J
joe370
Guest
All Catholics and non-Catholics are familiar with the following:
Jesus, by carrying our sins and suffering for our transgressions, freed the world from spiritual imprisonment thereby achieving eternal salvation for all who pick up their cross and follow Him. He cancelled the debt, repaired our broken relationship and restored our status with the Father by dying on the cross, making us heirs of God and co-heirs with Him. Jesus’ death on the cross took away the punishment which would have been total and eternal separation from God, in hell, if not for His atoning work on the cross.
With the new covenant in place, heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ, can now have their sins forgiven and follow Jesus into eternity, which means that even if a person was a murderer or a serial killer, for example, his entire life, but eventually comes to accept Jesus as his savior just before his demise, then all of his sins are forgiven and heaven awaits him, since “He himself bore our sins…by his wounds you have been healed.”
Something I pondered as a former non-Catholic. Your thoughts:
Does it seem reasonable and scriptural to non-Catholics (because it didn’t to me as a former non-Catholic) - that God would rescind divine justice regarding** the consequences **of the murderer/serial killer’s sins that Jesus bore and forgave once he accepted Jesus (and was baptized for most non-Catholics) - as his one and only savior?
Did Jesus also bear, and wipe away the consequences of the hypothetical man’s forgiven sins at the same time he forgave his sins? In other words, we are accountable for absolutely nothing regarding the consequences of our forgiven sins?
Jesus, by carrying our sins and suffering for our transgressions, freed the world from spiritual imprisonment thereby achieving eternal salvation for all who pick up their cross and follow Him. He cancelled the debt, repaired our broken relationship and restored our status with the Father by dying on the cross, making us heirs of God and co-heirs with Him. Jesus’ death on the cross took away the punishment which would have been total and eternal separation from God, in hell, if not for His atoning work on the cross.
With the new covenant in place, heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ, can now have their sins forgiven and follow Jesus into eternity, which means that even if a person was a murderer or a serial killer, for example, his entire life, but eventually comes to accept Jesus as his savior just before his demise, then all of his sins are forgiven and heaven awaits him, since “He himself bore our sins…by his wounds you have been healed.”
Something I pondered as a former non-Catholic. Your thoughts:
Does it seem reasonable and scriptural to non-Catholics (because it didn’t to me as a former non-Catholic) - that God would rescind divine justice regarding** the consequences **of the murderer/serial killer’s sins that Jesus bore and forgave once he accepted Jesus (and was baptized for most non-Catholics) - as his one and only savior?
Did Jesus also bear, and wipe away the consequences of the hypothetical man’s forgiven sins at the same time he forgave his sins? In other words, we are accountable for absolutely nothing regarding the consequences of our forgiven sins?