You are a Legalists who spreads Leavin.....
God’s CLEAR Remedy is this....”Throw out The Bondwoman and her Child”
Notice that God does NOT say to debate them, try to cajole them or to even Pray for them.....He says simply “ Throw them out......”
Personally , I prefer that you guys stay here spouting your Biblical Ignorance and Hog Wash......Newbies are gonna to encounter Legalists and Tares out in the real work like we see in here.....using Blind Guides. as a type of “ Springboard” to show Newbies how to destroy their False, Perverted “ Gospel” is the reason that I live and breathe .....bring them on! They serve a purpose that they are oblivious about.....
Your straw man pontificating would possibly be highly effective except for one thing. You will not find one example where anyone here suggested that by our "works/obedience/law-keeping etc etc, was a means to being justified. You have constantly accused us of teaching this, told us we aren't Christians, called us liars, blind, tares, legalists, and more, yet not once have we said anything that could be construed to mean that obedience is a means by which we must be justified.
Here is the true gospel...if anyone can fault this, then by all means correct me. But stop calling us lost...heretics etc without any evidence.
Inherent in the Ten Commandments is the gospel. The first commandment has been edited by most but if we read the entire passage of scripture, we can readily see that God is not commanding us to do the impossible. The Ten Commandments begin:
Exodus 20:2 ” I am the LORD thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. You shall have no other gods before Me.”
In this small portion of the scripture is found the key to understanding our relationship to God’s laws, and how to find the power to obey them. Here is the gospel.
You may be thinking, “Hey, that first part isn’t a part of the law, because it doesn’t tell us something we must do or not do! Instead, it tells us of something God has done!!!”
Yes, exactly! And that’s the point. The entire Ten Commandments start with something God has done, and not with something we must do. “I am the Lord thy God
who has….” God did not give us His law and then say, ” Okay, if you manage to obey, then heaven is yours”, knowing that we would fail. He knows us well, that we are but dust, morally corrupt, and totally incapable in and of ourselves to render any righteousness that meets God’s requirements. That is why He starts His law with what He has done for us, and not what we are to do for Him.
God has delivered us from bondage. The deliverance God refers to is a direct reference to the Passover. To the blood of the Lamb. A deliverance only He has accomplished, all by Himself, and without any assistance from us. The Passover was symbolic of Calvary. The shed blood of the lamb pointed forward to the crucifixion. (
John 1:29;
1 Cor. 5:7)
So when God gave His law, He pointed first back to the Passover, which itself points to the future, the cross. And there you have the gospel embedded within the law, and far from being distinct from one another, the law and gospel compliment one another perfectly.
Isaiah 44:22 I have blotted out, as a thick cloud, thy transgressions, and, as a cloud, thy sins: return unto me; for I have redeemed thee.
Notice that the part we play in redemption comes
after God plays His part. “Come to Me, for I
have redeemed thee”. And notice also that Israel’s salvation and redemption and final entrance into Canaan was a
process, not a one off act. First, the blood of the lamb brought deliverance from bondage,
then came Sinai and the giving of the law, with the power to obey established already on the already accomplished work of God whilst they were yet in bondage.
Romans 5:8 But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.
Our obedience doesn’t activate God’s grace, as many charge us with. It is God’s saving grace that activates our law-keeping. The power for all true obedience is present in our realization of what God has already done for us in Christ by virtue of His ‘unearnable’ grace.
We are simply called upon to come alive to and walk in the victory and the freedom from bondage that Christ has won for us.
Without Christ as the center of the law, without Christ not only as the law-giver but also the empowering agent behind the law, the Ten Commandments degenerate into a mere idealistic code of ethics, a kind of religious “wish-list”. The same goes for all those who look at the law as an impossibly attainable goal; they leave Christ out of the equation, even claiming that it is theologically acceptable to believe that Christ’s death annuls the law.
God loves us out of sin, and God loves us into obedience.
Romans 5:10 For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by his life.
Justified by Christ’s death, and sanctified by His life. Delivered from bondage by His blood, empowered to remain free by His Spirit.
And rather than impossible commands, with the love of Jesus motivating and empowering us, the precepts of the Ten Commandments become promises.
Exodus 20:2 ” I am the LORD thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. You
shall have no other gods before Me.” See? Not a command at all really, but a promise. "After those days" saith the Lord," I
shall put My laws in their hearts, and in their minds I
shall write them". Promise. The just shall live by faith. Faith in what? God's promises. And it's that faith in God's promises that bring forth from God His righteousness and obedience. It isn't our doing. It isn't our obedience. It isn't our righteousness. It's all about Christ. the Alpha and Omega. The author AND
Finisher of our faith. Here's another promise...
Romans 8:3 For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh:
4
That the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.
Here's another promise to the same folk (those walking in the Spirit, and who are fulfilling all the requirements of the law...
1 ¶ There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.
God never asks us to make promises to Him. All He asks us to do, is to believe and trust in His promises to us. The new covenant is God's one way promise to write His laws on our hearts and minds, and to give us everlasting life as a free gift in Christ. The old covenant was faulty, not because God's promises were faulty, but because the peoples response was faulty, they replied, "everything the Lord has said, we will do". God didn't ask them to make a promise to "do". This is what gave birth to bondage. The covenant and promise of God are one and the same. After the flood God made a covenant with every beast of the earth, and with every fowl, but the beasts and birds could make no promise in return(Genesis 9:9-16) They simply received the favour at God's hand. That is all we can do. Receive. And
that is the only reason any of us manage to obey...because God Himself has granted us the power to do so. God gives us all that we could ask or think...even abundantly more than that. We give Him ourselves, which is nothing. He had given us everything. We cannot make salvation a "mutual give and take affair". A transaction whereby we place ourselves as equal partners in our salvation. No. That's not how it works.