That was NOT God telling you that you were still a sinner. God saved you, there is no way He would still call you a sinner. God gave you His Righteousness IN CHRIST alone. You were correct to believe you are righteous, but ONLY because of Yeshua/Jesus Christ, not any works you did.
This is were born again believers stumble over their sinful flesh which is in our soul and body.
We really need the baptism with the Holy Spirit (which is the first time God fills us with His Holy Spirit) and we need to learn how to be continually filled with the Holy Spirit.
This is were it gets really confusing for believers that don't understand why they are STILL struggling with sin. We end up doubting our salvation because we can't stop sinning in our own strength, so we say, "Oh well, I guess I'm still a sinner, but at least I'm not going to hell."
In Adam, we are born with a "sinful nature" which desires to sin.
In Christ, we are born with a "spiritual nature" which desires God. Sin is NO LONGER in our "nature." However, sin is STILL in our soul (mind, will and emotions) and our body.
The "work" of the Holy Spirit is to restore our souls by renewing our minds with the knowledge, understanding and wisdom of God. We just need to cooperate with the Holy Spirit and stop resisting, quenching and grieving the Holy Spirit.
This is God's Work, NOT ours. Just like we received by faith our salvation from God through Yeshua/Jesus Christ, we need to also receive by faith the baptism and indwelling of the Holy Spirit in us in power, so we CAN walk by the Spirit and not fulfill the lusts of the flesh.
God saves sinners because God loves sinners and does not want sinners to perish.
If a sinner wants to be saved, God will save them by taking their sin away with His Blood and giving them the Righteousness of God in the Body of Yeshua/Jesus Christ, and lastly, sealing them with His Holy Spirit.
The last portion of sin that remains in us is in our soul and body which is our "flesh". This sin will be dealt with by the power of God's Holy Spirit and the power of God's Word - the baptism with the Holy Spirit is required because we are to be sealed and FILLED with the Holy Spirit.
Don't you see, God's doing it, NOT us. If God wanted us to not sin in our own strength, then we wouldn't need His Holy Spirit, but it's God that is completely delivering us from ALL sin. Just let Him!
Come, Holy Spirit! Fill us!! We want to walk by the Spirit so we do not fulfill the lusts of the flesh.
First, when said that God revealed the meaning of Jeremiah 17:9 to me, I was talking about the moment of salvation, and it WAS INDEED God telling me this. I was very self righeous and had deceived myself into thinking that I had made myself worthy of God's forgiveness through good works and through diligently pursuing him.
God showed me otherwise. He showed me that I had deceived myself and was actually wicked and a sinner. I was then able to accept Christ's sacrifice on my behalf, and to confess him as Lord and Savior.
I am really not sure how you think that you are qualified to step into my past and help me re-interpret my conversion. I find it bizarre that someone would attempt to do this. I suppose some charismatics think they can do that, though. But since they aren't the Holy Spirit, I won't be listening to them anytime soon.
Second, the believer is simultaneous saint and sinner. In one sense, he is a saint, and in another sense he is a sinner. I can see some level of harm if an individual accepts an identity as a sinner, because his identity is a saint. However, I see some level of harm with individuals who believe they never sin, because they are either self-deceived or lying according to 1 John 1.
Paul used the word "sinner" to describe himself in the current tense so in one sense, he was a sinner. In another sense, he was a saint.
He was a saint because he had been united with Christ, and legally God views him in this manner. Christ's righteousness was his righteousness, bestowed as a free gift. He was a sinner in the sense that he still commits acts of sin, although he has a new nature that wants to please and serve God. He called himself the chief of sinners. He wasn't at peace with his sin, and he was being transformed into the image of Christ, but he still did not claim that he had totally ceased to commit any sin.
Regarding your views of man's ontology, I don't think sin resides in the physical flesh only. The word "flesh" used in the NT implies more than the physical body. It implies the fallen nature, the man who is in Adam, and relates to the old man. The physical body itself is not sinful..this would be more of a Gnostic view of man's composition. However, I don't have a real big issue with your language in that regard.
I believe that the Christian continues to sin because he has an identity issue, and has not fully accepted his identity in Christ. Romans 6:1-14 and 1 Corinthians 6 leads me to this conclusion.
Paul repeatedly points Christians to this new identity in Christ as a reason to begin behaving according to it. He gives the believer an identity, and then encourages them to live out this identity. He tells them to "put on Christ". They were already in Christ, but they needed to start living out their identity.
Regarding other aspects of what you've said, I am really not into folks who call Jesus "Yeshua" because I begin to think they are Judaizers who are trying to wear their scant knowledge of Hebrew like a garment of pride. I certainly don't have a problem with someone using the word Yeshua, especially a Jew, because it is Jesus' Hebrew name. But, it always makes me think they might be some Hebrew Roots person who looks down on non-Hebrew Roots believers.
And, by the way, I do believe it is God who is transforming the sinner into the image of Christ. In fact, my position on that is perfectly in line with Reformed theology. Reformed brothers were the ones who helped me understand these teachings from Scripture.
It could be that I would agree with some things you have said, but your vocabulary is much different than my vocabulary. My focus is on union with Christ, and identity in Christ. I believe our worldview regarding man's ontology is different, too. Free-willers like to separate man's nature out, so they can maintain autonomous free will by saying that the spirit is dead, but the soul is still alive, or something along that line.
Also I'm suspicious that you may hold a two-tier view of Christianity, where there are "carnal Christians" who really aren't as super-charged as you are, and there are "spirit filled Christians" who are super-duper Christians who are on a higher spiritual plane. Sometimes this is accompanied by charismatic claims, and other times it is accompanied by holiness claims. I reject this two-tiered view. All Christians are indwelt with the Holy Spirit, and according to their pursuit of the means of grace, they grow. If they avail themselves of the study of the Word, prayer, fellowship, worship, and other means of grace, they will grow. This is because they are growing closer to Jesus, and growing closer to Jesus through the means of grace results in them being more like Jesus.
Anyways, I tend to avoid "super duper Christians", too.
I might be totally wrong on my suspicions, though.