If we are born in sin, how is it fair for God to judge us for our sin?

Got questions is a calvinist organisation. Immediately I expect some eisegesis of scripture. So when they ask : Does God unfairly judge us for something we have no control over? They should be answering ‘yes’ if they were being consistent and honest.

It is not Christianity, it is Calvinism and maybe some Armenians might have this view of original sin that becomes inherited guilt or nature.

Like Psalm 51:5 that says :5 Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.Speaks of his mothers sin. David has many more verses he speaks about himself being a baby and child where he says the exact opposite of what the doctrine of original sin implies here. Check – ‭Psalm 22:9-10, 71:5-6, 139:13-14, 127:3-5.

They use Eph 2: 3 but skip over verse 2 that says.Wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience:verse 3 just explains the nature of people who are following the prince of the power of the air.

That is not something anyone is born with.

They quickly may Augustinian anthropology claims and say because Adam is the father of the human race he passed his guilt on to his children. None of these verses say that, even Romans 5:12 they quote says death came into the world, that is it.

They make further claims that they cannot prove with scripture about natural inclinations, they can’t prove this is from birth.Funny thing is they speak about choice but then say it is our nature.

Can a lion choose to eat veggies when it is nature to eat meat? There is no choice in this doctrine. They will say choice, but they mean you chose to act according to your nature, which means there was no real choice.

If you came out a sinner and that is your nature. Choice has gone out the window and you are the result of someone else’s choice, namely Adam or Jesus in their view of Romans 5.

This is why their false dilemmas about man’s salvation are usually between Calvinism or Universalism… I’m over here saying it is neither!