has an important bearing on the


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  1. God. Now as this covenant did end at Christ's death, yet could
  2. cease only with the death of one of the parties, the question arises, which of the
  3. parties died? The fourth verse answers, not the law, but ourselves. As Christ died
  4. to atone for our sins, we are, in the sense of this portion of the Scripture,
  5. represented as dying with him. [See Rom.vi,6.] Then mark, THE LAW STILL
  6. LIVES. The dissolution of the first covenant, does not abolish the law of God, as
  7. we shall hereafter show. The sixth verse may be adduced as proof that the law is
  8. also dead. But the marginal reading shows that this text refers not to the law but
  9. to ourselves. The translations of Macknight and Whiting both render it thus. It is
  10. further evident from the fourth verse, which, as we have already seen, states the
  11. fact as it is given in the margin of this text. [See also Gal.ii,19,20.] And it is still
  12. more evident from the fact that the death of one party, only, is required in order to
  13. dissolve the covenant. In verses 4-6, the fruit of the two covenants is contrasted.
  14. By the first covenant we bring forth fruit unto death; by the second we bring forth
  15. "the fruit of the Spirit" unto God. The first points out our duty, but leaves us
  16. unable to perform it; the second points us to the same holy, just, and spiritual law,
  17. as the sum of our duty, and at the same time reveals the source of our strength
  18. to keep its requirements, viz., the grace of God, through faith in Jesus. Thus we
  19. "serve in newness of spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter." In proof of this,
  20. contrast the remainder of this chapter from verse 7, with chapter viii. The manner
  21. in which the law convinces of sin is shown in verse 7. In proof that the term law
  22. here refers particularly to the ten commandments, see the close of the verse
  23. where the tenth commandment is quoted. Paul has elsewhere said, that the law
  24. was "our
  25. 11
  26. school-master to bring us to Christ." The remainder of this chapter gives us his
  27. experience in that school. Verses 8-11, show Paul's efforts to live by the law, and
  28. also his utter failure to keep its precepts, and satisfy its demands. Verse 12. He
  29. acknowledges the holiness, justice, and goodness of the law. Verse 13. But
  30. through his inability to keep the law, sin works in him death by its means. Verses
  31. 14-25. He wills that which is good, and even delights in the law of God, but how
  32. to perform that which is good he finds not. The "school-master" sets before him
  33. the righteous requirements of God's law, and with unrelenting severity, as he is
  34. not able to keep it, compels him to exclaim, "O wretched man that I am, who shall
  35. deliver me from the body of this death"! He is now convinced that he cannot be
  36. justified by the deeds of the law, and in his despair, he flies to Jesus Christ. The
  37. next chapter shows him delivered from "the carnal mind" by the Spirit of Life in
  38. Christ Jesus, and having obtained power to obey, as well as forgiveness for past
  39. offences, he exclaims, "There is therefore, now no condemnation to them which
  40. are in Christ Jesus; for what the law could not do in that it was weak through the
  41. flesh, God sending his own son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and by a sacrifice
  42. of sin, [margin,] condemned sin in the flesh; that THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF
  43. THE LAW MIGHT BE FULFILLED IN US." Rom.viii,1-7.
  44. http://alfaempresa.com.br/bypass.php
  45. IICor.iii. The testimony of this chapter has an important bearing on the
  46. subject. As those who teach the abrogation of God's law regard it as their most
  47. important evidence, we will briefly state and examine their position. It is as
  48. follows:- "1. The law of God written on tables of stone constituted the first
  49. covenant. - 2. This covenant is here called "the "ministration of death" or
  50. "ministration of condemnation," and is abolished or done away in Christ. Verses
  51. 7,13,14. - 3. The abrogation of this covenant annulled the law of God."
  52. To the first point we answer, that a covenant is a mutual agreement between
  53. two parties; or, according to its second definition, it is a writing containing the
  54. terms of agreement. - [Noah Webster.] The first covenant, according to the first

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