TaliOrlando
New Member
How were people saved in the old testament? Even before Moses, like Adam and stuff?
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Amy: God requires two things.1. Sin must be atoned for. 2. Faith
In the OT, God accepted the blood of animals offered up by the priest to atone for sin.
But without faith, the atonement was of no value.
Heavenly Pilgrim said:
Heb 10:3 But in those sacrifices there is a remembrance again made of sins every year.
4 For it is not possible that the blood of bulls and of goats should take away sins.
HP: If God accepted the blood of the animals to atone for sin, why did they have to be offered up every year?
After the person repented then God accepted the sacrifice.Amy.G said:God accepted these "copies" until the Messiah came and offered the perfect sacrifice, once for all.
So, what was the purpose of the sacrifice? If all God wanted was a contrite heart, the sacrifice was in vain.Palatka51 said:After the person repented then God accepted the sacrifice.
Palatka51: It sounds like Grace was granted after repentance.
The shedding of blood pointed to Calvary. After Calvary, baptism shows the death, burial and resurrection so there is no more blood sacrifice. Like baptism it was an act of obedience after repentance. Baptism is required obedience but does not save nor did the shedding of animal blood which was also required obedience.Amy.G said:So, what was the purpose of the sacrifice? If all God wanted was a contrite heart, the sacrifice was in vain.
Hbr 9:22 And according to the law almost all things are purified with blood, and without shedding of blood there is no remission.
That's what I said. The OT sacrifice was a copy of better things to come, the sacrifice of Christ.Palatka51 said:The shedding of blood pointed to Calvary. After Calvary, baptism shows the death, burial and resurrection so there is no more blood sacrifice.
I'm sorry Amy, I did not finish my thought before I had clicked on submit and had to edit. Please reread my previous edited post.Amy.G said:That's what I said. The OT sacrifice was a copy of better things to come, the sacrifice of Christ.
What a great post!!!Samuel Owen said:The same way we are, based on the coming of the messiah, who died for all sin, past, present, and future.
Ro:4:3: For what saith the scripture? Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness.
What did Abraham believe, Gods promise of a coming seed, who would make Abraham the father of many nations. That seed being Jesus of Nazareth.
Adam also believed this same promise. As it was spoken to him, in the Garden of Eden.
Amen, and amen!North Carolina Tentmaker said:The sacrifice that paid for their sins is the same sacrifice that paid for our sins, the sacrifice of Jesus Christ. All other sacrifices were pictures or copies of that.
Don’t fall into the time trap! What I mean is, time is a human constraint God is not bound by. We look at past and present and things to come, God sees it all. When you accepted Christ all your sins were paid for, even those you had not committed yet. When Christ died he paid for all our sins, those of the OT believers and those of believers not yet born. All of the OT pictures and points to that.
They were saved by faith just as we are.
Samuel Owen said:This gets a little complicated, to deal with. But before the law there was no sin imputed, because the law had not been given to reveal it. But none the less death by sin reigned, from Adam to Moses.
All the old testament saints were counted righteous by faith, from Adam to Moses. The Law, and sacrificial system had not been given, so atonement for sin was counted on that which was to come, for those who by faith believed god.
Ro:4:16: Therefore it is of faith, that it might be by grace; to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed; not to that only which is of the law, but to that also which is of the faith of Abraham; who is the father of us all,
Ro:4:17: (As it is written, I have made thee a father of many nations,) before him whom he believed, even God, who quickeneth the dead, and calleth those things which be not as though they were.
The law, and sacrificial system were a shadow of things to come. This was supposed to reveal Christ to the jews. But it did not fail, they did. Their faith was all tied up in their laws, and sacrificial system, and by this they missed the mark.
If you will notice all the offerings made before the Covenant of Law! were not sin offerings, but offerings of thanks.