Funkyderek, Jesus died on the cross for the sins of all including those in the future. Yours included.
How does somebody's death save us from "sin"? I don't see the connection.
Sin is a wrong against God.
But
nobody but Jesus has ever been born without sin.
So when I was born I had already wronged god? My very existence, over which I had no control, was a wrong against god, for which I will be punished unless I believe that 2000 years ago, someone died to save me from the wrong against god which I would commit simply by being born?
It seperates us from him and without the reconcilation of Jesus, we would never bridge that gap. That is why Jesus is our Savior.
Nope, still don't get it. Surely if god simply gave up his policy of punishing the innocent, there would have been no need to kill someone to make it all better?
Sins come in all shape and sizes, some serious and some not so serious, but ever since the fall of man, we have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.
But I thought simply being born is a sin?
You can choose not to believe it and that is your free will.
I don't choose what to believe. To do so would be the worst kind of dishonesty. I believe what the available evidence compels me to believe.
But it is a gift that has already been made available to you.
Some gift! Let me get this straight. Just be being born, I've already committed a "wrong against god". To be "saved" from the punishment (by God) that goes with that "wrong", I must believe - without evidence - that this god had his son executed, and that this execution saves me from the "sin" I was born with. Or am I missing something?
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"Theology is never any help; it is searching in a dark cellar at midnight for a black cat that isn't there. Theologians can persuade themselves of anything." -Robert A. Heinlein