At the end, you are taking away meaning and purpose from the suffering of the Lord Jesus Christ, and that is dangerous ground to go on. You are twisting the plain meaning of Scripture to fit your thoughts, instead of vice versa.
td,
Why didn't you answer my questions?:
How does sin affect anything but the soul? When a soul sins then that soul is separated from the LORD and that is spiritual death. And then when he believes his soul is saved.
In what way does sinning affect any other part of a man?
Augustine is credited with formulating the theory of Original Sin and he said this:
"Our bodies would not have been born with defects, and there would have been no human monsters, if Adam had not corrupted our nature by his sin, and that had not been punished in his posterity. Op. Imp. I. 116; II. 123; III. 95,104; V. 8. The sickly and dying nature of the human body, proceeds from the lapse of the first man. De Gen. ad Lit. XI. 32" [emphasis added] (G.F. Wiggers, An Historical Presentation of Augustinism and Pelagianism From the Original Sources [Andover, MA: Gould, Newman & Saxton, 1840], 97; A Reproduction by Forgotten Books).
There is absolutely no evidence that when Adam ate of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil that his body was changed in any way but the theory of Original Sin is totally dependent on that piece of fiction. Albert Barnes wrote the following:
"The tree of the knowledge of good and evil effected a change, not in the physical constitution of man, but in his mental experience - in his knowledge of good and evil" (Albert Barnes, Barnes Notes on the Bible, Commentary at Gen.3:22)
In fact, verse 14 completely repudiates your claim (because that's all it is) that men die for their own sins.
Here is the death which results when a person sins:
"And you, being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh, hath he quickened together with him, having forgiven you all trespasses" (Col.2:13).
Paul does not say that they were dead as a result of Adam's sin but instead dead because of their own sin.
When a sinner is made alive together with the Lord Jesus he is made alive "spiritually." That can only mean that previously he was dead "spiritually"--as a result of his own sin and not the sin of Adam.
Furthermore, since a person dies spiritually as a result of his own sin that can only mean that before he sins he is spiritually alive. After all, it is impossible to die spiritually unless a person is first alive spiritually. From this we can understand that all people emerge from the womb spiritually alive.
Not spiritually dead, as the proponents of the theory of Original Sin teach.