A'ight ttoews . . .
ttoews wrote:I note the NIV also provides for "be a sin offering on our behalf". In any event, I would not interpret "to be sin" literally. The Son is God and as God must always be holy. If the verse is taken literally, it means God became sin, or in other words, became the thing opposite of holy. If somebody paid a traffic ticket on my behalf, that person would have bore my penalty but would not have become guilty in the process.
I both agree and disagree . . . first, I think the equation of Jesus with sin (that's the correct interpretation so far as the grammar goes) is meant to emphasize a point. Jesus Himself wasn't sin. It is to say that God took all the sin and placed in on Him so that, when God looked at Jesus, what He
saw way sin. That's the important aspect. It, for me, is the basic truth that explains the entire doctrine of justification! Gal. 3:13 probably puts it a little better.
That enough is really enough to validate the idea of spiritual separation between Jesus and God. God can't look on sin, and when God saw Jesus, He saw sin (Jesus was made sin; He was made a curse. How else would you interpret these?)
My question would have to do with the holiness of Christ. Yes, He Himself was without sin. It is why that He could be resurrected. I'd say that while He was
under sin, He was still Holy, for He Himself was sinless. He simply took the price of sin onto Himself. We know that because Christ was our propitiation (Rom. 3:25). Literally, God poured out His wrath on Jesus instead of on us, but God pours out His wrath on sin. He could do that because Christ became sin--He became the curse. In the same way that we are not righteous, but rather God chooses to view us as righteous, Jesus was not unholy, but chose to view Him for a time as such.
ttoews wrote:I've heard some say that death means separation, but I don't agree. Death was common for those of the biblical ages and as such death was a thing commonly observed and spoken of. I would suggest "death" to them meant the same as "death" means to us. When they spoke of a dead tree, it wasn't contemplated that the tree was separated from life or from God,... it just meant the tree was dead (a simple idea really versus some complex concept of separation). Same for a dead lamb or dead man.
Don't get me wrong--yes, death is just that. It
is death. But, what IS death? It is the state of not being alive, right? And are we not dead in the spirit prior to being saved? What is life? That is a bit harder to define, but, in the Hebrew sense, it had to do with the breath of God. Adam came to life when God breathed into him. In fact, the word for "life" in Hebrew can also be translated "wind" or "breath."
So God is the source of life. Of that much, we can be sure. We can be equally sure that the Jews thought the same way. We can be especially sure that the early Christians thought that way, and that included the concept that "true death" was separation from God. In Revelations 20, we are told that those who are cast into the lake of fire experience "the second death." Clearly, that is in the concept of the spiritual separation from God. I don't believe in annialation in Hell. I believe it will be just that--everlasting punishment.
So, again, I think the idea of death=separation is the most fundamental view, and it's the one that is more appropriate to apply to Jesus on the cross (more on that below, though).
ttoews wrote:this I think is the core of the matter. Did the Father and Son have a break of sorts in their "interconnectedness" at a point on the cross?
I think they had to have. How could Jesus have become the curse, or become sin . . . how could God have poured His wrath on Him if not? And how else would you interpret Jesus' asking why God had forsaken Him?
ttoews wrote:see here you are straying from a literal interpretation...the Son doesn't actually become sin, but the Father chooses to consider Him to be sin
I was a bit unclear previously. Here, you phrase my position correctly, as I have argued above. All this is about God's perception. The comparison we can make is to our own righteousness in Christ. We are not righteous, but we are
perceived to be righteous. God chooses to view us as such even though we are not. He can do that and satisfy His sense of justice because He has already paid the price in full. In the same way, God chose to view His Son as sin, even though He was not. In that regard, Jesus really
was sin, just like we really
are righteous!
ttoews wrote:Yes, Jesus calls out from the cross in a manner that would be suggestive of a "separation" or rejection by the Father, calls out a second time and dies. Matthew 27:45-50 the second call from the cross is recorded here Luke 23:46 and if the first call is suggestive of rejection this call is suggestive of a reconciliation already having occurred. Therefore, the "separation" you suggest would not have occurred at Jesus' death but moments before the death and with reconciliation occurring before death arrived.
I can see how you could come to that conclusion, but I'll tell you why I don't agree. Separation must be followed by unification, but how can that happen? How, in your opinion, did the unification happen without the physical death of Christ? To argue that He "spiritually died" and was "spiritually brought back to life" all before physical death puts even more emphasis than I do on the aspect of spiritual separation. It does seem to be an awkward position. It seems better to me that Christ was reunited with God spiritually at the resurrection. He died spiritually, died physically, and rose both physically and spiritually. If not, then you are saying that Jesus died in a righteous state, but if so, what happened to the sin? And what is the need for physical death? Why didn't He just come off the Cross right there? Or why the cross at all? Why didn't God just lay all the sin of the world on Him in the Garden of Gethsemene and then consider it all paid for? Remember, the wages of sin is death, and while ultimately this refers to spiritual death, I think that physical death is involved as well because you can't allow someone to live forever who has sinned. That would mean that God, who is the source of life, is forever sustaining a sinful being, which is unjust. Hence, the idea of a "second death" in the Lake of Fire.
So, it seems to me that the physical death of Jesus was necessary before His spiritual reunion could take place. Don't take this next part too literally--this is just an illustration. It has helped me to think of it in these terms: Jesus died embracing the curse of sin. In death, He took sin into Sheol, and then He rose again, but He left it there, effectively confining it forever.
ttoews wrote:Moreover, when Jesus inaugurates the Lord's Supper, He speaks of His body which was broken and His blood which was poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins. Matt 26:28 Paul, in the first known creed here 1 Cor 15: 3-5 declares that Jesus died for our sins was buried and rose again. To my recollection scripture makes no mention of the significance of the cross being a separation from the Father (or a spiritual death if you will). The scripture (again from the above references and what else I recall) places the emphasis of importance entirely on the physicality of the death (of the perfect Passover Lamb) and the resurrection (and from Luke 23:46 the alleged separation would be a thing of the past at the time of Christ's physical death...and that God could suffer a spiritual death would seem to be inconsistent with His nature.)
Well, I hope I've shown that the physical death is definitely necessary. In fact, I can use that as primary support for the necessity of physical death before spiritual resurrection. Secondly, Jesus doesn't have to emphasize separation here. That is explained elsewhere. It is interesting to note that nowhere in the entire Bible is a doctrine laid out in full. Even justification, which is the entire theme of Romans, isn't completely explained there! We still have to have other texts to finish out the concept.
Thirdly, the physical death of Jesus was necessary because our physical death is necessary. In order for us to be raised, Jesus had to be raised (see 1 Cor. 15). It helps to remember that the entire concept of the cross was for us . . . He went through what He did so that we wouldn't have to, so if we have to go through something, He did it instead. We have to die, so He did. We have to be separated from God, so He was, etc. Therefore, it is the spiritual death of Jesus that is the ultimate propitiation of sin, but you may say that it is the physical resurrection of Jesus that is the ultimate expiation of our sin. Physical resurrection, though, requires physical death, and as I outlined earlier, I don't think that Jesus could serve as a propitiation if He was not dead under sin. In other words, He had to die
in that state.
Oh, and just for fun (it's not much of an argument--it can be used for either side), do you think Jesus more represented the Passover Lamb or the Scapegoat? Check out the system God set in place at the Day of Atonement. It is interesting that the goat doesn't die. It is simply separated from the community where God deals with it.
So, all in all, it seems to me that spiritual separation is the ultimate meaning behind the Cross, and this necessitated a physical death, which enabled a physical resurrection to everlasting glory, first in Jesus, then in us.
God bless