The idea of a ransom did not come from New Testament times, but from OT times:
Exodus 21:30 KJV — If there be laid on him a sum of money, then he shall give for the ransom of his life whatsoever is laid upon him.
And a ransom from the grave is explicitly spoken of.
Hosea 13:14 KJV — I will ransom them from the power of the grave; I will redeem them from death: O death, I will be thy plagues; O grave, I will be thy destruction: repentance shall be hid from mine eyes.
This gets into hermeneutics and the importance of context, context, context, context and context.
The word “ransom” was used in the Old Testament in Hebrew and translated to the Greek to be the same word used in the NT, but that does not mean the people of the first century went back to the OT to defined their definition for words. How was the Greek word “Ransom” defined by the first century audience being addressed by the writers of the NT and not how we today will try to go back to the OT section of the Bible to try to define the word. If the writer is
quoting from the OT, then you do want to know how the word were defined in the OT, because that is probably the way the writer is using them.
Some English words used 400 years ago have changed their meaning, looking at later translations of Ex. 21:39-30 (NIV) 29 If, however, the bull has had the habit of goring and the owner has been warned but has not kept it penned up and it kills a man or woman, the bull is to be stoned and its owner also is to be put to death. 30 However, if payment is demanded, the owner may redeem his life by the payment of whatever is demanded. The idea is the family might accept payment for the life of their family member killed, instead of the owner of the bull being killed. This would not be an unbelievable huge amount.
Hosea 13:14 (NIV) “I will deliver this people from the power of the grave; I will redeem them from death. Where, O death, are your plagues? Where, O grave, is your destruction?
God did save a small group of Israel from the destruction so it was not a total wipe out. “Ransom” in the KJV could have the meaning of deliverance.
In the OT the Jews paid a “ransom” of a few coins as a temple tax, but that is a modest amount, paid by the person themselves to enter the temple, and it did not set them “free”.
So, that OT definition does not fit Jesus’, John’s, Paul’s, Peter’s nor the writer of Hebrew’s definition.
The payment is unbelievably huge, a child is being set free, the Father is paying, the child set free goes to the Father and the kidnapper is an undeserving criminal. The ransom in the NT fits a kidnapping scenario.
Ok. If you have another thread, or want to start one, ping me in it.
I will try to find what I started many years ago.
Sounds like original sin of some type.
I am not saying: “I do not believe in original sin”, because Adam and Eve were the first human sinning, but I disagree with the “doctrine” of original sin.
I believe we are born innocent, and sin when we reach the age of accountability, partly because there are so many ways to sin and our nature is the same as Adam and Eve (who sinned with only one way to sin).
Not true. Everybody dies, even infants sonetimes.
Yes, but is death bad in and of itself? Death is the way good and innocent people get to go to heaven and bad people quit doing bad stuff. The problem with infants dying is the fact they will not have fulfilled their earthly objective.
Think of what it would be like if people did not die, sin has perceived pleasure for a season, so would people put-off for eternity humbling themselves to the point of accept God’s pure undeserved charity? Death actually help some nonbelievers to become believers, so should God take that benefit away from them?
Even infants and those under the age of accountability die and need to be ransomed from death.
You say “die” meaning physical death, but then say: “be ransomed from death”, but do they not physically die? In Hosea 13 the author is talking about redeeming (ransoming), some Jews from physical death that is coming to Israel, not spiritual death.
Some infants do physically die, but that does not mean they need saving, they will not fulfill their earthly objective.