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PRmerger
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Ah. I see, now. Anyone else besides these 2?Ambrose+Augustine=plural.
Your turn.
I will address soon…
Ah. I see, now. Anyone else besides these 2?Ambrose+Augustine=plural.
Your turn.
Actually, I need go no further.Ah. I see, now. Anyone else besides these 2?
I will address soon…
While I think you’re ultimately right and dronald is misreading the fathers here… if he only finds those two, they’re a heckuva two to find. Let’s not fall into a goofy numbers game, let’s look at the text and its context:Ah. I see, now. Anyone else besides these 2?
I will address soon…
Here Augustine is correcting the errors of Vincentius Victor. This particular passage is simply explaining how Original Sin (which VV effectively denied) absolutely corrupts the human being from the very moment of conception. He even, rightly, quotes from Romans. But dronald is reading more than what Augustine is writing. All Augustine has noted is that however God decides to judge, He does so justly. Frankly, we all deserve eternal punishment. We admit as much every time we confess our sins in the confessional or at Mass. But take care; Augustine is not saying that God would not or could not have mercy on the unborn in a similar way that He sent His Son for us. He is only insisting on the Truth: that only one means of redemption has been revealed to humankind, and that means begins with one baptism for the remission of sins. Can we decisively state that infants go to Heaven? No. Can we decisively state that infants go to Hell? No. Can we state that we have a just, yet loving and merciful, God who desires the redemption of His Creation? With great trust in His promises, we do.Whence they, who are not liberated through grace, either because they are not yet able to hear, or because they are unwilling to obey; or again because they did not receive, at the time when they were unable on account of youth to hear, that bath of regeneration, which they might have received and through which they might have been saved, are indeed justly condemned; because they are not without sin, either that which they have derived from their birth, or that which they have added from their own misconduct. ‘For all have sinned’-whether in Adam or in themselves-‘and come short of the glory of God.’
Yep.While I think you’re ultimately right and dronald is misreading the fathers here… if he only finds those two, they’re a heckuva two to find. Let’s not fall into a goofy numbers game, let’s look at the text and its context:
Ok, let’s stop here for a second and go deep into the woodsFrankly, we all deserve eternal punishment.
Not guilty, just unfit for heaven. We are by nature children of wrath. We get our nature at conception. Therefore, from conception, we are children of wrath. Do you see anything wrong with that argument? If not, what do you think “wrath” means in Ephesians 2:3? Because I think there is evidence that it means we deserve divine punishment.Ok, let’s stop here for a second and go deep into the woods
So at the moment of conception we deserve eternal punishment? or At the moment we are born?
I don’t remember asking to be here, on earth, as a human being. So someone put me here. Yeah, yeah, I know it was my mom and dad
. But, but — my spirit? Who else can create the life breath but God?
IOW - Are we declared guilty at the very moment of conception?
I guess it just seems odd (to me, as a Jew) to say that we deserve divine punishment just as our human nature, body and spirit, is being created by G-d, through our parents, in His image and likeness.Not guilty, just unfit for heaven. We are by nature children of wrath. We get our nature at conception. Therefore, from conception, we are children of wrath. Do you see anything wrong with that argument? If not, what do you think “wrath” means in Ephesians 2:3? Because I think there is evidence that it means we deserve divine punishment.
Well look at the Blessed Mother she passed the test, as many people in the bible. We don’t deserve punishment because our human nature, body and spirit is created by God, we deserve punishment because we choose to sin and put our evil thoughts and deeds over the human nature body and spirit.I guess it just seems odd (to me, as a Jew) to say that we deserve divine punishment just as our human nature, body and spirit, is being created by G-d, through our parents, in His image and likeness.
So having committed no sin at all, we still deserve eternal punishment? Just because our parents carried the command to be fruitful and multiply?Not guilty, just unfit for heaven. We are by nature children of wrath. We get our nature at conception. Therefore, from conception, we are children of wrath. Do you see anything wrong with that argument? If not, what do you think “wrath” means in Ephesians 2:3? Because I think there is evidence that it means we deserve divine punishment.
Well, you know the Lutheran (and Reformed) response here is Total Depravity, and if Paul left any doubt in Romans, Psalm 51 is rather clear:Ok, let’s stop here for a second and go deep into the woods
So at the moment of conception we deserve eternal punishment? or At the moment we are born?
I don’t remember asking to be here, on earth, as a human being. So someone put me here. Yeah, yeah, I know it was my mom and dad
. But, but — my spirit? Who else can create the life breath but God?
IOW - Are we declared guilty at the very moment of conception?
But the issue of “what happens to u baptized infants?” can be discussed without looking into particular views of human nature by simply recalling that God is merciful and loving.Surely I was sinful at birth, sinful from the time my mother conceived me.
That command, while still in effect, was given prior to the Fall. Through Adam, we’re all stained. If we are human from conception, then we also hold a sinful nature from that point.So having committed no sin at all, we still deserve eternal punishment? Just because our parents carried the command to be fruitful and multiply?
You see the problem here?
God commands us to multiply.
Only for our fruit to deserve eternal punishment without being culpable of sin yet. (Ez 18:20 comes to mind)
The last thing I had in my mind when my son was born was that he deserved eternal punishment.
Yep. Not a one of us “deserves” heaven.So having committed no sin at all, we still deserve eternal punishment?
Genesis 9, the command is again given to Noah and all his descendants=us.That command, while still in effect, was given prior to the Fall. Through Adam, we’re all stained. If we are human from conception, then we also hold a sinful nature from that point.
I didn’t say we deserve heaven, PR. The subject is deserving hell at the moment of conception and not committing personal sin.Yep. Not a one of us “deserves” heaven.
(Here, the universe of discourse is: those of us left here on earth at this moment)
What we do “deserve”…is hell.
That’s why Christ came, Isaiah.
NO.I didn’t say we deserve heaven, PR. The subject is deserving hell at the moment of conception and not committing personal sin.
So all human souls at the moment of conception are guilty of the sin of Adam.
Is that correct?
Lew-I guess it just seems odd (to me, as a Jew) to say that we deserve divine punishment just as our human nature, body and spirit, is being created by G-d, through our parents, in His image and likeness.
If we [all] inherited the loss of sanctifying grace, I can only conclude that all conceptions are hell bound until a means of sanctifying grace is installed. For without it, it is impossible to enter heaven. I mean, after all that’s why we baptize infants.NO.
We do not inherit the guilt of Adam. What we inherited was the loss of sanctifying grace.
And without it, we cannot enter heaven.