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benedictus2
Guest
And where did I say we are blaming our sin on Adam and Eve. You said that Er was killed because God wanted to cut him out of the line from which Jesus will be born.Again, not true. You don’t get to blame your or anyone else’s sins on Adam and Eve.
Well if that was the case, then He should have come from another line considering that the entire human line was compromised at the root.
Wrong. We are not just prone to sin because of Adam and Eve, we are sinful because of Adam and Eve. That is what original sin is all about. At the root of our being we are sinful because we came from sinful parents. End of story.It doesn’t work that way. We are more PRONE to sin based upon Adam and Eve, but each of our specific sins are our responsibility. If they were not, everyone would equally evil/good. We all know that this is not the case.
That is true, but there is NOTHING REMOTELY close to your interpretation in the New Testament. This is just something you made up without any scriptural support.And as I have said over and over again, you must read it with the New Testament in mind, just as when you read the Psalms, their meaning becomes clear in light of Christ’s sacrifice.
It is interesting that you do not cite here the specific Levitical regulation. It seems that you are afraid that if one were to look closely at the rule, it will debunk your argument.Obviously I disagree. It makes perfect sense. Onan would not have been stricken dead for spilling his seed because the consequences or this were simply a ritual washing and being unclean until the next day.
Sorry, but here it is. Lev 15: 16-18
When a man has an emission of seed, he shall bathe his whole body in water and be unclean until evening.
Any piece of cloth or leather with seed on it shall be washed with water and be unclean until evening.
"If a man lies carnally with a woman, they shall both bathe in water and be unclean until evening.
As you can see, the prescription of ritual washing is not specifically to the spilling of seed but for any emission of seed. Even if Onan completed his union with Tamar and had not wasted his seed, He would still have been considered unclean and would have had to do the ritual washing.
So therefore, what Onan did was more than just a case of mere emission but the grave fact that he “ruined” (as the Hebrew Bible put it) his seed on the ground.
Aaah Thoughtfulone, I knew that this time would come – when you would make my case for me.Actually at the time, not even this. This was the original Levirate marriage. The law did not exist then. There was no punishment for such because such did not exist at this time.
Let me go along with your argument – the Levirate marriage was not law then. Correct. We are still in Genesis after all.
**If that is so, then God could not have been punishing Onan for not giving seed to his brother since there was no such law to break then! **
That would be like punishing someone for DUI when DUI was not even a regulation yet!
So if the Levirate marriage was not law, then what could God be punishing Onan for? What directive had he contradicted?
Remember, it is still Genesis. So what explicit commandment could he have possibly broken?
The only commandment that relates to what Onan did was "Go forth and multiply!
Douay-Rheims says this:
[9] He knowing that the children should not be his, when he went in to his brother’s wife, spilled his seed upon the ground, lest children should be born in his brother’s name. [10]And therefore the Lord slew him, because he did a detestable thing.
Nope. As I explained above that no longer holds water.He certainly did. He specifically acted to NOT give Tamar children, a detestable thing indeed, but as we have seen above, neither ejaculating on the ground nor failing to give one’s brother children were worthy of capital punishment. So why then was Onan slain by God?
And besides, Douay-Rheim as you cited here is very clear. He did a detestable thing.
He was punished for the THING that he did. What was the THING that he did before he was slain?
I mean if all God was concerned with was for Onan to make Tamar pregnant, all He had to do was give a specific command to Judah to make sure that Onan complied. Striking him dead just beats the purpose of making sure that Tamar became pregnant don’t you think?