Date
12-11-2024
Department
Rawlings School of Divinity
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy in Bible Exposition (PhD)
Chair
Jacob Charles Boyd
Keywords
Slavery, Original Sin, Augustine, Pelagius, Sin, Metaphor, Slaves of Christ, Slaves of Sin, Adam, Creation, Original Guilt, Shared Guilt
Disciplines
Anthropology | Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion
Recommended Citation
Gamble, William Daniel, "Created to be Slaves: Reexamining the Doctrine of Original Sin" (2024). Doctoral Dissertations and Projects. 6238.
https://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/doctoral/6238
Abstract
One of the earliest debates in the church was over the nature of Sin, its transmission to subsequent generations, and its effects upon man’s nature. Two terms, “sin nature” and “original sin,” have become the prevailing terminology, yet there remains debate concerning the meaning or appropriateness of these terms. This discussion will examine and assess the doctrine of Original Sin through the prism of the metaphor of slavery as found and utilized throughout the OT and NT. Ancient Slavery, in its various forms, serves as the background for understanding the idioms and metaphors employed concerning the power and role of sin in the life of humanity and its effects, if any, on the nature of man. Slavery appears to be “a” or even “the” standard way of understanding an individual’s status and relationship to Sin and to Christ, and likely the original design and purpose of man.