@UnderGrace thank you for the likes and support my friend. When asked if she sins now, she said no. Logic demands she is now living in a sinless state. I am pressing her to admit to what her logic demands.
Under Grace is the wrong person from which to seek council concerning me.
You press me because you do not care to take the time to learn the answers to your questions in the article I provided that tells you everything you need to know.
No Christian boasts about being sinless. We live in the truth of Christ and what it means to be a Christian. If you are still a sinner saved by grace, you weren't saved at all.
There are a few that think they grasp scripture. But it doesn't take long to read them and realize they don't.But they brag none the less in their own way so as to impart those they do not respect are clueless. And a good thing if being clued in would pertain to their way of thinking about scripture.
It's unfortunate to witness how many Christians profess the title and faith but have no idea what salvation entails. Salvation is the saving grace of God that redeems those dead in their sins as sinners unto the new creation that is that of one redeemed from sin and that state of death, so as to be alive in Christ as a saint.
Thinking ones self is still a sinner who sins, by all that meant according to the doctrine of God as pertains to the meaning of sinner, and sin, is still that after redemption, is absurd! And the idea one that believes that way is a Christian is what is called in many circles, lazy believerism.
One who believes in Jesus but has never taken the time to study first what is required in order to come into redemption.
That one who reads that piece of scripture about faith in Christ and thinks all they have to do is believe in Christ and they're good to go.
They're not. But that can go a long way to explain why those who think that way still insist and expect others to admit , they are sinners who sin.
If you are a sinner who sins? Then the teaching of redemption by Christ is a lie.
Oh, wait! It isn't!
That means, if someone thinks they're a Christian who is a sinner who sins, they're wrong and they're living a lie. Lazy believerism sucks. It only hurts the lazy believer. God's word does not change to fit that ideology. God's word predated that lazy believer idea that all it takes is to have faith and not know a hill of beans about what the teachings of Christ and the doctrine of salvation means.
You'll not press me into anything dear. Never in the new testament is a saved person referred to as sinner.
(From the article you refuse to read. And you need to because you don't know a lot about the faith.)
"....NONE of those scriptures shows the sinner as anything but an unredeemed person, an unbeliever, or even someone who has wandered from the truth.
NEVER is a person with a saving faith in the Lord Jesus Christ called a sinner.
None of us who claim to be Christians with a saving faith should ever call ourselves a sinner. It is not appropriate to try to claim common ground with unbelievers or immature Christians by saying that you also are a sinner. Scripture says otherwise. Christians are not sinners. If you are a sinner
one who habitually sins, you are not a true believer. In that case you can properly call yourself a sinner. Please note the distinction: Christians do occasionally sin. A sinner habitually sins. The Christian (should) immediately repent and seek Gods forgiveness. The sinner does not.
A Christian can properly say, I was a sinner, but have been saved by grace. "
You won't press a mouse button so as to read from the Berean site so as to learn what you demonstrate in your "pressing" of me you do not know yourself.
We are not saved when we think you're still that sinner that needed saving. You're not perpetually damned as a sinner while thinking you are eternally saved as a Christian. It doesn't work that way.
Jesus came to save sinners! Not save people so they can still consider themselves sinners.
It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners (Mark 2:17)
If that doesn't answer your question, I don't care.