It has been suggested by various theologians that God exists in a metadivine realm. In other words God exists in some framework that gives him power, limits his power, moderates it, or some such.
For example. In our universe 1+1=2. This may be a feature of creation ordained by God. Or it could be something that is beyond that, something that limits God: God couldn't make 1+1=3, that would be silly.
This becomes important when we think about Jesus and the Sacrifice for Sin. Most Christians who believe in the substitution of Jesus's death for theirs believe that Sin neccesarily entails death, and God sent his Son to pay that price so we didn't have to.
If you believe this, do you believe it because of a metadivine rationale: death as a neccesary consequence of sin is something that God is subject to. God couldn't just ignore or forgive the sin without the price being paid?
This is the logic of the common analogy told about Jesus paying the price: imagine a Judge who condemns a guilty person, then steps forward to take their sentence on. In the case of the analogy the unbreakable law is analogous to the metadivine constraints.
Or do you believe that the death-penalty for sin is something that God instituted, and that he chose to send his Son to death for some other reason that because death is the unavoidable consequence of sin?
Sorry if it is a highbrow topic, but I'm genuinely interested in what you think.
For example. In our universe 1+1=2. This may be a feature of creation ordained by God. Or it could be something that is beyond that, something that limits God: God couldn't make 1+1=3, that would be silly.
This becomes important when we think about Jesus and the Sacrifice for Sin. Most Christians who believe in the substitution of Jesus's death for theirs believe that Sin neccesarily entails death, and God sent his Son to pay that price so we didn't have to.
If you believe this, do you believe it because of a metadivine rationale: death as a neccesary consequence of sin is something that God is subject to. God couldn't just ignore or forgive the sin without the price being paid?
This is the logic of the common analogy told about Jesus paying the price: imagine a Judge who condemns a guilty person, then steps forward to take their sentence on. In the case of the analogy the unbreakable law is analogous to the metadivine constraints.
Or do you believe that the death-penalty for sin is something that God instituted, and that he chose to send his Son to death for some other reason that because death is the unavoidable consequence of sin?
Sorry if it is a highbrow topic, but I'm genuinely interested in what you think.