#136. Are the sins of the parents reckoned on their children to the third and fourth generation OR are sins reckoned to each offender only? (Ex 20:5, 34:7; Deut 5:9 vs Deut 24:16; Jr 31:29-30; Ez 18:2-4)

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The notion of hereditary guilt runs throughout the Bible and was a common characteristic of most ancient societies.

Exodus 20:5, for example, claims from the mouth of Yahweh himself that he is a jealous god, “reckoning fathers’ sins upon sons, on the third and on the fourth generation.”

This theology of inherited sin is duplicated in the Deuteronomic version of the Ten Commandments (Deut 5:9), and is prominent throughout the Deuteronomic History. It was also cited to provide the theological response as to why Jerusalem fell (Lam 5:7), and it permeates the book of Daniel, with its repetitive refrain, “the sins of our fathers.”

Yet other textual sources negate this theology of inherited sin, or at any rate draw it into question, such as we find in Jeremiah 31:29-30 and Ezekiel 18:2-4.

After explaining theologically the fall of Jerusalem on account of the sins of the fathers, Jer 31:29-30 imagines an ideal restitution wherein “all shall die for their own sins”—rather than nations falling for the sins of their fathers is the point.

More explicitly, another Deuteronomic scribe writes the following: “Fathers shall not be put to death for sons, and sons shall not be put to death for fathers. They shall each be put to death through his own sin” (Deut 24:16). Although this particular verse may have been created to counter any idea that capital offenses could be ransomed or payed for by another, it nevertheless stipulates against the idea of hereditary guilt, which seems to have been the normative view in many of the Bible’s texts.

Finally, this contradiction can be extended into the New Testament, where much of the literature also talks about an individual’s responsibility for his own sins. At core these differences are a reflection of the changing worldview and beliefs of the 70+ authors who wrote the texts of the Bible which span a 1,000 years.

3 thoughts on “#136. Are the sins of the parents reckoned on their children to the third and fourth generation OR are sins reckoned to each offender only? (Ex 20:5, 34:7; Deut 5:9 vs Deut 24:16; Jr 31:29-30; Ez 18:2-4)

  1. “For I, Yahweh your God, am a jealous God, punishing
    sons for the iniquity of their fathers, to the
    third and fourth generation of those who reject me,”

    i need help in understanding

    1. are the generation who reject created to reject because of the INIQUITIES of the fathers or are they just copying the ways of their fathers and by free will rejecting the hebrew god?

    the jewish apologists try to reconcile and say that god is punishing, not because of inherited sin but because of following the evil ways of their fathers

    who is telling the truth?

  2. the argument is that it is not punishment because of the fathers, but because of the practices of the children. your thoughts please

    is this just trickery and apologetic?

  3. To the above – just read the text. Does the text say “sons copy their fathers for three or four generations and therefore shall be punished”? Or does it say “sons will be punished for the sins of their fathers”? It says sons will be punished for their fathers “to the third and fourth generation of the father that rejected me”.

    Interpret or invent all one likes, the text is clear – sons are punished, because their fathers reject god. It does not say sons that reject god will be punished.

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