First, notice how you keep having to mix in Paul's letter to make Peter's letter say what you want it to say, when that's literally the "twisting" Peter warned about.
Perfection (to become the perfect image of Christ) is the process of sanctification.
Perfection is not justification. Justification is cleansing from sins.
You must understand this difference to understand what Peter and Paul and James are talking about in each of their respective letters.
Paul's letter to the galatians is discussing justification. Justification. Justification. Not sanctification. You keep quoting the galatians passage literally with the word "justified" in there and yet you keep missing it.
Peter's letter in question is discussing sanctification (growing in godliness; holiness), which is the believer's burden to make every effort in. He says it twice in his letter: "make every effort"..."make every effort". And when we sin (i.e. break a law) we go to the throne to confess and Christ cleanses/justifies us again (because there's nothing in the law that can do that for us).
So to answer your question; my effort to perfect myself will be EQUAL to Christ perfecting me, because that's what grace is: the Almighty's divine instruction from Christ, placed in me to FOLLOW, to live in godliness (Titus 2:12).
Christ works on the inside of me, on my heart. And *I* must work on the outside of me, on my walk.
The promise of "Christ's holy spirit in you" was NEVER a promise of "Christ doing the work of your obedience for you". Never. Search all of the scriptures and you will never find that promise made.
Yah does nothing unless he first reveals it to his servants the prophets (amos 3:7).
If you can find your promise anywhere...absolutely anywhere...I will definitely consider it. But if you can't find the promise of "Christ doing the work of your obedience in you, for you" anywhere in the "OT" then it was never a promise made by the Almighty, and Yah has not done it. Yah doesn't fulfill promises he never made.
The promise you WILL find in scripture is "Christ's Holy Spirit in you changing your heart to make you WANT to obey". That promise is in Jeremiah 31:31-34 and Ezekiel 36:27. Two or more witnesses establish truth. That was the promise, no more, no less. You yourself still must make every effort to obey once your heart is changed. The apostles knew this.
Grace is the WANT; the talent of gold that the king gifts to his servants and expects them to put the effort/work into making grow (Matthew 25:14). Obedience is the effort/work expected by the servant that makes it grace grow.
"GROW IN GRACE and in the KNOWING of our master and savior..."
"...Unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ."
Perfection.
----
This is what Peter's phrase means when he says "the ignorant and unstable twist Paul's words". Those who don't know iron-clad truths like Amos 3:7, Jeremiah 31:31-34 and Ezekiel 36:27 unwittingly twist Paul's words to their own pending doom, and then teach others the same error of lawlessness, causing whole crops of people to be lost.
There's the promise never to destroy the world again by water...
There's the promise of being an heir through faith like Abraham, being a blessing to the world...
There's the promise of becoming a royal nation of priests through obedience to the law...
There's the promise of David not wanting for a man to sit on his throne...
There's the promise of putting Yah's laws in one's heart, circumcising it to move one (i.e. make one want) to obey his laws...
And scripture says each one of these promises are perpetual/everlasting.
So if you can find the promise made by Yah anywhere in the Torah & the Prophets that says "Christ (or the Spirit of Yah...or grace) will do the work of your obedience in you, for you", then I will consider it.
The promise is the foundation of everything we're discussing.
The promise is everything.
Perfection (to become the perfect image of Christ) is the process of sanctification.
Perfection is not justification. Justification is cleansing from sins.
You must understand this difference to understand what Peter and Paul and James are talking about in each of their respective letters.
Paul's letter to the galatians is discussing justification. Justification. Justification. Not sanctification. You keep quoting the galatians passage literally with the word "justified" in there and yet you keep missing it.
Peter's letter in question is discussing sanctification (growing in godliness; holiness), which is the believer's burden to make every effort in. He says it twice in his letter: "make every effort"..."make every effort". And when we sin (i.e. break a law) we go to the throne to confess and Christ cleanses/justifies us again (because there's nothing in the law that can do that for us).
So to answer your question; my effort to perfect myself will be EQUAL to Christ perfecting me, because that's what grace is: the Almighty's divine instruction from Christ, placed in me to FOLLOW, to live in godliness (Titus 2:12).
Christ works on the inside of me, on my heart. And *I* must work on the outside of me, on my walk.
The promise of "Christ's holy spirit in you" was NEVER a promise of "Christ doing the work of your obedience for you". Never. Search all of the scriptures and you will never find that promise made.
Yah does nothing unless he first reveals it to his servants the prophets (amos 3:7).
If you can find your promise anywhere...absolutely anywhere...I will definitely consider it. But if you can't find the promise of "Christ doing the work of your obedience in you, for you" anywhere in the "OT" then it was never a promise made by the Almighty, and Yah has not done it. Yah doesn't fulfill promises he never made.
The promise you WILL find in scripture is "Christ's Holy Spirit in you changing your heart to make you WANT to obey". That promise is in Jeremiah 31:31-34 and Ezekiel 36:27. Two or more witnesses establish truth. That was the promise, no more, no less. You yourself still must make every effort to obey once your heart is changed. The apostles knew this.
Grace is the WANT; the talent of gold that the king gifts to his servants and expects them to put the effort/work into making grow (Matthew 25:14). Obedience is the effort/work expected by the servant that makes it grace grow.
"GROW IN GRACE and in the KNOWING of our master and savior..."
"...Unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ."
Perfection.
----
This is what Peter's phrase means when he says "the ignorant and unstable twist Paul's words". Those who don't know iron-clad truths like Amos 3:7, Jeremiah 31:31-34 and Ezekiel 36:27 unwittingly twist Paul's words to their own pending doom, and then teach others the same error of lawlessness, causing whole crops of people to be lost.
There's the promise never to destroy the world again by water...
There's the promise of being an heir through faith like Abraham, being a blessing to the world...
There's the promise of becoming a royal nation of priests through obedience to the law...
There's the promise of David not wanting for a man to sit on his throne...
There's the promise of putting Yah's laws in one's heart, circumcising it to move one (i.e. make one want) to obey his laws...
And scripture says each one of these promises are perpetual/everlasting.
So if you can find the promise made by Yah anywhere in the Torah & the Prophets that says "Christ (or the Spirit of Yah...or grace) will do the work of your obedience in you, for you", then I will consider it.
The promise is the foundation of everything we're discussing.
The promise is everything.
24 For I will take you from among the heathen, and gather you out of all countries, and will bring you into your own land.
25 Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be clean: from all your filthiness, and from all your idols, will I cleanse you.
26 A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh.
27 And I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments, and do them.
28 And ye shall dwell in the land that I gave to your fathers; and ye shall be my people, and I will be your God.
The error of the wicked, which is the error of the lawless, continues to be the thought that people are "law-keepers" because they look to the law to obey it.
All that happens when people think they obey the law is what happened with the Pharisees. They thought they were righteous because of their work. They made up extra laws to "expound" on the 10 commandments.
The same exact thing that people do today who pretend they are following the 10 commandments by their own efforts.
Unless God is the One who cleanses you, you are not clean.
Unless God is the One who makes you godly, you are not godly.
Unless God is the One who makes you Righteous, you are not righteous.
Unless God is the One who Saves you, you are not saved.
Unless God is the One that produces the fruit, you will not produce fruit.
You didn't get it the first few times. There is obviously some sort of disconnect between you and the scriptures.
This happens when someone doesn't understand Paul or Peter they pretty much wrestle with ALL the scriptures.
Romans 9:32-33
32 Wherefore? Because they sought it not by faith, but as it were by the works of the law. For they stumbled at that stumblingstone;
33 As it is written, Behold, I lay in Sion a stumblingstone and rock of offence: and whosoever believeth on him shall not be ashamed.
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