by jimwalton » Wed Jun 05, 2019 2:39 pm
> Wait are you saying your free will was tampered with before you became free to actually utilise it?
No, that's not what I'm saying. It was a status, not a choice. Maybe think of it this way: suppose your parents were the citizens of a country, let's say, Germany, before you were born. Let's say your parents didn't like the life there, renounced their citizenship, and chose to move to, uh, France. So you were born a French citizen. Your free will was not "tampered with before you became free to actually use it." This doesn't pertain to free will but rather to where your citizenship lies, and that's the result of some decisions your forebears made. You're born French rather than German. But when it comes right down to it, you are free any time to return to Germany and become a citizen there. There's nothing stopping you. You have a free will choice to do that anytime you want.
As far as the relation of this analogy to Romans 6, you are born separated from God, a citizen of this world, so to speak, because of the decisions of your forebears. It's not an interference with your free will, but a status of fact. But when it comes right down to it, you are free to come to God and become a citizen of His kingdom anytime you want. There's nothing stopping you. You have a free will choice to do that anytime you want.
It's not that you didn't have a choice to not sin before. "Being born with a sin nature" means that you are born separated from God, a citizen of Earth. It doesn't mean you're born wicked, bad, or evil. Although anyone who has raised children knows that in them is a very natural propensity for self-centeredness ("MINE!"), anger, and rebellion ("NO!"). These things aren't *evil*, per se, but they are sin.
> Also if you have a christ nature and still sin, does it not mean that its a lie?
No, to be set free from sin means that your citizenship has been transferred, not that you're suddenly a perfect person. Now you belong to God and His kingdom. The work of teaching you how to avoid sinning (now that you're out from under its government) is just beginning.
> How can you sin in direct opposition to this nature you supposedly have?
We can behave contrary to our nature. Our nature is just who we are. There are non-Christians who are very good people, wonderful people; there are Christians who are jerks. But the non-christians are still separated from God, and the Christians are redeemed (if they are truly Christians, which some Christian jerks most certainly are NOT). When a person chooses to become a Christian, there are many inner, spiritual transformations that happen instantaneously. And sometimes (often) there are even instantaneous behavioral changes. But most behavioral change is a slow process of what Christians call "sanctification": The Holy Spirit gradually, little by little, making us holy. It's a life-long process.