On this we are agreed. They were innocent of
committing sin. They were fetuses in the womb; they had not done anything yet.
But then a moment later you said something different, something I cannot agree with because it contradicts Scripture (emphasis added):
That answers my question:
- If a person has not consciously performed any sinful acts, does it follow that the person is sinless?
Your answer is, “Yes. Until they commit sin, they are sinless.”
Let’s take this back to Jacob and Esau in the womb. They were innocent in a relative sense—of committing sins—but they were not innocent in an absolute sense. They were not innocent forensically before God. Scripture clearly says, “By the one man’s disobedience, the many were constituted sinners.” We are not innocent; Paul said we are sinners.
That is the historical conflict between Augustinian orthodoxy and Pelagian heresy:
- Augustine: We sin because we are sinners (i.e., what we do flows from who we are).
- Pelagius: We are sinners because we sin (i.e., what we are is the result of what we do).
Pelagius never dealt with Romans 5:19 on its own terms, reducing it to moral imitation, and that reduction is precisely what trapped him in error.
And his view being heretical is a matter of historical record. You can disagree with the historical record but that doesn’t change it.
Well, good luck with that. You are relitigating a settled historical argument.
That follows. But it’s definitely the argument found in Scripture.
Agreed. But they were not innocent
simpliciter.
You need to understand that the father in Ezekiel 18 is not a federal head of humanity.
Deal with the argument I presented, please. I will repeat it here:
That innocence does not extend beyond those two. Everyone after the first Adam stands under a federal head and therefore has a legal status prior to any personal acts. We are all constituted sinners even before we have committed any sins ourselves. As Paul says in Romans 5:19, “By the one man’s disobedience the many were constituted sinners”—κατεστάθησαν (third-person plural aorist passive indicative of καθίστημι), a transitive verb that often takes either a simple object (“to appoint someone”), or a double construction with object + predicate (“to make/constitute someone something”).