I am surprised. I find echoes of Joseph Smith in your post. Smith taught that a man caught in adultery and shot to death by the woman's husband would have, by his own blood, paid for his sin.
Well, I am not echoing anyone that I know of. I am asking whether we are saying what scripture says, or whether we are saying
what we have been told that the scripture teaches.
I wonder about the last sentence. I am not saying you are wrong, but I wonder if the scriptures support this notion. Romans 6:7 says (in the Greek), "He who has died has been justified from sin."
Are you saying this is not referring to our "death" to our old life and to our status in Christ? I see nothing problematic in the verse.
I believe that, in the whole context, Paul is discussing our death with Christ and its effect of justifying us. However, the particular force of the word "for" at the beginning of verse 7 appears, to my mind, to be referencing natural death as an analogy to illustrate the effect that death (including having died with Christ) has upon the sinner's status.
And how can Jesus' payment of a penalty on our behalf remove the stain of guilt, if the payment of a penalty does not have this affect?
Surely it is because of the efficacy of the one sacrificed for our sins, the sinless Lamb of God. The only sacrifice, or punishment, that can suffice. Do you not believe in imputed righteousness?
I am not doubting that Christ's death is uniquely efficacious, unlike that which any other man could offer. I am raising the point that, if we believe that Christ's payment of our penalty eliminates our guilt, then we must be affirming that the payment of a penalty can eliminate guilt. If we do not think that the payment of the penalty actually settles the score, then how does His payment of the penalty do so? And if payment does not have this effect, then what is the point of punishing sinners at all? Is its purpose the settling of a score, or mere vindictiveness? If it is the balancing of the books, then my question is, how much does it take for a sinner to suffer to balance those books? These are questions for which I, at this point in time, see no obvious answers. And I do believe in imputed righteousness.
This may be true, but do we know this to be the case? I mean, a stronger biblical case could be made affirming that a person pays the penalty for his sins when he dies (Rom.6:23). If there is additional punishment after death.........?
I am stunned at this statement. It causes me to think you must have read Hosea Ballou and now consider the "no-hell" position to be a viable option.
I have not read Ballou's book. I am musing from the scriptures merely. I am not suggesting answers, only questions.
I think your affirmation, above, sound a lot like what I would dutifully have said myself, due to my evangelical upbringing, until I began to require of myself biblical support for my opinions.
And this is what has puzzled me the most about your position. You say you require biblical support for your position and yet, unless you have made a recent change, you have become agnostic regarding the fate of the lost. You have maintained in discussion with me that "the Holy Spirit will guide you into all truth", spoken to the Apostles, applies to us today as it did to those Jesus spoke to. How is it the more books you read the less certain you become?
I do, in fact, believe that it is the Spirit who leads us into all truth. This is not done, however, apart from the Bible (it is the Holy Spirit's book, after all), nor do I consider that He leads apart from our thinking and reasoning faculties. These latter are best used when we consider every reasonable possibility before deciding that we know something for sure.
I am not of the opinion that the Spirit will lead us into a certainty of knowledge on every subject, including those which are unnecessary for us to know. The fate of the lost is certainly unnecessary for us to know, which is why I regularly say that I do not expect ever to reach a conclusion about it. If ever I do reach such a conclusion, it will have to be that the scriptures will have become more crystal clear to me on this subject than they currently are.
I suggest you have "overstudied" something that is rather plain in the scriptures; that is, that there is no post death "second" chance (or rather, unlimited opportunity to be saved).
If you think that the proposition that "there is no post death 'second' chance" is "rather plain in the scriptures," then perhaps you have some passages in mind that I have not considered. I personally have not found the Bible to say anything very plainly about the state of man after death.
P.S. - recently you argued that the Catholics were wrong to take John 20:23 as applicable to them today because it was not spoken to us which would seem to contradict your application of John 16:13.
Some things in the upper room discourse are indeed addressed only to the apostles with regard to their apostolic mission and privilege (e.g., John 15:27), while other statements seem to be for the entire Church (e.g. John 13:34-35). I readily admit to finding some difficulty, with some of the statements, in deciding whether they apply to all Christians, or only to the apostles. This includes John 20:23. Depending upon what it actually is promising, it might be applicable to all Christians, or only to the apostles. No one has every heard me commit myself to one or the other view on this verse.