You certainly have no understanding of the scriptures and this is genuine proof right here. The "body of Christ" in Romans 7 is not in reference to the Church here it is a reference to Christs death on the cross paying the price for our sins so that we through faith can walk in newness of life
WOW!
That was a bit off the charts 3rdAngel.
So "the body of Christ" is not a reference to the church.
Ooookay, I'm listening, but I'm not sure if I'm listening to an Adventist. My bad, I thought I was, so let's get right down to the real nitty-gritty then. It may help me and any of our readers make more sense of your post.
I am once again REPEATING our prior conversation (see above), much like I and many other Christians have had to do before. Why?
Because of your response. Here it is:
SUNDAY SCHOLAR COMMENTARIES ON "THE BODY OF CHRIST" NOT BEING THE CHURCH IN ROMANS 7:4
Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
By the body of Christ - Which was slain for you.
No reference to the mystical Body, the Church, (
Romans 12:5; 1 Corinthians 10; Eph.; Col.
is to be sought here. The word “body” is used, instead of “death,” probably to remind the readers that the Lord “took our nature upon Him” expressly in view of His death.
Your ORIGINAL argument stated "
The body of Christ" in Romans 7 is not in reference to the Church here...."
But your subsequent comment NARROWS Romans 7 to simply Romans 7:4!
That's called "Moving the goalposts" my friend. Romans 7 is 25 verses. Roman 7:4 is only 1.
That's equivalent to reducing the goalposts by a factor of 25! A 25 foot goalpost is suddenly a foot.
Look at post # 3061 for example. There is not a single Sunday keeping scholar that agrees with anything you have posted in our discussion here.
I looked at it. ALL the "Sunday keeping scholars" agree with me. You are simply "proof-texting" (IMO, rather badly).
That's not a problem
@3rdAngel. I love commentaries. But I'm not going to go through all of them. It's getting late and just a few should serve my purpose. I am surprised but grateful you would pick these commentators and I may even suggest one for you. But first, let's see if we can get some of these allegedly "disagreeable" commentaries straightened out.
By the body of Christ - Which was slain for you.
No reference to the mystical Body, the Church, (
Romans 12:5; 1 Corinthians 10; Eph.; Col.
is to be sought here. The word “body” is used, instead of “death,” probably to remind the readers that the Lord “took our nature upon Him” expressly in view of His death.
Hmmmmmmmmm....
I have to admit, you surprised me with this one. IMO, it's a rather unusual commentator for you to have picked out!
Let's see. He talks about the
mystical Body, the
Church. Lots of clues right there.
Did you notice? Two words are capitalized, both Body and Church. And we have an Anglican Bishop speaking to us from the 19th Century, and we're trying to determine the original intent of the Author when he made wrote this commentary.
Offhand, I would say he is claiming there is no reference to a
specific church. He is not claiming there's no reference to the church at all. Since there is no reference to a specific church, I would certainly agree with him on this.
Okay, so let's take another walk and discuss Roman 7:4. We won't even discuss the rest of Romans 7. I think verse 4 will do very nicely.
Ready?
Here's the CBSC translation of verse 7:4:
Wherefore,
my brethren,
ye also are become dead to the law
by the body of Christ; that ye should be married to another,
even to him who is raised from the dead, that we should bring forth fruit unto God.
More clues. Paul states "my brethren" and also the term "ye" in his opening to the verse. Who was he referring to if not the church?
Probably just two guys who happened to be walking across his field of vision at that time.
Let's move on to with the authors analysis via CBSC:
Did you notice? I'm referring to the section that says
"Which was slain for you" which appears in the commentary right after "By the body of Christ", outlined in red above.
That section in italics is scripture, the section beginning "Which was slain for you" begins the authors commentary for this verse.
Are we agreed?
So the question to ask now is: Who is the "you" in "Which was slain for
you"?
Is it:
1. Christ, or
2. Some person unknown, or
3. The individual believer that comprises the church?
Here's what I think 3rd Angel:
The author is stating there is no reference to a
specific Church, the mystic
Body, but he is not saying there is no reference to the church in general. Christ's physical body was slain for "you", which includes any believer in the church.
Let's move on:
By the body of Christ - Which was slain for
you. No reference to the mystical Body, the Church, (
Romans 12:5; 1 Corinthians 10; Eph.; Col.
is to be sought here. The word “body” is used, instead of “death,” probably to remind the readers that the Lord “took
our nature upon Him” expressly in view of His death. (See
Hebrews 2:14.) Meanwhile the truth of
the connexion between believers and their Head, their Second Adam, is still full in view. By virtue of it the death of
the Lord counts as the death of His brethren, in respect of the claim of the Law upon them—here figured as the claim of one marriage-partner over the other, to be broken only by the death of one of the two.
Also, since you brought up this commentator, can you give us your thoughts on who "our" might be in "took our nature upon Him", what does "connexion between believers and their Head" means, and why the author thinks "
...the death of the Lord counts as the death of His brethren".
Lastly can you explain who "His
brethren" are if the author is giving no reference to the church?
So we have at least one out of the way. Again, I am pressed for time and it's late. We can do another later.