Wrong thread? Left field? I'm NOT playing a game here.
The title of the thread is, "Sins cannot be charged". Please read it again for the first time.
My response to this was posted and is repeated below.
THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A LICENSE TO SIN.
God hates it and He hates those who do it.
God does NOT hear the prayer of the sinner except for the prayer of repentance. God WILL have an end to SIN either by the repentance (to turn away from) of those who live with it or the punishment and premature death of those who've been born again but continue to wallow in it.
Do not think God will wink at SIN in the life of the believer.
The LAW still stands.
St. Paul wrote in Romans 2:12, ""those who do not live by the LAW will die by the LAW." Peter also wrote in 1 Peter 4:17 "it is time for judgment to begin in the house of God..."
Jesus, who is something of an authority on the subject, was quoted in Matthew 5:17 as saying, "I did NOT come to abolish the LAW, I came to fulfill it." Continue reading the next line where Our Lord said not one jot or tittle would be removed from the LAW. Jots and tittles are the tiny marks in Hebrew writing that act like punctuation. Not one dot of the LAW will fail.
When Jesus said He didn't come to abolish the LAW, which part of NOT does the reader not understand?
Why do people who claim to be followers of Jesus, who lived by the LAW, spend so much time denying the LAW and spend time justifying SIN instead?
No one can be saved apart from the LAW.
Some Biblically illiterate person will write that we're saved by grace, not law. There are two problems with this assumption.
First is that such persons do not understand there are TWO laws. One is Torah, given by grace. The other is Talmud, accomplished by works.
Jesus is, by current definition of the term, a Karaite Jew. Karaite Jews are those who deny Talmud as canonical scripture. They read study and live by Torah and the prophets of the Tanakh (protestant OT). Jesus always quoted Torah (mostly Deuteronomy, actually) and the prophets of the Tanakh. He NEVER quoted the teachings of the Talmudic rabbinate (which Jews of today follow - religiously).(*)
Bear in mind the entire Bible, except for the gospel of Luke and book of Acts, was written by Jews for Jews. Jews who read those words understand references to Jewish tradition (between the lines, as it were). References in the NT to the law are usually references to Talmudic law - or that part of Torah that was fulfilled by Jesus. Grace is not a mask that covers the LAW God gave to Moses and the world. GRACE is intended to act as justification for SIN. GRACE and LAW work together.
The Jewish holiday of Shavout is an observance of the day God gave the LAW too Moses.
The gentile holiday of Pentecost is an observance of the day God gave the Holy Spirit, GRACE, to the world.
Do you not know that BOTH holidays fall on the same calendar day?
Is this a coincidence or is God saying something important about LAW & GRACE?
They are two sides of the same coin (of redemption & reconciliation unto God).
that's me, hollering from the choir loft...
(*) According to Talmud, 10 rabbis who agree on a thing force God to comply with their decisions. God is thus subservient to the will of the rabbinate - according to Talmud.
The title of the thread is, "Sins cannot be charged". Please read it again for the first time.
My response to this was posted and is repeated below.
THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A LICENSE TO SIN.
God hates it and He hates those who do it.
God does NOT hear the prayer of the sinner except for the prayer of repentance. God WILL have an end to SIN either by the repentance (to turn away from) of those who live with it or the punishment and premature death of those who've been born again but continue to wallow in it.
Do not think God will wink at SIN in the life of the believer.
The LAW still stands.
St. Paul wrote in Romans 2:12, ""those who do not live by the LAW will die by the LAW." Peter also wrote in 1 Peter 4:17 "it is time for judgment to begin in the house of God..."
Jesus, who is something of an authority on the subject, was quoted in Matthew 5:17 as saying, "I did NOT come to abolish the LAW, I came to fulfill it." Continue reading the next line where Our Lord said not one jot or tittle would be removed from the LAW. Jots and tittles are the tiny marks in Hebrew writing that act like punctuation. Not one dot of the LAW will fail.
When Jesus said He didn't come to abolish the LAW, which part of NOT does the reader not understand?
Why do people who claim to be followers of Jesus, who lived by the LAW, spend so much time denying the LAW and spend time justifying SIN instead?
No one can be saved apart from the LAW.
Some Biblically illiterate person will write that we're saved by grace, not law. There are two problems with this assumption.
First is that such persons do not understand there are TWO laws. One is Torah, given by grace. The other is Talmud, accomplished by works.
Jesus is, by current definition of the term, a Karaite Jew. Karaite Jews are those who deny Talmud as canonical scripture. They read study and live by Torah and the prophets of the Tanakh (protestant OT). Jesus always quoted Torah (mostly Deuteronomy, actually) and the prophets of the Tanakh. He NEVER quoted the teachings of the Talmudic rabbinate (which Jews of today follow - religiously).(*)
Bear in mind the entire Bible, except for the gospel of Luke and book of Acts, was written by Jews for Jews. Jews who read those words understand references to Jewish tradition (between the lines, as it were). References in the NT to the law are usually references to Talmudic law - or that part of Torah that was fulfilled by Jesus. Grace is not a mask that covers the LAW God gave to Moses and the world. GRACE is intended to act as justification for SIN. GRACE and LAW work together.
The Jewish holiday of Shavout is an observance of the day God gave the LAW too Moses.
The gentile holiday of Pentecost is an observance of the day God gave the Holy Spirit, GRACE, to the world.
Do you not know that BOTH holidays fall on the same calendar day?
Is this a coincidence or is God saying something important about LAW & GRACE?
They are two sides of the same coin (of redemption & reconciliation unto God).
that's me, hollering from the choir loft...
(*) According to Talmud, 10 rabbis who agree on a thing force God to comply with their decisions. God is thus subservient to the will of the rabbinate - according to Talmud.