chaoschristian
Well-Known Member
Mark, one more attempt here.
Is there a difference between saying that Adam made sin possible and all people are sinners because of Adam?
Do you see the distinction?
In the former, and agent, Adam, is responsible for sin (unholiness, seperation from holiness/God) to be an option; the latter states that all people subsequent to Adam are sinners because Adam was a sinner.
Paul says the former. That can be found in the original Greek (that Assyrian has provided) and in all proper English translations.
St. Augustine claimed the latter, based upon a faulty translation of the Greek into Latin. He didn't use the Koine Greek, despite that Paul had written Romans in Koine Greek, because Augustine wasn't reading from Koine Greek manuscripts, but a Latin translation of the Greek manuscripts. I'm not very good at explaining this, but when I read the Latin, I can tell it's in error. Assyrian has provided ample evidence for why it is so.
The implications of your stance, the one Augustine espoused, is that either sin is biological (which if I remember correctly is the former stance of the RC and the one advocated by Augustine) or that, as gluadys pointed out, our own sinful actions are irrelevant because we all bear the burden of Adam's own sin.
I don't think any of these are defensible from scripture. And I know that must smart, because as best as I can surmise your entire paragidm of Christ is based upon a direct physical and biological connection between Adam and Christ.
But then here's a question for you and your creation science: if sin is biological, then what's the biological indication of sin? It is a gene? Something in our blood? And organ, a tissue, a what? Where's the physical evidence of the sin marker?
Is there a difference between saying that Adam made sin possible and all people are sinners because of Adam?
Do you see the distinction?
In the former, and agent, Adam, is responsible for sin (unholiness, seperation from holiness/God) to be an option; the latter states that all people subsequent to Adam are sinners because Adam was a sinner.
Paul says the former. That can be found in the original Greek (that Assyrian has provided) and in all proper English translations.
St. Augustine claimed the latter, based upon a faulty translation of the Greek into Latin. He didn't use the Koine Greek, despite that Paul had written Romans in Koine Greek, because Augustine wasn't reading from Koine Greek manuscripts, but a Latin translation of the Greek manuscripts. I'm not very good at explaining this, but when I read the Latin, I can tell it's in error. Assyrian has provided ample evidence for why it is so.
The implications of your stance, the one Augustine espoused, is that either sin is biological (which if I remember correctly is the former stance of the RC and the one advocated by Augustine) or that, as gluadys pointed out, our own sinful actions are irrelevant because we all bear the burden of Adam's own sin.
I don't think any of these are defensible from scripture. And I know that must smart, because as best as I can surmise your entire paragidm of Christ is based upon a direct physical and biological connection between Adam and Christ.
But then here's a question for you and your creation science: if sin is biological, then what's the biological indication of sin? It is a gene? Something in our blood? And organ, a tissue, a what? Where's the physical evidence of the sin marker?
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Didn't Adam's transgression show he had the possible option of sin too?