Made a Sin Offering for Us
==========================

  You may have been told, or you may have heard, that Yeshua (Jesus)
  took on our sins so that he literally became sin for us while we have
  become righteous in the sight of God, "as if we had never sinned."

  One of the verses used to bolster this blasphemous theology was,
  perhaps unsurprisingly, written by Paul the apostle, in 2 Corinthians
  5:21. A typical rendering of this verse can be seen in, for instance,
  the WEB translation, as follows:

        For him who knew no sin he made to be sin on our behalf;
        so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.
        (II Corinthians 5:21)

  By ignoring an important meaning of the word 'sin' in both Greek and
  Hebrew, the translators have twisted the meaning of Paul's words.

  The correct translation goes like this:

        The one knowing no sin, he made a sin offering on our
        behalf, so that we might become the righteousness of God
        through him.

  The word-for-word translation of this verse is shown in figure 1,
  demonstrating how Paul deliberately uses the word 'sin' in two
  different ways. This is one of Paul's signature rhetorical devices.

  <file:../images/2019-03-18_2-cor-5-21.png>

  How do we know that this is what Paul meant?

  First, we know that in Hebrew, and in the ancient Greek Septuagint
  translation, 'sin' is used in the sense of 'sin offering', and is an
  important meaning of the word. Refer to Leviticus 4:8, being one
  example of this (see figure 2).

  Second, knowing this meaning of the word 'sin', Paul's verse makes
  perfect sense, unlike the idea of a person becoming "sin", which makes
  very little sense at all.

  Third, the idea is blasphemous that Yeshua, God-in-the-flesh,
  actually, literally, became sin on our behalf. It is also blasphemous
  to claim that God can believe a fiction that his innocent Son became
  guilty of our sins, while we became innocent of them. It is
  blasphemous, because God is the God of truth, and not of fiction. It
  is blasphemous also because there is no sin in God.

  Fourth, once the blasphemous interpretation, believed by many
  Christians, is ruled out, we are left with only one interpretation of
  'sin' that could make any sense whatsoever, and that is: Yeshua took
  our place and received in his body the punishment that we ourselves
  deserve because we are /guilty/ of sinning against God. That describes
  a sin offering.

  <file:../images/2019-03-18_lev-4-8.png>