
Q & A
Question
I am a Christian and have been taught that I have two natures: my old sin nature and my new nature in Christ. If that is true, how can I hope to ever stop committing sin?
Answer
This new union with Christ doesn’t mean that we cannot sin.
We are tempted in our soul with thoughts and feelings. When we choose in our spirit to go with these temptations, we commit sin. The sin invariably involves unbelief that we are just ourselves, not Jesus Christ living His life through us. As Paul says in Romans 7:17 and 20, “No longer am I the one doing it, but sin which indwells me.” What a clear parallel to Galatians 2:20. In neither verse are we just ourselves-neither sin nor righteousness is intrinsic to us, but are the products of another.
As Christians, we do not sin because an old nature wells up from inside us, uncontrollably making a sin choice. We sin because we make a self-centered, Satan choice, opening the door for him to express sin through our soul/body and temporarily block block the Holy Spirit. If we possessed a sinful nature, we would always be at war with a part of our-selves, battling an unavoidable, inherent tendency to sin. With the belief that Jesus Christ lives in us, we avoid sin by simply affirming our union with Him. The concept that you have two natures confuses you because this contradicts Galatians 2:20–”I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me.” We are not born with two natures but are born with the ability to choose between two operators, either Christ or Satan. Because of the fall of Adam and Eve, we are born sinners, doomed to eternal damnation for our sins. We are bound to Satan, and he expresses his sin existence through us. But when we admit that we are sinners and accept the shed blood of Jesus Christ as our savior, we are no longer bound to Satan but, instead, live in union with Jesus Christ. He lives His life out through us.