Quote
Pilgrim said:
Quote
speratus said:
No. In the hypostatic union, Christ is both true God and true man in one indivisible person. Christ is holy and incapable of sin (Lev. 19.2; 1 Peter 15, 16; James 1:13). To say that Christ the man is capable of sinning is to separate the person and deny the true nature of the Incarnation (John 1:14; 1 Tim. 3:16; Col. 2:9; Is., 9:6).
And similar to the other errors you have made on similar subjects re: the two natures of Christ, using your "logic", the human nature of Christ was divine, possessed omniscience, omnipotence and omnipresence.

No, that would be Eutychianism. According to your logic, there is a Christ who is incapable of sin and a Christ who is capable of sin (i.e., two persons). Christ the Man is incapable of holiness since holiness is purely a divine attribute. And we are lost because we can never be holy.

In His state of humiliation, Christ did not always use His divine powers (Phil. 2:5-8), but He never became capable of sin. He could never deny Himself (2 Tim. 2:13).