popsthebuilder
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We inherit the propensity to sin.
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What is it about the above treatment of imputation that you would disagree? Explain in detail why the author of this entry is wrong according to your views.
Paul’s statement of the imputation of Adam’s sin to his posterity is stark: “By [through] one man sin entered into the world, and death by [through] sin; so death passed upon all men, for all have sinned” (Rom. 5:12). In the AV the clause “for all have sinned” may give the impression that Paul’s argument is that all die like Adam because all, like him, have sinned. But this is not the case. His statement is, “Death passed upon all humanity inasmuch as all sinned.” He teaches that all participated in Adam’s sin and that both the guilt and the penalty of that sin were transmitted to them.
But scripture says that we do die because of the sin of Adam and Eve. It is our own sin yes, but also because we inherit the sin from our ancestors sin and disobedience against God.
David lamented “Surely I was sinful at birth, sinful from the time my mother conceived me” - Psalm 51.
We all inherit sin from Adam and Eve.
Paul tells us he was in his “sinful nature a slave to the law of sin” - Romans 7:25.
"For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord." - Romans 6:23
The Bible says that each of us will die because of the sin we inherit, which is our own sin because we are sinful by nature. sinful is our flesh.
1 Corinthians 15:22 - "Just as everyone dies because we all belong to Adam, everyone who belongs to Christ will be given new life."
So we do die because of the sin of someone else - Adam.
First of all, well done, your arguments and explanations are always very well put together and flow logically and make sense (which we can all attest doesn't always happen on here lol). I will just say that I can see your point.
Adam sinned. Adam died. The wages of sin is death. Romans 6:23
IMO, anyone who does not defend this biblical truth and argue against this silly and sorry lie you attempt to sell, is not worth their salt in the eyes of God Almighty!
See:
http://theologyonline.com/showthrea...cs-of-Reformed-Theology&p=4559007#post4559007
Evidently Paul assumed as much, too:
http://theologyonline.com/showthrea...mputed-Death&p=4928249&viewfull=1#post4928249
When Adam and Eve sinned, physical death did not occur immediately. Adam lived 930 years (Gen. 5:5). Spiritual death, however, happened instantly. Spiritual death is the state of spiritual alienation from God. As a result of Adam’s sin, all living people are born spiritually dead (with the exception of the Lord Jesus Christ). Paul refers to spiritual death in Ephesians 2:1: “And you were dead in [your] trespasses and sins.” In Ephesians 2:5, Paul says that unsaved people are “dead in [their] trespasses.” For Adam and Eve, sin brought separation from God, banishment from his presence, and forfeiture of spiritual life (Gen. 2:23–24). All their descendants have likewise been born in a state of spiritual death. This deadness also renders a person unresponsive to spiritual truth (Rom. 8:7–8; 1 Cor. 2:14; 2 Cor. 4: 4; Eph. 4: 17–18). Only by the divine miracle of regeneration does God end spiritual death and re-create sinners, making them alive to himself (2 Cor. 4:6).
Denial of original sin leads to three important dangers:
1. Those who do so often rely on their emotions or what they think is true when coming to doctrinal conclusions.
2. When you deny the first imputation (i.e., the imputation of Adam’s guilt and sin nature to man) many Pelagians end up denying the two other critical imputations: the imputation of the believers’ sin to Christ on the cross and the imputation of Christ’s righteousness to believers. [FONT=&]Because Adam was the federal representative of all humanity, his disobedience is counted—legally imputed or judicially reckoned—by God to be the disobedience of all who were in Adam. Those who would charge that such imputation is wrong or inappropriate because not everyone actually participated in Adam’s sin show their inconsistency when they do not make the same charge against the imputation of Christ’s righteousness. For if the justification and righteousness of the Lord Jesus is imputed to those in Him, so too the guilt of Adam’s sin has been imputed to those he represented.
Imputation, from the Dictionary of Theological Terms:
[/FONT]Spoiler
IMPUTATION
A forensic term that denotes the reckoning or placing to a person’s account the merit or guilt that belongs to him on the basis of his personal performance or of that of his federal head. While impute is used in Scripture to express the idea of receiving the just reward of our deeds (Lev. 7:18; 17:4; 2 Sam. 19:19), imputation as a theological term normally carries one of two meanings:
Imputation of Adam’s Sin
First, it describes the transmission of the guilt of Adam’s first sin to his descendants. It is imputed, or reckoned, to them; i.e., it is laid to their account. Paul’s statement is unambiguous: “By one man’s disobedience many were made [constituted] sinners” (Rom. 5:19). Some Reformed theologians ground the imputation of Adam’s sin in the real involvement of all his posterity in his sin, because of the specific unity of the race in him. Shedd strongly advocates this view in his Dogmatic Theology. Others—e.g., Charles and A. A. Hodge, and Louis Berkhof—refer all to the federal headship of Adam. The Westminster Standards emphasize that Adam is both the federal head and the root of all his posterity. Both parties accept that this is so. Thus, the dispute is not whether Adam’s federal headship is the ground of the imputation of his first sin to us, but whether that federal headship rests solely on a divine constitution—i.e., because God appointed it—or on the fact that God made him the actual root of the race and gave the race a real specific unity in him.
The theory of mediate imputation has never gained acceptance in orthodox expressions of the Reformed Faith. It is subversive to the entire concept of the imputation of Adam’s sin upon which Paul grounds his exposition of justification by virtue of union with Christ our righteousness (Rom. 5:12–19; 1 Cor. 15:22).
Paul’s statement of the imputation of Adam’s sin to his posterity is stark: “By [through] one man sin entered into the world, and death by [through] sin; so death passed upon all men, for all have sinned” (Rom. 5:12). In the AV the clause “for all have sinned” may give the impression that Paul’s argument is that all die like Adam because all, like him, have sinned. But this is not the case. His statement is, “Death passed upon all humanity inasmuch as all sinned.” He teaches that all participated in Adam’s sin and that both the guilt and the penalty of that sin were transmitted to them. However we explain the mode of that participation—whether on purely federal or on traducianist-federal grounds—the fact of it stands as a fundamental of the Christian revelation. As the Shorter Catechism says, “The covenant [of works] being made with Adam, not only for himself, but for his posterity, all mankind, descending from him by ordinary generation, sinned in him, and fell with him, in his first transgression” (Question 16, emphasis added.)
Imputation of our Sin to Christ and of His Righteousness to Us
Second, imputation has a second major use in Scripture. It describes the act of God in visiting the guilt of believers on Christ and of conferring the righteousness of Christ upon believers. In this sense
“imputation is an act of God as sovereign judge, at once judicial and sovereign, whereby He—(1). Makes the guilt, legal responsibility of our sins, really Christ’s, and punishes them in Him, Isa. 53:6; John 1:29; 2 Cor. 5:21; and (2). Makes the merit, legal rights of Christ’s righteousness, ours, and then treats us as persons legally invested with all those rights, Rom. 4:6; 10:4; 1 Cor. 1:30; 2 Cor. 5:21; Phil. 3:9. As Christ is not made a sinner by the imputation to Him of our sins, so we are not made holy by the imputation to us of His righteousness. The transfer is only of guilt from us to Him, and of merit from Him to us. He justly suffered the punishment due to our sins, and we justly receive the rewards due to His righteousness, 1 John 1:8, 9”
(A. A. Hodge, Outlines of Theology, chap. 30, Q. 15).
The fact of this imputation is inescapable: “By the obedience of one [Christ] shall many be made righteous” (Rom. 5:19). The ground of it is the real, vital, personal, spiritual and federal union of Christ with His people. It is indispensable to the biblical doctrine of justification. Without it, we fail to do justice to Paul’s teaching, and we cannot lead believers into the comfort that the gospel holds out to them. That comfort is of a perfect legal release from guilt and of a perfect legal righteousness that establishes a secure standing before God and His law on the basis of a perfect obedience outside of their own subjective experience.
The double imputation of our sin to Christ and of His righteousness to us is clearly laid down in 2 Cor. 5:21: “He hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in him.” Hugh Martin’s paraphrase catches the meaning precisely: “God made him, who knew no sin, to be sin for us, who knew no righteousness, that we might be made the righteousness of God in him.” That Paul means us to understand a judicial act of imputation is clear. God did not make Christ personally a sinner. The reference is not to Christ’s subjective experience. He was as personally sinless and impeccable when He was bearing our sins on the cross as He had ever been. What Paul is describing is God’s act of reckoning our sin to Christ so as to make Him legally liable for it and all its consequences. Similarly, while believers are not by any means righteous in their subjective experience, God reckons to them the full merit of Christ’s obedience in life and death (Rom. 5:18, 19). That righteousness, not any attained virtue, is the ground of a believer’s acceptance with God.
Source: Cairns, A. (2002). Dictionary of Theological Terms (pp. 225–226). Belfast; Greenville, SC: Ambassador Emerald International.
3. If you deny man is born a sinner with a sinful nature then you deny the absolute need for God’s grace and Christ’s death on the cross for men.
To deny original sin is to fall into a camp outside the bounds:
https://blogs.thegospelcoalition.org/trevinwax/2009/09/29/why-should-i-believe-in-original-sin/
https://carm.org/pelagianism
http://www.equip.org/article/original-sin-its-importance-and-fairness/
Then again, given your open theist leanings, Jerry, you are already beyond the bounds. :AMR:
AMR
I can see that those who believe in the idea of "Original Sin" have little intention of defending that idea.
I wonder why that is?
I'm sorry but I'm confused; why would GOD need to manifest itself in human form in order to be a payment and sacrifice to itself?Humans were designed to sin, it's perfectly natural, otherwise we wouldn't need God's Spirit in addition to our own human spirit.
Anyone can die physically, but spiritual death is the result of sin. Righteousness can be imputed, but sin can't. Had Jesus sinned he would have died for his sin, not ours. The Jewish leaders imputed sin to Jesus, but it was a false accusation, sin cannot be imputed.
When Jesus died he died spiritually, not for his sin but as Creator God he assumed the sin of his creation, his life was of more value than the lives of all his creation combined. The Word became human to do just that and he did it well, nary a complaint.
I'm sorry but I'm confused; why would GOD need to manifest itself in human form in order to be a payment and sacrifice to itself?
I agree; but you didn't exactly address my question, or I was incapable of making the connection. Could you reword please?The Word was sent by the Father to atone for sin. The Spirit had pronounced spiritual death for sin at the very beginning of human history. For all humans to die for spiritual sin would defeat the purpose of human creation.
I agree; but you didn't exactly address my question, or I was incapable of making the connection. Could you reword please?
I'm sorry but I'm confused; why would GOD need to manifest itself in human form in order to be a payment and sacrifice to itself?
Seems to me that the Christ is the way to GOD and, in human form the Christ wasn't the utter fullness of GOD, but the fullness there of as per can be attained by the will of GOD, to man.
Please excuse my ignorance, but it has been my findings that the word of GOD is generally easily understood and rather straight forward, not making confusion, and for such reason I do have trouble understanding what you and I both stated.
Thank you, peace
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But listen to what you actually wrote please.... does it make sense to you, honestly?Your question was : "Why would GOD need to manifest itself in human form in order to be a payment and sacrifice to itself?"
God is innately immortal and cannot die. The Word relinquished immortality for awhile to become human to atone for sin.
The Spirit gives life and desires love in response. Sin is not love, it is a violation of love. To love is to live, to sin is to die.
Had Jesus not paid the penalty for spiritual death there would be no resurrection and no Spirit family. As it is, there is.
But listen to what you actually wrote please.... does it make sense to you, honestly?
Relinquishing immortality for a while is an oxymoron and nonsensical.What?
Relinquishing immortality for a while is an oxymoron and nonsensical.
peace
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Relinquishing immortality for a while is an oxymoron and nonsensical.