| SIN IN THE FLESH.Sin is in the flesh and as long as we are in the flesh we cannot 
			please God. This is a re-statement in modern form of the old 
			Manichaean heresy, which flourished in the second half of the Third 
			century. The morality of Manichaeism, according to Dr, Schaff, was 
			"based on the fundamental error of the intrinsic evil of matter and 
			the body * * * Their great moral aim was to become unworldly in the 
			Buddhistic sense; to renounce and destroy corporiety; to set the 
			good soul free from the fetters of matter."
 The meaning of the word flesh in the Bible gradually shades off from 
			a physical through an ethical to a metaphysical sense. The idea of 
			essential sin as lying in the physical body cannot be found in the 
			Word of God. The corporeal flesh is not sinful. It is simply a 
			material organism composed of various chemical elements, which 
			elements can all, without exception, be found elsewhere in nature, 
			but to this corporeal substance is added, in the living man, the 
			interior and exterior organisms of the senses; by the union of the 
			flesh with the spirit it becomes possible to conceive ideas, 
			sensations, desires, and this union contains the faculties of the 
			soul with their divers functions. Without the additions of the 
			spirit, the flesh is a dead substance, incapable of any activity 
			whatever. (See Eccl. 9:10). According to the Scriptures sin is in 
			the heart (See Jer. 17:9; Matt. 15:19; Jas. 3:14), the center of our 
			personality, in which all the influences, good and bad, meet, and 
			the choice is made between them. (See Dan. 1:8; Eph. 6:6). The heart 
			is the seat of spiritual affections and here resides the powers of 
			discrimination and choice. (See Prov. 4:23; 23:7; Eccl. 8:5). Hence, 
			heart sin is a perversion of the affections (Col. 3:2), and actual 
			sin is a misdirecting of the will toward that which is denied or 
			which is contrary to obedience.
 
 In the human body in common with the beast are appetites, desires 
			and aversions. The proper gratification of any one of these does not 
			constitute sin. But sin enters when the soul which should be master 
			is brought under and made the follower of fleshly desires. This is 
			part of the bondage mentioned in the seventh chapter of Romans.
 
 Then the corporeal flesh is not sin, neither are fleshly desires 
			sin, but the choice of the lowest or animal man is sin and makes one 
			worldly, sensual, devilish.
 
 The flesh spoken of in the passage so often quoted, "So then they 
			that are in the flesh cannot please God." (Ram. 8:8) is not the 
			corporeal body, else Enoch would have been as desperately situated 
			as we, but the Bible says that "before his translation (even while 
			he was here in the flesh) he had this testimony that he pleased 
			God." -- Heb. 11:5.
 
 As to whether it is possible for us while in this life to please 
			God, the Bible makes clear when it says that without faith it is not 
			possible to please God (Heb. 11:6), leaving the inevitable inference 
			that he that has faith does please God. This is the ground of 
			Enoch's success and also of ours.
 
 But people who quote this passage about the flesh almost invariably 
			fail to see the very next sentence, which reads, "But ye are not in 
			the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell 
			in you." Even the Westminster Confession declares that regenerated 
			persons have the Spirit in their hearts; and a better authority than 
			that declares, "If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none 
			of his." -- Rom. 8:9.
 
 Minding the flesh is choosing the lowest that is in man, excluding 
			the spiritual for the sake of the earthly, either the vicious or the 
			so-called lesser sins.
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