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Is "Original Sin" Biblical?
God considered Adam's sin a very serious matter. Adam, whose
name means "man" in Hebrew, stands as the head of the
human race as Jesus Christ stands as the head of the redeemed race
(1Cor. 15:22). When Adam sinned in the garden, he made sinners
of all mankind, for all men were now corrupted by one manĚs disobedience.
Paul states clearly five times in Rom. 5:12-19 that Adam brought
death and condemnation on the whole human race and that men were
now constituted as sinners. Understanding Paul's detailed
explanation of the fall in Romans 5 helps us to understand why Paul
wrote earlier in Romans 3 that there was no one righteous, no one
who understands, no one who seeks God, and no one who does good,
not even one (Rom. 3:10-18).
David understood that he came into this world as a sinner (Ps.
51:5), and Jeremiah wrote that the human heart was deceitful above
all things and beyond cure (Jer. 17:9). Even Jesus in the
Sermon on the Mount referred to people as evil (Matt. 7:11).
Jews who knew the law of God realized that people were born in sin
(John 9:34).
The effect of sin is so serious that the Bible uses the strongest
metaphors to describe it, metaphors that teach that sin leaves man
without any moral ability. Paul writes that they were
dead in trespasses and sins and were by nature children
of wrath (Eph. 2:1-3). Sin makes us blind to the truth
of God (John 9:39-40, 2 Cor. 4:3-4). It makes prisoners
and slaves of us (John 8:34). The sinner has no
life in him; he is unconceived spiritually (John 3:3).
We sin because we are sinners, because it is our nature to sin.
In such a state, we cannot come to Christ, because we have no ability
to come (John 6:44, 65). In the state of sin we cannot accept
the things of God nor understand what God says to us (1 Cor. 2:14).
Holy Scripture presents the case of man in his natural state in
the worst possible terms: separated from Christ, excluded from God's
promises, without hope, and without God (Eph. 2:12).
Sin is indeed serious with a holy God! Original sin is an
unpleasant reality! Humanism has always asserted that man
is fundamentally good and perfectible; God's word has consistently
taught that he is fallen, wicked, prone to evil, and lacking moral
ability (Gen. 8:21). A study of human history and a careful
look at current events will prove which view of man is true.
It is God and his active grace which enables fallen man
to do good, to understand, to come to Christ, and to be saved.
These are good gifts that bless mankind, and James tells us that
all good gifts come from God, who, in accordance with his will,
brought us to life (Jas. 1:17-18). James is pointing out the
obvious fact that our goodness and our spiritual life have their
source in God's free grace. Yes, man is fallen, but there
is good news for those who put their trust in God's son and our
Savior, Jesus Christ.
For more detailed studies on this topic contact Engedi Ministries.
This subject is addressed in several recorded studies: "The
Doctrines of Grace," "Justification," and "Christ
Our Comfort."
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