- Aug 4, 2012
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In this story is a question from Christ to the RYR, "if you would be perfect, sell your old life and give it away never to return, and come follow me."
When people read it and see perfect, they automatically assume failure because perfection, as we see it in today's English is not going to happen.
The dilemma is, the use of the word in Greek, doesn't have the same meaning as the English use today. In fact the KJV 1611 Bible's use of the English word Perfect wouldn't mean the same as it does today either. In the last 100ish years the Utopian flavor has been added to the word.
So, the story goes summ'n like this...
Rabbi how do I get eternal life.
Keep the commandments (their covenant)
I have since my youth.
<<<PAUSE>>>
NOTE; Christ knew if he had or hadn't kept those sins. The samaritan woman at the well, a person a "clean" jew wouldn't be in the viscinity of, was made well aware of her sins when she talked with Jesus.
NOTE: Christ loved Lazarus and raised Him from the dead.
NOTE: Christ loved the RYR by name, one of only a handfulla folks that were.
NOTE: Christ would have corrected the RYR out of Love, if he wasn't telling the truth, not let him continue thinking an error and go to hell on a lie.
This is based on deduction using scripture as the basis of the deduction. Every leg of that argument is based on the Bible.
What Is NOT based on the Bible is "Jesus knew he had not kept the law" (purely supposed into the story, there is NO basis to make that a likely event behind Christ's message), "so Jesus let him walk away and go to hell...."
<<<<<END PAUSE>>>>>
Then Christ says to the RYR, "if you would be perfect...."
In today's sin centric church, where SIN is made more powerful than God and is the focus of all that is taught, when people hear the word perfect they freak out and immediately fall into defensive role. The word PERFECT means mature in this instance.
Christ was saying, if you would be mature, or finished, or complete your growth, you must DIE to your former life and hold on to none of it (see: if a man loves his mother, father, daughter more than me...) then come follow Christ, totally dependent on Him for providence.
This is the very image of being born again. It was a lesson. If you would finish your spiritual maturity, you must die and be born again....
----------------
Since people think of Christ as SAVE YOU OR NOT SAVE YOU only, and ignore that there are saved people of varying degrees of Spiritual Maturity, it's very logical for them to think Christ was being snide there.
Perfection is something that occurs AFTER atonement/salvation. That's why Christ is the gate, you first go through his atonement, and THEN you are made mature. An altar call and magic bath doesn't make you a mature Christian.
WANTING to behave differently, WANTING to be a different person, doesn't make you that different person.
Born again is more than a way you see life, it's a changed life. One that is dependant on Him.
Blessed are the Poor in Spirit.
Look up the Greek word for Poor and tell me if I'm not consistent.
5% of you will read this and ponder it. 55% of you will read it just to find something to argue against. 40% of you will read this and dismiss it because it's not something you have heard before.
Test my work before you write it off. And if I'm wrong AFTER you test it, then show me. :)
I'm prepared for objections now...
(Sits behind his mental blocks with an army helmet on.)
When people read it and see perfect, they automatically assume failure because perfection, as we see it in today's English is not going to happen.
The dilemma is, the use of the word in Greek, doesn't have the same meaning as the English use today. In fact the KJV 1611 Bible's use of the English word Perfect wouldn't mean the same as it does today either. In the last 100ish years the Utopian flavor has been added to the word.
So, the story goes summ'n like this...
Rabbi how do I get eternal life.
Keep the commandments (their covenant)
I have since my youth.
<<<PAUSE>>>
NOTE; Christ knew if he had or hadn't kept those sins. The samaritan woman at the well, a person a "clean" jew wouldn't be in the viscinity of, was made well aware of her sins when she talked with Jesus.
NOTE: Christ loved Lazarus and raised Him from the dead.
NOTE: Christ loved the RYR by name, one of only a handfulla folks that were.
NOTE: Christ would have corrected the RYR out of Love, if he wasn't telling the truth, not let him continue thinking an error and go to hell on a lie.
This is based on deduction using scripture as the basis of the deduction. Every leg of that argument is based on the Bible.
What Is NOT based on the Bible is "Jesus knew he had not kept the law" (purely supposed into the story, there is NO basis to make that a likely event behind Christ's message), "so Jesus let him walk away and go to hell...."
<<<<<END PAUSE>>>>>
Then Christ says to the RYR, "if you would be perfect...."
In today's sin centric church, where SIN is made more powerful than God and is the focus of all that is taught, when people hear the word perfect they freak out and immediately fall into defensive role. The word PERFECT means mature in this instance.
Christ was saying, if you would be mature, or finished, or complete your growth, you must DIE to your former life and hold on to none of it (see: if a man loves his mother, father, daughter more than me...) then come follow Christ, totally dependent on Him for providence.
This is the very image of being born again. It was a lesson. If you would finish your spiritual maturity, you must die and be born again....
----------------
Since people think of Christ as SAVE YOU OR NOT SAVE YOU only, and ignore that there are saved people of varying degrees of Spiritual Maturity, it's very logical for them to think Christ was being snide there.
Perfection is something that occurs AFTER atonement/salvation. That's why Christ is the gate, you first go through his atonement, and THEN you are made mature. An altar call and magic bath doesn't make you a mature Christian.
WANTING to behave differently, WANTING to be a different person, doesn't make you that different person.
Born again is more than a way you see life, it's a changed life. One that is dependant on Him.
Blessed are the Poor in Spirit.
Look up the Greek word for Poor and tell me if I'm not consistent.
5% of you will read this and ponder it. 55% of you will read it just to find something to argue against. 40% of you will read this and dismiss it because it's not something you have heard before.
Test my work before you write it off. And if I'm wrong AFTER you test it, then show me. :)
I'm prepared for objections now...
(Sits behind his mental blocks with an army helmet on.)