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MOD NOTE: The following discussion was moved here from a thread on the Pelagian heresy which asserts that human nature is sinless until a person commits a sin.
Well, they are certainly both true, that’s for sure.
But I would say they’re true for different reasons. He was born of a virgin Mary for reasons of Davidic promise, and he was sinless because he wasn’t under the federal headship of Adam; rather, he was himself a federal head, the last Adam. When Paul says all those in Adam are constituted sinners (Rom 5:12-19), he is using covenantal language, not biological, as the contrast with Christ proves.
It is the difference that makes all the difference in the world.The genealogy is connecting Jesus to the Seed of Gen3:14-15, and to the royal kingship line. But the categories are distinct. Not to being born in Adam because he wasn't.
Do you know this? Or does it just make sense to you? Are men not enough different in their genome (or whatever it is that is necessary for this notion) from women? Analogically, men are not the carriers of certain defects—women are the carriers of Hemophilia (last I heard). I don't know enough to say it is possible, but why would it not be possible that the sin nature be transmitted only through the man?I have argued this before, so this won’t surprise anyone to hear: “Sin is not genetic.” It is not something in our genome. (If it were, Jesus would have inherited it from Mary—which is one reason why Roman Catholics dream up ideas like Immaculate Conception.)
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