Battling Two Natures: The Struggle of Faith

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The Christian life involves a constant battle between the old sinful nature and the new nature given by the Holy Spirit. This struggle is a sign of genuine faith and the work of God within us. [00:05:18]

The old nature is described as a "body of death," symbolizing the burden and corruption of sin that remains with us. Yet, through Christ, we have the power to overcome this burden. [00:11:06]

The new nature, though seemingly weaker, is empowered by God and destined for victory. Our struggles are temporary, and we are assured of ultimate triumph over sin. [00:27:51]

Those who do not experience this internal conflict may lack genuine faith. The absence of struggle could indicate spiritual complacency or a life not yet transformed by God's grace. [00:40:31]

Our hope lies in the promise of future perfection and freedom from sin. This hope sustains us through our current struggles, reminding us of the glorious future that awaits us. [00:38:46]

The Apostle Paul is here describing his own experience as a Christian. Some have affirmed that he is merely declaring what he was before conversion and not what he was when he became the recipient of the grace of God, but such persons are evidently mistaken. [00:00:26]

The nearer a man lives to God, the more intensely he has to mourn over his own evil heart, and the more his master honors him in his service, the more also doth the evil of the flesh vex and tease him day by day. [00:01:50]

The Christian becomes a double man, two men in one. Some have imagined that the old nature is turned out of the Christian. Not so, for the word of God and experience teach the contrary. The old nature is in the Christian unchanged, unaltered, just the same as bad as ever it was. [00:07:19]

The old nature is evil only evil and that continually. The new nature is holy, good. It knows nothing of sin except to hate it. Its contact with sin brings it pain and misery, and it cries out, "Woe is me that I dwell in Meek, that I tabernacle in the tents of Kedar." [00:16:14]

The old nature of man which remains in the Christian is evil, and it cannot ever be anything else but evil. The old Adam nature cannot be improved; it cannot be made better. It is hopeless to attempt it. You may do what you please with it, but you cannot make the rebel into the friend. [00:15:29]

The new nature can never be tainted, spotless, holy, pure. It dwells in our hearts, it rules and reigns there, expecting the day when it shall cast out its enemy, and without a rival, it shall be monarch in the heart of man forever. [00:18:00]

The Christian is to be a conqueror at last. Do you think that we are forever to be the drudges and the slaves of sin? Am I forever to be the galley slave of my own nature, to tug for freedom and never to escape? [00:36:58]

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