Results 1 - 5 of 5
|
|
|||||
Results from: Answered Bible Questions, Answers, Unanswered Bible Questions, Notes Ordered by Verse | ||||||
Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
1 | Is sin inherited from father and mother? | Rom 5:12 | Morant61 | 75476 | ||
Greetings Disciplerami! So, your response to all the points I made is "No comment"! :-) Your Brother in Christ, Tim Moran |
||||||
2 | Is sin inherited from father and mother? | Rom 5:12 | disciplerami | 75514 | ||
The response I make is that you start with a good translation. Let's be honest here, an inferior translation the NIV is. Could I teach the Gospel to someone with it, sure. Could I teach the Gospel to someone with the Living Bible, sure. But I don't recommend it. The translation is inferior, that is my point. So why should I try to argue against a translation that we know is inferior to the NASB? The NASB, Psalm 51:5 passage doesn't say David was sinful. To say otherwise is just commentary and speculation. Good day. |
||||||
3 | Is sin inherited from father and mother? | Rom 5:12 | Morant61 | 75542 | ||
Greetings Disciplerami! I differ with you on the quality of the NIV. Overall, I think that it is a decent translation. I use it primarily because it is easy for the average reader to understand. However, since I know Greek and a little Hebrew, I usually depend upon my own translation for the heavy details (at least in the New Testament)! :-) But, back to Psalm 51:5. May I ask what you see Psalm 51:5 as saying if not that David was sinful? Your Brother in Christ, Tim Moran |
||||||
4 | Is sin inherited from father and mother? | Rom 5:12 | disciplerami | 75602 | ||
Hi Tim, 'brought forth in iniquity' can be referring the sin all about him, his mother, the world. If David is talking about himself, then he has to be exaggerating for emphasis to his sinfulness, as in psalm 58:3 |
||||||
5 | Is sin inherited from father and mother? | Rom 5:12 | Morant61 | 75617 | ||
Greetings Disciplerami! So, your answer is that you don't know what it means, but it can't mean that! :-) First of all, why would David talk about sin all around him, or the sin of his mother, when he is confessing his sin? Was he claiming that everyone sins, so it is alright? Secondly, why does he have to be exaggerating? Simply because you don't agree with the possibility, doesn't mean it can't be! :-) The options you mention don't make any sense in a personal confession of sin. The subject of the sentence is David, not his mother or the world around him. He has just said in v. 4 that God is right to judge him. Why? Because, not only did he sin against God, but he has been a sinner from birth. Verse 6 continues the thought by observing that this is not what God desires from David. God wants him to be faithful. So, David asks for this ability. Psalm 51 is a beautiful prayer of repentance. To ignore the meaning of v. 5 robs it of it's beauty. Your Brother in Christ, Tim Moran |
||||||