LOL, you're so twisted up. Yes, the effect of Adams sin is that death of our organic body happens to all. The condemnation upon sin is placed only upon those for whom Christ's atonement is not given. For those whom Christ died to save, the elect, the wrath of God fell upon Christ.That hypocrite, John Owen, also wrote, in his A Display Of Arminianism, that
John Owen suffered death temporal, with at least some of its antecedents and attendants. That's why he's been buried in a grave, in England, for over 300 years.
In your quote, Owen, who, of course, considered himself to be elect, said
Yet, in my quote, he affirms, in addition to that, that temporal death is a punishment of original sin. So, according to Owen, even though Christ already suffered for the elects' original sin, the elect, themselves also must suffer for their original sin, thereby making Christ's suffering for the elects' original sin of none effect. What rank Calvinist hypocrisy!
Maybe that sort of performance is why Owen was called a "nonconformist"; his affirmations out of the one side of his mouth did not conform to his affirmations out of the other side of his mouth.
Thanks for the Owen quote. I may have seen it before, but if I did, I had forgotten about it. But, now I'll keep that one handy to always be paired with the one I already knew about, and have just now quoted. They work against each other magnificently!
Clearly this biblical truth makes you gnash your teeth in hatred. Your hate does not concern me.