Addressing certain Concerns associated with Limited Atonement
The starting premise is that God’s love and compassion for the human beings whom He created (in His own image) are unmistakably evident throughout scriptures. However, there is no doubt that God is at the same time holy and just, and these attributes cannot be overlooked by the generations of sinners who took on the fallen nature of Adam and Eve after the couple succumbed to temptation and disobeyed His explicit prohibition. How then will God deal with those who sinned — from birth as pointed out in Psalm 51:5 and Psalm 58:3 — when He epitomises love and compassion on the one hand but on the other hand He is holy and just as well? Even before Adam and Eve were evicted from the Garden of Eden, the plan had already been set in motion for the woman’s Seed to play a crucial role in the ensuant “enmity between you [ viz the tempter] and the woman, and between your seed and her Seed” (Genesis 3:15). The Seed disclosed by God in the protoevangelium is none other than “… the Ma