by jimwalton » Mon Oct 08, 2018 11:58 am
> I've already responded to this point in an earlier comment.
As far as I can tell, this was your response: "But isn't God seeking to provide spiritual salvation to human sinners, despite the fact that everyone supposedly deserves Hell? Why would God try to redeem human sinners who otherwise deserve Hell while simultaneously calling for capital punishment against murderers? Why give murderers the punishment they deserve on Earth, but not give all human sinners the punishment they deserve after death? Why apply the principle of retributive justice to the earthly realm but not the spiritual realm?"
This is a response of asking rhetorical questions, not of any rebuttal to the point I was making. You want to know why I believe in punishing the perpetrator despite that it might not be a deterrent to the next guy. My response is because it is just to punish the guilty for crimes done. I don't feel as if your questions address the point, but rather inquire about theological extensions of my reason.
> The keyword being "hopefully". Since you lack statistical evidence to demonstrate how capital punishment would deter such people more than life imprisonment, do you have any anecdotal evidence?
I already responded to this in an earlier comment. I said, "but we know that it does [deter]. We see it every time there are riots and looting in the cities. When looters think they can get away with it without facing punishment, they steal from local stores, not as part of their protest but simply to get away with crime. I can also speak for myself (and I presume for others) that the prospect of getting a ticket keeps me driving a reasonable speed—and drivers routinely slow down when they see a cop. The fear of prosecution is a great deterrent to people stealing, cheating, and murder. We all know that fear is a powerful motivator. It's very possible that hardcore criminals are not deterred by the prospect, but intuition and reason tells us all that we know fear of punishment is what restrains our corrupt behavior."
> So we're being rewarded for the merits and works of someone else? To me, that is a very bizarre concept I've never seen applied elsewhere.
In the Bible, salvation is a free gift, bought and paid for by Jesus. We don't and cannot earn it or deserve it, but can only accept the gift. Those who refuse to accept the gift are left remaining in their natural state, that of separation from God. Therefore attaining heaven is being rewarded for the merits and works of Jesus, but the degrees of reward in heaven are based on our works and merits. How much and what type of reward we receive, beyond access to heaven itself, is based on our own record.
As far as being a bizarre concept, in the Bible substitutionary positions and actions are very common, and were common in all cultures in the ancient world. Sacrifices (blood, grain, incense, scapegoat) were all accepted by many cultures to effect substitutionary ends.
> Aren't you basically conceding that not all human sinners will receive their due punishment because Jesus intervenes to save them? In that case, why did you say all human sinners will receive the punishment they deserve after death?
When judgment is pronounced on saved sinners, Jesus will bear the due punishment for them. When judgment is pronounced on unsaved sinners, they will bear the due punishment themselves.
> First, if Jesus is God, then God sacrificed Himself to Himself to appease Himself in order to save mankind from Himself.
Close, but only close. First, there are more nuances to the Trinity than you are allowing. The Father sacrificed the Son, who volunteered for the task. There are different principles of action in the Trinity despite being a unified essence. Second, appeasing God's wrath is only one aspect of what atonement accomplished, so this sentence as you wrote it is reductionistic, almost straw-manish. Third, He wasn't saving humankind from Himself as much as He was saving humankind from the results of man's own behavior. We brought the wrath of God upon ourselves; God didn't initiate it.
> Moreover, what penalty is Jesus saving us from?
By our sin we brought the punishment of spiritual death upon ourselves. The penalty Jesus is saving us from is the penalty of spiritual separation that we began.
> In that case, shouldn't Jesus still be in Hell today?
There is a strong belief that Jesus went to hell and broke the locks, so to speak, so that no one had to stay there except by their own choice. He took out any who would come to him, and hell has no hold on any who choose him now.
> Plus, why is belief necessary when Jesus paid off our debt for us?
If you have a debt, and someone offers to pay it for you, it doesn't get paid unless you accept the offer. If you tell the benefactor to get lost, the debt is still on your shoulders.