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Satan was the master of deceipt! Sin entered the world through Satan's rebellion! Satan was in the garden of Eden,and tricked,taught wrong,tempted,took Adam and Eve from the garden,put up a wall of fire,so they could not return! Satan was responsible for sin entering the world, and it was through him! Satan was condemned,not mankind,by God Almighty to the Lake of Fire! It was Satan posing as Jesus to Luke and the Apostles at the Last Supper! The wages of sin is death,even for angels! Jesus did not sin, and could not be tempted in the wilderness,after fasting 40 days and nights! Jesus told Satan to go, and he had a destination,to the cross,to die,and to hell! How do you think Satan went to hell? Do you think anyone could kill Jesus,without sin! Never,not possible,without sin Jesus could not die,and didn't need to die,not for a second! Satan had the power to deceive all!Satan's death was the atonement for all the sins of this world! Jesus rolled away the stone,Arch Angel Michael took him

2006-12-20 23:28:08 · 16 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

16 answers

wow that is quit a ramble there lol. i ahve always wondered that myself it would fit satan's personality though. but yeah good question i hope the christians dont tear you up to bad just for asking this. ill do my best to defend you and ill give ya a thumbs up lol.

YOU CHRISTIANS BETTER LEAVE THIS PERSON ALONE. BE NICE AND PLAY FAIR OR YOULL HAVE SOMETHING COMEING TO YOU!!! lol there ya go hopefull htat did the trick lates keep up the good work
happy yule
)O(

2006-12-20 23:34:43 · answer #1 · answered by lucifer 3 · 0 1

Free will causes a lot of problems, but God wants to know who loves Him. Satan still has power over many. You do not have to be a bad person to miss heaven. Just reject the offer Jesus gave you or do not make decision about it ..and Satan won. Even Satan is God's Satan. We just need to let God know who we will serve. We are either on God's team or Satan's. There is no other choices.

2006-12-21 07:36:12 · answer #2 · answered by SeeTheLight 7 · 2 0

Isaiah 53:5 is about Jesus not satan

2006-12-21 07:31:45 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

my friend dont look past the mark.. ye know for it explains clearly that ye can not misunderstand it talks about Jesus and ye are not understanding the plan of salvation. everything Satan did was part of God's plan for God is all knowing he already knows what Satan shall do and has already prepared for all his actions.. Adam fell that men might be if Eve had not partaken of the fruit they would still be in the garden of eden to this day walking around naked it was part of God's plan for adam to fall and also that Christ should redeem them cause of the fall. also part of God's curse which he gave to Eve was in pain shall ye bring forth children so ye see if they hadn't gotten cast out of the garden they would of remained in a state of innocence like a infant forever and they would of never had children and we would of never existed... no one could kill Jesus he had power to lay down his own life and also power given him by the Father to take it back up/ the archangel didnt take christs body where did you read that?? Christ rose from the dead himself then went and showed himself to all his followers and said feel the prints of the nails in my hands that ye may know it is I.. also Satan is not in hell he is free roaming the Earth puttin Vain ideas in the children of men head.. Satan is not bound until Christ returns to Earth and then God being so merciful that he is even releases Satan after the 1000 years.. I dunno where your getting your information but you should check with the source even God the Father before you use your own ideas.

2006-12-21 09:07:34 · answer #4 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

How could this be satans fault!!HE was made an angel of god!! GOD knew that satan would do this because he is omnipotent!!Why would god do this? If god knows everything then whats the point we were destined from the start to go to heaven or hell!! If God does indeed know everthing, then he knew you were gonna go to heaven or hell before you were born.. How could God be omnipotent, if he gives us a choice? If god did indeed give us choices then he would not be all-knowing, b-cuz he would not know what you were going to choose..PLZ listen, I'm not knocking religion, But if god is perfect, and all knwing, then all of life was predestined, would that be fair? IF god is perfect then were all going 2 heaven b-cuz we had no choices, choices would just be an illusion..

2006-12-21 08:31:44 · answer #5 · answered by bossman 4 · 0 1

Love your intensity and fire, but you need to read the Gospels again. Jesus took your sin, and my sin, and died for us so that we could also have everlasting life. The entire concept of the New Testament is that Jesus resurrection from the dead showed us that we could also have life after death. Without Christ's resurrection there is no Bible, as then all of Jesus statements to the fact that he did and would, would then be lies. If Jesus lied then he sinned and could not be the Son of God

2006-12-21 07:38:03 · answer #6 · answered by mark g 6 · 1 1

if you read the whole verse it says that he was bruised for our sins and by his stripes we are healed. The verse is clearly talking about Jesus. Sin came into the world when adam and eve disobeyed God by listening to the devil. Jesus gave up his life though he was without sin for the redemption of all mankind.

2006-12-21 07:38:14 · answer #7 · answered by shiro 3 · 1 1

My dear Sister Eve, you most go back to basics and read third chapter of Genesis where the fall of man is explained that through Adam not only mankind were condemned but all creation. To think that Jesus had to die for mankind the just for the unjust in the mind of many is incomprehensible, but that was his purpose to His birth and death to destroy Satan's works. Jesus' death was the atonement for all the sins of this world!
In 1 Tim. 2:13-14 the subordinate place of woman is argued from two facts: (1) Adam was created first, and (2) Eve was deceived though Adam was not. This passage presumes that the Genesis stories tell us something of permanent significance about all men and women.
Romans 5 stresses the connection of mankind at large with Adam. It was through that one man that sin came into the world, and the consequence of his sin was death. This happened long before the law was given, so death cannot be put down to law-breaking. And even though people did not sin in the same way as Adam, they were caught in the consequences of sin: "death reigned from Adam to Moses" (Rom. 5:12-14). This brings Paul to the thought that Adam was a "type" of Christ, and he goes on to a sustained comparison of what Adam did with what Christ did. There are resemblances, mainly in that both acted representatively so that what each did has incalculable consequences for those he heads. But the differences are more significant. Adam's sin brought death and condemnation to all; it made people sinners. When law came in, that only increased the trespass. It showed up sin for what it was. The end result is disaster. By contrast Christ brought life and acquittal; such words as "free gift," "grace," and "justification" emphasize the significance of Christ's death. The end result is blessing. Paul concludes by contrasting the reign of sin in death with the reign of grace "through righteousness to eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord."
In Paul's magnificent treatment of the resurrection we read: "As in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive" (1 Cor. 15:22). The thought is not unlike that in Rom. 5. Adam was the head of the race and brought death to everyone in it; Christ is the head of the new humanity and brought life to all within it. Some have argued that the two uses of "all" must refer to the same totality, the entire human race. There is no question but that this is the meaning in respect to Adam. The argument runs that similarly Christ raises all from the grave, though some are raised only for condemnation. However, "made alive" seems to mean more than "raised to face judgment." It is probably best to understand "made alive" to refer to life eternal, so that "all" will mean "all who are in Christ." All these will be made alive, just as all who are in Adam die.
A little later Paul writes, "the first man Adam became a living being'; the last Adam became a life-giving spirit" (I Cor. 15:45). Adam became "a living being" when God breathed life into him (Gen. 2:7). Physical life was all the life Adam had and all he could bequeath to his posterity. But "the last Adam" gave life in the fullest sense, eternal life. Again there is the thought that Christ cancels out the evil Adam did. But the emphasis is not negative. It is on the life Christ gives.
The scriptural use of Adam, then, stresses the solidarity of the human race, a solidarity in sin. It reminds us that the human race had a beginning and that all its history from the very first is marked by sin. But "the last Adam" has altered all that. He has replaced sin with righteousness and death with life.

2006-12-21 07:56:32 · answer #8 · answered by Niguayona 4 · 0 1

Isaiah 53:5 is talking about how God had to allow His son to be crucified in order to save mankind. It is definitely referring to Jesus Christ.

http://www.handlethetruth.net

2006-12-21 07:31:07 · answer #9 · answered by truth_handler 3 · 1 0

Isaiah 53:5 (King James Version)
King James Version (KJV)

5 But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed.

Isaiah is fortelling the crucifixion and atonement for the sins of mankind. The Old Testament's Levitical law requirements for blood sacrifice ended with the crucifixion of Christ -- the lamb of God -- sacrificed for the sins of people so that those who believe in Him would not die but have everlasting life in the eternity.

2006-12-21 07:37:44 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

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