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prov1810
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That's why I go back to the fact I've examined the Scriptural term "atonement" where as most people (including Reformed theologians) have not. This is precisely why you don't see Protestants appealing to examples like Moses, Aaron, and Phinehas, all of whom made atonement (turning away God's wrath), and were clearly types of Christ.
This is just hugely wrong. We see the theology of types of Christ in centuries of Protestant exegesis, Calvinist and Arminian.
The priests were appointed ambassadors to reconcile God to the people; and this in the person of Christ, who is the only sufficient surety of Gods grace and blessing. Inasmuch, therefore, as they then were types of Christ, they were commanded to bless the people. --Harmony of the Law, John Calvin.
Not sheer desperation (what dramatic language) and it's not absent from the text - it's there, you just interpret it differently.The Reformed dilemma comes out the most when we examine the Crucifixion accounts in the Gospels. All those accounts show is Jesus being tortured and physically put to death on a Cross by wicked men. The Reformed must say (and have) that the physical sufferings Jesus endured were nothing compared to the 'invisible' pains that God the Father was inflicting on Jesus in the mean time. So the physical sufferings of Jesus were essentially incidental, since the real suffering was spiritual, invisibly taking place when all eyes were on the nails and blood. And that's why, in sheer desperation, the Reformed scholars cling with all their might to "My God, why have you abandoned me" since they're desperately grasping at whatever straws they can to support a claim that's clearly absent from a plain reading of the crucifixion accounts.
More drama:
They "freak out"? You mean they sweat blood?This reveals a serious error of Protestant theology as a whole, because Protestant theology cannot explain human (especially Christian) suffering. The logic is, suffering must mean God is mad at me. And when the Christian believes Jesus took that punishment, then God shouldn't be mad at them, and so they freak out when suffering hits them.
Two huge groups of people (Protestant and Catholic) dispersed over the globe, diverse in age and education and culture and everything else, and one of them is temperamentally inferior? The claim is arrogant and fatuous.
Jesus became a curse for us (Gal.3:13) and was therefore treated like an enemy. Suffering is a result of Original Sin. Suffering is not always a penalty for personal wrongdoing, but the inherited weakness is the result of sin and it's a symptom of alienation from God. And yet, as the author of Hebrews pointed out, we have a High Priest who understands our weaknesses.So you have two options here, either abandon you claim that "making someone suffer means treating someone like an enemy," and thus abandon your overall argument that Jesus suffering entails the Father treating Him like an enemy, or else maintain that and leave unexplained the sufferings of Job and Christians.
Both Jesus and the martyrs were persecuted but Jesus' suffering was obviously unique in its redemptive value. We are not saved by the martyrs. Protestants are perfectly capable of seeing the difference here.In fact, I'll up the ante here by showing you a plain example how Reformed scholars have failed you when they point to the "cup" that Jesus must drink. Look at Mark 10:37 And they said to him, Grant us to sit, one at your right hand and one at your left, in your glory. 38 Jesus said to them, You do not know what you are asking. Are you able to drink the cup that I drink, or to be baptized with the baptism with which I am baptized? 39 And they said to him, We are able. And Jesus said to them, The cup that I drink you will drink, and with the baptism with which I am baptized, you will be baptized, 40 but to sit at my right hand or at my left is not mine to grant, but it is for those for whom it has been prepared.If this is the "cup of God's wrath," then this verse becomes unintelligible. It means Jesus will drink the wrath and the apostles will drink the wrath, completely contradicting PSub. Rather, what this "cup" is is simply the cup of persecution and suffering, which God is granting to bring about some good. And just as if was the Father's will that the cup would not pass from Jesus, so to it was the Father's will that the cup would not pass from the Apostles (who were martyred for the Gospel).
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