BarneyFife
Well-Known Member
Straw man argument. Galatians 3:24-26 does not teach antinomianism and neither do I. With that being said we are still not justified by the law but by faith in Jesus Christ. (Galatians 2:16) Salvation is not by grace plus law, faith plus works as SDA's basically teach.
Romans 3:24 - being justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, 25 whom God set forth as a propitiation by His blood, through faith, to demonstrate His righteousness, because in His forbearance God had passed over the sins that were previously committed, 26 to demonstrate at the present time His righteousness, that He might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus.
27 Where is boasting then? It is excluded. By what law? Of works? No, but by the law of faith. 28 Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith apart from the deeds of the law.
Hi, Dan!

But aren't you just making a distinction without a difference here, and then countering with a straw man of your own?
The absence of antinomianism that holds to an ambiguous law is, to fallen human nature, little better than anarchy.
After all, who, among those who oppose the ten commandments, agree on precisely what law it is that Christians are obliged to keep? Not enough to avoid pluralism, I'm afraid.
And, as one who's obviously been in the thick of these discussions, I can testify that that little detail is of no consequence to those who are busy giving the ten commandments a good beatdown.
So, while you may not teach strict antinomianism, many on this very forum, in fact, do so.
And no Seventh-day Adventist I know of teaches that the works of man can justify a man in terms of atonement with God. I sure would like to see such a statement from one, though. I'm not saying they don't exist in some form but all one has to do to see that such a belief is in no way Adventist orthodoxy is to point their web browser of choice to adventist.org/beliefs.
It seems to me that if one holds that all but the fourth commandment is morally relevant to Christians, then a satisfactory explanation should be forthcoming as to why, up until about 50 or so years ago, no one outside of a "progressive" seminary study hall would dare suggest that God accidentally did what amounts to dropping a temporary, dispensation-specific, ceremonial statute in the middle of His moral code for the human race.
My Southern Baptist grandmother wouldn't let us kids mow her lawn on Sunday and we all knew exactly why that was.
And I now know why, better than ever:
She thought Sunday was the 7th day of the week, Dan, and so did most other Christians, including us grandkids.
And she wasn't about to have her grandkids trampling the ten commandments underfoot right smack dab on her property.
That's pretty much exactly how she would have put it, too, and nobody in town would've thought that to be controversial at all.
But, then, they didn't have the misinformation superhighway back then.
Sure, the calendar had Saturday in position 7, but the church had Sunday there, and the real authority, TV Guide, had Friday there! - lol
Interestingly enough (at least, to me), my other (maternal) grandmother did, in fact, know which day was the 7th day of the week because she listened to Pastor Joe Crews talk about that and many other interesting Bible topics on the Amazing Facts program over clear-channel AM radio every night. She never took her stand for that truth openly, but when I became an Adventist in 1990, she was not surprised at all, and confided in me that she believed what she had heard. She and her mother were the best Christian role models I had as a child, and I know I'll be reunited with them very soon.
Sorry for the rant/ramble, Dan. Always a pleasure to see you around and about, of course.
.