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Allow Me To Explain (50 of 439) – Finger Pointing

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50. Who was to blame for original sin? 1 Timothy 2:14 vs. Romans 5:12

You know not what you ask …

1 Timothy 2:14
And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived was in the transgression.

Romans 5:12
Therefore, just as through one man sin entered the world, and death through sin, and thus death spread to all men, because all sinned

C. Neither of the above!

If we’re really taking the question at face value, since the question is taking the text at face value, the answer is Satan. He did the tempting, and the deceiving, so Satan is “to blame” for original sin.

Or are we asking which of the two people is responsible for the first sin? Or which of the two people is responsible for sin entering the world?

Because the questions have different answers, as clearly explained by the two verses given.

Of course there really is no question, because no one is genuinely asking. There’s just an accusation that the scriptures given contradict one another.

But they can’t contradict, because they’re not really talking about the same thing.

1 Timothy 2:14 recounts the story as a mechanism for explaining to Pastor Timothy (Paul is writing) why women who are deceived are not to teach in the church. (Anyone who is deceived should not be teaching in the church, but Paul is addressing Timothy’s concerns.) A better, more literal, translation of the verse would read:

and Adam was not deceived, but the woman, having been deceived, into transgression came

We all know the story. Eve was deceived, and so she sinned. That was the point Paul was making in his letter to his prodigy, and so that’s where his example ended. Adam sinned, of course, it just didn’t suit his lesson.

In Romans 5, Paul is contrasting Jesus with Adam.

Adam brought sin into the world, Jesus defeated it.

Adam and Eve both sinned, but Adam – as we’re told – was not deceived. Adam sinned willfully. And while God gave dominion of the earth to both Adam and Eve, Adam was the head of his wife, so the dominion was ultimately his to maintain or give away. And he gave it away.

The two verses given reference the same event, but both incompletely, because their purposes are different. If we know the story, and we keep the verses in context, it’s pretty clear.

Allow Me to Explain (49 of 439) – Excess Baggage

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49. Did Jesus tell His apostles to go barefoot and without a staff? Matt 10:10, Luke 9:3 vs. Mk 6:8-9

No

Matthew 10:10
nor bag for your journey, nor two tunics, nor sandals, nor staffs; for a worker is worthy of his food.

Luke 9:3
And He said to them, Take nothing for the journey, neither staffs nor bag nor bread nor money; and do not have two tunics apiece.

Mark 6:8-9
He commanded them to take nothing for the journey except a staff – no bag, no bread, no copper in their money belts 9 but to wear sandals, and not to put on two tunics.

I could never believe in a God whose followers can’t get their story straight about sandals and staffs. *exaggerated eye roll*  Continue Reading…

Allow Me To Explain (48 of 439) – Leadership 101

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48. Did Jesus baptize anyone? John 3:22 vs. John 4:2

No. (They really think we’re stupid.)

John 3:22
After these things Jesus and His disciples came into the land of Judea, and there He remained with them and baptized.

John 4:2
(though Jesus Himself did not baptize, but His disciples),

So … no. Does it necessitate explanation?

Jesus and His disciples were at the river, and His disciples were baptizing people under His supervision and authority.

Shorter way of saying that? “Jesus baptized.” He was, via His disciples.

When we talk about John 6, we say that Jesus fed 5000 men (plus women and children). But Jesus didn’t really do much. Scripture tells us that He had the disciples organize the crowd. The disciples distributed food, and the disciples cleaned up the left-overs.

Why?

I don’t know, but I can think of a few good reasons:

  • Jesus is the best leader ever. He was teaching His disciples how to do the ministry they were going to have to do when He left.
  • God always has, and always will, use people to do His work.
  • No one would have wanted Peter to baptize him, if Jesus was also baptizing people. The line would have been unending, and He would eventually have to turn people away when it was time to go, and how would those people feel?

In Chapter 3, John takes the short-cut of saying that Jesus baptized because it was enough to introduce the conversation, which was really about John the Baptism turning people over to Jesus’ leadership. In Chapter 4, John clarified the point.

Again:

Clarification is not contradiction.

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