Sentences with phrase «became sin»

I said that «Just as Jesus became sin for us, God became sin for Israel.»
The Bible says that «He BECAME sin, Who knew no sin.»
2 Corinthians 5:21 says He became sin for us!
An example would be drinking alcohol which for some Christians became a sin because of its association with drunkenness and dissipation.
Christ, who was righteous, became sin for us, so that all who believe in Him, might gain His righteousness as a free gift.
Love, because of what Jesus did, but horror, because of what Jesus became: He became sin.
He became sin that we might become the righteousness of God in Him. . .
Just as Jesus became sin for us (2 Cor 5:21), so God became sin for Israel.
God inspired the Old Testament authors to write about Him in a violent way so that He could do the same thing for Israel that Jesus did on the cross: Just as Jesus became sin for us, God became sin for Israel.
If it is on the cross that Jesus most fully reveals God, and it is on the cross that Jesus became sin for the world, then this means that God also was becoming sin for the world.
So God took the blame, took the fall, and became sin for us, so that we might be His righteousness in the world.
The righteous God became sin for us (2 Cor 5:21).
«He became Sin for us» more at this link on «unBeautiful Jesus» http://www.globalmensgroup.com/Bible-verses-about-Jesus-in-the-Old-Testament/.
He cried out «Why hast thou forsaken me» because in that moment he took on the sin, sickness, pain, and death upon himself and became that sin dying upon the cross.
When Jesus said,» Why have you forsaken me» he said this because God the Father turned His back on Him, not because of how bad he had been beaten, because the scriptures made it clear that «it pleased the Father to crush Him», but because God hates sin and can't stand to look at it and because Jesus took on the sins of the entire world he became sin and when God the Father looked at Him he saw sin.
Would you say He was experiencing hell when He became sin for us?
Just as Jesus became sin for us, God became sin for Israel, and in this way, hopefully, stops the cycle of violence from continuing.
Christ became sin so that we could become the righteousness of God.
If it is on the cross that Jesus most fully reveals God, and it is on the cross that Jesus became sin for the world, then this means that in the Old Testament, God also was becoming sin for the world.
On the cross, when Jesus became sin for us, He experienced this when He said, «My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?».
For Kierkegaard there is no «solution» to this paradox, other than the greater paradox of the God - man, who, without ever making the leap into sin, became sin for us, i.e., accepted his human solidarity with us, so that in him we might be reconciled with God through the Atonement.
The sinless one became sin, crying out from the cross, «My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?»
Just as Jesus became the sin - bearer for the world, maybe we could say that God made Himself the sin bearer for Israel.
In previous posts I have suggested that Jesus became sin for us (2 Cor 5:21), and since Jesus reveals the Father to us, it seems to follow that maybe this is what God was doing in the Old Testament in the violent sections.
Jesus became that curse, became sin, redeemed us so that we would be loosed from the law.
First, when Jesus «became sin» and died upon the cross, I tend to get the visual of Jesus acting as a spiritual sponge....
Though he was without sin, he knew firsthand the consequences of sin, since he became sin for us (2 Cor.
This is what St. Paul means when he says that «in Christ God became sin» (2Cor 5:21).
Jesus became sin on the behalf of His people and payed for their sins.
Jesus became sin.
God became a sin bearer for Israel, just like Jesus is the sin - bearer for the world.
The Lord Jesus Christ fulfilled the Law on our behalf, died on the Holy Cross for the remission of our sins (became sin and curse for us) descended to hell and defeated death (keys of which were held by Satan,) rose from the dead on the third day bringing us eternal life and reconciliation with God the Father, then ascended to Heaven promising us the Holy Spirit and preparing the place for us.
Jesus became sin for us, he took our sin upon himself, and suffered hell upon the cross.
His father turned his back on him, I believe from the moment Judas kissed him, the same moment I believe he became our sin for us.
I contend the use of modern birth control has only become a sin, because the Catholic Church has said it is.
He knew the guilt of becoming sin.
He was circumcised so that He might become sin for us (Gal 5:1 - 5).
I am not fully sure what it means for Christ to become sin for us either, and I would be a little nervous about any scholar that was sure.
(to be completely honest I struggle with understanding Christ becoming sin, altogether)
Jesus did not become our sin, he finished our sin.
It think that whatever it means for him to become sin, it only happened on the cross.
In the midst of being willingly engulfed in our sins and the sins of all men of all time, He writhed in anguish not from the lacerations on His back or the thorns that still pierced His head or the nails that held Him to the cross but from the incomparably painful loss of fellowship with His heavenly Father that His becoming sin for us had brought.
Just as Jesus came to destroy the devil's work, to become sin for us, and to reveal God to us through His entire life and ministry and especially on the cross, then this also is what God was doing in the Old Testament.
Jesus came not only to become sin and die in our place for our ultimate redemption and salvation, but to also be an example for how we should live our lives in Christ empowered by the holy spirit.
Before sin becomes sins or acts, it is a state of the self.
I have called on Thee for pardon and forgiveness of my sins, but so coldly and carelessly that my prayers are become my sin, and they stand in need of pardon.»
No, He embraced it to the very end, praying and pleading with God to stay the course, despite how painful it would be for both of them to sever their relationship, and make Jesus become sin for us (2 Cor 5:21).
The principle of non-contradiction alone precludes the possibility of God literally becoming sin.
Was Jesus becoming sin for us, a process that began in the garden and finishing on the cross or just while He was on the cross?
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