- Joined
- Sep 1, 2017
- Messages
- 7,760
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Anglican
- Political Affiliation
- Conservative
- Marital Status
- Married
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- Yes
There really is nothing to the point you are laboring so hard to get across. The Scriptures teach that Christ reconciled Man and God, and this was accomplished by the sacrifice of the Cross. The key item at issue concerns when this was accomplished, not when it was planned or foreseen.
But you imagine that everything, right down to the individual human, was determined and settled, unchangeably, long in advance of our births.
As a result, you have convinced yourself that nothing else enters into the process. However, to do that you have to make the Crucifixion be a mere gesture and Faith be almost meaningless.
There is no way that such a theory, which would require us to ignore large sections of Scripture, can be correct. Not so long as the Bible is recognized as being the word of God.
You quote this verse as though it proves your theory, but it clearly does not.
See that it's "NOW" that the recipients of the message are changed--and "BY HIS BLOOD."
So, who is the writer speaking to? That's right, it's people alive in the first century, only a short time after the history-altering sacrifice of the Cross had taken place.
But you imagine that everything, right down to the individual human, was determined and settled, unchangeably, long in advance of our births.
As a result, you have convinced yourself that nothing else enters into the process. However, to do that you have to make the Crucifixion be a mere gesture and Faith be almost meaningless.
There is no way that such a theory, which would require us to ignore large sections of Scripture, can be correct. Not so long as the Bible is recognized as being the word of God.
Rom 5:9
9 Much more then, being now justified by his blood, we shall be saved from wrath through him.
You quote this verse as though it proves your theory, but it clearly does not.
See that it's "NOW" that the recipients of the message are changed--and "BY HIS BLOOD."
So, who is the writer speaking to? That's right, it's people alive in the first century, only a short time after the history-altering sacrifice of the Cross had taken place.
Last edited: