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5 pages in length. Can a sin be forgiven? Should it be? Is it the guilt a sinner attempts to rid from himself, or is it a true sense of regret that drives him to seek out forgiveness? Inasmuch as sin is definitive and a proverbial slap in the face of God, how can it be forgiven? In response to mankind's sinning ways, atonement was required in order to escape the wrath of God and regain His favor. Repenting one's sins and abating His anger, which is tempered by love for His people, took its form in blood sacrifices; however, these offerings were not so strict as to require human blood, but rather He was appeased with the presentation of sacrificial animals who gave their life for Man's sinful ways. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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true sense of regret that drives him to seek out forgiveness? Inasmuch as sin is definitive and a proverbial slap in the face of God, how can it be
forgiven? In response to mankinds sinning ways, atonement was required in order to escape the wrath of God and regain His favor. Repenting ones sins and abating His
anger, which is tempered by love for His people, took its form in blood sacrifices; however, these offerings were not so strict as to require human blood, but rather He
was appeased with the presentation of sacrificial animals who gave their life for Mans sinful ways. "A blood sacrifice was required because a life was required and the pouring
out of the blood symbolized the pouring of that life as an atonement for sin. Life is in the blood and a blood sacrifice is literally a giving of
life unto death" (The Cruelty of the Cross). Many claim that Judeo-Christianity is a bloody religion whose historical focus has long been upon torturous methods of atonement. The
very first sin Man ever committed set a precedence of repentance that required the sacrifice of life in exchange for Gods forgiveness. This sacrifice, however, did not require the
sinner to relinquish his life, for God realized that would be too great a cost, so He set forth the blood sacrifice of animals as atonement for human sin.
Bulls, goats and other species were offered up as substitutes, whose spilled blood granted redemption for the sinner (The Cruelty of the Cross). When one examines the fundamental objective of
blood sacrifices in the Judeo-Christian religion and understands the sometimes-subtle underpinnings of such an action, it is quite easy to see why Jesus crucifixion is considered to be the ultimate
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