If you want to wait until you no longer sin, then I guarantee you'll die first. Christianity is different from all other world religions in this respect.PaulB007 wrote:The way I have always understood it, is that you have to repent for your sins and *mean* it in order for Christ's sacrafice to matter. That you can't just say "oh I believe and that gives me a free pass to do whatever I want" To me your repentance wouldn't have much meaning if you continue to sin over and over and over again and not try your hardest in your heart to not do so. Or am I misunderstanding?jlay wrote:Why do lost people miss this?
Wake up man. While you are now in your sin, Jesus Christ died for you.
The bible doesn't say, stop sinning, clean up your life, and then maybe if you are lucky, Jesus will die for your sins.
He already did it. It's done. Finished.
You won't become one thinking you have anything to bring to the table. YOu think your perversions can undo the work of the Savior? You need to repent. Repent of the idea that you are somehow beyond help. Repent of the idea that you have anything to contribute to your salvation. Jesus paid it all. Not you.I cannot become a Christian and then *knowingly* defy God's will by doing these things.
You know you are a sinner. You know your porn and lust are wrong. By knowing that you are closer than most out there. But you need to know that you are truly helpless. You can't make yourself fit for God's Kingdom. Trusting Jesus will make you fit for his Kingdom/.
You want to do something really radical? Trust Christ. Trust that He is bigger than your sin. That His life, death and resurrection, have reconciled vile sinners like you and me to Himself. Stop trying. Start trusting.
Something nearly all religions have in common is one must purify themselves by performing rituals or resisting fleshly temptations. The Gospel starts with one truth. We all stand condemned before God because of our sin. To think that a sinner can purify themselves is like saying a filthy rag can eventually clean itself. The next part of the Gospel is that because of Christ, God's righteousness has been fulfilled in Christ, so we who belong to Christ no longer stand condemned. We have someone in our favour who wraps us in His protective righteousness - Christ. Finally, because we are no longer captives to sin, but rather captives to Christ, why should we continue in our sin? A natural change seems inevitable to anyone who loves Christ. And through Christ and with the help of the Holy Spirit who has been given to us, we have hope that changes will follow.