Are you saying that we could choose to resist the old carnal nature...or still live in it?
Yes. Once a person is saved, they have this ability. Read
Romans 6:1-11.
If they so choose WHAT Kokyu?
To live in sin?
To disobey Jesus?
That's not, of course, how Christians usually frame their sin, but this what they are doing when they choose to follow the direction of the old, carnal Self.
And you like Romans 7:14-22? Now we know why.
I "like" it? Where did I write such a thing? Nowhere.
What exactly do you THINK Romans 7 is saying?
Do you believe you can still sin because you are not the one doing it?
??? Obviously not. Read
Romans 8:1-16. Why are you trying to frame my position in such bizarre and unwarranted ways?
I added verses 19 to 21 just in case you've misunderstood Paul because Romans is the most difficult book in the NT to understand and so is Paul.
??? I've not misunderstood Paul. But you certainly seem eager to think I have - though I've given you no good cause to do so. Why is that?
And what does Galatians 5:17 mean?
Simply read what Paul wrote. His language in the verse is not at all difficult to comprehend.
2 Peter 3:16
15 and regard the patience of our Lord as salvation; just as also our beloved brother Paul, according to the wisdom given him, wrote to you,
16 as also in all his letters, speaking in them of these things, in which are some things hard to understand, which the untaught and unstable distort, as they do also the rest of the Scriptures, to their own destruction.
17 You therefore, beloved, knowing this beforehand, be on your guard so * that you are not carried away by the error of unprincipled men and fall from your own steadfastness,
Though Paul might be difficult to understand, I added verse 17 in which Paul, once again, gives a warning to be on guard so as not to be CARRIED AWAY by the error of men with no principles and thus FALL from steadfastness.
You mean Peter, not Paul. The Scripture quotation above is from
2 Peter about Paul, in part, but the section you highlighted are not Paul's words, but
Peter's. Maybe his words are difficult for you to understand because you think it's Paul speaking when, in fact, it's Peter.
I assume you think "fall from steadfastness" means "fall from salvation." But, as you've pointed out, Scripture says what it means and means what is says. And so, when Peter wrote "from steadfastness," not "from salvation," that's exactly what he meant. Why are you altering his words (if this is how you're understanding what he wrote)?
Paul does this many times:
Colossians 1:21-23
21 And although you were formerly alienated and hostile in mind, engaged in evil deeds,
22 yet He has now reconciled you in His fleshly body through death, in order to present you before Him holy and blameless and beyond reproach -
23 if indeed you continue in the faith firmly established and steadfast, and not moved away from the hope of the gospel that you have heard, which was proclaimed in all creation under heaven, and of which I, Paul, was made a minister.
Paul states that we will be presented holy and blameless before God
IF we CONTINUE IN THE FAITH....
How would God present anyone blameless and above reproach if they depart from the faith? The mere act of departing is sin. But how does not being presented to God holy and blameless equate to salvation lost? Paul never wrote "If you don't continue in the faith you will lose your salvation." This is a construction you're putting upon his words derived, not from what he actually wrote but from your salvation-lost presupposition that you're imposing on his words. In contrast, all I have to do is understand Paul's words as they're given and when I do, I don't arrive at a threat of salvation lost but a warning of standing before God not holy, blameless and above reproach. These are two very different states-of-affairs.
As some do, I could, alternatively, simply understand that Paul was writing of the false convert who because he is not truly saved departs the faith, like those of whom the apostle John wrote:
1 John 2:19
19 They went out from us, but they were not really of us; for if they had been of us, they would have remained with us; but they went out, so that it would be shown that they all are not of us.
No one who is genuinely saved would depart the faith and so, those who do reveal they "were not really of us" though they had perhaps participated for a time in life and work of the Church.
So, then, a saved-and-lost interpretation of Paul's words in
Colossians 1:21-23 is by no means the only possible one - and it certainly isn't the most reasonable one, either.