Bible studies

"Let us go on unto perfection" Hb 6:1

justification

What is it to be ‘alive’ and ‘dead’?

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The condition of being dead before God results from the penalty instituted in the divine alert (you will certainly die), as a result of judgment and condemnation. The condemnation brought enmity and separation, since God is life and everyone who exists apart from Him is dead. There is no darkness in God, because everyone who is darkness is separated from Him. As there is no communion between Light and darkness, it is clear that there is no communion between God (life) and men under condemnation (dead).


What is it to be ‘alive’ and ‘dead’?

As the apostle, Paul declared that those who are dead are justified.  The answer to the four premises in question can only be in the phrase: “Because the one who is dead is justified from sin”.

Before we clarify the mystery above, we should check what ‘being dead ‘is and ‘being alive’.

The Bible establishes a relationship between ‘death’ and ‘life’. The relationship shows that it is impossible to be alive for sin and alive for God simultaneously. There is no way for man to assume both conditions (positions) simultaneously before God. That is, when man is alive to sin, he is dead to God, or, when he is alive to God, he is dead to sin.

Perhaps the reader will ask why it is not possible to be alive for sin and alive for God simultaneously.

It is not possible because of the following reasons:

“For it is Christ who died, or rather, who rose from the dead…” (Rom. 8:34)

Paul in his song of victory referred to the death of Christ. However, the Christ who died also rose from the dead. In the same way that those who believe are conformed to Christ in death (he dies with him), with him they also rise from the dead (or earlier).

It’s instant! That is, he who believes in Christ dies to sin and begins to live for God. Just as when he disobeyed divine determination, Adam immediately became dead to God, so too, those who believe in Christ are immediately resurrected with Christ, and begin to live for God.

We must keep in mind that God is Lord of all and of all things. God is Lord of the Living and the Dead, because for him, everyone lives “Now, God is not the God of the dead, but of the living; because for him all live”(Luke 20:38; 2 Tim 4: 1; Rom 14: 9).

These verses refer to the living and the dead, that is, it addresses both the death of the body and the immortality of the soul. Ex: Lazarus, the beggar, lived in this world and when he died, he only stopped living in this terrestrial tabernacle and started to live in eternity (Luke 16:20 -25). The rich man, who also died, was dead to God while he existed in this world, and when he died (he left the earthly tabernacle) he spent eternity in the condition of the dead (separated).

These are some references to the word death and possible uses that the Bible contains of the terms ‘death’ and ‘life’.

However, when the Bible says, “While we were still dead in our offenses, it quickened us together with Christ …” (Eph. 2: 5), it demonstrates that there is another use for the terms ‘death’ and ‘life’.

When man is without God in the world (without Christ) (Eph 2:12), he is dead to God. The condition ‘death’ of man is the result of the condemnation established there in the Garden of Eden, in Adam.

When God told the couple that on the day they ate from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, they would certainly die, a determination or warning was given (you will not eat), a time (on the day), the certainty of punishment (certainly), and the type of punishment (will die): death.

The judgment in Eden resulted in the condemnation of humanity! In other words, “The Judgment came from a single offense, in fact, to condemn …” (Rom. 5:16). Adam and Eve were createding alive for God, and after being condemned, they became dead before God.

The condition of being dead before God results from the penalty instituted in the divine alert (you will certainly die), because of judgment and condemnation. The condemnation brought enmity and separation, since God is life and everyone who exists apart from Him is dead. There is no darkness in God, because everyone who is darkness is separated from Him.

As there is no communion between Light and darkness, it is clear that there is no communion between God (life) and men under condemnation (dead).

Because ‘being’ dead before God, all the works that man does in this condition are tainting by sin. If you do good or bad deeds before men, they do not change the condition of the guilty man before God, because ‘good works’ are only achievable in God, who prepared them beforehand, for those who believe in Christ.

When sinning, Adam was condemned to death, and all men were condemned with him. As everyone dies, and it is certain that all have sinned “… so death has passed on to all men, because all have sinned” (Rom. 5:12).

Life is only possible in Jesus, because through Christ man reaches the gift of God, which is eternal life. Christ is man’s only access to God. If he accepts Christ, man becomes a son of the light, and will live in the light of God (communion).

So: death is the result of the condemnation that occurred in the garden of Eden, where all men became sinners. Life is the result of man’s reconciliation with God. Man is created again in true justice and holiness and begins to live for God (Eph 4:24).

We will need this concept later: The old man dies, is buried, and then a new man appears, created according to God in true justice and holiness (Eph 4:24).

Based on what we have just seen, it is clear that when the apostle Paul says that “… I am crucified with Christ …”, he refers to death with Christ and not his physical death.

When he says he lives (… and I live …), he expresses a new condition before God. He did not refer to his physical life.

In the second part of the verse, when he says: “… and the life I now live in the flesh…”, this ‘life’ refers to physical life.

“I’m already crucified with Christ; and I live, no longer I, but Christ lives in me; and the life I now live in the flesh, I live in the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave himself for me ”(Gal 2:20)

When the apostle Paul claims that he is already crucified with Christ, he makes it clear that he died to sin, and that now his life is hidden with Christ in God (Christ lives in me). Paul ceased to live a life of ‘subjection’ to the law (Pharisaism), and went on to live his daily life (in the flesh) through faith in Jesus.

It is only possible for man to be in the condition of “living in Christ” after being crucified and buried with Christ.

“For the law of the Spirit of life, in Christ Jesus, delivered me from the law of sin and death” (Rom. 8: 2)

The new life that man lives in Christ (life) cannot be shared when one is in sin (death), because sin is the cause of the condemnation of man without Christ. The life that God gives to man through faith in Christ frees him from the previous condition: sin (cause of judgment and condemnation) and death (penalty).

So that, by believing in Christ, man becomes partakers of his death, through the body of Christ that was delivered for sinners. The old man is killed when he is crucified with Christ (or, the man is circumcised with the circumcision of Christ, which is the stripping of the body of the flesh) (Col 2:11), and begins to live (new creature) through the Spirit Eternal, because of justice.

Thus, when the apostle demonstrates that the Christian is dead with Christ to sin, it is the same as saying that the Christians were alive through the Eternal Spirit.

“And if Christ is in you, the body is actually dead because of sin, but the spirit lives because of righteousness” (Rom. 8:10);

“For you died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God” (Col 3: 3)

Claudio Crispim

É articulista do Portal Estudo Bíblico (https://estudobiblico.org), com mais de 360 artigos publicados e distribuídos gratuitamente na web. Nasceu em Mato Grosso do Sul, Nova Andradina, Brasil, em 1973. Aos 2 anos de idade sua família mudou-se para São Paulo, onde vive até hoje. O pai, ‘in memória’, exerceu o oficio de motorista coletivo e, a mãe, é comerciante, sendo ambos evangélicos. Cursou o Bacharelado em Ciências Policiais de Segurança e Ordem Pública na Academia de Policia Militar do Barro Branco, se formando em 2003, e, atualmente, exerce é Capitão da Policia Militar do Estado de São Paulo. Casado com a Sra. Jussara, e pai de dois filhos: Larissa e Vinícius.

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