Dyonisius the Areopagite
Member
We sin, because we are MORTAL. The sin "principle", as you say elsewhere, is in our mortal flesh. It is not a part of our spiritual nature. We sin because the world pressures us to sin and our mortal bodies pressure us to sin through instinct. We are born struggling for resources to survive. That is the basis of sin. The first sin caused this mortal state of being. Thus, we all sin because we are all dying the moment we are born.The fact that all people (except Jesus Himself) are inclined to sin becomes obvious when innocent children are observed over time. They commit sin before they even know what it is. But they have to be trained to be righteous, because it's not in their nature. They don't have to be trained to sin, because it's in their nature. It's not human nature, it's sinful nature.
So if you claim that innocent children are not inherently sinful exactly like Adam was before his fall, then the obvious implication is that you believe God created Adam with an inclination to sin. So according to your doctrine, God would be the author of sin.
But the traducian doctrine says that Adam was created sinless, and he was the one that infused sin in himself and in all mankind. This is what Paul teaches in Rom. 5. In Rom. 7 Paul says that sin was in him before he knew the law "do not covet." But that the law actually induced the sin to come out in his behavior. So then, he is teaching that people are born in sin, that is, born with a sinful nature.
I agree that the power of the Spirit helps us (He is the Helper) to overcome sin and the world. "This is what overcomes the world, even our faith." (1 Jn. 5). But I think John would agree that it's not actually faith itself that overcomes, but the fact that we trust God to grace us with the power to overcome. So it is the unregenerate who are in bondage to sin, whereas believers in Jesus are encouraged to overcome it because God is with them.
The command to be angry but without sin is not a guarantee that we are without sin or can be without sin. It does depend on our spiritual maturity and faith, that in the moment of testing we are more desirous of God's will than our own petty concerns.
Death is what the Lord came to save us from. He saves mankind from mortality. Buying us back from death, through death.
Christ is risen from.the grave.
Trampling down death by death.
And upon those in the tombs.
Bestowing life.
Amen!