to his law (Romans 2:12-13).

---

I think the misunderstanding when it comes to term "works" is this idea that "all works are of the flesh", but we must read the context of the passage to see what works are being discussed at that moment. For instance, just in the 5 chapters we've covered so far there has been mentioned the following "works/actions":

- Evil deeds (selfish perverse actions based on lusts of flesh)
- Good deeds (both gentiles outside of law following their heart and followers of law obeying)
- Hypocritical judgement (being hearers and not doers of law)
- Obeying the law (example of gentiles outside of circumcision still being counted as circumcised if they follow the law)
- The Law's function (to show what unrighteousness/sin is)
- Working for a wage (as a general example against receiving a gift not owed)
- Justification (Christ's work as High Priest in heaven that's a gift to us)

...and all of these instances were different actions (or "works") being mentioned. They were either actions/works from God or from men; from gentiles or from jews; from good people or from evil people, based on the context. But out of all of these "works/actions" it's only one in the list that's described as being works/actions "of the flesh" or "of self" and that's evil deeds.

Evil deeds are works of self?
I didn't mean to put a question mark at the end of my post here.
 
H

Hoffco

Guest
Yahshua, Whoa! I should hope not. Sorry for the impression you got; But , it was not in tended, or thought. Love to all. will be back in a couple of hours ,need to go visit church people. thanks for teaching that "saving faith " obeys.
 

Yahshua

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Sep 22, 2013
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Yahshua, Whoa! I should hope not. Sorry for the impression you got; But , it was not in tended, or thought. Love to all. will be back in a couple of hours ,need to go visit church people. thanks for teaching that "saving faith " obeys.
No it was I just a thought. as a side note, I realize that even typing posts on this forum bears a weakness of interpretation...because we're each reading through our lenses.

Yes I'll also continue later with more passages studying Romans (heading to bed until the morning).

---

Again thanks for the contributions people. I'm sure it's edifying someone out there in CC land.
 
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Elin

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Yahshua, Whoa! I should hope not. Sorry for the impression you got; But , it was not in tended, or thought. Love to all. will be back in a couple of hours ,need to go visit church people.
thanks for teaching that "saving faith " obeys.
On that we are all agreed.

However, we are not agreed that it's faith alone, and not it's necessary obedience,
that justifies (removes guilt, gives right standing before God), as shown by
Abraham who was justified before any obedience occurred (Ge 15:6).

The Abrahamic covenant (Ge 15:9-21) contained the gospel of grace (Gal 3:8);
i.e., justification/righteousness by faith alone
(Ge 15:6),
and the promise (covenant) based on faith alone (Ge 15:18),
before there was any circumcision (Ge 17:10), which was simply the sign, a seal
guaranteeing justification/righteousness (guiltlessness, right standing before God) by faith alone.
 
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homwardbound

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Oct 24, 2012
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The works, Rom.2:7 that bring us to eternal life are produced in us by he transforming grace of God, Rom.1:16. This is the WHOLE message of rom chps, 1&2. THE Gospel is the POWER of God,to believers,yes, but unsaved believers ,who then are given the gift of the new birth by the grace of God. Grace turns our "seeking faith" into "saving faith", which is "obeying faith". The WHOLE message of Rom. 1&2 is Sanctification begun, the radical brake from sin, by the Grace of God, who "effectually calls" us from sin to holiness of life, "called to be SAINTS". You guys abort the whole first two chs. of Romans with Justification.You are "playing God for a day". like, move over God, I will tell YOU, how to write YOUR Bible. This is blasphemous! PLEASE, just receive GOD'S word as He gave it.! You worship "half truths". LOve to all, Hoffco
The result of believe is LOVE, God's type best described in 1 Cor. 13:4-13
The only thing that is blasphemous is unbelief against the Holy Ghost's testimony of Christ and Father
Father's imputed righteousness shining through the believer is santification, where the believer trusts in nothing else but God. All, credit to God through Son.
For Father through son's death sees us as made perfect and is ready to give us new life in the Spirit once we accept by Christ we are forgiven, this takes place, and we are sanctified
Believe, Receive and see
No seeing the kingdom without being born again by the Spirit of God from God sending this a free gift to the beleiver in the finished work of Christ at the cross, death first for justification then new life for sanctification
 

homwardbound

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Oct 24, 2012
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On that we are all agreed.

However, we are not agreed that it's faith alone, and not it's necessary obedience,
that justifies (removes guilt, gives right standing before God), as shown by
Abraham who was justified before any obedience occurred (Ge 15:6).

The Abrahamic covenant (Ge 15:9-21) contained the gospel of grace (Gal 3:8);
i.e., justification/righteousness by faith alone
(Ge 15:6),
and the promise (covenant) based on faith alone (Ge 15:18),
before there was any circumcision (Ge 17:10), which was simply the sign, a seal
guaranteeing justification/righteousness (guiltlessness, right standing before God) by faith alone.
Yes, truth Sister, and then he did as God led, this sanctified his belief. Just as when I go and do what God says it is sanctified. Just as Christ did nothing or said nothing without the lead of Father via the Holy Ghost that told him what Father wants. Sanctification is shown being a doer, already justified in Christ death, forgiven,
Hebrews 13:12 Wherefore Jesus also, that he might sanctify the people with his own blood, suffered without the gate.
1 Peter 3:15 but sanctify the Lord God in your hearts: and be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear:
1 Thessalonians 5:23 And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.

After belief this is waht we grow into the sanctification of the Lord, growing us up unto perfection as we are already made perfect
[h=3]1 John 3[/h]Authorized (King James) Version (AKJV)

3 Behold, what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called the sons of God: therefore the world knoweth us not, because it knew him not. [SUP]2 [/SUP]Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is. [SUP]3 [/SUP]And every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself, even as he is pure.




 

Yahshua

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Sep 22, 2013
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Romans 4:23-25
But the words “it was counted to him” were not written for his sake alone, but for ours also. It will be counted to us who believe in him who raised from the dead Jesus our Lord, who {*was delivered up for our trespasses*} and {*raised for our justification*}.


What Paul's Saying...

(Still in context to faith counting as righteousness [“calling those things that are not as though they were”]), Paul says righteousness also will be counted to the believer in God; God who raised Christ from the dead, The Messiah who:

1) Died for our sins, and...

2) Was resurrected for our justification.


INTERESTING NOTE: Do you see how the end of this passage splits between two purposes – “...for our trespasses/sins” and “...for our justification”? If we carefully follow Paul’s grammar here, Christ's death did not justify believers. Christ death paid for the believer’s sins...but after that...Christ was resurrected back to life to justify believer’s. In other words, we weren't justified at the cross...we are justified at the resurrection, with our resurrected High Priest ministering/covering us with his blood he shed at the cross. If God did not resurrect Christ, we would not be justified even if he still went to the cross.


If you agree with this interpretation, “like” it.

If you disagree with this interpretation, post an alternative for others to agree with.

If you’d like further elaboration of an interpretation, feel free to ask.
Leviticus 17:11

Viewing the King James Version. Click to switch to 1611 King James Version of Leviticus 17:11.

For the life of the flesh is in the blood: and I have given it to you upon the altar to make an atonement for your souls: for it is the blood that maketh an atonement for the soul.
Thanks Karraster. I see this thread is getting a lot of readers but not many chiming in for explanation. So I'm going to take the liberty to elaborate on this point for the reader's edification.

Reference: The word "atonement" comes from the Hebrew word "Kappur" and means "to cover".

There were two things needed for the symbolic foreshadowing ritual of Atonement: Blood and a pure High Priest.

1. Blood shed (received from the death of the pure animal)
2. A High Priest takes the blood in the Most Holy Place to sprinkle it
3. The Most Holy Place was in the Temple on Earth


...and in fulfillment of this...


1. Christ was the fulfillment of the animal whose blood would be shed
2. Christ was High Priest tasked to take his blood and sprinkling it in the Most Holy Place
3. The Most Holy Place was in the Temple in Heaven


Rhetorical: If Christ is both Lamb AND High Priest, how can he take his blood into heaven if (a) it was not yet shed out of his body after crucifixion and (b) he was not yet resurrected back to life to ascend to heaven and actually sprinkle it? The answer is "he can't". This is why Paul specifically says what he says in Romans 4:23-25.

Christ's death on the cross *provided* the pure blood FOR atonement/covering...but it did not atone; not yet. It's only in resurrection that our High Priest is alive to ascend to heaven to *perform* the atonement/covering on the heavenly altar.

Notice when Christ was finally resurrected that he told Mary not to touch him because he hadn't yet ascended to his Father. This means when he was dead for 3 days and 3 nights he wasn't yet in the Most Holy Place in heaven to cover believers with his blood.

It's his resurrection from the grave that's for the believer's justification, not his death on the cross. Christ's death on the cross was another work; it was the payment (i.e. "end") for our sin penalty on our behalf (one of multiple tasks he had to complete per Daniel 9:24)...but Christ's resurrection into heaven was for our reconciliation to God.
 

Yahshua

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Continuing...

Paul rejoices in God because believers have been reconciled to God (through justification by Christ’s blood). Again, reconciliation (through justification) can't be equated with “being saved” in Paul’s language here. His definition of Salvation is “being delivered from God’s wrath on judgment day and receiving God's glory”.

Romans 5:12-13
Therefore, just as sin came into the world through one man, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men because all sinned for sin indeed was in the world before the law was given, but sin is not counted where there is no law.


What Paul's Saying...

(Following the context of all believers being reconciled by one man, Christ) Paul begins comparing it to how sin entered the world through one man, Adam.

1. One man sinned
2. That sin brought death
3. Death spread to all because all have sinned (too)

4. So by these facts sin existed in the world before God's Law was given

[IMPORTANT: Note that the text does not say "before God's law was *created*". It merely says "before God's law was *given* (to the world)" at this point.]

5. But (in agreement to Romans 3:19-20; Post #35) sin could not be pointed out until God's law was (in context) "given to the world" to perform its work/action/task of revealing sin.


If you agree with this interpretation, “like” it.

If you disagree with this interpretation, post an alternative for others to agree with.

If you’d like further elaboration of an interpretation, feel free to ask.
 

Yahshua

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Sep 22, 2013
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(Following the context of all believers being reconciled by one man, Christ) Paul begins comparing it to how sin entered the world through one man, Adam.

1. One man sinned
2. That sin brought death
3. Death spread to all because all have sinned (too)

4. So by these facts sin existed in the world before God's Law was given

[IMPORTANT: Note that the text does not say "before God's law was *created*". It merely says "before God's law was *given* (to the world)" at this point.]

5. But (in agreement to Romans 3:19-20; Post #35) sin could not be pointed out until God's law was (in context) "given to the world" to perform its work/action/task of revealing sin.

Romans 5:14
Yet death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over those whose sinning was not like the transgression of Adam, who was a type of the one who was to come.


What Paul's Saying...

(Even though God's law wasn't yet given to reveal sin) Because sin brought death, Paul explains that death ruled from Adam to Moses...even over those who didn't sin like Adam did.


If you agree with this interpretation, “like” it.

If you disagree with this interpretation, post an alternative for others to agree with.

If you’d like further elaboration of an interpretation, feel free to ask.[/QUOTE]
 

Yahshua

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(Even though God's law wasn't yet given to reveal sin) Because sin brought death, Paul explains that death ruled from Adam to Moses...even over those who didn't sin like Adam did.

Romans 5:15
But the free gift is not like the trespass. For if many died through one man's trespass, much more have {the grace of God} and {the free gift by the grace} of that one man Jesus Christ abounded for many.


What Paul's Saying...

(Concerning Death spreading to many by one man's sin) Paul says the free gift (of Justification, in context) abounds for many from the one man, Christ....by the grace of God and the grace of Christ.


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Yahshua

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(Concerning Death spreading to many by one man's sin) Paul says the free gift (of Justification, in context) abounds for many from the one man, Christ....by the grace of God and the grace of Christ.

Romans 5:16
And the free gift is not like the result of that one man's sin. For the judgment following one trespass brought condemnation, but the free gift following many trespasses brought justification.


What Paul's Saying...

But Paul says there's a difference between Death and Justification. After just one sin came the condemnation (to death; in context). However, after many sins came the free gift (of Justification, in context).


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Yahshua

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But Paul says there's a difference between Death and Justification. After just one sin came the condemnation (to death; in context). However, after many sins came the free gift (of Justification, in context).

Romans 5:17
For if, because of one man's trespass, death reigned through that one man, much more will those who receive the abundance of grace and the free gift of righteousness reign in life through the one man Jesus Christ.


What Paul's Saying...

(Supporting his last statement) If death ruled (the world) through Adam because of Adam's one sin, then indeed life will rule for those who receive Grace and Justification through Christ.

---

To this statement I then wonder to myself...why do so many Christians still live life acting as if death rules over them? If I updated Paul statement here to modern times it may read:

"If death rules (the world) through mankind because of Adam's one sin, then indeed life should rule for those who've receive Grace and Justification through Christ...shouldn't it?"


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Yahshua

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(Supporting his last statement) If death ruled (the world) through Adam because of Adam's one sin, then indeed life will rule for those who receive Grace and Justification through Christ.

---

To this statement I then wonder to myself...why do so many Christians still live life acting as if death rules over them? If I updated Paul statement here to modern times it may read:

"If death rules (the world) through mankind because of Adam's one sin, then indeed life should rule for those who've receive Grace and Justification through Christ...shouldn't it?"

Romans 5:18-19
Therefore, as one trespass led {Past Tense} to condemnation for all men, so one act of righteousness leads {Present tense} to justification and life for all men. For as by the one man's disobedience the many were {Past tense} made sinners, so by the one man's obedience the many will be {Future Tense} made righteous.


What Paul's Saying...

Paul concludes this point (note the difference in tenses):

1. Sin led to the condemnation for all (past tense)
2. Christ act leads to Justification & life (present tense; so why do believers operate under death?)

3. From one man's disobedience, many were made sinners (Past tense)
4. From one man's obedience, many will be made righteous (future tense)


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Yahshua

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Paul concludes this point (note the difference in tenses):

1. Sin led to the condemnation for all (past tense)
2. Christ act leads to Justification & life (present tense; so why do believers operate under death?)

3. From one man's disobedience, many were made sinners (Past tense)
4. From one man's obedience, many will be made righteous (future tense)

Romans 5:20-21
Now the law came in to increase the trespass, but where sin increased, grace abounded all the more, so that, as sin reigned in death, grace also might reign through righteousness leading to eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.


What Paul's Saying...

(Now Paul switches focus to God's Law for a moment to show its interplay in all of this). God's Law was brought in [again, it doesn't say "created" as if it never existed prior]; God's Law was brought in to magnify sin; to bring it to its full measure. In other words, to reveal what actions/works of men are "sins" in order to show how unrighteous *men without Christ* are.

But Paul assures that while sin is magnified like this, Grace [God's power for salvation; Romans 1:16-17] is even more magnified. [Because, in context, with God's grace the believer is no longer weak to sin (Romans 5:6-8). With God's grace, they don't have to be sin's slave like before].


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Elin

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Thanks Karraster. I see this thread is getting a lot of readers but not many chiming in for explanation. So I'm going to take the liberty to elaborate on this point for the reader's edification.

Reference: The word "atonement" comes from the Hebrew word "Kappur" and means "to cover".
It was the name for the cover of the Ark in the Holy of Holies.

The animal sacrifices of the OT only covered sin (Ro 4:7), they did not take away sin (Heb 10:4).

The sins of the OT saints were only covered, they were not remitted (taken away) until Christ
shed his blood on the cross (Ro 3:25).

There were two things needed for the symbolic foreshadowing ritual of Atonement: Blood and a pure High Priest.
I'm not sure where you get that the High Priest who offered sacrifice was pure.

The High Priest who offered the great sin sacrifice on the Day of Atonement was not pure
(H
eb 5:1-3, 7:27-28).
His sins were only covered (Heb 10:4) by the special sin offering (Lev 16:4, 11-14,)
which he made before the great sin offering (Lev 16:15-16) on the Day of Atonement,
for defilement of the tabernacle by being in the midst of a sinful people (Lev 16:16).

1. Blood shed (received from the death of the pure animal)
2. A High Priest takes the blood in the Most Holy Place to sprinkle it
But that occurred only once a year, on the Day of Atonement.

Sacrifices were offered every day, but their blood was not taken in the Most Holy Place,
it was sprinkled on, and poured out at the base of, the altar.


3. The Most Holy Place was in the Temple on Earth

...and in fulfillment of this...

1. Christ was the fulfillment of the animal whose blood would be shed
2. Christ was High Priest tasked to take his blood and sprinkling it in the Most Holy Place
3. The Most Holy Place was in the Temple in Heaven
And Hebrews shows us the meaning of this physical picture depicting an immaterial heaven.

"For it was necessary, then. . .for the heavenly things to be purified with better sacrifices than these.
For Christ. . .entered heaven itself, now to appear for us in God's presence
(Heb 9:23-24)
where he ever lives to make intercession (R
o 8:34; Heb 7:25).

Christ's sacrifice (blood) is presented in heaven in his daily intercession in the presence of God
for us, where Christ applies the benefits of (sprinkles) his blood; e.g.,
guaranteeing our redemption,
working out everything for us in accordance with God's will,
preparing a place for us.


Rhetorical: If Christ is both Lamb AND High Priest, how can he take his blood into heaven if
(a) it was not yet shed out of his body after crucifixion
I'm not sure where you get this.

Christ's blood was poured out at the base of the cross (Jn 19:34, 36-37; Lk 22:20) just as
the blood of the sacrificial animal was poured out at the base of the altar (Lev 4:7, 18, 25, 30, 34).

and (b) he was not yet resurrected back to life to ascend to heaven and actually sprinkle it? The answer is "he can't".

This is why Paul specifically says what he says in Romans 4:23-25.

Christ's death on the cross *provided* the pure blood FOR atonement/covering...but it did not atone; not yet. It's only in resurrection that our High Priest is alive to ascend to heaven to *perform* the atonement/covering on the heavenly altar.
That assumes physical meaning of an immaterial heavenly reality, which Hebrews indicates (above)
is not a physical sprinkling of it, but the application of its benefits through Christ's ever-living
intercession for us.

The sprinkling of the blood on the horns of the altars on the Day of Atonement
was the application of the blood's benefits; i.e., cleansing of the holy things from defilement.


Notice when Christ was finally resurrected that he told Mary not to touch him because he hadn't yet ascended to his Father.
The Greek word translated "touch" here is haptomai, which means "to hold on, to embrace."

Jesus is telling her that she can no longer have him in the physically human way as before,
but can have him now only through the Holy Spirit, whom he will send after he returns to heaven.

This means when he was dead for 3 days and 3 nights he wasn't yet in the Most Holy Place in heaven to cover believers with his blood.
It means he had not yet ascended to the presence of his Father where he would apply
the benefits of (sprinkle) his blood in ever-living intercession for us.

It's his resurrection from the grave that's for the believer's justification, not his death on the cross. Christ's death on the cross was another work; it was the payment (i.e. "end") for our sin penalty on our behalf (one of multiple tasks he had to complete per Daniel 9:24)...but Christ's resurrection into heaven was for our reconciliation to God.
Christ's death on the cross paid the penalty for the sin of those who believe in him.

Christ's resurrection acquitted us of guilt (justified) in that it showed the Father
did regard our debt as paid, his justice as satisfied and we did, indeed,
have a guiltless right standing before him, reconciling us.

However, keep in mind that Paul more often refers to Christ's death on the cross without
the resurrection, assuming its inclusion rather than as a separate work, in reconciling us
to God (e.g., Col 1:20; Eph 2:16; 2Co 5:20-21).

The sprinkling of Christ's blood in heaven is the application of his blood's benefits
through his ever-living intercession for us in the presence of God (Heb 9:23-24).
 
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Elin

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Continuing...

Romans 5:12-13
Therefore, just as
1) sin came into the world through one man, and
2) death through sin
, and so death spread to all men because
3) all sinned for sin indeed was in the world before the law was given,
4) but sin is not counted where there is no law.

What Paul's Saying...

(Following the context of all believers being reconciled by one man, Christ) Paul begins comparing it to how sin entered the world through one man, Adam.

1. One man sinned
2. That sin brought death
3. Death spread to all because all have sinned (too)

4. So by these facts sin existed in the world before God's Law was given

[IMPORTANT: Note that the text does not say "before God's law was *created*". It merely says "before God's law was *given* (to the world)" at this point.]

5. But (in agreement to Romans 3:19-20; Post #35) sin could not be pointed out until God's law was (in context) "given to the world" to perform its work/action/task of revealing sin.

If you agree with this interpretation, “like” it.

If you disagree with this interpretation, post an alternative for others to agree with.

If you’d like further elaboration of an interpretation, feel free to ask.
Note the dilemma.

Sin was in the world when there was no law,
but when there is no law, sin is not taken into account.


So how could there be guilt of sin which causes death (Ro 6:23)

when sin was not taken into account?
 

Elin

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Romans 5:14
Yet death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over those whose sinning was not like the transgression of Adam, who was a type of the one who was to come.

What Paul's Saying...

(Even though God's law wasn't yet given to reveal sin) Because sin brought death, Paul explains that death ruled from Adam to Moses...even over those who didn't sin like Adam did.

If you agree with this interpretation, “like” it.

If you disagree with this interpretation, post an alternative for others to agree with.

If you’d like further elaboration of an interpretation, feel free to ask.
Alternative.

Which is it?

No, sir. . .that's an altered translation from the Judaizers' playbook for the Bible.

The Greek text reads:

"but death reigned from Adam until Moses, even on those who had not sinned
(by transgressing God's law)
in the likeness of Adam's transgression (who had transgressed God's law, "Thou shalt not eat of it.")

They had not sinned as Adam had sinned in breaking God's law.

The Judaizer's playbook twists the text to the opposite meaning.

And the dilemma is still on the table, Paul has not answered it. . .yet.

How could there be guilt of sin which causes death (Ro 6:23)

when sin is not taken into account?
 
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Elin

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Romans 5:15
But the free gift is not like the trespass. For if many died through one man's trespass, much more have {the grace of God} and {the free gift by the grace} of that one man Jesus Christ abounded for many.

What Paul's Saying...

(Concerning Death spreading to many by one man's sin) Paul says the free gift (of Justification, in context) abounds for many from the one man, Christ....by the grace of God and the grace of Christ.

If you agree with this interpretation, “like” it.

If you disagree with this interpretation, post an alternative for others to agree with.

If you’d like further elaboration of an interpretation, feel free to ask.
Alternative.

And here Paul gives the answer to the dilemma:

How could there be guilt of sin which is the casue of death (Ro 6:23)

when sin is not taken into account?

His answer: they were held guilty of the sin of Adam, "many died through one man's trespass."

Here Paul presents an analogy between Adam and Christ, but it is an
analogy of contrast.

The one man through his sin brought universal ruin (death because of guilt), whereas

the one man through his grace brought universal blessing.

But note that
it was their personal guilt of Adam's sin that caused many to die,

just as it is their personal blessing of Christ's grace that causes many to live (eternal life).
 

Elin

Banned
Jan 19, 2013
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Romans 5:16
And the free gift is not like the result of that one man's sin. For the judgment following
one trespass brought condemnation, but the free gift following
many trespasses brought justification.

What Paul's Saying...

But Paul says there's a difference between Death and Justification. After just one sin came the condemnation (to death; in context). However, after many sins came the free gift (of Justification, in context).

If you agree with this interpretation, “like” it.

If you disagree with this interpretation, post an alternative for others to agree with.

If you’d like further elaboration of an interpretation, feel free to ask.
Comment:

Paul continues his analogy, showing the magnitude of God's grace in Christ in contrast
to man's sin in Adam.
 

Yahshua

Senior Member
Sep 22, 2013
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It was the name for the cover of the Ark in the Holy of Holies.

The animal sacrifices of the OT only covered sin (Ro 4:7), they did not take away sin (Heb 10:4).

The sins of the OT saints were only covered, they were not remitted (taken away) until Christ
shed his blood on the cross (Ro 3:25).


I'm not sure where you get that the High Priest who offered sacrifice was pure.

The High Priest who offered the great sin sacrifice on the Day of Atonement was not pure
(H
eb 5:1-3, 7:27-28).
His sins were only covered (Heb 10:4) by the special sin offering (Lev 16:4, 11-14,)
which he made before the great sin offering (Lev 16:15-16) on the Day of Atonement,
for defilement of the tabernacle by being in the midst of a sinful people (Lev 16:16).

But that occurred only once a year, on the Day of Atonement.

Sacrifices were offered every day, but their blood was not taken in the Most Holy Place,
it was sprinkled on, and poured out at the base of, the altar.


And Hebrews shows us the meaning of this physical picture depicting an immaterial heaven.

"For it was necessary, then. . .for the heavenly things to be purified with better sacrifices than these.
For Christ. . .entered heaven itself, now to appear for us in God's presence
(Heb 9:23-24)
where he ever lives to make intercession (R
o 8:34; Heb 7:25).

Christ's sacrifice (blood) is presented in heaven in his daily intercession in the presence of God
for us, where Christ applies the benefits of (sprinkles) his blood; e.g.,
guaranteeing our redemption,
working out everything for us in accordance with God's will,
preparing a place for us.



I'm not sure where you get this.

Christ's blood was poured out at the base of the cross (Jn 19:34, 36-37; Lk 22:20) just as
the blood of the sacrificial animal was poured out at the base of the altar (Lev 4:7, 18, 25, 30, 34).


That assumes physical meaning of an immaterial heavenly reality, which Hebrews indicates (above)
is not a physical sprinkling of it, but the application of its benefits through Christ's ever-living
intercession for us.

The sprinkling of the blood on the horns of the altars on the Day of Atonement
was the application of the blood's benefits; i.e., cleansing of the holy things from defilement.



The Greek word translated "touch" here is haptomai, which means "to hold on, to embrace."

Jesus is telling her that she can no longer have him in the physically human way as before,
but can have him now only through the Holy Spirit, whom he will send after he returns to heaven.


It means he had not yet ascended to the presence of his Father where he would apply
the benefits of (sprinkle) his blood in ever-living intercession for us.


Christ's death on the cross paid the penalty for the sin of those who believe in him.

Christ's resurrection acquitted us of guilt (justified) in that it showed the Father
did regard our debt as paid, his justice as satisfied and we did, indeed,
have a guiltless right standing before him, reconciling us.

However, keep in mind that Paul more often refers to Christ's death on the cross without
the resurrection, assuming its inclusion rather than as a separate work, in reconciling us
to God (e.g., Col 1:20; Eph 2:16; 2Co 5:20-21).

The sprinkling of Christ's blood in heaven is the application of his blood's benefits
through his ever-living intercession for us in the presence of God (Heb 9:23-24).
Elin I started a thread replying to this post to debate you on this point. It can be found in this link:

http://christianchat.com/bible-disc...atone-did-christs-life-atone.html#post1393967