What evidence is snowballing against me? I have addressed every text that purports to show Jesus as being punished and showed how it could be interpreted otherwise.swaimj said:The evidence is snowballing against you and you have weakened your own position by admitting that Jesus "received the punishment", an admission that you waited until page 16 to make followed by an attempt to distinguish between "receiving punishment" and "being punished".
About the word "curse". In Genesis 3 it is shown that an object can be cursed - in this case the ground - without the object of the verb "cursed" being punished. This is really beyond debate. The verb is "cursed", the object of the verb is "the ground". And since, presumably the ground cannot be punished, the case is made.
The fact that the cursing of the ground is then used to punish man is entirely beside the point. You are making an argument of the form:
1. I want to punish Fred;
2. I short-sheet Fred's bed to punish him.
3. Therefore any other use of the verb "short-sheet" implies punishment.
This is simply not correct. So the case that "curse" need not connote punishment has been established.
I have never denied that Jesus recieved the "punishment". I claim that this act - the act of receiving the punishment - is no more an act of God saying "Jesus, you are being punished" than I am being "punished" if I pay someone else's fine.
If I pay a fine or take lashes for someone else's deed, I can perfectly legitimately claim that I bear the punishment without the authorities engaging in an act of punishment for me.
In short, if the law demands a fine of $ 1000 for Fred's speeding, and if I were to satisfy that demands of the law by paying for Fred, a reasonable person can say "Andre is not being punished, he is bearing someone else's punishment".
This distinction may not seem important, or to be one of mere semantics, but I think it is vital - non-believers who are told that Jesus is being punished rightly think of a capricious and malevolent god who, for no apparent reason, has to punish someone in order to solve the sin problem.
Yes, there is some kind of mysterious "payment" going on, but I submit that God should not be thought of as punishing Jesus, as much as using Jesus as the means to make the payment. There are a lot of other interesting issues here that might be helpful to look into.
But notwithstanding all this, my real point in starting this thread was to look at the other aspect of the atonement - the breaking of the power of sin in the world so that it no longer has such a powerful grip on us in respect to our actions in the future.
But it appears that we agree that Jesus indeed "made the payment" for our sins at the Cross.