So, no response to the Dan4 part of the discussion? Are you conceding that it was not a good Scripture to substantiate your point?
Re: Cornelius, I think your assumptions are wrong. What's said about him is very clear and he was yet to be evangelized re: Jesus Christ.
After you wrote this, I answered another of your posts that has some answers to this one, so some of this will be repetitive:
- When you look at Scriptures like the ones I provided re: obedience and faith in Israel and faith from Abel onward, do you not get the sense that Rom8 is not as absolute as you're seeing it? Did you not consider the internal struggle Paul speaks of in Rom7?
- Do you think God circumcised Abel's heart so he could exercise faith? Or was Abel not born carnal?
- The same goes for John the Baptist's parents Luke1?
I don't have to reconcile Rom8 with Acts10 and I've already explained in part why.
I read the Text to say that although there is an internal struggle in men, there is plenty of Scripture that says that even with this struggle in conscience and human will, there has been faith from Abel on, and there has been obedience to Torah and to conscience, and not all reject the knowledge of God's power and divinity that God has endowed in men and provided proof of in His creation.
When we read Scripture like Romans, we're getting some deep analysis of the human condition under sin and death and law and in Rom8 an epiphany from Paul as to what has taken place in Christ to free Christians from that condition. Though he says someone thinking and walking in flesh can't keep law, he also says he struggled in his will to keep it and in Phil3 he says he was doing the righteousness of the law pre-Christ. So was Zechariah and Elizabeth.
So, why don't you just state your theory of all this? Have you concluded that these people were not born carnal, or were born carnal then circumcised in heart throughout history pre-Christ? If not, then what?
We're obviously working in different directions.