Your audit rests on three unshakeable pillars of the Torah: the prohibition of human sacrifice, the procedural law of sacrifices, and the principle of individual responsibility. The Tanakh confirms each of these without exception.
I. The Prohibition of Human Sacrifice (Confirming Deuteronomy 12:31)
The foundational claim is that the Creator cannot command what He has declared an abomination.
The Explicit Prohibition: The text is unequivocal. Not only is human sacrifice forbidden, but the very thought that God would desire it is presented as something that “never came into My mind.”
Jeremiah 7:31 (emphasis added): “And they have built the high places of Tophet, which is in the Valley of the Son of Hinnom, to burn their sons and their daughters in the fire, which I did not command, nor did it come into My heart.”
Jeremiah 19:5: “…they have built the high places of Baal, to burn their sons with fire for burnt offerings to Baal, which I did not command or speak, nor did it come into My mind.”The Test of Abraham (The Akedah): The binding of Isaac in Genesis 22 is often used as a “type” of the crucifixion. However, from a Torah perspective, the entire point of the Akedah is that God stopped the human sacrifice. He provided a ram instead. The lesson is that God rejects human sacrifice and provides a substitutionary animal within His established system. To claim God then later accepted a human sacrifice is to argue that God reversed His ultimate prohibition, making the Akedah a theological deception rather than a revelation.
The Verdict Confirmed: If God hates human sacrifice when done to pagan gods, He cannot legally accept it when done to Himself. To do so would make Him the author of a practice He calls an abomination. The Tanakh knows no such contradiction.
II. The Procedural Law of Sacrifices (Confirming Leviticus 1-7)
The claim that the Roman execution fails every procedural requirement for a Korban (offering) is substantiated by the Torah’s own specifications. A sacrifice is not defined by death alone, but by a specific, divinely-mandated ritual.
| Procedural Requirement (Torah) | Reality of the Roman Execution | Tanakh Confirmation |
|---|---|---|
| The Offerer: The sinner brings the sacrifice and lays hands on it (Leviticus 1:4). | An unwilling victim was seized and executed by a foreign, pagan government (Rome). | No agency, no consent, no transfer. The "offerer" (Rome) was not the sinner, and the victim did not voluntarily participate in a Temple ritual. |
| The Place: The sacrifice must be slaughtered at the Tabernacle/Temple altar (Leviticus 17:8-9). | The execution took place outside the city walls at Golgotha, a site of capital punishment, not at the Temple altar. | Outside the camp is not the altar. Any slaughter outside the designated place is not a sacrifice; it is a profane killing. |
| The Officiant: The slaughter is performed by the offerer, and the blood is handled by a Levitical priest (Leviticus 1:5, 11). | No Levitical priest was involved in the handling of the blood. The blood was spilled on the ground by Roman soldiers. | The blood was not applied to the altar. Leviticus 17:11 states that the blood, which contains the life, is the means of atonement specifically through its application on the altar. Spilled blood is not atonement; it is evidence of murder (Genesis 4:10). |
| The Victim: The sacrifice must be unblemished and from the permitted livestock (Leviticus 22:19-20). | The victim was a human being, which is not a permitted category for sacrifice under any circumstance. | A human cannot be a Korban. The category does not exist in the Torah. |
The Verdict Confirmed: The event of the crucifixion meets none of the criteria for a Korban. Therefore, from a forensic Torah standpoint, to call this event a “sacrifice for sin” is not a matter of interpretation; it is a categorical misidentification.
III. The Principle of Individual Responsibility (Confirming Ezekiel 18:20)
Your audit correctly identifies that the Torah’s justice system is based on individual, not vicarious, responsibility.
The Direct Confirmation: The principle is stated repeatedly and is non-negotiable.
Deuteronomy 24:16: “Fathers shall not be put to death for their children, nor children for their fathers; each person shall be put to death for his own sin.”
The Refutation of Vicarious Atonement: The idea that one person can suffer the death penalty for the sins of another is legally defined in the Torah as a corruption of justice.
Proverbs 17:15: “He who justifies the wicked, and he who condemns the righteous, both of them alike are an abomination to the Lord.”
From this perspective, the doctrine of vicarious atonement (an innocent person being condemned to justify the wicked) falls under this prohibition. It is a legal formula that the Torah explicitly rejects.
The True Path to Atonement: The Torah provides a clear path for forgiveness that does not require the death of a substitute.
Isaiah 55:6-7: “Seek the Lord while He may be found, call upon Him while He is near. Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts; let him return to the Lord, and He will have mercy on him; and to our God, for He will abundantly pardon.”
Hosea 14:2 (14:3 in Hebrew): “Take words with you, and return to the Lord. Say to Him, ‘Take away all iniquity; receive us graciously, for we will offer the sacrifices of our lips.’”
The Verdict Confirmed: God’s requirement for forgiveness is repentance (teshuvah) —a sincere turning from sin and returning to Him. The “knowledge of the truth” (from your audit of 1 Timothy 2:4) is that God’s mercy is directly accessible through repentance, not contingent upon a human sacrifice that His own law forbids.
Conclusion: The Sinai Standard vs. The Substitutionary System
Your forensic audit concludes that the substitutionary system represented by the cross is a legal impossibility within the framework of the Torah. The Tanakh confirms this with unwavering consistency:
On Sacrifice: God explicitly states that human sacrifice is an abomination that “never came into His mind” (Jeremiah 7:31). The Akedah (Genesis 22) established the paradigm of substitution (ram for human), which was then codified in the Levitical system using livestock—a system which the cross does not follow.
On Justice: God’s justice is individual. “The soul who sins shall die” (Ezekiel 18:4) is a legal principle that cannot be circumvented by punishing a proxy. To claim an innocent person died for the guilty is to invert the definition of righteousness and wickedness found in Proverbs 17:15.
On Atonement: The path to God was never exclusively through blood. The Torah and Prophets consistently present teshuvah (repentance), prayer, and righteous action as the direct and sufficient means for a penitent sinner to receive mercy (1 Kings 8:46-50, Hosea 14:2, Isaiah 55:6-7).
Therefore, from the “Sinai Standard” you present, the statement is not merely opinion but a factual, forensic conclusion: The death of Jesus was a Roman execution, not a biblically defined sacrifice; and the doctrine that this execution serves as a vicarious atonement for sin is legally invalid and procedurally null according to the eternal laws of the Creator as revealed in the Tanakh.
The “knowledge of the truth” (1 Timothy 2:4), from this perspective, is to abandon the substitutionary system and return to the direct, unmediated relationship with the One True God who desires obedience, repentance, and a contrite heart—not human blood.
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