Page 196 - THE REVELATION OF THE THIRD HEAVEN and THE MEAT OF THE WORD
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Once back under the Law the former Christian can then commit the sin of
blasphemy against the Son or the Father (Mat 12:31). All non-Christians are
committing the unforgivable sin of not being indwelled by the Holy Ghost, i.e.
saved, which is blasphemy against the Holy Ghost (Mark 16:16, Rom 1:19-20).
As stated before, a Christian can however commit the unforgivable Sin which is
the deliberate choice of ceasing to be a Christian and having Salvation (Mat 12:31,
Heb 6:4-6). The time order and detail in a case such as this is as follows. The
Christian, as a Christian, commits, via the flesh, not the basic spirit as that is pure
in the Christian (Rom 7:18, 1 John 1:8, 3:9), the unforgivable sin (Heb 6:6), is
then, as a mystery, forgiven as he sins it (1 John 2:12), in other words his flesh is
forgiven (Rom 7:18, 1 John 1:7, 2:12, 1 John 3:9), but then immediately loses his
salvation status, as he chose (Mark 16:16), and can then no longer be forgiven the
sin by God (Mat 12:32, Mark 3:29, Luke 12:10, Heb 6:6), unless and until saved
again (Phil 2:10). At this stage both the flesh and his basic spirit are now in a state
of sin (Mark 16:16, Heb 6:6). So, to be strictly accurate, the state of sin is not
actually experienced until the Christian ceases to be a Christian as it is loss of
Christian status that is required for the Christian to be unforgiven (Heb 6:4-6, 1
John 2:12). So, this sin is never actualized as a state of sin by a Christian whilst he
is, still, a Christian (1 John 1:7, 2:12). In the second Creation all the, by now, saved
beings have the eternal option of rejecting this status and committing the
unforgivable sin but none do so (1 Cor 4:5, Rev 22:3). This is also a sin against the
two great commandments but is a separate sin as well and is more particularly the
sin against the Holy Ghost which indwells in the Christian (Mat 12:31, Heb 6:4-6).
The sin of losing Christian status or not being one at all is unforgivable in the sense
that this status is unrighteous (Rom 1:19-20, 3:10, 20) and can not be forgiven
(Heb 6:4-6) but does not mean that this status can not be changed into (or back
into again) Christian status as of course it should and ultimately always is for all (1
Cor 4:5, 12:3, Phil 2:11, Rev 22:3).
Love & The Two Great Commandments
Any entity to be judged is always irreducible for the purpose of judgement despite
the separate elements that may exist in the composition of the entity (1 Pet 3:19).
The soul is the repository of the alive Man's and the alive Christian's free will and
is a mysterious antinomy especially so in the Christian (Rom 7:14-25, 1 John 1:8,
3:9). So a Christian sinning the unforgivable sin and losing salvation makes this
final decision in his soul, although the flesh makes the first decision here, see
above. The soul is the 'I' or 'he' person making this decision (Rom 7:14-25, Jam
1:23-25). Judgement after death pertains to the basic spirit (1 Peter 3:19) although