I have never said that part of the NT is in error. You have me saying it.
Well, please clarify for me, Richard. You do believe that the book of James is not a new covenant book, correct? That the book is written under the Law for those of the Law...and the law is antithetical to grace?
Seems to me that the fact that James is situated in the "New Testament" would mean that the NT canon is faulty since you believe James is Law, not New Testament grace. You see, "New Testament" means its part of the "New Covenant" Jesus established. You believe our "New Testament" books are in error because some of them belong to the "Old Testament" and are contrary to the "New Testament" teaching Paul proclaimed. Where am I wrong?
I have never suggested that the NT is flawed or that the NT contains books with a corrupt Gospel message. You have me saying it.
You said that James was not writing under the New Testament/Covenant. He was writing out of the Old Covenant. Thus, the implication is that James should not be in the NT and to include it in the NT is to corrupt the true Gospel Paul preached. Is that not right? Didnt you say, "
Church tradition takes what Jesus and the 12 taught the Jews under the law and mixes it in with grace that Jesus revealed to Paul." Thus the book of James is not part of the New Covenant and mixing it with the New Covenant tarnishes the true Gospel. Is this correct or not?
All of the above is supported by the scriptures.
I dont entirely disagree with the statements you made about the Gospel. However, what you are leaving out is what is significant in this discussion, namely that Jesus' preaching of the Kingdom of God was void of grace and that James contradicts Paul and his message is incomparable with grace....and has twisted the Gospel of Grace by virtue of a legalistic early church. You have continually accused me of being "in religion" and being a legalist who corrupts the Gospel based on my acceptance of the historic belief of Christianity that Paul and James are not at odds. You have accused me (first, I might add) of twisting the Gospel because I agree with what historic Christianity has claimed. Is this not true? If I am mistaken about your views, I will gladly apologize. If these are your views, then my statements remain valid. From where I sit, it just seems that you and FHII just do not see the full implications of your statements. But again, I will gladly apologize if I have misunderstood your statements.
What you fail to understand, and Paul goes to great lengths to show this.... is that God has ALWAYS operated by grace. The Old Testament is not void of grace, even though it is based in Law. Rather, the OT points people to grace...both then and now. As Paul says,
“For if Abraham was justified by works, he has something to boast about, but not before God. For what does the Scripture say? “Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness.”” (Romans 4:2–3, ESV)
“just as David also speaks of the blessing of the one to whom God counts righteousness apart from works: “Blessed are those whose lawless deeds are forgiven, and whose sins are covered; blessed is the man against whom the Lord will not count his sin.”” (Romans 4:6–8, ESV)
These are Old Covenant passages that point to the fact that people of faith have always relied on God for grace and not legalistic righteousness. Paul's whole point in Romans is to show that the Law is a good thing that has always pointed people to their need of grace. The problem is not the Law, the problem is that we are sinners who cannot keep the Law. Thus, we must seek righteousness by grace. That is what Abraham did and that is what David did. Paul's point is that the fullness of that grace has been revealed now in Christ, who frees us entirely from the Law and the power of sin. Those who seek to be justified by law are not Abraham's offspring because even he (prior to the Gospel of grace in Christ) relied on grace, not on works (circumcision).
You see, the Bible does not contradict itself. The covenants are not antithetical. They both point to grace. The problem was that many Jews misunderstood their Scriptures and the purpose of the Law. Of course Jesus taught grace. God has always operated by grace. That is the basis for forgiveness, both in the OT and in the NT.