G
Gmsod
Guest
Why didn’t he say it before he died and before the resurrection? What was “it” referring to? Thanks
GOD bless!
GOD bless!
I think the issue is you are reading this passage in a literalistic manner.am simply having trouble seeing why he said it beforehand?
That’s a huge question!Why didn’t he say it before he died and before the resurrection? What was “it” referring to? Thanks
I’m confused Romans 4:25 He was delivered over to death for our sins and was raised to life for our justification.That’s a huge question!
I’ve heard Protestant preachers teaching that “τετέλεσται” was the inscription that Greek-speaking bankers used, to indicate that a debt had been paid off. I’ve never seen anyone substantiate that claim, so I can’t really speak to whether it’s true or not.
Nevertheless, that claim fits well with the Protestant theology of “forensic justification” and “penal substitution”. This theology claims that God the Father is less a loving father and more a precise accountant. It says that God punished Jesus (who was innocent of sin) and did not punish us (who are guilty of sin). It says that God extracted the very last iota of debt from the sufferings of Jesus, and then God – as a precise accountant – said, “yep, all done; you’ve paid the debt in full… humanity is now off the hook.”)
As Dr David Anders often says on the EWTN program “Called to Communion”, that makes God a horrible tyrant: he punishes the innocent and acquits the guilty. Penal substitution is not what the Catholic Church teaches!
And so, the Catholic Church would reject the claim that the τετέλεσται of Christ means “paid in full.” (Heck… even if that’s the way Greek accountants used to use the word, it doesn’t mean that this is what Christ was saying on the cross!)
As a ‘substitute’, yes. (Satisfaction theory is a theory of substitutionary atonement.) But, it’s not ‘penal substitution’.These all say Jesus died for our sins as a substitute.
Not quite the same, because Jesus offered himself. The lamb didn’t jump into the arms of Aaron exclaiming, “choose me! let me die for the sins of the people!”Same as the OT sacrifices of the lamb without spot or blemish being offered to cover the sins of the people IE Passover.
No, because the animal was property, belonging to the people. It was a means of giving up something they had ‘earned’, by the sweat of their brow, and by God’s providence, and therefore, it was something they were giving back to God. If they had been sacrificing people, on the other hand, it would’ve been a different story!Was God unjust to require the death of an innocent animal to cover the sins of the people?
Jesus multi-tasked. Pointers from Brant Pitre’s Jesus and the Jewish Roots of the Eucharist, Jesus:Very true Jesus offered Himself for sacrifice in accordance with the Father’s will and a lamb cannot consent to that. None the less Jesus is identified in scripture as the Passover Lamb and possessing the qualities of a lamb. He is the Lamb without spot or blemish.
Ownership of the lamb is not the question but requiring that an innocent life is taken and its blood must be shed because without the shedding of blood there is no remission for sins. Jesus paid the price which is penal in nature. Otherwise why would blood have to be shed and the life taken?
I would be interested in any scripture references to support your position.