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Hehe. Not being single minded would be no problem. The problem is that the view which you have expressed has in it theological problems, some of which you seem not yet to have discovered.
But you are saying that He died spiritually and as such had to be born again, which you believe also occurred at the cross. How can you say this without also saying that Jesus became a sinner or that He literally became sin? How can that work together?
But you are saying that He died spiritually and as such had to be born again, which you believe also occurred at the cross. How can you say this without also saying that Jesus became a sinner or that He literally became sin? How can that work together?
What is so hard about it?
Again, If my debt is 1000 dollars because I committed a crime, and my dad who is innocent paid that thousand dollar fine and purchased my freedom from that debt, It is still 1000 dollars. It did not make my father guilty of that crime. To be honest, I feel your being unreasonable here. and trying to make a mountain out of a molehill.
Yes, there was a separation in the sense that God for that while must "treat" Him as a sinner. It does not mean that He was literally separated from the Father as sinners are separated from God due to their sin (Isa.59:2, Jer.5:25). Again, the sin sacrifices did not literally become what they atoned for. They had to be pure and without blemish all the time, else the sacrifice was invalid. Do you see this difference and distinction to be made?
The one giving the sacrifice had to be pure and without blemish. Jesus was. or our sin could not be placed on his body. The separation is because God can not look on sin, If my sin was placed on his body, God had to turn his back. For God is holy and can not look on sin. That was the penalty that paid for my sin.
Think about it, If jesus did not suffer the penalty imposed to me because of my sin (ie the thousand dollars) I am still dead in my sin, my freedom has not been purchased.
To talk about my calvinism is pie throwing. We are clearly taught what sin is and what our sins are and how they separate us from God. Ty. As for Calvin he taught nothing murky regarding the moments of Christ on the cross. Actually, it was Calvin who pioneered in the field of the biblical doctrine of substitutionary atonement, something also you would believe in, I assume. Me think it's your flat, literalistic reading of the text which veils your eyes to see the problems it creates, when not having a consistent interpretation of same. You are in effect saying that Jesus became a sinner, but since you know that other texts, flatly and literally, are not saying that, you come up with a half-way or a left-fielder to go around the problem. That's why you end up stuck with the notion "the penalty for sin is spiritual death" (even no flat, literal text says that) and that "Jesus died spiritually" (even no flat, literal text says that) and that "Jesus was born again" (even no flat, literal text says that). And that's where we are at.
I was born dead, Yet I was alive, and even my spirit had life. Yet the bible calls me dead.
So you either give that type of death a name, Than name is spiritual death (literally a spiritual separation)
Being born again is nothing more than our fellowship being restored with God. or being made spiritual alive.
Again, it is not rocket science, And not something you would try to teach a babe in Christ, for they could not understand it.
There is no problem in what I am teaching, it is clear. and explains more deeply what my situation against God was. And why I need to be born again, And also to show what great pain Christ went for in my behalf. (ie, man did not punish him for my sin, God did)