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Re: Lesson #3 - The Reality of His HUMANITY [Re: Mountain Man] #98839
04/29/08 05:43 PM
04/29/08 05:43 PM
asygo  Offline
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 Originally Posted By: Mountain Man
Arnold, does "nature", as it relates to human nature, always mean the same thing in the SOP? Doesn't it mean different things depending on the context?

The meaning is variable, to be determined by the context.

However, some statements are more definitive than others. When EGW describes the threefold nature of humanity, we need to see that as more foundational than when she says that Jesus came in our nature. We need to understand which are definitive and which are derivative. Confusion there will lead to confusion almost everywhere else.


By God's grace,
Arnold

There is no excuse for any one in taking the position that there is no more truth to be revealed, and that all our expositions of Scripture are without an error. The fact that certain doctrines have been held as truth for many years by our people, is not a proof that our ideas are infallible. Age will not make error into truth, and truth can afford to be fair. No true doctrine will lose anything by close investigation. RH 12/20/1892
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Re: Lesson #3 - The Reality of His HUMANITY [Re: Mountain Man] #98841
04/29/08 05:49 PM
04/29/08 05:49 PM
asygo  Offline
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 Originally Posted By: Mountain Man
In the next two quotes nature is in contrast to the nature of angels. His nature was perfectly identical with our own nature, except without the taint of sin. In this case it cannot refer to form since it was defiled by sin. But it could refer to character.

"His human nature was created; it did not even possess the angelic powers. It was human, identical with our own. (3SM 129)

"He had not taken on Him even the nature of the angels, but humanity, perfectly identical with our own nature, except without the taint of sin. (16MR 181)

Note that in such uses of "nature" by EGW, she tends to put in an exception clause. If Christ's nature was identical to ours in every way, the period would have come 6 words earlier.

But also notice that she doesn't always include the exception, as in the 3SM quote. In that case, the contrast is simply between human nature and angelic nature; the same contrast would be valid between Gabriel and unfallen Adam. The 16MR quote contrasts Christ's human nature with angelic nature, but with the clarification that there is a distinction between His nature and ours. Only when it can truly be said of us that we have no taint of sin can we say without reserve that Christ's nature was identical to ours.


By God's grace,
Arnold

There is no excuse for any one in taking the position that there is no more truth to be revealed, and that all our expositions of Scripture are without an error. The fact that certain doctrines have been held as truth for many years by our people, is not a proof that our ideas are infallible. Age will not make error into truth, and truth can afford to be fair. No true doctrine will lose anything by close investigation. RH 12/20/1892
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Re: Lesson #3 - The Reality of His HUMANITY [Re: asygo] #98845
04/29/08 07:45 PM
04/29/08 07:45 PM
Tom  Offline
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Regarding your post #98834 (which I'll address in a separate post) we seem to be talking about different things. What I've been emphasizing is that the suggestion that Ellen White did not teach that Christ assumed our human nature, with all its inherited inclinations, is not viable because of historical considerations. You seem to be trying to parse her writings in a vacuum, as if Haskell, Prescott, Jones, Waggoner, and countless others did not exist.

I have pointed out that:

a.Ellen White wrote that letters had been coming to her, saying that Jesus could not have had our nature, because if He had then He would have fallen under similar temptations that we do. Given that she was preaching side by side with Jones and Waggoner, this can only be understood as teaching that Christ took our fallen nature in order to be tempted as we are, as fallen human beings. For example:

 Quote:
How fully did Christ share our common humanity?" by stating: "In His humanity Christ partook of our sinful, fallen nature. If not, then He was not ‘made like unto His brethren,’ was not ‘in all points tempted like as we are,’ did not overcome as we have to overcome, and is not, therefore the complete and perfect Saviour man needs and must have to be saved. The idea that Christ was born of an immaculate or sinless mother, inherited no tendencies to sin, and for this reason did not sin, removes Him from the realm of a fallen world, and from the very place where help is needed. On His human side, Christ inherited just what every child of Adam inherits,—a sinful nature. On the divine side, from His very conception He was begotten and born of the Spirit. And all this was done to place mankind on vantage-ground, and to demonstrate that in the same way every one who is ‘born of the Spirit’ may gain like victories over sin in his own sinful flesh. Thus each one is to overcome as Christ overcame. Revelation 3:21. Without this birth there can be no victory over temptation, and no salvation from sin. John 3:3-7


This is what was being taught, and what Ellen White defended.

b.Prescott preached a sermon entitled "The Word Became Flesh." The theme of the sermon was that Christ took sinful flesh, which he called "flesh of sin," flesh identical to our own. He emphasized this over and over again, over 30 times. He used this to argue that we could obey the law.

Ellen White endorsed this sermon in the strongest language.

c.When addressing the Holy Flesh teachings, Haskell wrote to EGW:

 Quote:
Their point of theology in this particular respect seems to be this: They believe that Christ took Adam’s nature before He fell; so He took humanity as it was in the garden of Eden; and thus humanity was holy, and this was the humanity which Christ had; and now, they say, the particular time has come for us to become holy in that same sense, and then we will have "translation faith"; and never die"


They could have decided to fight against this teaching by explaining simply that our nature does not change before death. But they didn't do this. Their starting point in fighting against it was by emphasizing that Christ took the nature of Adam after the fall.

Haskell quoted from the Desire of Ages, and explained Ellen White's meaning as Christ came in our nature, "with all its inherited inclinations."

Assuming Ellen White disagreed with Haskell, where is the record of such a disagreement? How can one rationally suppose that Ellen White would accept an unsound argument like this when she wrote:

 Quote:
It is important that in defending the doctrines which we consider fundamental articles of faith we should never allow ourselves to employ arguments that are not wholly sound. These may avail to silence an opposer but they do not honor the truth. We should present sound arguments, that will not only silence our opponents, but will bear the closest and most searching scrutiny. Testimonies, vol. 5, pp. 707,708


Waggoner also used this same argument before the 1901 GC session, which EGW attended.

d.Ellen White used language which could only have been interpreted by her contemporaries as meaning that Christ's inherited nature had tendencies to sin. This is demonstrated by the fact that they, in fact, understood her to be saying this.

She was aware of this.

It hardly seems reasonable to assume that she would use language to communicate an idea she knew would be interpreted incorrectly.


Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
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Re: Lesson #3 - The Reality of His HUMANITY [Re: Tom] #98846
04/29/08 07:52 PM
04/29/08 07:52 PM
Tom  Offline
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 Quote:
Only when it can truly be said of us that we have no taint of sin can we say without reserve that Christ's nature was identical to ours.


Regarding Christ and "taint of sin"

 Quote:
Christ came to receive baptism, not with confession of sins to repentance, for He was without the taint of sin. (LHU 33)


Christ came not with "confessions of sins to repentance" because He was "without the taint of sin." The human nature He assumed was "perfectly identical with our own" yet "without the taint of sin."

IOW, she is saying exactly the same thing as her contemporaries who emphasized that while Christ took a nature, or flesh, like ours, He never sinned in that nature. For example, W. W. Prescott, in the sermon "The Word Became Flesh" (which EGW strongly endorsed) said that Christ came in sinful flesh like ours, "flesh of sin, flesh in which we sin, but flesh in which He did not sin."


Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
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Re: Lesson #3 - The Reality of His HUMANITY [Re: asygo] #98847
04/29/08 07:58 PM
04/29/08 07:58 PM
Tom  Offline
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 Quote:
Would you include physical predispositions as tendencies to sin? For example, the heredity of some children predisposes them to alcoholism more than the average. Do you include that?


Yes.

 Quote:
I think a strong argument can be made that such physical factors count as tendencies to sin. EGW and her contemporaries could very well have taken such things into account when they wrote.

However, that is not my focus when it comes to the similarities/differences between Christ's nature and ours. Like us, He surely bore some physical damage. He probably bore mental damage like the rest of fallen humanity. But did He suffer moral damage like us?


Yes, if by that you are referring to the human nature He assumed. That human nature was a sinful human nature, just like ours.

 Quote:
If He was not morally damaged, as the rest of us are, then no matter what, He was significantly different. Moreover, He was different in the most important aspect of life.

If He was morally damaged, as we are, then one could say that His nature was the same as ours. The only difference would be in the magnitude of the damage.

But if you would argue that His example of victory depends on having the same strength of propensity toward sin, then He would have to be the most damaged man there ever was or will be.

I say that Jesus was not morally damaged in any way. Would you agree with that?


I'm not sure what you mean by morally damaged, but if you mean was the human nature He assumed like ours, the answer is yes. He accepted the working of the great law of heredity. What heredity passes to us, it passed to Him.


Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
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Re: Lesson #3 - The Reality of His HUMANITY [Re: asygo] #98868
04/30/08 12:06 AM
04/30/08 12:06 AM
Mountain Man  Offline
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 Originally Posted By: asygo
 Originally Posted By: Mountain Man
In the next two quotes nature is in contrast to the nature of angels. His nature was perfectly identical with our own nature, except without the taint of sin. In this case it cannot refer to form since it was defiled by sin. But it could refer to character.

"His human nature was created; it did not even possess the angelic powers. It was human, identical with our own. (3SM 129)

"He had not taken on Him even the nature of the angels, but humanity, perfectly identical with our own nature, except without the taint of sin. (16MR 181)

Note that in such uses of "nature" by EGW, she tends to put in an exception clause. If Christ's nature was identical to ours in every way, the period would have come 6 words earlier.

But also notice that she doesn't always include the exception, as in the 3SM quote. In that case, the contrast is simply between human nature and angelic nature; the same contrast would be valid between Gabriel and unfallen Adam. The 16MR quote contrasts Christ's human nature with angelic nature, but with the clarification that there is a distinction between His nature and ours. Only when it can truly be said of us that we have no taint of sin can we say without reserve that Christ's nature was identical to ours.

If Jesus possessed Adam's pre-fall sinless nature, or some other form of sinless nature, there would have been no reason for Him to partake of the divine nature. Like Adam, or some other sinless being, He would have possessed the tools necessary to form a perfect character without having to partake of the divine nature. The reason Jesus had to partake of the divine nature like we do is due to the fact He could not form a perfect character with the nature and tools He inherited.

In the following quotes the word "nature" means Jesus inherited the same tendencies and temptations we do. He had to deal with the same problems we do. He was tempted from within and from without in the same way and for the reasons we are. He had no advantage over us.

If His nature communicated sinless desires and suggestions He would have had an advantage not available to us. Instead, He had to rely on the same heavenly tools we do because He possessed the same inherited tendencies and temptations we do. Unlike us, though, He never turned His internal foes into sinful traits of character. Thus, Jesus was untainted by sin.

"Christ’s overcoming and obedience is that of a true human being. In our conclusions, we make many mistakes because of our erroneous views of the human nature of our Lord. When we give to His human nature a power that it is not possible for man to have in his conflicts with Satan, we destroy the completeness of His humanity. (OHC 48)

"If we had to bear anything which Jesus did not endure, then upon this point Satan would represent the power of God as insufficient for us. Therefore Jesus was “in all points tempted like as we are.” Heb. 4:15. He endured every trial to which we are subject. And He exercised in His own behalf no power that is not freely offered to us. As man, He met temptation, and overcame in the strength given Him from God. (DA 24)

"If Christ had a special power which it is not the privilege of man to have, Satan would have made capital of this matter. The work of Christ was to take from the claims of Satan his control of man, and He could do this only in the way that He came – a man, tempted as a man, rendering the obedience of a man. (7BC 930)

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Re: Lesson #3 - The Reality of His HUMANITY [Re: Mountain Man] #98869
04/30/08 12:09 AM
04/30/08 12:09 AM
Mountain Man  Offline
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Arnold, I trust things are well with you and your family in regards to the passing of your father-in-law. You have been in my prayers.

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Re: Lesson #3 - The Reality of His HUMANITY [Re: Tom] #98871
04/30/08 12:30 AM
04/30/08 12:30 AM
Rosangela  Offline
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I haven’t had much time to visit the forum, owing to a deadline to meet, and also owing to two surgeries I had to undergo because of a wisdom tooth that hadn’t come out. I’m still recovering. But Arnold did a fine job in replying to some points, so I’ll make just a few comments.

 Quote:
You also assume that you are better able to interpret her meaning than Haskel was. He worked with her and spoke to her. Waggoner did the same, and preached side by side with her. But in spite of this they supposedly did not understand her view on the nature of Christ. In fact none of the church understood that Ellen White alone believed that Christ did not have inherited tendencies to sin. And she never made that point public in a way that any of her contemporaries could understand it. But almost a century after her death, you are able to correctly understand that her view was in reality different than everyone else's while her contemporaries could not.

Well, she preached side by side with her husband and, if we believe at all what she said years later, she didn't believe in the shut-door theory, although it's well known that her husband and the rest of the Adventist group believed in it. She even used the expression "shut door" at that time, but evidently it must have had a different meaning for her and for him (them).
Not to mention that her husband died as a semi-arian, believed she had seen Jupiter and Saturn in the astronomy vision of 1846, and Joseph Bates, a close associate, wrote a book saying that Christ was going to come in 1851. She never corrected any of these wrong notions, and preached side by side with them. So, Ellen White's views and her contemporaries' views were not always the same, not even when they employed the same terms.

 Quote:
In addition, supposedly she used the term "sinful nature" to mean something that nobody else meant by that term, the same thing that those who used the term "sinless nature" meant, and never corrected those who misunderstood the unique meaning she had for that phrase.

I'm sure you're familiar with "Occam's razor," that the simplest explanation is most likely to be correct. The simplest explanation is that by saying that Jesus Christ took our sinful nature that she meant what every other person who said this had meant, which is also the same meaning all of our church publications attributed to the phrase.

The problem is that if she had meant what you say, she would have contradicted herself in other passages she wrote. It’s curious you don’t seem to apply Occam’s razor to the Baker letter, to the phrase “born without a taint of sin,” etc. \:\)

 Quote:
You can't be saved if you're not alive. Without Christ as Savior, they would never have been alive to be saved.

After being alive, but before they sin, they still need a Savior.

 Quote:
Since babies have rejected no light, there is "no sin," and no condemnation, no "frown of God."

This refers to a different circumstance. Condemnation in Romans 5 is in opposition to justification, which is not the case in this EGW quote. A five-minute-old baby needs a Savior, and if he needs a Savior it’s because he is condemned.

 Quote:
She is arguing that Christ took our nature (i.e. fallen, our nature is fallen), which enabled Him not only to be tempted, but to be tempted as man (i.e. fallen man, which is to say US! how *we* are tempted, this was Jones and Waggoner's whole point). If He were not tempted *as we are tempted* He could not be *our* helper. He could have been unfallen Adam's helper, but not our helper (This is just what Jones and Waggoner explained).

It’s not this that she says. She says, “If it were not possible for him to yield to temptation, he could not be our helper.”
This argument has nothing to do with the aspect of fallen nature, but it does have to do with the aspect of divinity/humanity mentioned in the other parallel quotes. In none of the quotes Ellen White mentions “fallen nature,” but just “human nature,” “man’s nature,” etc. She is writing about Christ’s human nature as opposed to His divine nature. She is not speaking at all about “fallen nature.”

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Re: Lesson #3 - The Reality of His HUMANITY [Re: Rosangela] #98875
04/30/08 02:13 AM
04/30/08 02:13 AM
Tom  Offline
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1.Regarding Haskell, you have to believe, in your view:
a.She used a term she knew nobody in the world would understand but herself in "sinful nature." If she had simply said that Christ took a sinless human nature, that would have been clear; He would have had a nature that could become weary, hungry and thirsty, but one without tendencies to evil. Everyone would have understood that.
b.She didn't bother to correct Haskell when he misquoted her.
c.She didn't bother to correct Haskell (or Waggoner) when they presented unsound arguments in public, in the R&H and GC session, even though she had given specific counsel regarding the importance of not using unsound arguments when encountering opponents.

None of the things you mentioned, shut door, semi-arianism, are similar cases to what was happening here.

If Haskell (or anyone else) had quoted a work of hers, and interpreted it as saying "therefore Christ was not eternal, one with the Father" and used this as an argument to meet opponents, and she sat by and said nothing, I could see the point. But I'm not aware of a single incident in her life which would correspond to any of a, b, or c that I mentioned above.

2.Regarding the Baker letter, it seems clear to me that she made the same points she always did, which is that Christ took our fallen, sinful nature, but never sinned. Occam's razor which suggest her writing in that letter to be in harmony with what she had written before, and in harmony with the SDA position on the subject, since their was no disharmony regarding it. Occam's razor would certainly not suggest reinterpreting her view as being different than that which her contemporaries understood. The analogy I gave regarding Lincoln, to Arthur, illustrates this point.

I appreciate you were making this point somewhat tongue-in-cheek (smiley), but it's a valid question, and I think Occam's razor is a strong argument for interpreting the Baker letter to agree with the idea that Christ's inherited human nature had "all the inherited inclinations" of human nature, as Haskell interpreted her to say.

 Quote:
After being alive, but before they sin, they still need a Savior.


They couldn't continue to be alive without a Savior. "To the death of Christ we owe even this earthly life." Every water spring, every breath, is the purchase of His blood.

So not only would they never have been alive in the first place, they could not continue to be alive without a Savior.

 Quote:
This refers to a different circumstance. Condemnation in Romans 5 is in opposition to justification, which is not the case in this EGW quote. A five-minute-old baby needs a Savior, and if he needs a Savior it’s because he is condemned.


Why do you conclude that one can only need a Savior if one is condemned? Unless by condemned you mean simply "needs a Savior," in which case this becomes "babies need a Savior because they need a Savior."

Here's Waggoner on Romans 5:18

 Quote:
There are no exceptions, for the Scripture says that "death passed upon all men." For the reign of death is simply the reign of sin. "Elias was a man of like passions with us." Enoch was righteous only by faith; his nature was as sinful as that of any other man. So that death reigned over them as well as over any others. For be it remembered that this present going into the grave, which we so often see, is not the punishment of sin. It is simply the evidence of our mortality. Good and bad alike die. This is not the condemnation, because men die rejoicing in the Lord, and even singing songs of triumph.

"Justification of Life." "By the righteousness of One the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life."Â There is no exception here. As the condemnation came upon all, so the justification comes upon all. Christ has tasted death for every man. He has given himself for all. Nay, he has given himself to every man. The free gift has come upon all. The fact that it is a free gift is evidence that there is no exception. If it came upon only those who have some special qualification, then it would not be a free gift.

It is a fact, therefore, plainly stated in the Bible, that the gift of righteousness and life in Christ has come to every man on earth. There is not the slightest reason why every man that has ever lived should not be saved unto eternal life, except that they would not have it. So many spurn the gift offered so freely.


I agree with Waggoner here.

4.Again, regarding the "letters have been coming to me" quote, you're not tying back to anything Jones and Waggoner preached. You have to do that. The letters were coming in response to what Jones and Waggoner were preaching. What were Jones and Waggoner preaching in regards to Christ's human nature? They were preaching what I quoted:

 Quote:
In His humanity Christ partook of our sinful, fallen nature. If not, then He was not ‘made like unto His brethren,’ was not ‘in all points tempted like as we are,’ did not overcome as we have to overcome, and is not, therefore the complete and perfect Saviour man needs and must have to be saved. The idea that Christ was born of an immaculate or sinless mother, inherited no tendencies to sin, and for this reason did not sin, removes Him from the realm of a fallen world, and from the very place where help is needed. On His human side, Christ inherited just what every child of Adam inherits,—a sinful nature. On the divine side, from His very conception He was begotten and born of the Spirit. And all this was done to place mankind on vantage-ground, and to demonstrate that in the same way every one who is ‘born of the Spirit’ may gain like victories over sin in his own sinful flesh. Thus each one is to overcome as Christ overcame. Revelation 3:21. Without this birth there can be no victory over temptation, and no salvation from sin. John 3:3-7


This is what the people were hearing, and what they had questions about. Ellen White was defending what had been presented, not out of the blue coming up with some argument that no one had been presenting.

5.Ellen White endorsed W. W. Prescott's sermon "The Word Became Flesh" in the strongest language. She spoke of it's being "truth separated from error," and went on and on in regards to how the Holy Spirit was using him.

The theme of the sermon was that Christ came in flesh identical to ours, "flesh of sin," he called it. He expressed the same views I've been defending.

How could such an endorsement be anything but a goof, if your view were correct? Have you read the sermon? Over 30 times he makes the point that Christ took our sinful flesh, flesh just like yours and mine. He also made the corporate arguments in regards to Romans 5:18 that I've shared. Really, I can think of almost nothing in that sermon you would agree with, yet Ellen White went bonkers over it.


Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
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Re: Lesson #3 - The Reality of His HUMANITY [Re: Mountain Man] #98878
04/30/08 07:41 AM
04/30/08 07:41 AM
asygo  Offline
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 Originally Posted By: Mountain Man
Arnold, I trust things are well with you and your family in regards to the passing of your father-in-law. You have been in my prayers.

Thanks. The immediate shock is wearing off, and people are recovering. When things like this happen, it should remind us that knowing the truth is not nearly as important as knowing Him who is the Truth.


By God's grace,
Arnold

There is no excuse for any one in taking the position that there is no more truth to be revealed, and that all our expositions of Scripture are without an error. The fact that certain doctrines have been held as truth for many years by our people, is not a proof that our ideas are infallible. Age will not make error into truth, and truth can afford to be fair. No true doctrine will lose anything by close investigation. RH 12/20/1892
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by dedication. 05/02/24 08:58 PM
The Papacy And The American Election
by Rick H. 04/30/24 09:34 AM
Christian Nationalism/Sunday/C
limate Change

by Rick H. 04/13/24 10:19 AM
A.I. - The New God?
by kland. 04/11/24 12:34 PM
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