He paid for/appeased the wrath of God towards sins.Jesus is that atonement. He is the propitiation for sin.
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He paid for/appeased the wrath of God towards sins.Jesus is that atonement. He is the propitiation for sin.
You have a couple of terms mixed up, brother. Let me help.He paid for/appeased the wrath of God towards sins.
He paid for/took that wrath, which allows God to call us now justified all who receive Him thru faith!You have a couple of terms mixed up, brother. Let me help.
Jesus purchased/redeemed/ransomed us from the bondage of sin and death.
Jesus propitiates/turns aside God's wrath towards us.
Please don't take offence, but I have no interest in discussing your unsupported ideas. Even if your tradition was not [Edit: opposite of what the Bible states] (even if it did not deny Scripture) I wouldn't take your word for it. You would have to provide Scripture.He paid for/took that wrath, which allows God to call us now justified all who receive Him thru faith!
You are faced, I'm afraid, with the fact that the Father forsook the Son. It may caused you problems in your theological understanding, but it is simply the case. "My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?" (Psalm 22:1; Matthew 27:46; Mark 15:34).
There are several other things that the Father does to the Son, which are difficult to understand if you think of God doing them to God: "For as the Father has life in Himself, so He has granted the Son to have life in Himself" (John 5:26).
The Father sends the Son, gives the Son, raises the Son from the dead, exalts the Son and glorifies the Son. The Son loves and obeys the Father and glorifies Him. FWIW, The Spirit sends the Son into the desert (Mark 1:12) and glorifies Him (John 16:14).
So why should it be thought impossible that the Son should propitiate the Father or that the Father should forsake the Son when it is so clearly written in Scripture that it happened?
[I have had long discussions on this board over whether to 'abandon' is somehow different from to 'forsake.' I hope we can avoid that particular argument]
So.....sin does not really have to be punished?No, for Martin's view is that God poured wrath upon the Son. I do not.
Christ suffering was not God pouring wrath upon the Son.
In this we disagree.
Hebrews is not discussing the Savior's sacrifice, but all that went before were insufficient to accommodate in full what was necessary for redemption.
Therefore, the words "He taketh away the first (that which He had no pleasure), that He may establish the second."
The pleasing is respondent in the slain lamb taking the scroll in Rev. 5 and of course the Isaiah 53:10 "The Lord was pleased..." (NASB)
This aspect is one of the specific disagreements carried by those who would embrace the Wrath of God poured out upon the Son and those who do not find such as the attitude of God.
Sin itself cannot be punished.So.....sin does not really have to be punished?
You are in fact confirming Martin's view in saying you believe this...
Agedman said:
"He took my sin and my sorrows and made them His very own,
No, for Martin's view is that God poured wrath upon the Son. I do not.
Christ suffering was not God pouring wrath upon the Son.
He didn't approve of the Crucifixion, He suffered it:
Hebrews 10
King James Version (KJV)
5 Wherefore when he cometh into the world, he saith, Sacrifice and offering thou wouldest not, but a body hast thou prepared me:
6 In burnt offerings and sacrifices for sin thou hast had no pleasure.
7 Then said I, Lo, I come (in the volume of the book it is written of me,) to do thy will, O God.
8 Above when he said, Sacrifice and offering and burnt offerings and offering for sin thou wouldest not, neither hadst pleasure therein; which are offered by the law;
9 Then said he, Lo, I come to do thy will, O God. He taketh away the first, that he may establish the second.
Sacrifice, even that of Christ, was a necessity, not something God took pleasure in.
In this we disagree.
Hebrews is not discussing the Savior's sacrifice, but all that went before were insufficient to accommodate in full what was necessary for redemption.
Therefore, the words "He taketh away the first (that which He had no pleasure), that He may establish the second."
The pleasing is respondent in the slain lamb taking the scroll in Rev. 5 and of course the Isaiah 53:10 "The Lord was pleased..." (NASB)
This aspect is one of the specific disagreements carried by those who would embrace the Wrath of God poured out upon the Son and those who do not find such as the attitude of God.
Darrell,
You miss read JonC.
JonC posted about the punishment, not the death.
The punishment did not lead to the death.
The death was purposed by The Christ at the exact time He determined to allow the fleshly form He took on to expire.
Hey Darrell,
I think that you may have misunderstood my comment.
What I disagree with is the idea that Jesus died in our place by God punishing Him with our punishment.
I agree that Christ died for us.
I agree that the One died for the all. I agree that He who knew no sin was made sin for us. I agree that Christ died for the ungodly.
I affirm the doctrine of penal substitution (what is taught in Scripture)
but not the Theory of Penal Substitution (that all of that was accomplished by God pouring His wrath upon His Son as a punishment to satisfy His justice rather than pouring that wrath on me and you).
This is truly a sad reflection to make.
The early church did support doctrine often taught by singing of songs, and of course especially the Psalms which are taken as inspired.
We do not support Doctrine with poems, unless they are Inspired.
Much doctrine is referenced to the Psalms. The principles of such doctrine are also found in the earliest known written hymns.
One is the "Phos Hilaron" ("Hail gladdening light") which was an old Hymn when St. Basil the Great (329-379 AD) remarked of how cherished it was in the churches.
Perhaps the one that has retained favor and is still sung in churches in this age is "Let all Mortal Flesh Keep Silence." Written and sung probably even before "Phos Hilaron."
Great Hymns always support doctrine.
What is sad is that you do not see that doctrine is supported by "songs, hymns, and spiritual songs."
Such do not create doctrine, but can certainly be supportive of doctrine.
- Let all mortal flesh keep silence,
And with fear and trembling stand;
Ponder nothing earthly-minded,
For with blessing in His hand,
Christ our God to earth descendeth,
Our full homage to demand.
- King of kings, yet born of Mary,
As of old on earth He stood,
Lord of lords, in human vesture,
In the body and the blood;
He will give to all the faithful
His own self for heav’nly food.
- Rank on rank the host of heaven
Spreads its vanguard on the way,
As the Light of light descendeth
From the realms of endless day,
That the pow’rs of hell may vanish
As the darkness clears away.
- At His feet the six-winged seraph,
Cherubim with sleepless eye,
Veil their faces to the presence,
As with ceaseless voice they cry:
“Alleluia, Alleluia,
Alleluia, Lord Most High!”
Icon, are you really being serious about this?So.....sin does not really have to be punished?
Does anyone find it inconsistent that he disagrees and then toward the end of his post agrees?Bingo.
The pleasing is respondent in the slain lamb taking the scroll in Rev. 5 and of course the Isaiah 53:10 "The Lord was pleased..." (NASB)
agedman said: ↑
Such do not create doctrine, but can certainly be supportive of doctrine. Darrell said,
Does anyone find it inconsistent that he disagrees and then toward the end of his post agrees?
Did I not start the post and finish saying essentially the same thing?
For those who do not remember, here it is:
"The early church did support doctrine often taught by singing of songs, and of course especially the Psalms which are taken as inspired."
And then at the end,
"Such do not create doctrine, but can certainly be supportive of doctrine."
Remember, I don't have much of a short term memory, but I try not to change saddles while the horse is running.
Well the Scripture declares rather clearly that He did. You are trying to present a horse chestnut as being a chestnut horse!Christ quotes David, and God forsook neither of them. I don't have much time this evening, so I would exhort you to look at Psalm 22 again, study it in detail, and see if a case can be made for God forsaking David.
I quite agree that being forsaken by the Father was an entirely new experience for the Lord Jesus. Even when He was in extremis in Gethsemane, the Father sent an angel to strengthen Him (Luke 22:43). But on the cross, the Son was utterly alone. Even His mother and the apostle John, I think, had left Him before the sixth hour (John 19:27). Because, if the Christ as our Substitute did not suffer being forsaken by the Father, then we will have to suffer it ourselves.
What are we getting down to here?....Does sin exist if no one commits it? I do not do philosophy.Sin itself cannot be punished.
But Jon, He did.
The penalty for sin is death, and that is precisely what Christ took upon Himself, and this is the cup and baptism of suffering given Him (in His incarnate form) of the Father.
I like to surprise.And see this is a little surprising, and probably because I am just getting into the discussion.
So just to clarify, you do believe Christ died vicariously for the sinner, just as the pattern of animal sacrifice presented.
To be honest I don't really have a problem with the concept, unless it is likened to Eternal Punishment, which was not necessary for Christ to atone for our sin. It still remains that what Christ suffered, both in being brutalized my men, and, just the grief and sorrow of taking on human flesh, was orchestrated by God Himself. He formulated the Remedy by which He could begin to make sons of God of sinners through Eternal Union with Himself, and, He carried it out.
Well the Scripture declares rather clearly that He did. You are trying to present a horse chestnut as being a chestnut horse!
Psalm 22 is rather clearly messianic. David did not have his hands and feet pierced (v.16), nor did anyone cast lots for David's clothing (v.18). It is Christ who was forsaken by the Father. 'O My God, I cry out in the daytime, but you do not hear; and in the night season, and am not silent' (v.2). 'Now from the sixth hour to the ninth hour there was darkness in the land' (Matthew 27:45). In His six hours upon the cross, He endured the absence of the Father's felt presence in the light and in the dark. Why? Because He was enduring for that time the fate of sinners. 'These shall be punished with everlasting destruction [away] from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of His power' (2 Thessalonians 1:9).
I quite agree that being forsaken by the Father was an entirely new experience for the Lord Jesus. Even when He was in extremis in Gethsemane, the Father sent an angel to strengthen Him (Luke 22:43). But on the cross, the Son was utterly alone. Even His mother and the apostle John, I think, had left Him before the sixth hour (John 19:27). Because, if the Christ as our Substitute did not suffer being forsaken by the Father, then we will have to suffer it ourselves.