I'm nodding off....
Dear Valid Name,
I fully intended to get back to you this afternoon, but something came up and I was not able to. Now, I'm too sleepy to give a proper reply. However, I will try to address one thing tonight and, possibly, more tomorrow.
You asked me to explain this statement of mine more fully.
When we are looking at Adam's sin, which brought in death and brought about a need for redemption, I just don't see that we can see redemption in terms of satisfying any wrath in God. There are many kinds of biblical salvation, and some of them just don't involve any wrath of God, it's just that somehow all salvation has come to be defined as "saved from the wrath of God". This is just not scriptural. For example, in the book of Exodus, we see Israel saved from Pharaoh out of Egypt . That is very clearly a picture of Redemption and yet where is any wrath of God? Can we say then that their Redemption saved them from the wrath of God? Now look at them a little later in the book of Numbers at Kadesh Barnea when they would not enter the land for lack of faith. What did they incur there that they needed to be saved from. Yep. The wrath of God. God issued a death penalty on them, much like he did on Ninevah except it was not for their behavior, but for lack of faith.. The crisis that a redeemed people faced at the border of Kadesh relates to a promise, not to salvation. The promise given to Abram. So now we see a saved people left to die right where they were, in the wilderness. My point is, whether or not we see Egypt as a picture of sin (as you do) or a picture of death (as I do) I think we would have to agree that it is not a picture of God. So how can we say that our Passover Lamb died to save us from the wrath of God?
Jesus came to save the world from the fall in Adam, not to save man from God. Repentance has always been and still is the only way to be saved from God's wrath and penalties. All who we ever see saved from the wrath of God are saved by grace through faith. We never ever find a person or nation facing the penalty of God's wrath where they are allowed to bring in a substitute to take the wrath and they go free. The only escape and salvation from God's judgment is a broken and contrite heart. Redemption just does not relate to the wrath of God in any way. Jesus did not come to satisfy the justice or wrath of God, but to satisfy the Love of God by taking the sinner's place. He offered His life; an offering. He came that we might have Life. The blood sprinkled within the veil by the High Priest Himself gives us life. Jesus did not come to change God or turn Him around in favor to man but rather to change man and let him see the Grace of God in providing Salvation. To me, there's just all the difference in the world in the two views and I think we must seek the Truth in order that we might bring glory to the Most High God.
I will try to get back to the other questions. Oh, and Brad, thanks for talking to me.
Love,
Robin
Dear Valid Name,
I fully intended to get back to you this afternoon, but something came up and I was not able to. Now, I'm too sleepy to give a proper reply. However, I will try to address one thing tonight and, possibly, more tomorrow.
You asked me to explain this statement of mine more fully.
As a Passover Lamb, His death satisifies the death sentence of another. It does not satisfy the wrath of God. It satisfies the Love of God who spared Him not but freely gave Him for that very purpose. The salvation of the world through Jesus is through redemption, not forgiveness.
Jesus came to save the world from the fall in Adam, not to save man from God. Repentance has always been and still is the only way to be saved from God's wrath and penalties. All who we ever see saved from the wrath of God are saved by grace through faith. We never ever find a person or nation facing the penalty of God's wrath where they are allowed to bring in a substitute to take the wrath and they go free. The only escape and salvation from God's judgment is a broken and contrite heart. Redemption just does not relate to the wrath of God in any way. Jesus did not come to satisfy the justice or wrath of God, but to satisfy the Love of God by taking the sinner's place. He offered His life; an offering. He came that we might have Life. The blood sprinkled within the veil by the High Priest Himself gives us life. Jesus did not come to change God or turn Him around in favor to man but rather to change man and let him see the Grace of God in providing Salvation. To me, there's just all the difference in the world in the two views and I think we must seek the Truth in order that we might bring glory to the Most High God.
I will try to get back to the other questions. Oh, and Brad, thanks for talking to me.
Love,
Robin
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