Saturday, December 30, 2017

Sapate Tisema 31, 2017

Ngaohi Ia ke angahala, ke vete ange au ko e angahala
( the Son of God willingly made sin, that we might be
freed from the same)

Fehu‘i #25

‘I he pekia ‘a Kalaisí , ‘e malava ke fakamolemole‘i kotoa ai ‘etau ngaahi angahalá ?

‘Io, he na‘e totongi kakato ‘e he pekia ‘a Kalaisí ‘i he kolosí ‘a hotau mo‘ua ki he angahalá, pea tu‘unga ‘i he ‘alo‘ofa ‘ata‘atā pe ‘a e ‘Otuá, ‘oku ne foaki kiate kitautolu ‘a e ma‘oni‘oni ‘a Kalaisí, ‘o hangē pe ia ko ha‘atau me‘á, pea ‘ikai ha‘ane toe manatu ki he‘etau angahala.

Does Christ's death mean all our sins can be forgiven?

Yes, because Christ's death on the cross fully paid the penalty for our sin, God graciously imputes Christ's righteousness to us as if it were our own and will remember our sins no more.

2 Kolinito 5:21
Na‘a ne ngaohi ko e koto angahala ‘a e Toko Taha ko ia na‘e ‘ikai te ne ongona ha angahala, koe‘uhi ā ko kitautolu; koe‘uhi ke tau hoko ai ‘iate ia ko e koto mā‘oni‘oni faka‘otua.

2 CORINTHIANS 5:21
For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.


Commentary - RICHARD SIBBES


Though one sin was enough to bring condemnation, yet the free gift of grace in Christ is of many offences unto justification. And we have a sure ground for this, for the righteousness of Christ is God's righteousness, and God will thus glorify it, that it shall stand good to those that by faith apply it against their daily sins, even till at once we cease both to live and sin. For this very end was the Son of God willingly made sin, that we might be freed from the same. 

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