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Why did Jesus need to die?

Walkntune

Well-Known Member
To love is to sacrifice. If you have no understanding of sacrifice then you don't understand love. God is Love.
 

jmvizanko

Uber Tool
To love is to sacrifice. If you have no understanding of sacrifice then you don't understand love. God is Love.

Actually, that we understand sacrifice is precisely we we do not consider the Jesus story a sacrifice, let alone a logically necessary one. How is a few hours of torturous pain for the messiah a big deal next to the eternity of torture that awaits all those who don't believe in him, let alone the much worse and longer torture that many people experience in this life? And why is it even necessary? (see my post above).

If a king decided to kill his son, and then base all of his citizens' sentencing on what they believe about his son's sacrifice, we wouldn't call him just or sane, we'd demand his head on a plate. And you would be the person to equate this king with love?

And for some of us, love is anything but a sacrifice, but rather the meaning and goal of our life. What makes sacrifice a necessary, let alone defining, characteristic of love?
 
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dave2

New Member
The whole purpose of my post was to try and understand why God required a sacrifice in the first place. Why couldn't he just forgive humans. That's my question. Why was there a need for a sacrifice at all?

By instigating this situation in the first place, Satan challenged God’s authority. If God just forgave the transgression, the issue raised would go unchallenged. The way things are; Satan is being dealt with, and mankind has the opportunity of redemption.
If you read the accounts relating to the Jewish people at the time of Moses, you will see that there is a strictness to God’s justice; ‘an eye for an eye’ and the like. It was an exacting law without compromise. Likewise, the only sacrifice acceptable for the redemption of sin would need to by another perfect man (‘the last Adam’ 1 Cor. 45). As such, Jesus was the only one able to provide this; a corresponding ransom.
 

McBell

Unbound
By instigating this situation in the first place, Satan challenged God’s authority.

How did the satan "instigate" this situation?

If God just forgave the transgression, the issue raised would go unchallenged.

God was the one that set up the transgression in the first place.
The satan had nothing to do with it.

The way things are; Satan is being dealt with, and mankind has the opportunity of redemption.
If you read the accounts relating to the Jewish people at the time of Moses, you will see that there is a strictness to God’s justice; ‘an eye for an eye’ and the like. It was an exacting law without compromise. Likewise, the only sacrifice acceptable for the redemption of sin would need to by another perfect man (‘the last Adam’ 1 Cor. 45). As such, Jesus was the only one able to provide this; a corresponding ransom.
Yes, GOD sent HIMSELF to earth as his son in order to pay the price HE set up.
The satan is not a factor in this situation at all.
 

jmvizanko

Uber Tool
By instigating this situation in the first place, Satan challenged God’s authority. If God just forgave the transgression, the issue raised would go unchallenged. The way things are; Satan is being dealt with, and mankind has the opportunity of redemption.
If you read the accounts relating to the Jewish people at the time of Moses, you will see that there is a strictness to God’s justice; ‘an eye for an eye’ and the like. It was an exacting law without compromise. Likewise, the only sacrifice acceptable for the redemption of sin would need to by another perfect man (‘the last Adam’ 1 Cor. 45). As such, Jesus was the only one able to provide this; a corresponding ransom.

But why is that how things are being dealt with? If god can do anything, why doesn't he jus destroy Satan? Or judge people based on their deeds instead of arbitrary and blind belief about what they can not know?
 
I don't think Jesus' death would have been necessary if people had believed in him. Their belief would have become the sacrifice. I don't think the crucifixion was inevitable or even desirable. But that is not a standard Christian view.
 

Falvlun

Earthbending Lemur
Premium Member
To love is to sacrifice. If you have no understanding of sacrifice then you don't understand love. God is Love.
Ok, I'll play.

There's a sweet old couple who have been married for 52 years. They've had their ups and downs but in the end, they love each other dearly. The husband has never had the need to give his life for his wife, and the wife has likewise never had the need to give up her life for her husband (e.g. no one had to dramatically throw themselves in front of bus so that the other could live.)

Because there was no sacrifice, would you claim that this couple did not truly understand or experience love? Do you claim that without sacrifice, their love will always be less than complete?

Ah. You say. There must have been sacrifice at some point: She put up with his snoring in bed, and he would eat her tuna casserole even though he hated tuna casserole. She gave up a promising career to raise his babies; he worked two jobs to pay the bills when she got cancer.

So, in other words, a sacrifice doesn't need to be a literal, bloody giving/taking of a life?

In other words, Jesus did not have to die, but God could have sacrificed something else, such as his unbending condemnation of every imperfect human?
 

dogsgod

Well-Known Member
According to the story, in Earthy terms there was sacrifice. In divine terms I don't see it.
Even in Earthy terms, thousands of Jews were hung by the Romans, many were trouble makers like this supposed Jesus, so what makes his death special?
 

Falvlun

Earthbending Lemur
Premium Member
I find it strange that these threads always focus on Western Christian interpretations and beliefs on soteriology.

Everyone should at least be vaguely familiar with Eastern Christianity's soteriological views.
Feel free to enlighten us. Nobody's holding you back.

If we debate the Western form, it's because it's the one that we are most often confronted with.
 

Zadok

Zadok
Not sure if this is already a thread, but whatever.



Why was Jesus' blood the only thing that could make God forgive people? It just doesn't make sense to me. You would think that an all loving god would be able to forgive his creations without spilled blood, but it seems as if that wasn't the case, that the only thing that could appease him was blood from his own son(and therefore himself).


*People always seem to assume that I am a christian because I posted from a (semi)christian perspective. I am being figurative or whatever, I am not a christian, and I do not believe in the bible scriptures and such. I just want a good discussion/debate. Thanks

Very few people understand the doctrine of a mediator (Messiah, Christ, Redeemer). Note that the concept of Messiah, Christ and Redeemer are related to the concept of atoning for other’s sins.

The laws of justice require that for each act a reward or punishment is given. However, mankind, according to doctrine; became a fallen creature through the fall of Adam. The result of this fallen state is eventual death. Because man is a fallen creature they cannot atone or pay for their own sins because they already are subject to death and must die. If it was possible that man could pay for their sins then there would be no purpose or justice in death.

There is an additional condition to man’s fallen state – that is a condition of limited knowledge. Man is blinded from the eventual outcome of their choices and therefore their choices are made in ignorance but faith (meaning no proof of G-d or the outcome for repentance or not repenting). Because man is in a state of “darkness” not knowing the full consequences of their choices it would not be just not to provide a way to overcome such ignorance – therefore, should an individual begin to realize that their choices were flawed they can justly petition a Messiah, Christ or Redeemer to suffer for their former acts of ignorance. This atoning for others is known as the act of mercy or specifically the mercy of G-d.

In order for G-d to offer mercy without upsetting justice – that G-d must atone for the transgressions and sins of those to be forgiven – else there is no justice. The price or payment is to suffer death. And that is the reason it was required that Jesus die that our sins can be redeemed.

Zadok
 
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dave2

New Member
But why is that how things are being dealt with? If god can do anything, why doesn't he jus destroy Satan?

[FONT=&quot]Satan’s time is limited, Rom 16:20, Ps 37:10, which is what I was referring to, but to have destroyed him straight out would have left the issue that he raised unresolved. [/FONT]
 

Falvlun

Earthbending Lemur
Premium Member
See previous edit with accompanying link.
From the Wiki article:
Incarnation[/url] is not only an act of love but an act of salvation. Jesus Christ, by uniting man and God in his own person, reopened for man the path to union with God. In his own person Christ showed what the true 'likeness of God' is, and through his redeeming and victorious sacrifice he set that likeness once again within man's reach. Christ, the Second Adam, came to earth and reversed the effects of the first Adam's disobedience.
It's basically very similar: Jesus is the bridge between man and God. God could have created any bridge he wanted. He chose Jesus.
It also goes on to state that through his sacrifice, Jesus reversed the effects of sin (ie, whipping boy), and put the ability to be "like God" back in man's reach. So, we again have the idea that Jesus had to be sacrificed in order to bring man back to a condition acceptable to God. Once again, God could have chosen any mechanism he wanted: he chose to sacrifice his innocent son.

Christ will judge all people exclusively on the basis of how they have served him by serving each other, the least of the brethren. This will show how each person loved God and each other. The love for God and the love for man, becoming one and the same love. It is accomplished in Christ and is Christ. To love with this love is to love with the love of Christ and to fulfill his "new commandment" to "love one another even as I have loved you." (John 13:34-35, 15:12) In this is the whole of spiritual life. In this, and this alone, man will be finally judged. It is the crown of all virtue and prayer, the ultimate and most perfect fruit of God's Spirit in man.
That first part seemed promising: It makes so much more sense to judge someone on how he has treated his fellow living beings, than simply on whether he believed a story-- however true-- or not. It means that an atheist, who is kind and loving, will be allowed to enter heaven, while a mean-spirited Christian would be denied.

But then we have this:
Saint Cyprian wrote, 'A man cannot have God as his Father if he does not have the Church as his Mother'. God is salvation, and God's saving power is mediated to man in His Body, the Church. This stated the other way around by Georges Florovsky: 'Outside the Church there is no salvation, because salvation is the Church'.
Which only reinforces the idea that Jesus had to die to save us, and to be saved we must believe that Jesus died to save us.
 

dave2

New Member
How did the satan "instigate" this situation?

As outlined at Gen 3. 1-15


God was the one that set up the transgression in the first place.
The satan had nothing to do with it.

You are entitled to that opinion, but I don't share it.

Yes, GOD sent HIMSELF to earth as his son in order to pay the price HE set up.
The satan is not a factor in this situation at all.

I don't believe Jesus to be God but the son of God, his ceation.
 
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