BilliardsBall
Veteran Member
I am looking for information not argument- could anyone cite Bible verses that says we owe God for sin?
We owe God death for sin; Romans 6:23, Romans 3:23, Romans 4:1-5, etc.
Jesus's death paid the debt.
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I am looking for information not argument- could anyone cite Bible verses that says we owe God for sin?
We owe God death for sin; Romans 6:23, Romans 3:23, Romans 4:1-5, etc.
Jesus's death paid the debt.
Rom 3:23 For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; Does this say we owe HaShem our death for sin or does it simply say we have failed to live up to HaShem's standard?
Rom 4:1-5 says nothing about death for sin.
Rom 6:23 For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. Again, this verse clearly teaches that we earn death from sin and nothing about owing HaShem our death.
Where is it written that Yeshua,s "paid" anything.
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When Gods laws are overstepped, God holds us to account for that and brings punishment on wrongdoers just as he did when he allowed the nation of Isreal to be devoured by its enemies on many occasions. Death is not merely a consequence of wrongdoing... it is a judgement handed out by God when God calls each one to account for their sins.
Rom 3:23 For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; Does this say we owe HaShem our death for sin or does it simply say we have failed to live up to HaShem's standard?
Rom 4:1-5 says nothing about death for sin.
Rom 6:23 For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. Again, this verse clearly teaches that we earn death from sin and nothing about owing HaShem our death.
Where is it written that Yeshua,s "paid" anything.
(2 Sam 12) When King David was confronted by Nathan for murdering Uriah and committing adultery with his wife, his response was “I have sinned against the LORD.”
So there may be something to the sin debt being to God (a debt against God's Holiness?).
As I have said-I do not have a full answer for that but I think the answer lies in natural death caused by knowingly sinning and unnatural death say of a small child. But speaking of small children- if children are born sinful how could Yeshua say Luk 18:16-17 But Jesus called them unto him, and said, Suffer little children to come unto me, and forbid them not: for of such is the kingdom of God. Verily I say unto you, Whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of God as a little child shall in no wise enter therein? If a little child is sinful how can they be of the Kingdom?
what if death is not natural at all?
then any death, ie the death of a child or of an adult, must be caused by something else.
The Hebrew scriptures identify a condition in mankind which beings with conception:
Psalm 51:5 Look! I was born guilty of error,
And my mother conceived me in sin
Sin is passed on from parent to child... it is a 'condition' of mankind and it is also mentioned in the book of Job:
“Who can produce someone clean out of someone unclean? There is not one.”—Job 14:4.
Every child born to Adam, is a sinner from birth... its an inborn defect. Sin is not just about our actions...it goes deeper then wrong actions alone.
Once again Psalms is poetry it employs hyperbole, exaggeration to express emotion it should not be used to make doctrine. David is repenting of his sin with Bathsheba here and if you take vs 5 literally you must take vs 7 that way to
Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean: wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow. Does HaShem purge everyone with a plant and is anyone really whiter than snow?
In context Job had his eye wholly on the frail and dying state of man, and not at all upon his moral state.
When context and style of writing i.e.-poetry, parable (story) is taken into consideration there is no Biblical support for the doctrine of Original or inherited sin.
I agree that the expressions being used are symbolic, but they are symbolic of spiritual truths.
The fact is that when they spoke in poetic language about physical things, there was a spiritual application.
For example, the expression 'Their own blood is upon them' found at Leviticus 20:27
This is not literally saying that blood is on them.... its saying that they are responsible for their sins. Those put death for such sin are responsible for their actions and the loss of their 'blood' or 'life' is their own doing.
Fire is also used as a way to clean a person of wrongdoing. Obviously this is not to be taken literally either, but being 'refined by fire' would have been well understood because fire was used to refine gold and other metals to make them pure. Eg Malachi 3:2-3 says 2 “But who will endure the day of his coming, and who will be able to stand when he appears? For he will be like the fire of a refiner and like the lye*+ of laundrymen. 3 And he will sit as a refiner and cleanser of silver+ and will cleanse the sons of Leʹvi; and he will clarify* them like gold and like silver, and they will certainly become to Jehovah people presenting a gift offering in righteousness.
This language has a literal meaning and a spiritual meaning....the spiritual meaning refers to being cleaned.
So there is spiritual application in these expressions.