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The Doctrine of Original Sin

jdlongmire

New Member
webdog said:
Seems like everyone who doesn't see things through your lens is a heretic.
You espouse your own "brand" of heresy in election = salvation. A sinner is not saved because they are elect, they are saved by grace through faith. Period.

And so you create a false dilemma. Election precedes Faith - both are given by God's grace and are components of the salvation process or ordo salutis. This is the clear teaching of Scripture and the doctrine of old.
 

webdog

Active Member
Site Supporter
jdlongmire said:
And so you create a false dilemma. Election precedes Faith - both are given by God's grace and are components of the salvation process or ordo salutis. This is the clear teaching of Scripture and the doctrine of old.
You can give me no proof, biblical or otherwise that an infant has faith. It is a presupposition needed in order to make your theology work, but it is quite false.
 

Jarthur001

Active Member
webdog said:
.......... everyone who does NOT hold to Augustinian original sin is pelagian?

They are. :) This is the number one mark of a Pelagain person.

FACT:
"Pelagius was a heretic who opposed the doctrine of "original sin"

Arminius said...
This was the reason why all men who were to be propagated from them in a natural way, became obnoxious to death temporal and death eternal, and devoid of this gift of the Holy Spirit or original righteousness: This punishment usually receives the appellation of "a privation of the image of God," and "original sin."....."Original sin refers to a state of sin in us due to that original act of sin on Adam's part.

Even Wesley believed in OS.
FROM: The Order of Salvation in John Wesley’s Theology
Wesley points out that the current state of humankind is greatly changed from our original condition. God created both male and female in a perfect state. We were fashioned in the image of God and, in that image, He pronounced us good. This goodness, Wesley believes, indicates that we were free from “sin and filled with righteousness and true holiness.” But we did not remain in that state. Committing sin against God through disobedience, humankind fell from this position and lost “both the knowledge and love of God.” Through this loss, we became unable to reflect the full image of God that we were created with, and death entered our lives. This death is understood first to occur as a spiritual death, then, eventually as bodily death. This death is not dependent upon our sinning, but upon our birth into the family of Adam. This fallen, sinful nature separates us from God and leaves us without hope. Original sin, therefore, is the state of humankind that cries out for salvation. Therefore, the need for salvation is based upon the current, desperate state of humankind
.

All of classic Arminian holds to OS...
.....He defended Arminianism against charges of semi-Pelagianism, holding strongly to beliefs in original sin and total depravity.

Arminian Adam Clark.....
Verse 4. Who can bring a clean thing ] This verse is thus rendered by the Chaldee: "Who will produce a clean thing from man, who is polluted with sins, except God, who is one?" By Coverdale thus: Who can make it cleane, that commeth of an uncleane thinge? No body. The text refers to man's original and corrupt nature. Every man that is born into the world comes into it in a corrupt or sinful state. This is called original sin; and is derived from fallen Adam, who is the stock, to the utmost ramifications of the human family. Not one human spirit is born into the world without this corruption of nature. All are impure and unholy; and from this principle of depravity all transgression is produced; and from this corruption of nature God alone can save. The Septuagint, in the Codex Alexandrinus, reads the verse thus: tiv gar estai kaqaro apo rupou; oude eiv, ean kai miav hmerav genhtai o biov autou epi thv ghv; "Who is pure from corruption? Not one, although he had lived but one day upon the earth.
"

WHO DOES NOT BELIEVE IN OS???

well, I know of one group.
Unitarian Universalists....and they love Pelagius as a hero

Maybe you know of others
 
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webdog

Active Member
Site Supporter
Jarthur001 said:
They are. :) This is the number one mark of a Pelagain person.

FACT:
"Pelagius was a heretic who opposed the doctrine of "original sin"

Arminius said...


Even Wesley believed in OS.
FROM: The Order of Salvation in John Wesley’s Theology
.

All of classic Arminian holds to OS...


Arminian Adam Clark.....
"

WHO DOES NOT BELIEVE IN OS???

well, I know of one group.
Unitarian Universalists....and they love Pelagius as a hero

Maybe you know of others
James, we've danced this dance before. From wikipedia...
It is the belief that original sin did not taint human nature (which God called very good), and that mortal will is still capable of choosing good or evil without Divine aid.

Since I don't believe man can choose Christ "without Divine aid", and sin did affect mankind's "human nature" ...I am NOT a pelagian. It would help if you guys got this simple fact.

As I stated earlier, sharing the same belief of the Trinity, or the view abortion is murder with a (Roman) Catholic does not make one a RC.

I thought you would have learned that lesson by now.
 

TCGreek

New Member
webdog said:
What does Ephesians 2:1 say you became the object of God's wrath?

1 And you did he make alive, when ye were dead through your trespasses and sins,

The Bible says that we are "objects of wrath by nature" and that we're responsible for our own sins, and we have all sinned in Adam (Eph 2:3; Rom 5:12).

We have to take it all and try to make some sort of sense.
 

TCGreek

New Member
webdog said:
The above is spot on...but because of OUR sin, not Adam's. Original sin denies this.

Paul says:

1. In Adam all sinned (Rom 5:12);

2. And that We are objects of God' wrath by nature (Eph 2:3).

We have to take them both.
 

Jarthur001

Active Member
webdog said:
James, we've danced this dance before. From wikipedia...
It is the belief that original sin did not taint human nature (which God called very good), and that mortal will is still capable of choosing good or evil without Divine aid.

Since I don't believe man can choose Christ "without Divine aid", and sin did affect mankind's "human nature" ...I am NOT a pelagian. It would help if you guys got this simple fact.

As I stated earlier, sharing the same belief of the Trinity, or the view abortion is murder with a (Roman) Catholic does not make one a RC.

I thought you would have learned that lesson by now.

1st...I think I would find a better source then wikipedia.

2nd, if we were to talk your word for it, this only proves you are much closer to Pelagius then Wesley, closer then Arminius, closer then Adam Clark then anyone save Unitarian Universalists. That would worry me to be to that extreme.
 

webdog

Active Member
Site Supporter
Jarthur001 said:
1st...I think I would find a better source then wikipedia.

2nd, if we were to talk your word for it, this only proves you are much closer to Pelagius then Wesley, closer then Arminius, closer then Adam Clark then anyone save Unitarian Universalists. That would worry me to be to that extreme.
It matters not if it's wikipedia...the definition stands. That is what pelagianism is in a nutshell. Don't discount wikipedia because you don't like the definition.

I don't know if you meant "take" your word for it...but by doing just that, you would know that I am not "closer to Pelagius". You are a riot.
 

jdlongmire

New Member
webdog said:
Since I don't believe man can choose Christ "without Divine aid", and sin did affect mankind's "human nature" ...I am NOT a pelagian. It would help if you guys got this simple fact.

Pelagianism
The teaching of a monk named Pelagius in the fifth Century. He taught that man's will was and still is free to choose good or evil and there is no inherited sin (through Adam). Every infant born into the world is in the same condition as Adam before the fall and becomes a sinner because he sins. from here

webdog - Which part of this teaching would you say you disagreed with?
 

webdog

Active Member
Site Supporter
jdlongmire said:
Pelagianism
The teaching of a monk named Pelagius in the fifth Century. He taught that man's will was and still is free to choose good or evil and there is no inherited sin (through Adam). Every infant born into the world is in the same condition as Adam before the fall and becomes a sinner because he sins. from here

webdog - Which part of this teaching would you say you disagreed with?
From this definition that we are all born as Adam before the fall. We are appointed ONCE to dies...unlike Adam. Our natures are tainted with sin, meaning we WILL sin, but we ourselves are NOT sinners until WE sin.
 

jdlongmire

New Member
jdl said:
Pelagianism
The teaching of a monk named Pelagius in the fifth Century. He taught that man's will was and still is free to choose good or evil and there is no inherited sin (through Adam). Every infant born into the world is in the same condition as Adam before the fall and becomes a sinner because he sins. from here

webdog - Which part of this teaching would you say you disagreed with?

webdog said:
From this definition that we are all born as Adam before the fall. We are appointed ONCE to dies...unlike Adam.

Please expound on this with Scriptural references, please.

Our natures are tainted with sin
How?

meaning we WILL sin, but we ourselves are NOT sinners until WE sin.

so you agree with this part of the definition?

becomes a sinner because he sins
 

Jarthur001

Active Member
webdog said:
It matters not if it's wikipedia...the definition stands. That is what pelagianism is in a nutshell. Don't discount wikipedia because you don't like the definition.

I don't know if you meant "take" your word for it...but by doing just that, you would know that I am not "closer to Pelagius". You are a riot.

How about this definition from THEOpedia?.

Pelagianism views humanity as basically good and morally unaffected by the Fall. It denies the imputation of Adam's sin, original sin, total depravity, and substitutionary atonement. It simultaneously views man as fundamentally good and in possession of libertarian free will. With regards to salvation, it teaches that man has the ability in and of himself (apart from divine aid) to obey God and earn eternal salvation
.

1) It denies imputation of Adam's sin
2) It denies original sin
3) it denies total depravity
4) it denies substitutionary atonement

5) It says man has libertarian free will.
6) It teaches man his the ability to come to God without a divine calling (election)

*****

Classic Arminianism holds to (does not deny) 1-3
Classic Arminianism is split on number 4
Classic Arminianism holds to 5 and 6

If I understand you right you deny 1-3 but may hold to 4
You also hold to 5 and 6.

Again, does this make you closer to Pelagius then an Arminian?
 

Amy.G

New Member
If we sin because we have a sin nature or because we are sinners already at birth, what is the explanation for why Adam sinned? He had no sin nature. He was created sinless and perfect.
 

jdlongmire

New Member
Amy.G said:
If we sin because we have a sin nature or because we are sinners already at birth, what is the explanation for why Adam sinned? He had no sin nature. He was created sinless and perfect.

free. will.
 

jdlongmire

New Member
Jarthur001 said:
How about this definition from THEOpedia?.

.

1) It denies imputation of Adam's sin
2) It denies original sin
3) it denies total depravity
4) it denies substitutionary atonement

5) It says man has libertarian free will.
6) It teaches man his the ability to come to God without a divine calling (election)

*****

Classic Arminianism holds to (does not deny) 1-3
Classic Arminianism is split on number 4
Classic Arminianism holds to 5 and 6

If I understand you right you deny 1-3 but may hold to 4
You also hold to 5 and 6.

Again, does this make you closer to Pelagius then an Arminian?

muuuch better!
 

Amy.G

New Member
jdlongmire said:
free. will.
Adam sinned because he had free will? Then why isn't that why we sin?

I know Calvinism states that fallen man has no free will. If that's the case then we can't help but sin. I will blame that on Adam. Do you think God will let me pass?
 

jdlongmire

New Member
Amy.G said:
Adam sinned because he had free will? Then why isn't that why we sin?

I know Calvinism states that fallen man has no free will. If that's the case then we can't help but sin. I will blame that on Adam. Do you think God will let me pass?

no - because without Christ all Men are condemned under the curse of Adam and condemned for their own sin. That is what Scripture teaches.

God's initial act of grace was to not completely destroy mankind when Adam sinned - He only delayed judgment for the sake of the elect and the glory of Christ.
 

Brother Bob

New Member
jdlongmire said:
no - because without Christ all Men are condemned under the curse of Adam and condemned for their own sin. That is what Scripture teaches.

God's initial act of grace was to not completely destroy mankind when Adam sinned - He only delayed judgment for the sake of the elect and the glory of Christ.

Is not sin, the deeds done in the body? Do babies have to pay for Adam's original sin, or do they have to pay for their own sins, done in their body?

And if the orginal sin brings death to us all physically and in most cases, in the future. How come the spiritual death by the orginal sin, be somewhere in the future also, such as when we come to the age of accountability? why the difference? Why the insistance that the spiritual death is at birth, but the natural death, usually is in the future? Both brought death, why the difference in time of the death?

BBob,
 
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jdlongmire

New Member
Brother Bob said:
Is not sin, the deeds done in the body? Do babies have to pay for Adam's original sin, or do they have to pay for their own sins, done in their body?

BBob,

Infants, passing from infancy, are responsible for original sin and their own sin.

Infants, dying in infancy, are only responsible for original sin, and since they have none of their own sin and cannot repent and be forgiven are saved by the grace Christ revealed that He has for infants in infancy.
 
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