You are taking this passage out of context as some others do. If you interpret this passage consistently in the way that you are doing, then no one under the age of 20 is accountable for their sin. Logically our justice system ought to let murderers of the ages 17-19 off the hook and go free because they don't know right from wrong. These "little ones" were all those that were under the age of twenty. Surely you don't hold the age of accountability at 20 do you? Are those who 19 years of age not responsible for their sins? They can murder, steal, rape, and be innocent of all charges because they have not reached the age of twenty?I have scripture that shows man is not accountable until he understands right from wrong.
Deut 1:39 Moreover your little ones, which ye said should be a prey, and your children, which in that day had no knowledge between good and evil, they shall go in thither, and unto them will I give it, and they shall possess it.
When the Israelites rebelled against God in the wilderness, God said they would not be allowed to enter the promised land. But he did not hold the children accountable because they did not know between good and evil.
If you use this verse that is what you are teaching. "Your children" referred to the generation that was below them. The generation of Joshua and Caleb had refused to obey God and enter into the promised land. The generation of their children, when they were young, did not rebel. It was their parents. Now 40 years later, their children would be able to enter the promised land. It was not they that rebelled. It was their parents. It was not that they didn't know right from wrong. They did. It was more likely (in today's terms) they were not fully aware of the political situation; not eligible to vote; not fully aware of the consequences of the actions of their parents. That is why we have a minimum voting age in our nation today.
We don't go by conjecture and guess work. There was no other sin. Adam's sin was the first sin. The Bible says it was.Yes, Adam and Eve had one single law which they understood. So therefore they could be held accountable for this one law. But if they had done some other sinful act, they would not be accountable because #1 there was no law against it, #2 they had no concept of right or wrong other than the one command and penalty God told them.
No, it is saying that there was a law, and man broke it and sinned. He defines sin. Sin is a transgression of the law (I John 3:4)Rom 5:13 (For until the law sin was in the world: but sin is not imputed when there is no law.
This is what Paul is saying here. Before the law man could commit sinful actions, but without law it could not be imputed to them.
If you are defining law as the law of Moses, then why did God destroy the world with a flood. Your theology makes no sense.
You contradict yourself. Doing wrong is sin. Are you redefining words?Do I have children? Only 8 of them. And no way did I ever consider any of them sinners when they were little. Did they do wrong things?
A misuse of Scripture doesn't justify sin.Yes, they would fight with each other, lose their tempers and many other acts. But they were not accountable because they did not understand the difference between good and bad just as God himself said in Deut 1:39.
Man is inherently evil.
He goes astray as soon as he is born (Psalm 58:3). The day that he is born he is a sinner. He has a sin nature and has the propensity to sin. That is why he is selfish, lies, and does wrong even from infancy.
You affirm this; but falsely affirm it. There has always been law.What some are failing to understand here is that Paul was speaking of legal concepts in Romans 5. Did he say there was sin in the world from Adam to Moses? Yes. But was that sin imputed? No. Why? Because there was no law.
Read Romans 2:14,15. Man always has had God's law written on his heart. He was created that way.
They were not God. They were not in every way like God. But God did not create them with imperfections. He looked on his creation and said that everything was very good. They were created in the likeness and image of God with a will to choose between good and evil.And I don't know how you can claim that Adam and Eve were absolutely holy and perfect as God is. Man has never been equal to God. God cannot be tempted to sin, but Adam and Eve could and were. This shows they were inferior to God from the very beginning.
Jesus was tempted in all points such as we. Was He God? Was He sinless?Adam and Eve were created good. They were sinless. They had no sin. But they were not God. They could sin. It defies common sense to say they could not. If they were exactly like God, then they could not possibly have sinned when the serpent tempted them.
Jesus couldn't sin; but Adam could. Jesus was God; Adam was a man. Both had the choice. Adam made the wrong choice; Jesus never made a wrong choice.
Correct.And it is the same with Satan. He was created perfect or sinless, but he had the ability to sin.
You are saying that God is unable to make man in his own image and likeness and yet make him with a will to choose between good and evil. You are saying that God is limited to do certain things in his creation. Is God really that powerless?I don't know how you are accusing me of being unscriptural here, it seems to me that you are arguing that man was exactly like God when he was created. Man was never equal to God. If so, man could not have sinned.
Does God have to do what you say He has to do?
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