Longfellow
Well-Known Member
One of my disagreements with some Christian beliefs is that I don't think that Jesus paid a price that we owe, or took a punishment that we deserve, for our sins. I think that what we owe for our sins is repentance, and that we are forgiven as soon as we repent, or maybe even before. I have a different understanding of Bible verses that are used as reasons for thinking that Jesus paid a price or took a punishment for our sins.
Sacrifice:
In my understanding, what God wants for us when we sin, is to repent. That is not for His satisfaction, it's for our benefit. The sacrifices that He prescribed for Israel were a way for people to put their repentance into action, by giving up something to God. The point was not for the animal to suffer, to pay a price or to be punished in the place of the owner. The point was for the owner to give up something to God, to put their repentance into action, and that for their own benefit and not to satisfy God. God knows if our repentance is real or not, He doesn't need us to do anything to prove it. The sacrifice was for the person and/or the community to know that their repentance was real, and to benefit from it. I'm not sure why, but that was only for the time before Jesus, and Jesus offering Himself as a sacrifice was to make that clear. He was the final sacrifice, the sacrifice to end all sacrifices. Another explanation might be that the ritual sacrifices were preparing Israel for the sacrifice of Jesus.
Scapegoat:
In the scapegoat ritual, the goat was not harmed at all. The goat was not paying for any sins, and was not being punished for any sins. It was carrying the sins away from Israel. The sins were put on its head, and it was driven into the wilderness.
Ransom:
In Israel, a ransom was, and still is, something that the people of Israel give to other people, for them to release some people of Israel that they have captured and enslaved, for them to return to their life in the kingdom. In my understanding, Jesus didn't pay a ransom, He was the ransom, for us to be freed from slavery to the sinful side of our nature. That freedom is not an end in itself, it's for us to be able to enter His kingdom. The people who paid the ransom were his disciples who lost His physical presence with them, and all their hopes for Him to restore the physical kingdom of Israel. The ransom wasn't just symbolic. When His disciples embraced it, it acted in some way for all people to be able to be released from being ruled by the sinful side of our nature.
Sacrifice:
In my understanding, what God wants for us when we sin, is to repent. That is not for His satisfaction, it's for our benefit. The sacrifices that He prescribed for Israel were a way for people to put their repentance into action, by giving up something to God. The point was not for the animal to suffer, to pay a price or to be punished in the place of the owner. The point was for the owner to give up something to God, to put their repentance into action, and that for their own benefit and not to satisfy God. God knows if our repentance is real or not, He doesn't need us to do anything to prove it. The sacrifice was for the person and/or the community to know that their repentance was real, and to benefit from it. I'm not sure why, but that was only for the time before Jesus, and Jesus offering Himself as a sacrifice was to make that clear. He was the final sacrifice, the sacrifice to end all sacrifices. Another explanation might be that the ritual sacrifices were preparing Israel for the sacrifice of Jesus.
Scapegoat:
In the scapegoat ritual, the goat was not harmed at all. The goat was not paying for any sins, and was not being punished for any sins. It was carrying the sins away from Israel. The sins were put on its head, and it was driven into the wilderness.
Ransom:
In Israel, a ransom was, and still is, something that the people of Israel give to other people, for them to release some people of Israel that they have captured and enslaved, for them to return to their life in the kingdom. In my understanding, Jesus didn't pay a ransom, He was the ransom, for us to be freed from slavery to the sinful side of our nature. That freedom is not an end in itself, it's for us to be able to enter His kingdom. The people who paid the ransom were his disciples who lost His physical presence with them, and all their hopes for Him to restore the physical kingdom of Israel. The ransom wasn't just symbolic. When His disciples embraced it, it acted in some way for all people to be able to be released from being ruled by the sinful side of our nature.