I am reading a book that presents two answers to this question.
The book says the Eastern church says yes focusing on Romasn 8:3 and Hebrews 4:15. The book says the Western church says no focusing on Hebrews 7:26,27.
This difference is new to me. Can someone enlighten me on the significance of this?
Did Jesus Have a Sinful Nature While on Earth?
Discussion in 'Other Christian Denominations' started by drfuss, Jan 6, 2010.
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For me it's no. It says in the likeness of sinful flesh. I wondered this for a while.
Also before He was born it was said, that ' holy thing ' the virgin birth was truly a miraculous thing in my thoughts.
That raises thoughts about was Jesus connected to Mary by an umbilical cord? Did Mary's blood flow through Him?
I thought that if Mary's blood ran through Jesus then He basically would be from Adams line, but no, that maybe is not the case. I got to thinking about it's the flesh that is sinful not blood. And so on.
Just thoughts! -
as an Orthodox Christian, we believe and teach that Christ is fully 100% divine and fully 100% human, which means His nature is just as ours is...the difference being is that Christ's humanity submitted perfectly to His divinity, thus Christ, being 100% man remained sinless....that's about as simple as I can explain it.
In XC
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The moment a baby is born, it does not sin, but it's in Adam and cut off from God.
Do you see the point, it's not about committing sin, it's the very fact of the nature. -
If I said I've been boating, that doesn't automatically mean I have a boat. Likewise, if scripture says Jesus esperienced a sinful nature, that doesn't automatically mean he had one. -
Furthermore, the ONLY thing we inherited from Adam is death...period...we are responsible for our own sin not Adam's sin...
In XC
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My mind still boggles on that one. Sometimes the more you think about difficult things the harder they become.
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Just learning here.
Teach me brother. -
In James 1 we are told that fallen mankind "enticed by his own lust" yields to sin.
in Romans 7 Paul says that sinful nature is "sin IN me - at WAR with the law of my mind" for a saved Christian.
In Romans 3 Paul describes the sinful nature when he says there is "no one that seeks after God".
The sinful nature is at war with the 2Cor 5 "new creation" that we receive at conversion.
The reason this is such an issue between various groups is that the "Jesus had a sinful nature" guys wrong-headedly think that they are making room for the Bible teaching that Christ is our example - or model "walk as Christ Walked (1John 2)" ONLY if He had a sinful nature like we do.
They err in arguing that Christ had a sinful nature - because of the fact that having a morally depraved sinful nature would have meant that Christ Himself was in need of a Savior.
Christ is our example as 1John 2 notes - but he did not posses a sinful nature. He did not provide an "example" of a "lost person getting saved". Even John the baptizer noted that Christ had no need at all for water baptism.
Christ conquered the temptations of Satan in Matt 4 in the sinless morally pure nature of Adam. Thus in Romans 5 Christ is the second Adam.
in Christ,
Bob -
all I can do is offer what that Orthodox Christian Church teaches, and trust me, I'm still learning too...
A correct understanding of the dogma concerning Christ is contingent upon a correct understanding of the dogma of the Holy Trinity. For, as the Holy Scriptures proclaim and the Fathers of the Ecumenical Councils affirmed, Jesus Christ is the incarnation of the second Person of the Holy Trinity. He is the only begotten Son of God Who has taken flesh, who has become a man.
As the incarnate Son of God, Christ is of One Essence with the Father and the Holy Spirit. Christ Himself said: I and My Father are one (John 10:30), and elsewhere Christ said: I am in the Father, and the Father in Me (John 14:11; 10:38).
Being of one Essence with the Father and the Holy Spirit, Christ is fully God. As St. Paul wrote: In Him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily (Colossians 2:9).
Being fully God, Christ is the incarnation of the Creator of the universe. St. John declares: All things were made by Him; and without Him was not anything made that was made (John 1:3). Likewise, St. Paul writes: For by Him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible …: all things were created by Him, and for Him: and He is before all things, and by Him all things consist (Colossians 1:16–17).
At the Ecumenical Councils it was affirmed that Christ is fully God and at the same time fully man. The Fathers at the Councils overcame heresies that attempted to diminish either Christ’s Divinity or His humanity.
In his humanity Christ was in all ways like us except for sin, as the Scripture says (Hebrews 4:15). He has both a human nature and a Divine nature, and these two natures are united in one Person. The Fathers defined in precise terms how the two natures are united in Christ: They are united unconfusedly and immutably and yet indivisibly andinseparably. “Unconfusedly and immutably”: this means the two natures do not mingle and are not converted one into the other.
“Indivisibly and inseparably”: this means that both natures are forever united. They do not form two persons who are only morally united, as the heretic Nestorius taught. According to the doctrine proclaimed at the Councils, the two natures were inseparable from the moment of Christ’s conception within the womb of the Virgin Mary, by the action of the Holy Spirit.
Finally, at the Ecumenical Councils it was decreed that Christ, having two natures in one Person, also has two wills. The human will of Christ was not changed into the Divine will and was not destroyed. Christ completely subjected His human will to the Divine will, which in Him is one with the will of the Father. As He said: I came down from heaven, not to do Mine own will, but the will of Him that sent Me (John 6:38).
To sum up what I’ve said so far: The Holy Trinity is God of One Nature or Essence (Ousia) and of Three Divine Persons (Hypostases), while Jesus Christ the incarnate God has two natures (ousia) and two wills united in one Divine-human Person (Hypostasis).
I know, it boggles my mind too...
In XC
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The thought that Christ's flesh was sinful but He never yielded to it will ruffle feathers to say the least on a protestant message board. :) As it should. Paul talked about understanding all mysteries. This is one of them in some respects.
The likeness of sinful flesh is inescapable. -
We would maybe ponder the offer or even yield, but God no. Instant rebuke.
Facinating stuff. -
Definitely facinating stuff. -
Jesus was God incarnate! Son of God that is.
Tempted as an action but not tempted in the sense that He gave it any other thought that was not in keeping with His nature. -
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The book gave an example reflecting the Western churches position which is too long for me to give here. Basically it said that Jesus always wanted to do the right thing, but His temptation was to do good things in the wrong manner.
A man tempted to steal to feed his hungry children would be doing a good thing in the wrong way.
The example the book gave of the Eastern position would be a man tempted to steal to feed himself, i.e. stealing to satisfy himself.
Any comments on these examples? -
I'm not sure I agree, but in and of itself, that pov doesn't appear to contradict scripture on the topic, so it's possible.
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Simply put, sinful nature is not a Biblical terms period.
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I would say that Jesus doesn't have a sin nature because he didn't inherit a sin nature from a man.
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