Post by Isapop on Dec 20, 2018 19:39:36 GMT
I assume atheists are allowed to play too, so I'm gonna take a stab at that one.
Proverbs 21:3 - "To do what is right and just is more acceptable to the LORD than sacrifice."
I'll say it doesn't invalidate Christianity because it's telling the average person that sacrifices to the Lord that THEY make don't mean as much to him as when they do right. The sacrifice that really counts big time with the Lord is the one that will be made by the Messiah.
The NT also seems to imply that "doing right" is not even a viable option that can save someone. In the addition to the aforementioned passage in Ephesians about salvation being a free gift from God so that no one can boast, both Jesus and Paul plainly state that "no one is good", and Paul says "all have fallen short of the glory of God". If no one is good, and all have fallen short, then how can doing right ever be a viable option for anyone to be saved? The two things can't both be true. And yet, that's exactly what seemed to happen in Moses case. So I still see a glaring hole in the theology.
I don't think I exerted too much in the way of mental gymnastics here, and I don't think I added anything. The proverb is saying God likes your good works better than your ritual sacrifices. Christianity is saying that, though they're commendable, it's not your good works that will SAVE you, but Jesus' sacrifice. I don't see a problem on this one.
But maybe a real Christian has a stronger argument to make than mine.

