bomgeography wrote:By choosing to follow Christ you are not paying Heavenly Father or Christ back.
D&C 19 states that a person who does not repent must suffer even as Christ suffered. If Christ suffered once to pay the price of sin as the hymn goes, what other reason is there for a person to suffer if not to repay Christ for what he had paid?
The natural repercussion of repentance is to follow the way that makes you a better person that would be to follow Christ and his example.
The act of repentence is described in Alma 42 as mandatory to satisfy justice. It doesn't say anything about making a person better through process. It says Justice has demands, and repentance is required to meet those demands. Your statement doesn't engage with this at all. I'm asking you to engage with the theology not offer Sunday School platitudes, please.
Grace is a free gift it cannot be bought or payed for. Those who think they earning there way into heaven are sadly mistaken.
Again, this is a nice saying but you yourself shared D&C 19 which clearly states there is a relationship between Christ's suffering as payment which, if not accepted, will require the unrepentant to then have to pay the debt themselves. There is a transaction taking place. It's not free if there is a transaction.
Good deeds are a natural outcome of following or trying to follow the savior. Good deeds do not cleanse a person from sin. Only the atonement can cleanse sin.
Isaiah 64:6
6 But we are all as an unclean thing, and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags; and we all do fade as a leaf; and our iniquities, like the wind, have taken us away.
This doesn't seem to have anything to do with our points of discussion so far.
Again, I'm curious how you view the implications of Alma 42? Is Justice the supreme force in the cosmos that even God must conform to? And what are the implications for living in a creation where God could cease to be God if He fails to conform to the demands of Justice?