L
LilyM
Guest
I think something along these lines - the methods God chooses to achieve His ends surely correspond with what is best in terms of achieving those ends. Probably what He did was far more effective, in terms of impressing itself on the human consciousness and understanding, than achieving salvation merely by ‘saying the word’ or pricking His finger. And so was chosen for that reason.Not based on any profound scholarly analysis, I always felt God “must be Just” and anything other action never passes from thought/understanding to action on God’s part. While God is totally Sovereign, He is also completely Consistent.
The Father, Son & Spirit totally understood the exact scope of the sacrifice in advance, yet because the Son inherited a “human nature”, he emptied himself of a portion of that power or strength (hence his query to the Father in the Garden re the cup).
Because of that query (with acceptance of the Fathers will), we can know each and every act of the crucification saga was fully required. However, at the very second the scales were in balance, His suffering ended. A lesser scenario would not have sufficed.
Christ was so perfectly aligned to the will of His Father that I would say it WOULD be a moral impossibility for Him to go against the Father’s will. So perhaps the option of another method of salvation wasn’t ‘possible’ for Christ only because another method would have been inconsistent with the Father’s will. Not because it was LITERALLY not possible to achieve salvation by any other means. Surely at least other methods of torture and death would have been acceptable, when you think about it.