You are begging the question. With justification comes the ability to proceed with sanctification. As Desmond Ford correctly said, "God gives with both hands," and one "has to be saved to be good." These statements are not merely rhetorical ones or semantics. Sanctification follows justification. Every person has their own particular 'journey'. It well may be that there are those who will overcome sin but the forensics of human flesh remain until glorification. This has been true since the sin of Adam. Again, it may well be that persons over the ages have reached whatever God regards as perfection in this life. Daniel is my hero against whom the bible records no sin. For many of us, even trying to be like him, is discouraging because our lives of sin. If there is any hope for us, justification and sanctification are intertwined. Malachi 3:17 is our hope.
This is what I wanted to hear
Pastor Dana says it from the Heart
Praise God
Number 12 was hard to find but glad i found it. thank you for this series
Thank you for this one
You don't understand the sanctuary inthe context of ps77;13,rom 1;16 etc
You are begging the question. With justification comes the ability to proceed with sanctification. As Desmond Ford correctly said, "God gives with both hands," and one "has to be saved to be good." These statements are not merely rhetorical ones or semantics. Sanctification follows justification. Every person has their own particular 'journey'. It well may be that there are those who will overcome sin but the forensics of human flesh remain until glorification.
This has been true since the sin of Adam. Again, it may well be that persons over the ages have reached whatever God regards as perfection in this life. Daniel is my hero against whom the bible records no sin. For many of us, even trying to be like him, is discouraging because our lives of sin. If there is any hope for us, justification and sanctification are intertwined. Malachi 3:17 is our hope.