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Surely there is no righteous man on earth who does good and never sins.Righteousness denotes that which is from good, and good is all that which belongs to love and charity. Righteousness is therefore, what good a man does.
Hi Ripheus, why do you believe that the Lord's death on the Cross was absolutely necessary for our salvation?
BTW, it would help me if you'd explain what you believe imputation is, because unless/until we're sure that we're both on the same page about the meaning of the terminology we're using, we could simply be talking past or around one another.
Thanks!
Yours and His,
David
2 Corinthians 5:21 is instructive in this matter.I think it was necessary because if He didn't die, He couldn't be resurrected. Resurrecting someone who is still alive is impossible.
As for what imputation is, it is predicating something of X that actually "belongs to" Y. E.g. if I impute the sin of person Y to person X, I no longer judge, "Person Y sinned," but, "Person X sinned." So as I understand it, imputing our sins to Christ, or His righteous works to us, would amount to believing that Christ sinned and that we did His good works, which seems depraved.
I got through reading all the post and can now comment.This doctrine implies the opposite of what it is used for. Its purpose is to have it so that we are not saved by our own works. However, it would have things this way on the grounds that the works of Christ are made out to be ours. That is, God makes it out that His Son's works are our works, which thereby save us. This is quite unseemly, I believe, if not outright profane.
Hi Ripheus, millions, perhaps billions of bulls and goats were sacrificed by Israel to atone for the sins of the people, both corporately and individually as well. These animals were never going to be resurrected, so what purpose did these sacrifices serve?I think it was necessary because if He didn't die, He couldn't be resurrected. Resurrecting someone who is still alive is impossible.
That's right, Jesus chose to die for His bride. He chose to pay the price needed to redeem the ones He loved, because the ones He loved had no way to do that for themselves.As for what imputation is, it is predicating something of X that actually "belongs to" Y. E.g. if I impute the sin of person Y to person X, I no longer judge, "Person Y sinned," but, "Person X sinned." So as I understand it, imputing our sins to Christ, or His righteous works to us, would amount to believing that Christ sinned and that we did His good works, which seems depraved.
Hi Ripheus, millions, perhaps billions of bulls and goats were sacrificed by Israel to atone for the sins of the people, both corporately and individually as well. These animals were never going to be resurrected, so what purpose did these sacrifices serve?
I suppose I should also ask why you believe the Lord's resurrection is necessary for our salvation, especially since you believe His death was not (beyond the fact that death, as you pointed out above, is a necessary precursor to resurrection)? How does the Lord's resurrection save us/what does it do for us?
Why do you believe that this loving act of God's on our behalf is profane?
Hi again Ripheus, it was God who commanded them, and even performed them Himself at times, right from the get-go, for instance (Genesis 3:21).In all honesty, I think the animal sacrifices were absurd, if not diabolical.
...it was God who commanded them, and even performed them Himself at times, right from the get-go, for instance...
Ripheus27 said:As for what imputation is, it is predicating something of X that actually "belongs to" Y. E.g. if I impute the sin of person Y to person X, I no longer judge, "Person Y sinned," but, "Person X sinned." So as I understand it, imputing our sins to Christ, or His righteous works to us, would amount to believing that Christ sinned and that we did His good works, which seems depraved.
EmSw said:Sin has no bearing on what righteousness means. Righteousness denotes that which is from good, and good is all that which belongs to love and charity. Righteousness is therefore, what good a man does.
How much of Genesis do you hold to be a myth? Also, do you hold the various times that God commands the sacrifices, and details exactly how they are to be carried out, to by a myth as well?That's in an allegorical legend, not direct historical fact (as far as I am concerned).
How much of Genesis do you hold to be a myth? Also, do you hold the various times that God commands the sacrifices, and details exactly how they are to be carried out, to by a myth as well?
Hi Ripheus, the slight difference in meaning between those two words seems insignificant in this case, IMHO anyway. At least if Genesis is considered to be a "myth", it could have been come directly from God to Moses.I said "legend," not "myth."
What evidence do you have that such a thing might be true? On what basis, for instance, did you decide that Genesis is legendary/allegorical, and that the Gospel of John is fact?As far as the post-Genesis narrative goes, I assume the book becomes closer and closer to literally true, is literally true for more or less the duration of the Gospels, and then fades back into allegory through the close of Revelation. So the early claim that God commands animal sacrifices is part of the ancient allegory.
I agree with you, that Christ's righteousness is necessary for our salvation, but how does that work? IOW, in what way do you believe His righteousness saves us?I actually didn't say it did in my picture of how Christ's righteousness saves us.
I'm not sure why you believe it was a "loaded question"That's a loaded question, is it not? I said a specific, and false, doctrine was profane, not an act of God on our behalf.
It's because we are fallen that such a thought even enters our minds. God is holy and righteous, but to be either, He must also be "just".I don't understand why God couldn't just forgive us without the Crucifixion or anything else in the first place.
Christ's justificatory righteousness is defined as His obedience, which is a work. When it is said that "all our righteousness is as rags" and that this is why our works do not save us, well, that just goes to show that Christ's righteousness is His work. Again, no more with these word-games.
So as I understand it, imputing our sins to Christ, or His righteous works to us, would amount to believing that Christ sinned and that we did His good works, which seems depraved.
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Thank you, but what I am looking for is, "the righteousness of Christ is imputed to them that believe in him,"
I think I told you we could dig deep into Atonement if you wanted to and I think you need to, but it is up to you, since it takes lots of words.I don't understand why God couldn't just forgive us without the Crucifixion or anything else in the first place. It's often said that because He is a holy God, He must punish all sin in some form or other, but I don't believe that, especially not if God is sovereign. The difference between Heaven and Hell is not the difference between Mercy and Justice but Mercy and Cruelty.
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