The two passages that immediately come to mind are Mark 8:31 & 10:45:
Mark 8:31 (Douay-Rheims 1899 American Edition)
31And he began to teach them, that the Son of man must suffer many things, and be rejected by the ancients and by the high priests, and the scribes, and be killed: and after three days rise again.
After checking out the verse in the NASB, and in context, I gotta say… you got a point.
Christ said it Himself, first of all. Word of God is a pretty strong argument. And then Simon Peter tried to rebuke Him, but Jesus confirmed Peter’s fears: He was going to have to die. That seems rather convincing that Christ had to die to save us.
Thank you for the lesson. I apologise. I was wrong.
Mark 10:45 (Douay-Rheims 1899 American Edition)
45For the Son of man also is not come to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a redemption for many.
This seems to further confirm what you have said, and what the Good Book says. See Mark 10:32-45, and you will see Christ once again prophesies His own death (Mark 10:33) to His Apostles.
I am not able to give an exegesis from the original Latin, but if Jesus “must” suffer and be killed then there must be some reason for it. I think we would agree that God is not arbitrary.
Agreed.
The question then becomes: what is the reason that Jesus must suffer and be killed? Mark 10:45 states one reason; he gives his life as redemption for many (other translations say “ransom for many”).
A good answer. I wonder if there is not something in the supernatural realm that we do not known about, however. Some technical rule that would make any other form of redemption illegal, or cheating, if you will. I would not know what that is.
I suppose you could hypothesize that Jesus could have saved just as many if he did it another way without interference with our individual free will. I’m open to suggestions supported by reasons.
As you noted in your previous post, he has the power to save every human being, but possibly only at the cost of interfering with free will. There is no doubt he has the power to do this. I also agree that he had a choice to save us,
…nope. The passages you quoted seem sufficient to me that, for whatever reason, Christ had to die to save us. I still don’t know why He does, but I take Christ at His word. I was trying to be proved wrong, really, I was.
But I do think, if God followed a different ruleset, He could just as easily have saved us without the death of His Son. He could have saved us without even sending a God-man being down to us. God can do anything He so pleases.
But, He isn’t doing it the way I think salvation could be handled. He isn’t doing it the way any of us think salvation could be handled. God’s rules for salvation are His own, and He thinks them best, hopefully for good reason. Considering the prospect He offers, I think rebelling against Him is rather much a bitter, fruitless work in comparison to following Him.
but Mark 8:31 does read that he “must” suffer and die for some reason. It is that reason I think we are trying to establish.
I think we were just trying to establish whether it was necessary or not, but it certainly couldn’t hurt.
Hm…
That is certainly one hypothesis based upon inferences from attributes of God and ourselves that we know. If we can base our conclusions directly on revelation (scripture) though, as a general rule we have a greater degree of certainty in our conclusions.
… yeah; you’re right.

I know I will get through it eventually, but over 2000 pages of Book, no matter how amazing its message, is still very daunting. Say, is it true that if we read the Daily Readings every day for three years we will have read the entire Bible?
Any way about it, reading and understanding the Bible and the Traditions of the Holy Church
through the guidance of the Holy Spirit will undoubtedly make me a better apologist, a better preacher (I do YouTube videos on occasion), and a better Catholic.
It does still kind of leave the question of “Why crucifixion and not some other form of execution?” but execution is execution, I suppose. Besides, it played out just as the Prophets had described, and as I read tonight from my “Word Among Us” (it has the Daily Readings), if the Church were of man and not God, it would have died out a long time ago.