Table of Contents
What did God plan before time began?
3 Great Plans of God Before Time Began 1. Eternal Life. God’s offer to people of eternal life in His divine family. God’s provision of grace—His undeserved favor, including forgiveness and help through Christ.
What was Jesus’s plan?
Jesus Christ, the perfect God-man, came to die on the cross, to offer the pure, complete and everlasting sacrifice to remove, atone, and make eternal payment for sin.
What happens when Jesus rejects?
Those who reject or neglect Christ will be in Hell. People go to Hell because they do not repent; rejecting God’s perfect plan of salvation. “He who believes in the Son has everlasting life; and he who does not believe the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abides on him” (John 3:36).
Why did God let us sin?
“God lets us sin because Adam sinned, so we will die,” says Ben, age 10. “If he didn’t sin, we would live forever. But Adam listened to Eve, so that’s it.”
What is the fall Christianity?
Christianity and the fall. Original sin is part of the Doctrine of the Fall, which is the belief that when Adam and Eve disobeyed God, they ‘fell’ from perfection and brought evil into a perfect world.
Where in the Bible is the plan of salvation?
The scriptures refer to this plan as “the plan of salvation” (Alma 24:14; Moses 6:62), “the great plan of happiness” (Alma 42:8), “the plan of redemption” (Jacob 6:8; Alma 12:30), and “the plan of mercy” (Alma 42:15). The plan of salvation is the fulness of the gospel.
Are the Father Son and Holy Spirit the same?
“The Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit” are not names for different parts of God, but one name for God because three persons exist in God as one entity. They cannot be separate from one another. Each person is understood as having the identical essence or nature, not merely similar natures.
Was the crucifixion God’s plan?
The Crucifixion in God’s Plan of Salvation It argues that the New Testament portrays the relationship between God’s will and Christ’s crucifixion with great consistency. On the one hand, God sends his Son to redeem us, and he gives him over to those who would crucify him.