No Condemnation For Those In Christ (Romans 8:1)

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GracePeace

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@CadyandZoe Not that finding respected people who agree with us conclusively proves anything (I stand on my own, and my arguments don't need help), but I'm curious: are there any NT scholars, any commentaries, any teachers, etc, (Monergist or Synergist), that actually disagree with my view and agree with your view (that, in Ro 14, Paul deals with making sure "true believers" get along, alone, and does not also deal with a rule for "true believers" ("let each man be fully convinced in his own mind") which rule Ro 14:23 ("but he who eats with doubts is condemned because his eating is not of faith and what ever does not proceed from faith [but from doubt] is sin") does not deal with "true believers" breaking)?

If not, wouldn't you consider that to be "odd"?
 
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Behold

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Oh, sorry, it just happened to coincide with your ignorance being debunked.
My mistake.

This entire Thread is your "mistake". @GracePeace.

The only carnal game you have left is to say......"nah, you didnt prove it'., as that is always the way it is when someone like you is revealed.

And you'll do it again., just to keep your Thread going.....

-watch and see.
 

GracePeace

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This entire Thread is your "mistake". @GracePeace.

The only carnal game you have left is to say......"nah, you didnt prove it'., as that is always the way it is when someone like you is revealed.

And you'll do it again., just to keep your Thread going.....

-watch and see.
1. You claimed people who were children of God weren't the "doulos" of Luke 12, but Paul said he was a "doulos", so was he not a child of God, or were you wrong?
By your own rule, you're "carnal": you're saying "nah you didn't prove it" when I did, and you haven't even begun to respond.

2. You're free to prove I made any error in my OP--show everyone how erroneous I was.
 

GracePeace

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This entire Thread is your "mistake". @GracePeace.

The only carnal game you have left is to say......"nah, you didnt prove it'., as that is always the way it is when someone like you is revealed.

And you'll do it again., just to keep your Thread going.....

-watch and see.
1. Here's your argument: "I'm right, and when ever you disagree, it proves you're carnal, and I'm sure you'll disagree with me again, proving that I'm right and you're carnal."
If I make that same argument, will it be as valid as when you make it?
Let me try: "I'm right, and when ever you disagree, it proves you're carnal."
By your logic, I have won the debate--or, at best, we have a stalemate.

2. Demonstrate how I have misunderstood the verses I cited, and then explain what they "really" mean.
That is how you debunk my argument.
You have nowhere argued, "Here is why your argument does not cohere: you said a, b, and c, based on such-and-such verses, but you have misunderstood those verses, because those verses you cited really mean x, y, and z."
If you have done so, point everyone to where you have. I haven't seen that at all.

What you did was you raised an argument from completely unrelated bases--such an argument has no bearing on the argument presented in the OP.
 

GracePeace

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@Behold It is commendable that people trust in what Christ accomplished for us, and it is good to teach people to trust God about those things, affirming things that are true of us in Christ, appropriating what Christ accomplished on the Cross, and it is a potential error to, having begun by the Spirit, to, thereafter, go about seeking perfection by works of the Law (an argument can be made that what is substantively wrong with being under Law is also substantively wrong with fear-based Christianity--which, though God is patient, and can put up with our misunderstandings, could constitute a retroactive denial of those truths about what Christ was responsible for establishing, relying on self to make those things true, rather than understanding Christ already made them true), but the fact that there is a danger in recognizing the truth (ie, that not all remain in Christ--and "how to remain in Christ" should be a matter of discussion, so people aren't left with the concept that not all remain without the corresponding method of how to remain) does not also mean that that truth is not true.

In other words, remaining in Christ is by Christ's Word abiding in us, and by keeping His Commands (Jn 15), but a person could place too much emphasis on Command-keeping, rather than on Christ's Word abiding in us, trusting God, so that the Command-keeping is done with fear, which sets a host of Scriptural dominos in motion that show how that is wrong--it may be that the lion's share of "remaining in Christ" is accomplished by trusting in Christ's Word, but that is not the only Command whereby people remain in Christ, as is detailed in 1 Jn 3:23,24 (reflected in in James 2, in Romans 2, etc), it is only one part of the singular two-fold Command. And I notice that people who share your view never think you won't do good works--you always agree you'll do them, you only disagree on why you do them and what they accomplish. You disagree on the motivation (based on your Scriptural understanding) for doing the works--and, in a way, you're not wrong (you can derive benefit), but, in another way, technically speaking, you are wrong (though not in a "heretical" way--ie, because you can derive benefit).

In other words, I don't doubt that those who share your view have good reasons for reacting so violently to what is stated in the OP, but for people whose minds cannot bend themselves into pretzels, as you all have done to yourselves--irrespective the benefit (and it is a real benefit) you derive from so doing--your incoherence is not helpful. I wouldn't mind deriving benefit, but maybe you could pray to ask God how to make a coherent argument to help people get there--that would be helpful. Make sense of Scripture, don't issue ridiculous arguments, because they're not helpful.
 
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GracePeace

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@Behold Regarding your non-answer to the OP, I think the benefit of believing in the error that "the only condemnation you experience as a Christian is your own self-condemnation--it's not real, it's not God condemning you, so just ignore it and trust that God doesn't condemn you" is (though helpful for people who don't know the Bible, unhelpful for people who know it) actually nothing other than the benefit people should be deriving from trusting "God is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins and cleanse us of all unrighteousness"--and, to deny that God forgives, to fear, is to lie about God (1 Jn 5:10) being faithful and righteous, is to call God unfaithful and unrighteous, and to believe God holds a grudge which gives us a false basis for being fearful, but it may just be a spirit of fear making us reject the testimony of God, because fear is the end result (and what ever is reaped is what ever was sown).
 

CadyandZoe

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Why did Paul give the rule?
He alerts the reader as to his subject matter in verse 14:1. The topic of chapter 14 is receiving those who are weaker in faith. He gives two examples of "beliefs" that are weak: 1)One person only eats vegetables, and 2)One person regards one day as holier than the others. The question Paul is addressing is this, "How do we receive fellow servants of the Lord who maintain inferior beliefs?

Paul postulates that both parties are serving the Lord. Thus, if both parties are serving the Lord but hold opposing beliefs, then each man should be convinced in his own mind. The obvious corollary is this. Don't engage in public argument, especially if the purpose of the argument is to judge the other person.

What were they doing that made him give the rule before he gave the rule?
Judging each other's opinions.

Nope, the rule Paul lays down is not "make sure you get your beliefs correct", it's "you are bound to the freedom of living out your convictions
I don't think you meant to say "bound to freedom" did you? Sounds like a lyric out of a Joni Mitchell song. :)

Being convinced in our minds is not the same thing as living according to our convictions if that is what you meant. Everyone lives according to their convictions that's what we naturally do.
, even if your convictions are held in ignorance (eg, you ignorantly think only eating vegetables is acceptable)"--so much so that the one whose beliefs are "correctly informed" (eg, the meat eater) is not free to impose his "reason based conclusion based on correct facts" on his brother, because he could destroy him by so doing.
The text of Romans 14 says nothing about imposing our views onto another person. No mention of anything like ordaining, decreeing, or establishing rules to follow. The topic of the chapter is receiving those who are weaker in faith.
No,
a) A person could have a religious conviction about dietary matters--eg, by the time Peter had the vision, years after the Gospel had been being preached, he still hadn't eaten anything forbidden by the Law, because he had heartfelt convictions about abstaining from those foods. He had an ethical code based on religious belief that was also dietary.
It's important to understand why Paul doesn't appear to care, one way or the other, whether a person keeps one day holy or considers all days to be alike. It's worth spending some time sorting this out. He exhorts his readers to receive the one who is weak in faith, citing the example of the Sabbatarian who considers one day to be holy.

If it is morally right to keep one day holy in every situation, then Paul would not suggest that it is acceptable for someone to treat all days the same while serving the Lord. Therefore, we understand that keeping one day holy is considered good for those who worship God within the Jewish tradition, but it is not required for those outside the Jewish context.

In other words, the rule to keep one day holy does not carry the same weight as the prohibition against murder. Murder is always wrong in every context. On the other hand, keeping a day holy is considered "good" only in the Jewish context. Gentiles are not obligated to keep a day holy.

The person with the weaker faith is the religious individual who has elevated religious rules or laws, which are only obligatory for those who practice the religion, to rules that everyone must follow because, in their view, these rules must be observed in all contexts. In other words, as we even see on this board, those who are weak in faith will insist that ALL Christians keep the Sabbath day.

Peter was allowed to eat things that weren't kosher because kosher laws don't define the good for every context.
b) "Avoid eating meat offered to idols" is a sound doctrine, depending on how it is applied (revolving around "each man must be fully convinced in his own mind", and whether they have knowledge, and whether they are convinced by that knowledge).
You seem to be forgetting the fact that Paul describes such a person as one "weak in faith." That is, he is NOT believing sound doctrine but erroneous doctrine instead. The sound doctrine in this matter, according to Paul, is that all foods are clean.
No, he doesn't; he commands the audience to do only those things which they are fully persuaded are correct, and to not overstep that boundary.

Rather, it allows for the freedom that each person walk in their own, even uninformed, convictions "as unto the Lord".
I see what you are saying, but the emphasis is on serving the Lord as the basis for our fellowship. I am not obligated to receive everyone. I am obliged to receive all those who are serving the Lord, even if we disagree over religious convictions. But if they are not serving the Lord, then I should not receive them.

1. To keep things in perspective, you were denying this was a personal issue, and trying to say it had more to do with the community not being led into judging one another, and my response was to say, no, "let each man be fully convinced in his own mind" is a personal command which individuals are held accountable to.
I understand your point about personal convictions and agree with you. However, the command to "receive the one weak in faith" involves dialogue and interaction with other people, and perhaps a community at large. Since we both agree that Paul wrote his letter to a group of Gentiles who were about to receive returning Jews to Rome, it makes sense for Paul to alert his readers that some of those who return to Rome may not share their opinions on certain subjects.

2. No, "in the context of faith", it's not about "God's promises", because the examples given are about people differing in their personal views about the rightness of eating a food or observing a day, and Paul permits these differences--ie, if it were about "God's promises", Paul would be sinning to let them doubt "God's promises" (ie, by having differing views).
Paul is talking about people "weak in faith" and I take issue with those who have incorrect understandings of the Biblical concept of faith. (I'm not charging you with this, I am merely using this opportunity to correct the error. :) Some believe that "faith" is like "the force" in Star Wars, a power source to control and direct as needed. The man who believes this is likely going to interpret the phrase "weak faith" in terms of one's ability to get things done, spiritually speaking.

Another man might believe that "faith" is another way of knowing -- an epistemological technique affording the believer with supernatural knowledge. This man would interpret "weak faith" to mean "unable to discern spiritual things."

Neither of these images accurately represents "faith." Biblical faith is centered on truth, God's word, and his promises. For this reason, those with a "weak faith" are those who are incorrect about what is true, what God said in his word, or what he promised.
No, because then Paul would've instructed, "Command that vegetarian to think correctly about how to eat before the Lord!"? Instead, he allows the vegetarian to follow his convictions. Clearly, it is not as you say.
Paul makes his opinion known that all foods are clean. In this way, Paul sides with the meat-eaters that their beliefs are correct. Yet, Paul allows the vegetarian to follow his own conviction on the matter, even though his opinion is incorrect. His permissive stance on the issue indicates to me that the Faith of Christ allows for differences of opinion on issues of insignificant concern.

Since Paul is speaking into a situation where a church filled with Gentile believers is about to receive the repatriated Jews, returning to Jerusalem, and based on his own experiences with the unification of Jews and Gentiles, I say Rome's challenge is to avoid arguing with Jews over the Sabbath or dietary regulations.

Right--but, to redirect (back on course), again, the overarching rule at play is "each man must be fully convinced in his own mind" so that they do not "sin" and be "condemned" (Ro 14:23).
Okay. But you still have yet to present a good argument for why Romans 14:23 is talking about God's condemnation rather than man's.
Your insistence on making the issue about the group not judging one another, instead of acknowledging that there is the other issue of the individual not crossing the boundary of his personal conviction even if it is wrongly informed.
Well, can you blame me for taking my cues from the first verse, where Paul alerts his readers to the subject matter?
I didn't say I was confused, I said it was "odd", which means I said it sarcastically.
Oh. I never met anyone from the "Piranha brothers." :) Just kidding.
 

CadyandZoe

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. Funny that Calvin is "wrong", but "wrong" in a way literally every Bible translator has ever been, because they've ALL translated the word as "doubt".
2. Actually, the commentary gives great reasons for seeing the word as "doubt"--again:
I can't help it if they are all wrong. Let each man be convinced in his own mind. Yes? :)
 

CadyandZoe

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1. No, I would find it hard to believe if you were not knowingly contorting the text, trying to make it pronounce the most unlikely of things, to protect your view--it really is that clear what the text is saying, and it really would take that much effort to try to cover it up and deny it.
2. This topic of this discussion is that those "in Christ" do not always remain in Christ. Your interaction with the material, in my view, hasn't bode well for your view.
3. No, I haven't changed a single view of mine--except, I did get the insight that the word translated "doubt" in Ro 14:23 is actually "waver" (as "unbelief" would make someone "waver" Ro 4:20--again, contrasted in the immediate context against faith).
Okay, please allow me to explain why I create long posts in discussions like this. As you suggested in your post, I find myself talking to people who are convinced that the words on the page are clear and unambiguous. I'm sure this was true when Paul wrote them in the original Greek to readers who shared a common understanding of them and the issues they sought to convey. But we are separated from the original by time, history, culture, and language. The process of Exegesis takes time and effort.

Secondly, and just as important, we believers are given definitions of Bible terminology by their denomination, favorite pastor, and Bible commentaries. Some definitions are correct, but not all.

For this reason, among others, I feel compelled to make sense of the entire passage all at once, which is why my posts seem a bit verbose. I apologize for that, but for me, I judge whether my interpretation is correct or incorrect by one cardinal rule: my interpretation isn't correct unless and until it makes sense of the entire passage. So I spend a lot of time doing that in my posts, so as to model good exegetical technique.

Your thread has taken the opposite tack, attempting to prove that my interpretation of Romans 8:1 is incorrect based on your interpretation of Romans 14:23. That is a double no-no in my view because I do not allow myself to consider two verses taken out of context.

I work hard during these discussions because the interaction is beneficial for me to the degree that I do the work. :) So thanks for the discussion.
 

GracePeace

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He alerts the reader as to his subject matter in verse 14:1. The topic of chapter 14 is receiving those who are weaker in faith. He gives two examples of "beliefs" that are weak: 1)One person only eats vegetables, and 2)One person regards one day as holier than the others. The question Paul is addressing is this, "How do we receive fellow servants of the Lord who maintain inferior beliefs?
No, you're confusing the matter (and it's understandable why--you have to try to save your argument): Paul never said "their arguments are weak", he said "the brother is weak in his faith", and he explicitly talks about someone who has a "weak conscience".
Paul postulates that both parties are serving the Lord. Thus, if both parties are serving the Lord but hold opposing beliefs, then each man should be convinced in his own mind.
But if the issue was about "make sure you believe what is true", as you had wrongly asserted, Paul would be sinning by permitting these differing beliefs, because the issue wouldn't be protecting the weaker brother from sinning, it would be "make sure you tell that weaker brother to stop believing lies--whip him into shape".
The obvious corollary is this. Don't engage in public argument, especially if the purpose of the argument is to judge the other person.
This emptiness has been addressed endlessly: Paul doesn't deal with a single issue, but with several overlapping issues.
I don't think you meant to say "bound to freedom" did you? Sounds like a lyric out of a Joni Mitchell song. :)
It sounds odd, but, yes, just as Paul says "prisoners of hope".
Being convinced in our minds is not the same thing as living according to our convictions if that is what you meant. Everyone lives according to their convictions that's what we naturally do.
No, it isn't--not in the context, here. People often do things they don't agree with, and they have feelings of guilt afterward. If by "we all live by our convictions" you mean to include "the deceitfulness of sin" in that (that sin deceives us so we momentarily believe lies), you're not tracking with Paul.
The text of Romans 14 says nothing about imposing our views onto another person. No mention of anything like ordaining, decreeing, or establishing rules to follow. The topic of the chapter is receiving those who are weaker in faith.
No, 1 Co 8, which deals with this same subject, does, but Ro 14:23 deals with the brother who goes and does what he doesn't believe in--which you deny can even happen--breaking the rule "each man is to be fully convinced in his own mind".
It's important to understand why Paul doesn't appear to care, one way or the other, whether a person keeps one day holy or considers all days to be alike. It's worth spending some time sorting this out. He exhorts his readers to receive the one who is weak in faith, citing the example of the Sabbatarian who considers one day to be holy.

If it is morally right to keep one day holy in every situation, then Paul would not suggest that it is acceptable for someone to treat all days the same while serving the Lord. Therefore, we understand that keeping one day holy is considered good for those who worship God within the Jewish tradition, but it is not required for those outside the Jewish context.
No, actually, it's just their conviction--as we see Peter kept Jewish convictions up until the Lord told him otherwise. It has to do with the fact that that is how they come to the Lord, with those convictions.
The person with the weaker faith is the religious individual who has elevated religious rules or laws, which are only obligatory for those who practice the religion, to rules that everyone must follow because, in their view, these rules must be observed in all contexts. In other words, as we even see on this board, those who are weak in faith will insist that ALL Christians keep the Sabbath day.

Peter was allowed to eat things that weren't kosher because kosher laws don't define the good for every context.
You missed the point: Peter was persuaded of that, so he did it, but, afterward, God gave him a new persuasion, and he walked in that persuasion.
You seem to be forgetting the fact that Paul describes such a person as one "weak in faith." That is, he is NOT believing sound doctrine but erroneous doctrine instead. The sound doctrine in this matter, according to Paul, is that all foods are clean.
No, that's not Paul's point he's getting to, he's saying to not disturb this weaker person's worship to God.
I see what you are saying, but the emphasis is on serving the Lord as the basis for our fellowship. I am not obligated to receive everyone. I am obliged to receive all those who are serving the Lord, even if we disagree over religious convictions. But if they are not serving the Lord, then I should not receive them.
Again, I disagree with how you characterize Paul's point--he isn't making a single point, but many points.
I understand your point about personal convictions and agree with you. However, the command to "receive the one weak in faith" involves dialogue and interaction with other people, and perhaps a community at large. Since we both agree that Paul wrote his letter to a group of Gentiles who were about to receive returning Jews to Rome, it makes sense for Paul to alert his readers that some of those who return to Rome may not share their opinions on certain subjects.
1. No, most of Romans was written to Jewish Christians.
Gentiles are only addressed in the beginning of the letter briefly then in Ro 11:13 he addresses them.
Gentiles don't have the Law (Ro 2:14), so Paul wasn't answering their objections--they didn't need the answers because they couldn't even formulate the objections, not knowing Scripture.
Also, Paul says "you call yourself a Jew" Ro 2:17, "Abraham our forefather according to the flesh" Ro 4:1, and "Brothers, for I speak to those who know the Law" (Ro 7:1) (Gentiles don't know the Law).
2. No, the Jewish Christians had returned, and the strife had already erupted--eg, in Romans 2, the Jewish Christians think they're better than the Gentile Christians, and Romans 14 gets a little into the details of some of the problems they were having.
Paul is talking about people "weak in faith" and I take issue with those who have incorrect understandings of the Biblical concept of faith. (I'm not charging you with this, I am merely using this opportunity to correct the error. Some believe that "faith" is like "the force" in Star Wars, a power source to control and direct as needed. The man who believes this is likely going to interpret the phrase "weak faith" in terms of one's ability to get things done, spiritually speaking.
Another man might believe that "faith" is another way of knowing -- an epistemological technique affording the believer with supernatural knowledge. This man would interpret "weak faith" to mean "unable to discern spiritual things."

Neither of these images accurately represents "faith." Biblical faith is centered on truth, God's word, and his promises. For this reason, those with a "weak faith" are those who are incorrect about what is true, what God said in his word, or what he promised.
That's not what's in view, here, it's a person's personal conviction about what is correct for them to do before the Lord.
Paul makes his opinion known that all foods are clean. In this way, Paul sides with the meat-eaters that their beliefs are correct. Yet, Paul allows the vegetarian to follow his own conviction on the matter, even though his opinion is incorrect. His permissive stance on the issue indicates to me that the Faith of Christ allows for differences of opinion on issues of insignificant concern.
"Faith of Christ" is an incorrect translation--it is to be rendered "faithfulness of Christ", as "faithfulness" also in the fruit of the spirit section.
Okay. But you still have yet to present a good argument for why Romans 14:23 is talking about God's condemnation rather than man's.
Because it's God's rule they're breaking?
 
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GracePeace

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Okay, please allow me to explain why I create long posts in discussions like this. As you suggested in your post, I find myself talking to people who are convinced that the words on the page are clear and unambiguous. I'm sure this was true when Paul wrote them in the original Greek to readers who shared a common understanding of them and the issues they sought to convey. But we are separated from the original by time, history, culture, and language. The process of Exegesis takes time and effort.

Secondly, and just as important, we believers are given definitions of Bible terminology by their denomination, favorite pastor, and Bible commentaries. Some definitions are correct, but not all.

For this reason, among others, I feel compelled to make sense of the entire passage all at once, which is why my posts seem a bit verbose. I apologize for that, but for me, I judge whether my interpretation is correct or incorrect by one cardinal rule: my interpretation isn't correct unless and until it makes sense of the entire passage. So I spend a lot of time doing that in my posts, so as to model good exegetical technique.

Your thread has taken the opposite tack, attempting to prove that my interpretation of Romans 8:1 is incorrect based on your interpretation of Romans 14:23. That is a double no-no in my view because I do not allow myself to consider two verses taken out of context.

I work hard during these discussions because the interaction is beneficial for me to the degree that I do the work. :) So thanks for the discussion.
1. I wasn't asking why you made long posts--everyone should.

2. I didn't follow any pastor or commentary to my conclusion--AFTER I reached my conclusion, during this discussion, I checked what others said about it, and they agreed with me.

3. You're not "verbose", you're just completely missing the mark.

4. I actually agree with your interpretation of Ro 8:1, but I simply do not agree with your idea that all remain in Christ (Romans 8:1 doesn't comment on that issue). I stand by every point I've made, and I wonder how you cannot see it as I do.

5. Yep, discussion is beneficial.
 

CadyandZoe

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How is your personal opinion about the matter (ie, that eating foods is a "religious" question) relevant to the text, which says the one who "wavers" is condemned if he eats "because", it explains, "whatever does not proceed from faith is sin"?
They aren't directly related. I distinguished between religious beliefs and rational beliefs for a good reason. First, the two examples Paul raised are religious beliefs. Unlike rational beliefs, religious beliefs are not formed by examining facts or arguments. Instead, they are accepted as part of belonging to a religion. This makes religious beliefs resistant to rational arguments and reasons. Since a person didn't adopt a religious belief through persuasion, they cannot be persuaded to give it up through reasoning. No amount of rationalizing will convince a religious person to reject a fundamental belief of their religion.

I'm just trying to work out how, according to Paul, I might cause my brother to stumble. I mean, if I have a steak in the privacy of my own home, how will that cause my brother to stumble? The only way my behavior might cause my brother to stumble is if my brother is a witness to what I do, and I am given no opportunity to explain myself. My brother sees me eat a stake and draws his own conclusion from my behavior. It will be a rare opportunity to learn something if the brother asks me why I eat meat, but according to Paul, my best recourse is not to eat the meat for the sake of his conscience.

So what is all this talk about doubt? Where does doubt enter into it? What is being doubted? Is my brother doubting? Am I being condemned because my brother ate some meat against HIS conscience? How does that work?
 

CadyandZoe

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But you don't find it odd that it's everyone else who's wrong, not you?
Not at all. I am aware of how things work in the publishing world. How many Bible teachers will get published if they come up with a unique interpretation? There are gatekeepers who keep us from hearing ideas that don't conform to the dominant paradigm. Is everyone truly in agreement? Or is it true that descent has been weeded out? :) Yeah?
 

CadyandZoe

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Yeah, he is: διεκρίθη is contrasted against πίστεως.

Romans 4:20 V-AIP-3S
GRK: θεοῦ οὐ διεκρίθη τῇ ἀπιστίᾳ
NAS: of God, he did not waver in unbelief
KJV: He staggered not at
INT: of God not he doubted through unbelief

Romans 14:23 V-PPM-NMS
GRK: ὁ δὲ διακρινόμενος ἐὰν φάγῃ
NAS: But he who doubts is condemned if
KJV: And he that doubteth is damned if
INT: he who however doubts if he eats

Romans 14
23But the one who doubts is condemned if he eats, because his eating is not from faith; and whatever is not from faith is sin.

Romans 4:21 V-APP-NMS
GRK: καὶ πληροφορηθεὶς ὅτι ὃ
NAS: and being fully assured that what
KJV: And being fully persuaded that, what
INT: and having been fully assured that what

Romans 14:5 V-PMM/P-3S
GRK: ἰδίῳ νοῒ πληροφορείσθω
NAS: [alike]. Each person must be fully convinced in his own
KJV: every man be fully persuaded in
INT: own mind let be fully assured

"Coincidence", I'm sure: the same word to describe the full persuasion Abraham had is the one used to describe the full persuasion we are to have in our actions.

So, "Abraham did not waver in unbelief but waxed strong in faith giving glory to God being fully persuaded..."--just as we are not to do things we are wavering about, but only those things we are fully convinced are correct, as unto the Lord, giving thanks, unto God's glorification, and falling short of this, what ever does not proceed from faith, but from doubt and wavering, is called sin, whereby one brings condemnation on oneself, proving that they're not remaining in Christ, where there is no condemnation, because remaining in Christ is by keeping His Word and obeying His commands.

It couldn't be clearer.
Again, publishers. :) Commonality among interpreters is merely an illusion manufactured by publishers.
 

CadyandZoe

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1. I wasn't asking why you made long posts--everyone should.

2. I didn't follow any pastor or commentary to my conclusion--AFTER I reached my conclusion, during this discussion, I checked what others said about it, and they agreed with me.

3. You're not "verbose", you're just completely missing the mark.

4. I actually agree with your interpretation of Ro 8:1, but I simply do not agree with your idea that all remain in Christ (Romans 8:1 doesn't comment on that issue). I stand by every point I've made, and I wonder how you cannot see it as I do.

5. Yep, discussion is beneficial.
Well, in order for me to prove my case we would need to review other epistles.

Can you show me why Paul is NOT giving the definition of being "in Christ" in Romans 8 and why one would conclude from the passage that eternal life is contingent? Why does it appear that the entire chapter is dedicated to a victory in Christ, which does NOT depend on us, depending solely on him instead? This seems like an odd passage and a bit disingenuous if the fate of those in question was ambiguous and contingent on them.
 

GracePeace

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They aren't directly related. I distinguished between religious beliefs and rational beliefs for a good reason. First, the two examples Paul raised are religious beliefs. Unlike rational beliefs, religious beliefs are not formed by examining facts or arguments. Instead, they are accepted as part of belonging to a religion. This makes religious beliefs resistant to rational arguments and reasons. Since a person didn't adopt a religious belief through persuasion, they cannot be persuaded to give it up through reasoning. No amount of rationalizing will convince a religious person to reject a fundamental belief of their religion.
As stated, this entire point is irrelevant.

Beside the fact that you're assuming inaccurate convictions are always religious beliefs (as if it only refers to Jewish Christians), but a Gentile believer could easily have held to vegetarianism, a religion-based argument can be religiously debunked (as Paul spent time "rationalizing" from Scripture with believers in Scripture).
I'm just trying to work out how, according to Paul, I might cause my brother to stumble. I mean, if I have a steak in the privacy of my own home, how will that cause my brother to stumble? The only way my behavior might cause my brother to stumble is if my brother is a witness to what I do, and I am given no opportunity to explain myself. My brother sees me eat a stake and draws his own conclusion from my behavior. It will be a rare opportunity to learn something if the brother asks me why I eat meat, but according to Paul, my best recourse is not to eat the meat for the sake of his conscience.
Obviously, eating together with one another was one of the activities that brought the issue about--eg, Peter, fearing the Jewish Christians, withdrew from eating with Gentile Christians when the Jewish Christians were present, so we know that eating together was a Church activity, and bc of that, thes issues of "what to eat" arose.

Beside that, Paul addresses the issue from the angle of a brother seeing you dining inside of an idol's temple, so there's that angle to consider.
In that case, you're thinking, "The idol is nothing--God made everything, it's fine," but they're interpreting it, "They're partaking in idolatry... I know it's wrong, but why are they doing it? Idolatry is OK? I will do the same." Then, wavering, he goes against his conscience, and partakes in idolatry, sins, and is destroyed.

Same goes for the vegetarian who should not overstep his restrictions bc he sees his brother eating meat--and the person who thinks all days are the same (he shouldn't be forced to observe a day)--and if they are caused to waver, and they act while wavering, not in full conviction, that is sin, and it disrupts their relationship with God.
o what is all this talk about doubt? Where does doubt enter into it? What is being doubted? Is my brother doubting? Am I being condemned because my brother ate some meat against HIS conscience? How does that work?
The guy thinks "this is the right way, and that is the wrong way", but let's say it's a restrictive thing, and he says "oh that guy isn't restrictive and he's OK with God", and he goes against his conscience based on that--eg, 1 Co 8.
 

GracePeace

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Not at all. I am aware of how things work in the publishing world. How many Bible teachers will get published if they come up with a unique interpretation? There are gatekeepers who keep us from hearing ideas that don't conform to the dominant paradigm. Is everyone truly in agreement? Or is it true that descent has been weeded out? :) Yeah?
So, it is more likely, to your mind, that basically everyone else disagrees with you because they do not love God than it is that you're simply wrong?

"Odd".
 

GracePeace

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Well, in order for me to prove my case we would need to review other epistles.

Can you show me why Paul is NOT giving the definition of being "in Christ" in Romans 8 and why one would conclude from the passage that eternal life is contingent? Why does it appear that the entire chapter is dedicated to a victory in Christ, which does NOT depend on us, depending solely on him instead? This seems like an odd passage and a bit disingenuous if the fate of those in question was ambiguous and contingent on them.
1. He had described the plight of the Jew under Law (mastered by Sin Ro 6:14), and he says Christ rescues us from that slavery, and being rescued from slavery to Sin, we THEREFORE are not condemned, because we can fulfill the Law, and not be condemned for breaking the Law, but he goes on to warn that IF they walk after the Spirit they will live, and IF they walk after the flesh they will die.
I don't see that Paul addresses whether being "in Christ" is static in v1, and he immediately speaks in a way that would render that understanding incoherent.

2. It is wrong to overemphasize self, as you say, but that doesn't conclude the matter and prove your point.

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