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DPMartin
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“Original sin”
Is it just, that all should suffer the consequence of another’s choice?
Is it just, that all should suffer the consequence of another’s choice?
In light of Adam and Eve’s unique place as the first parents of the entire human family, their sin has changed the human nature we are all born with.“Original sin”
Is it just, that all should suffer the consequence of another’s choice?
Hi.“Original sin”
Is it just, that all should suffer the consequence of another’s choice?
JoeIn light of Adam and Eve’s unique place as the first parents of the entire human family, their sin has changed the human nature we are all born with.
If you are interested in how the Catholic Church articulates the teaching on Original Sin, I would recommend taking a look at the Catechism of the Catholic Church: CCC 385-421.
This is probably the best way I have heard it put. It stinks that because of the actions of my great-grandfather I can no longer inherit the State of California.Original sin and its effects do not deprive us of anything we had a right to in the first place.
I read the following analogy somewhere. Imagine your great-grandfather owned the entire State of California, but lost it in a bet. It’s not your fault you didn’t inherit it, it’s his fault. But you still have no right to it.
And if you think about it, even if Adam and Eve hadn’t sinned and lost the Kingdom, what right would we have had to it anyway. Warren Buffet (the multi-billionaire Wall Street guy) isn’t leaving his children or grandchildren a dime. They did nothing to earn it. It was the result of his work. What the heck have any of us done to be entitled to inherit the Kingdom.Originally Posted by Aelred Mino Original sin and its effects do not deprive us of anything we had a right to in the first place.
SpencerianHi.
Original sin is not a matter of the transgression of one individual. It’s a matter of a transgression of very special individuals. The transgression was not like anything we can do, like running a red light. The error that Adam and Eve did changed the nature of humanity itself, spirit and body. The error, the introduction of death into the human form, was not what God designed us to be. Adam and Eve knew this, too, but chose to defy God anyway.
As I tell my son, we can all make mistakes. But some mistakes have a greater consequence and can only be resolved with difficulty, if at all. As with Adam, God may forgive him, but the effects of his mistake became a part of us.
But God provided us a way to atone for Adam’s sin, and that’s the more important thing. God provided an atoning sacrifice as penalty for Adam’s act. But since there is nothing material we could sacrifice to God, not even sacrificing an ordinary man, God provided a sacrifice with both qualities of infinite worth and humanity: His Son, the Second Person.
Christ’s death caused a positive contradiction. You can kill a man, but if the man is God, you cannot die. Further, that sacrifice infused a new way for man to return to God through the power of grace. We cannot change what Adam made of us, here on Earth, but the actions and faith in our lives today may grant us the purity of body and spirit that God had offered Adam and Eve to start–a purity they rejected, but one that, in Christ, is offered again.
Aelred MinorOriginal sin and its effects do not deprive us of anything we had a right to in the first place.
I read the following analogy somewhere. Imagine your great-grandfather owned the entire State of California, but lost it in a bet. It’s not your fault you didn’t inherit it, it’s his fault. But you still have no right to it.
Well, I personally don’t think that we should look at original sin this way (especially because I’m confused in how to answer“Original sin”
Is it just, that all should suffer the consequence of another’s choice?
Robert SockIn certain Jewish circles there is the belief that the Fall is really a blessing in disguise, and that our end-state will be greater than what it would have been if Adam and Eve did not sin.
Swiss GuyWell, I personally don’t think that we should look at original sin this way (especially because I’m confused in how to answer). If you were in the same situation as Adam and Eve, what makes you think you would do any different? Either way, we’ve all sinned (minus Jesus and Mary), so we all deserve hell. Help?
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I would say that the case that man must die in neither righteous nor unrighteous. It is simply the logical, and foretold, consequence of the unrighteous act of disobedience.Spencerian
Thanks for the excellent response.
No dispute in what I believe your point is, but look at it from a none believer’s possible view.
Did anyone choose to be born into the world? Yes many have chosen to remain in the world for as lone as they can, but no one chooses to be born into the world, which is truly the choice of another.
And we know that God is Just, and Righteous. Then what is the righteousness in the case of Adam and Eve, that man, and sons of man should die, do to their choices?
You are very welcomeSwiss Guy
thanks for the reply
Which gets you into the predestination controversy that I am struggling with now!You might consider that it is a matter of choice. In the Garden what did they choose (Adam and Eve) what did God Choose which is from the beginning? Meaning already Chosen by the Father, who is in Heaven, before there ever was anything.
I’d have to agree that this is an excellent point James, if you dead already then what’s the point of original sin? Or even the concern for it?I do not see how the view Joe expresses can be possible:
‘In light of Adam and Eve’s unique place as the first parents of the entire human family, their sin has changed the human nature we are all born with’
What happened to us, and how was human nature altered by human action? I think we have the same propensity to sin that they did, nothing that is necessarily worse.
And if our actions affect future human nature (challenges what human nature is), can we just as much improve human nature by our own actions? To refer to the loss of inheritance analogy, we might just as well work, earn, invest, etc!
DavidI would say that the case that man must die in neither righteous nor unrighteous. It is simply the logical, and foretold, consequence of the unrighteous act of disobedience.
No, but is that doesn’t prevent it from being the reality.David
thanks for the reply
Your matter of fact statement, is certainly legit, but is it just for all the sons and daughters of man to suffer the same consequence?