37818
Well-Known Member
I believe John 19:28 is after Jesus was a proxy for us. And in Matthew's and Mark's accounts Jesus was being our proxy when He was citing Psalms 22:1.Surely you can do better than that for an answer. Flesh out your comment.
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I believe John 19:28 is after Jesus was a proxy for us. And in Matthew's and Mark's accounts Jesus was being our proxy when He was citing Psalms 22:1.Surely you can do better than that for an answer. Flesh out your comment.
It simply, very simply, isUh....no.
Write out the following on a piece of paper:
Here was the concern:
"If we let Him go on like this, all men will believe in Him, and the Romans will come and take away both our place and our nation."
Here was the conclusion:
"You know nothing at all, nor do you take into account that it is expedient for you that one man die for the people, and that the whole nation not perish.”
That simply is not substitution. The plan was not to kill Jesus instead of killing the nation. It was to kill Jesus in order to prevent Rome from destroying the nation due to the impact they feared His ministry would have.
That is simply not Substitution.
This is getting so boring. It is killing one man so that the nation would not perish. He dies on behalf of the nation. He dies; the nation does not perish. Jesus takes the fall for the nation. Penal Substitution. End of story, dress it up how you will.It is killing one man for the nation, so that the nation would not perish. But not as a substitute. It was because they feared Rome would take notice and destroy the nation.
If anything, it was a sacrifice (kill one man for the nation so that Rome would not destroy the nation).
No. You are adding to the passage.It simply, very simply, is
This is getting so boring. It is killing one man so that the nation would not perish. He dies on behalf of the nation. He dies; the nation does not perish. Jesus takes the fall for the nation. Penal Substitution. End of story, dress it up how you will.
Close but no cigar.He is not dying on behalf of the nation (per the passage). He is dying so that the nation will not be destroyed by Rome.
Not in that passage. He is dying for the nation (so that Rome will not destroy the nation).Close but no cigar.
He actually is dying on behalf of the nation (Gk. huper). He is dying so that the nation will not be destroyed by Rome.
He is dying in the place of the nation.
No. You read substitution out of the passage.You read substitution into the passage
I am just reading the words ("what is written").No. You read substitution out of the passage.