Created Good, Inheritors of Sin
Dec 1st, 2007 by admin
We had a really good discussion last night on a number of subjects regarding Romans 9. One interesting question came up, “Since the Bible teaches total depravity, does this mean that were not only born sinful, but that we were created as sinners?” The answer to this question is a resounding, “No.”
God does not create sinners because God Himself is not sinful (James 1:13). Also, Ecclesiastes 7:29 answers this question directly, “See, this alone I found, that God made man upright, but they have sought out many schemes.” In other words, there is a time, known only by God, where God creates human beings good, and inherited sin from Adam (Romans 5) is then applied to every human being. As to when this actually occurs belongs to the secret things of God (Deut 29:29, hat tip to Chris for this wonderful text).
John Calvin writes on this subject:
It is true that nature has received a mortal wound, but there is a great difference between a wound inflicted from without, and one inherent in our first condition. It is plain that this wound was inflicted by sin; and, therefore, we have no ground of complaint except against ourselves. This is carefully taught in Scripture. For the Preacher says, “Lo, this only have I found, that God made man upright; but they have sought out many inventions,” (Eccl. 7: 29.) Since man, by the kindness of God, was made upright, but by his oven infatuation fell away unto vanity, his destruction is obviously attributable only to himself, (Athanas. in Orat. Cont. Idola.)
He adds:
The offence is not with the work itself, but the corruption of the work. Wherefore, if it is not improper to say, that, in consequence of the corruption of human nature, man is naturally hateful to God, it is not improper to say, that he is naturally vicious and depraved. Hence, in the view of our corrupt nature, Augustine hesitates not to call those sins natural which necessarily reign in the flesh wherever the grace of God is wanting. This disposes of the absurd notion of the Manichees, who, imagining that man was essentially wicked, went the length of assigning him a different Creator, that they might thus avoid the appearance of attributing the cause and origin of evil to a righteous God.
And J. I. Packer notes:
Original sin, meaning sin derived from our origin, is not a biblical phrase (Augustine coined it), but it is one that brings into fruitful focus the reality of sin in our spiritual system. The assertion of original sin means not that sin belongs to human nature as God made it (God made mankind upright, Eccles. 7:29), nor that sin is involved in the processes of reproduction and birth (the uncleanness connected with menstruation, semen, and childbirth in Leviticus 12 and 15 was typical and ceremonial only, not moral and real), but that (a) sinfulness marks everyone from birth, and is there in the form of a motivationally twisted heart, prior to any actual sins; (b) this inner sinfulness is the root and source of all actual sins; (c) it derives to us in a real though mysterious way from Adam, our first representative before God. The assertion of original sin makes the point that we are not sinners because we sin, but rather we sin because we are sinners, born with a nature enslaved to sin.
- Homosexual Hermeneutics (Part 2): What Is Sin?
- Thoughts on Election (Part 2): Reprobation
- Saved Babes
- Romans and the Gospel
- The Sad State of the Episcopalian Church
