In reading the following passages, I have considered what they are saying, and in turn I'd like to ask what they mean to you:
"She replied, "No one, Lord." And Jesus said, "i do not condemn you either. Go, and from now on do not sin anymore."" John 8:11
As you may well recognize, this is the passage about the adulterous woman. Jesus ends with instructing her: 'from now on do not sin anymore'. The part that is crucial to consider is 'from now on', because Jesus had not yet died for our sins, so how could she not sin anymore 'from now on'? Jesus would not have given her an impossible directive, so what gives?
In connection with this thought, I turn your attention to the Old Testament as well:
"If you act rightly, you will be accepted; but if not, sin lies in wait at the door: its urge is for you, yet you can rule over it." Genesis 4:7
This passage is about Cain before he kills Abel. Yahweh tells Cain that sin urges for him, but that '[he] can rule over it'. The text does not say that any outside source is needed to do so, and as we know, this was after the fall in the garden as well. So it falls within the timeline of Humanity being under sin. Yahweh painted Cain's path forward as a choice, rather than something he could not help; Cain had the power within himself to choose, and we all know how the story goes.
So, what do these verses/passages mean to you, without adding anything or taking away anything from what they say?
"She replied, "No one, Lord." And Jesus said, "i do not condemn you either. Go, and from now on do not sin anymore."" John 8:11
As you may well recognize, this is the passage about the adulterous woman. Jesus ends with instructing her: 'from now on do not sin anymore'. The part that is crucial to consider is 'from now on', because Jesus had not yet died for our sins, so how could she not sin anymore 'from now on'? Jesus would not have given her an impossible directive, so what gives?
In connection with this thought, I turn your attention to the Old Testament as well:
"If you act rightly, you will be accepted; but if not, sin lies in wait at the door: its urge is for you, yet you can rule over it." Genesis 4:7
This passage is about Cain before he kills Abel. Yahweh tells Cain that sin urges for him, but that '[he] can rule over it'. The text does not say that any outside source is needed to do so, and as we know, this was after the fall in the garden as well. So it falls within the timeline of Humanity being under sin. Yahweh painted Cain's path forward as a choice, rather than something he could not help; Cain had the power within himself to choose, and we all know how the story goes.
So, what do these verses/passages mean to you, without adding anything or taking away anything from what they say?