@Ascetic X
It seems that the problem many here have is the same problem the pharisees had...maybe even more severe because they reject even their understanding of divine justice.
The Pharisees could not come to terms with the idea that men would be saved apart from the law.
Now, Nicodemus had this problem. But he understood what
@Martin Marprelate can't. When Jesus explained how one could be saved in a way that fulfilled the law Nicodemus seems to have understood the implications.
His question was not how the law would be fulfilled from outside of the law but how one could be born again (or from above). I think Jesus' answer was sufficient.
@Martin Marprelate has applied a philosophy called "legal humanism" as divine justice. This is a type of legal justice developed in 16th century France (and held by John Calvin). This is why Cslvin's theory of atonement assumes this to be divine justice. He understood it as justice.
Basically this justice was not concerned with reducing crime, with the criminal or the victim. It was concerned with (to borrow from Calvin) avenging the law.
A crime creates a debt in the law that must be collected. How is it collected? Doesn't matter, as long as it is collected. The judge is responsible for balancing the deficit.
It is literally an accounting system.
But here comes God who's righteousness is not the law itself (the law was one manifestation of righteousness, the New Covenant a manifestation of the same righteousness apart from the law).
And God throws a monkey wrench in man's philosophy.
God will condemn the wicked. So Calvin says God put the sins of the wicked on Jesus and punished them there.
But what did God do? He made the wicked into new creations, made them lay aside their corrupt selves. Made them into Christ's image.
The reason
@Martin Marprelate and his sect cannot accept this is because it does not meet the demands of their philosophy. They want God to punish sins, even if thus can't be on the actual sinners because he is at judgment sinless.
Ultimately they see God as enslaved to their philosophy.
But read the law. Nothing in the law prohibits God from forgiving sins.
And even more important - the law just shows us our fruit (sins as the fruit of a mind set on the flesh). The law never addressed the problem that produces sin - we have fallen short of the glory of God.