GeneMBridges
New Member
Unbelief is not a sin. If a person does not believe in God, that person does not believe in everything that is attached to God, including sin. The notion of sin as we understand it is foreign to atheists. They think they do right or wrong, they don't think in terms of good or evil. They don't believe in demons or in Satan, so evil/hell does not exist for them anymore than heaven does.Originally posted by corinne:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by GeneMBridges:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Wes, Outwest:
Unbelief is a sin, is it not? If it is, then did Jesus pay for that sin or not?The question in the last post should read as follows:
The only thing we die for is LACK OF FAITH in Jesus and the Godhead. Our faith in Jesus gets our name written in the book of life. So instead of facing judgment which is, being cast into the lake of fire, the second death, we pass from death into life everlasting with Jesus because we are not judged. John 3:18. Our deeds are judged, but we are not, if we believe in Jesus.
If you say He did not, then please support this with Scripture. I do not know of any Scripture that says Jesus died for all our sins, except for the sin of unbelief. To say that Jesus paid for all our sins except for that one means we add value to the atonement by believing, effectively we pay for that sin ourselves, so we end up adding to the atonement. That means Jesus alone did not accomplish the atonement alone.
If you say he did pay for the sin of unbelief, but we still have to believe, then are you saying that belief (or the lack thereof) is somehow morally neutral? Where is that supported in Scripture? You say it is not a sin, yet I find no Scripture that says otherwise. In fact, if it is the thing for which people are punished then how can it be morally neutral since people are punished for it? No, unbelief must be a sin, even in your view, because otherwise God is punishing people for something that is not a sin, and nowhere does Scripture say that people go to hell for things that are not sins. If unbelief is sinful, it must therefore be a sin. If people go to hell because they do not believe, then unbelief must be sinful, because people are in hell because they are being punished for their sins.
Also, that would have to mean that Jesus paid for all our sins and that those that disbelieve are being punished in hell for their sin of unbelief as well, which means God is pouring out His wrath on them for a sin for which Jesus is said to be (indicative, so this proptitiation is a done deal according to the text), twice over. That is double jeopardy. Where is the Scripture that teaches that God punishes the sins of man twice over when satisifaction has already been made? Also, if you believe that Jesus paid for all our sins Himself, this is an actual atonement. If you say unbelief is a sin and this was paid for that is true, and if you say unbelief is morally neutral that is still true. That means you end up believing in an ineffective actual atonement (a actual potential or a potentially actual atoement), which is a logical contradiction; that is an oxymoron.
You see, even you limit the atonement. We limit its scope, you limit its power.
Nobody denies that justification is by faith. However, the construction of the text in Eph. 2:8 is such that salvation is the gift of God, there is no salvation without grace, and there is no faith without faith. Thus faith is the gift of God because it comes to us by grace. A lot of people say that the antecedent to "that" in 2:8 is not faith, it grace, but that isn't quite correct. First, the antecedent is the whole preceding clause, (By grace you have been saved through faith), not just the single word, "faith," moreover, even if the view that "faith" alone is the antecedent, the word "for" links the statement itself to the sentence above, which begins in 2:4, where the subject is "God" not "man," so any way you cut it, that text is teaching that salvation is by grace alone, through faith alone and that all three...salvation as a whole, as well as grace and faith are from God Himself not from man, otherwise, you end up with man's faith being the thing about which he can boast, contradicting 2:9. </font>
Corinne </font>[/QUOTE]Corinne, let Scripture be the final arbiter of what is sin and what is not sin. Where does Scripture state that unbelief is not a sin? I have provided muliple texts showing that it is a sin. In fact, Scripture says that whatever is not of faith is sin. Arminians that say on the one hand that "whosoever, all, world," etc. are always universal, must equivocate on "whatever is not of faith is sin," in order to state that unbelief is not a sin.
I would point you very clearly that the word for unbelief in koine Greek is apistia and one of the words for disobedience is apeitheia. Both are derivative of the same word. The other Greek word for unbelief is the same exact word, apeitheia.
Now, all disobedience is sin. Wes tries to wiggle out of this by saying that if one is in unbelief or one disbelieves, one is committing the sin of disobedience, but that makes no sense whatsoever. Then what sin is one committing if one commits the sin of adultery or homosexuality or stealing? One is still committing the sin of disobedience. One is also committing the sin of idolatry (in fact, Scripture teaches very clearly that the sin of homosexuality is, in fact, idolatry at its own root, and the root of idolatry is unbelief). Unbelief is sin.
The funny thing about this is that most Arminians do, in fact, teach that unbelief is a sin for the very reasons I enumerate. The stated position of Dallas Theological Seminary is that Jesus paid for all our sins, except the sin of unbelief. This is even the postion articulated by Dr. Berrien in this very forum.
Now I ask again, did Jesus pay for our sins or not? If not, then support this exegetically, along with unbelief not being a sin.