Sentences with phrase «took upon himself the sin»

God came down as a man to take upon Himself our sins to make us right with God, the Father.
We can look to Christ who took upon himself our sin and pain.
So the basic christian story of some alleged but never proven god impregnating a virgin with himself so that his son can die and take upon it the sins of all men is not true?
It also allows for a Holy God to maintain His standards as He took upon Himself the sins on mankind.
Who suffered in Gethsemane, taking upon himself your sins and mine, hung and died on a cross only to resurrect three days later.
He gave His life as a sacrifice; taking upon Himself our sins.

Not exact matches

Jesus became sin for us, he took our sin upon himself, and suffered hell upon the cross.
This was a free decision by an adult to give his life and take upon himself the consequence of sin to set you free.
As John the Baptist said upon seeing Jesus: «Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world!»
Christ is special because he was born to take upon his being the sins of those who were and then were also and of times yet to come!
Yet God covers our actions in His own blood, so that every time God looks like a lying, murderous, baby - killing, woman - raping bastard, it is because God has taken the burden of human sin upon His shoulders, and borne it away upon His body into death.
He simply took the sins of the world upon Himself so that He could conquer over sin, death, and the devil by bearing them all into the grave.
It was so that He could defeat sin, death, and devil by taking all the violence upon Himself without retaliating in any way, but forgiving and reconciling instead, thus showing the powerlessness and emptiness of the way of violence.
God answered this vital question by sending His Son, Jesus, as the fulfillment of the most violent religious writings, to show us that He had nothing to do with the violence, but was instead dying along with us in the midst of the violence, taking our sin and suffering upon Himself, bearing our guilt and shame in His own being, all for the sake of those He loved.
According to Anselm, God found a way of escape by allowing Jesus to take upon himself all the sins of the world.
Once sin entered the world through Adam, there was only way to defeat it, and that was for God to take it upon Himself, which He did in Jesus Christ.
As I understand it, Christ both took our punishment (legal requirement) and absorbed the full force of sin upon Himself (Christus Victor).
Jesus took our sin upon Himself so that we might gain His righteousness.
Their sin cut them off irrevocably from God and so God decided to repair the damage done by sending his Son to take that sin upon himself and so restore human beings to righteousness.
When God looks violent in the Old Testament, it is not because He is violent, but because He is taking the sins of the world upon Himself, just as Jesus did on the cross.
When I read you say this as your possible resolution: «When God looks violent in the Old Testament, it is not because He is violent, but because He is taking the sins of the world upon Himself, just as Jesus did on the cross.»
What so you mean by God «is taking the sins of the world upon Himself»?
On the cross, Jesus shows us what kind of God Yahweh is, and how Jesus came to rule and reign, not by might, nor by power, but by self - sacrificial service and taking the sins and guilt and blame of the entire world upon Himself.
Too often we focus upon the depth of our repentance rather than the depth of Gods love in rescuing us all, I read recently that repentance is not as much about saying sorry and turning from sin as it is recognizing what it cost God to save us and that he was the one who took the initiative and not us.
By taking the sin of the entire world upon Himself, Jesus revealed that this is what Yahweh has always been doing throughout time and history.
Jesus took our sin upon himself.
If you are burdened by your sin, and you are distressed about God's judgment coming upon you, take note of this word!
Jesus Christ took your sin upon his self and died the death you deserved.
In the Old Testament, when God looks like He is behaving in ways that do not match the nature and character of God as revealed in Jesus Christ, this is not because God is being deceptive, but because God is taking the sins of His people upon Himself just as Jesus did on the cross.
It is not a lie for God to take the sins of His people upon Himself.
The priest was to lay his hands upon the scapegoat, symbolically passing all of Israel's sins upon the goat, and then the goat was to be sent away into the wilderness, where it (presumably) died, taking all the sins of Israel with it into the grave.
God is not lying to take the sins of Israel upon Himself.
Though innocent of all violence attributed to Him, God allowed the violence committed by others to be laid upon His head so that He might take the blame and thereby rescue and deliver mankind from most of the self - destructive consequences of their sin, and reveal Himself to mankind as a loving Father who takes our sin upon Himself for our deliverance from the consequences of sin and for the sake of our relationship with Him.
It was only when He took our sin upon Himself on the cross, it was only when the crushing despair of being separated from God came upon Him, that He finally felt what we humans have lived with since we were born.
Yet when Jesus went to the cross, He took the sins of all people, throughout all time, upon Himself.
Jesus was not an abomination to God, but the sin of mankind He took upon Himself at the Cross was.
For he was saying «yes» to taking the sins of mankind upon himself.
He took our sins upon Himself and atoned for them.
He took our sin upon Himself and gave us His righteousness.
The traditional view holds that Jesus took the sin of humanity upon Himself and thereby paid the price (satisfied the debt) or in your terms «purchased the forgiveness of sins
I sometimes hear it said that a generation must sacrifice itself, «take the sin upon itself,» so that coming generations may be free to live righteously.
The scripture of old claimed that a man would come to suffer and die and take the sins of the world upon himself he would be bruised beaten and crucified and then He would come a second time as a conquering messiah.
Not only so, he sometimes took upon himself to assure these people that their sins were forgiven, and that seemed unpardonable presumption, if not something worse.
And in the next place, describing what properly is defiance, it teaches that a man does wrong although he understands what is right, or forbears to do right although he understands what is right; in short, the Christian doctrine of sin is pure impertinence against man, accusation upon accusation; it is the charge which the Deity as prosecutor takes the liberty of lodging against man.
He died a criminal's death because He went there willingly, as a sacrifice for the sins of the whole world, to take our sins upon Himself and bear them into death.
But the only reason people looked upon Jesus in this way at that time (few look upon Jesus in that way now), is because Jesus had incarnated Himself among men and had taken the sin of the world upon Himself so that He died among the wicked (Isa 53:9), bearing upon Himself the curse of the cross, and even crying out that He had been forsaken by God (Matt 27:46).
This was accomplished because Jesus is God and took all sin upon Himself.
In taking the sins of men upon himself, Jesus, however, had done more than Moses and Elijah.
Wesley frequently preached a sermon on Matthew 18, the passage in which Jesus describes the steps to take upon discovering a brother's sin.
I mean if God did well enough to see fit to install this perfect plan called salvation before the foundation of man, that who so ever believes that Jesus took not only one for the team or mankind but all of the sins of mankind upon Himself, that in this gift provides freedom liberty and justification?
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