Two-line reasoning is no longer a staple in historical Reformed theology. I feel like line 2 teaches a contradiction. Reformed theology defends the gospel from being oversimplified by religion. We tend to think that we are describing true faith when we apply justification by faith in its proper context. Our purpose is to defend justification by faith, teaching that salvation is not of man's part, but is by grace alone, through faith in Christ alone.However, the word justification is not just a term describing belief, it is a legal declaration of innocence. In defensive justification by faith, we tend to believe that we are innocent before God. but the two-line teaching is that we will still be doomed because we are also under the stresses that religious rituals bring. Let me give you many reasons why we are already innocent. I do not believe that God, speaking in the OT about His exclusive relationship with Israel, triumphantly informed His saints when He proactively addressed His people as stubborn, disobedient, and hard of hearing.This can be anywhere I follow the path, having resolutely defended justification by faith. I shall inevitably see where the exposed people who naively believe line 2 can draw this contradictory conclusion from the way you simply own God, who sharply addresses his exposed people within the law in Deuteronomy, and the difficult fulfillment of the Law as the Conditional Basis of Allegiance to the Law Covenant. You comply with the exact laws with explicit accuracy, and with it the unreasonable requirements for compliance. However, I sincerely believe that we tend to have a virtuous obligation to see the teachings of Deuteronomy in the actual context of how strongly they appealed to him in their divine worship. Therefore, I sincerely believe that the ethical law in the sacred words of the Psalms was extravagantly unanswerable because the structured culture adequately described the means they successfully executed in their everyday lives. By memorizing the Book of Psalms and knowing the common use of idioms necessary for the rest of the ot. Within the applied order of the words found in the Psalms.it is obvious to a person who believes that the company is mentally maintaining this knowledge accurately and sensibly. I don't think it's right to unknowingly teach an Old Testament passage to nursing workers without understanding the integrative culture of the sacred words found in the Psalms. I have a feeling that we tend to be so unfamiliar with this cohesive culture that we dilute the exact means by which they rightly approached God.
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