musterion
Well-known member
His perfect life alone would only have accomplished his own salvation.
What?
The law had a claim on everyone else, and this is where atonement is made on our behalf.
By his DEATH and RESURRECTION, not by His life.
His perfect life alone would only have accomplished his own salvation.
The law had a claim on everyone else, and this is where atonement is made on our behalf.
What?
By his DEATH and RESURRECTION, not by His life.
You realize that they asked Jesus about the law, right?
They didn't ask Him if He had any special knowledge of the woman'a guilt.
They asked Him concerning the law.
To condemn someone outside the instructions of the law would make one a lawbreaker.
The instructions on how to conduct an inquiry of adultery was specified in the law.
Did they violate the law? Yes.
Did Jesus violate the law? No.
Mad finds itself in the trash by applying simple logic
What?
By his DEATH and RESURRECTION, not by His life.
He was born under the law, and identified himself as a man. That means that the law had a claim on him a soon as he was circumcised.
He came through perfectly unscathed, and he took this perfect body, and offered it to God on the alter us.
That's where our atonement is accomplished.
At the cross.Jesus was the one who fulfilled the law or our behalf.
He took all of the condemnation everyone deserved on himself.
Obviously He could not abide by their not following the law as instructed on how to conduct an accusation of adultery.And so obviously he couldn't stand by the law and uphold it's condemnation towards those who violated the law,
Jesus said He did not condemn her.and forgive them at the same time. If he forgave,
Show in scripture where it says that Jesus forgave her of her sins.You won't be able to do it. So it would better for you to exit the thread to save face.
There's no sign in the account that the woman was repentant of her sin, or that she even realized Who Christ is, any more than it says He pronounced her forgiven as an extension of grace vs not breaking jot or tittle of His Law.
Too much reading into the incident that which the Text does not say. Just like the Pharisees did.
At the cross.
At the time of the adulterous woman, the cross had not taken place yet.
Not to mention that Jesus Christ says that not one jot or title will pass from the law until heaven and earth pass. (Matt 5:18)
Obviously He could not abide by their not following the law as instructed on how to conduct an accusation of adultery.
Again, they were not asking Him about His personal opinion; they asked concerning what the law said (ie. OT Mosaic law).
Jesus said He did not condemn her.
He says nothing about "forgiving" her.
Jesus could not have condemned her based on the way the inquiry was handled (it was not per the law).
You keep adding the word "forgive" when the scripture does not say that.
Show in scripture where it says that Jesus forgave her of her sins.
Why do you use words that scripture does not?
the whole point is forgiveness
The adulterous woman got off because there were no witnesses. Jewish Law was a lot like what Islam's is now- if there is no witness, then there is no prosecution. The Pharisees were overstepping their bounds.
Not in this incident.
Which made it unlawful to begin with.It was not an official trial,
Apparently to you, details are of no importance, so you feel free to change the details of the story.and so the details are irrelevant.
A trap that Jesus could easily avoid because they were not conducting the inquiry according to the law.It was nothing but a trap, pure and simple.
Nothing in the story of the woman being a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ.Condemnation of the law can only be forgiven if people believe in Jesus.
The question to Jesus was not whether anyone believed in Him or not. The question was concerning what the law said about handling accusations of adultery. The law being the Mosaic law of the old covenant. Not the law of the new covenant. Jesus hasn't even mentioned the new covenant yet at the time of the adulterous woman.The accusers didn't believe in Jesus, and so the woman remained under condemnation from their perspective. Understand?
If you remove Jesus out of the equation, your left with condemnation. In a moment of wisdom, Jesus removed the condemnation towards the woman working through the accusers, then he forgave her, because he took her condemnation on himself.
GRACE in other words!
Make sure you put MALE witness there on Islam.
So go for it; split the hairs between them.
Is forgiving all that different from not condemning?
At the cross.
At the time of the adulterous woman, the cross had not taken place yet.
Not to mention that Jesus Christ says that not one jot or title will pass from the law until heaven and earth pass. (Matt 5:18)
Obviously He could not abide by their not following the law as instructed on how to conduct an accusation of adultery.
Again, they were not asking Him about His personal opinion; they asked concerning what the law said (ie. OT Mosaic law).
Jesus said He did not condemn her.
He says nothing about "forgiving" her.
Jesus could not have condemned her based on the way the inquiry was handled (it was not per the law).
You keep adding the word "forgive" when the scripture does not say that.
Show in scripture where it says that Jesus forgave her of her sins.
Why do you use words that scripture does not?