Jesus chose all 12. Show me how 6:70 & 15:15 do not assert "Judas was chosen an ordaINED to bear fruit".
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Yes, Jesus chose the twelve apostles and Jesus said to the apostles, "Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you" (John 15:16). The choosing in that verse was not for salvation but for the special task of being an apostle. On that last evening Jesus gave His last address to eleven of His disciples and Judas was dismissed by Christ earlier because Christ knew that Judas will betray Him. In John 15. He speaks about two types of disciples with those eleven before Him who are real disciples, that you can discern which followers are true believers because they will bear fruit, obey, continue in His love, and remain in a close relationship with Him. False believers do none of those things and only follow Jesus temporarily. That is why Christ warns superficial followers of the terrible tragedy of being around Him like Judas, but not being saved.Quote:Have you erased Jn6:70 from your copy, "MamaZ"?
Not Judas chester
Jesus chose all twelve, and ordained all of them to bear fruit.
Find a way to deny that...
It seems to me that mr johnson is determined to establish a solid connection between himself and Judas...he seems rather determined to do so.Judas did bear the fruit for which he was chosen.. It just was not salvation fruit of the fruit of the son of perdition.![]()
Judas did bear the fruit for which he was chosen.. It just was not salvation fruit of the fruit of the son of perdition.![]()
Quote:Have you erased Jn6:70 from your copy, "MamaZ"?
Not Judas chester
Jesus chose all twelve, and ordained all of them to bear fruit.
Find a way to deny that...
In John6:70, Jesus said "I chose you, the twelve."
In Jn15:15, Jesus said: "I chose you (the Disciples) and appointed you to bear fruit, and your fruit remain."
So you all say that Jesus chose Judas to SINFUL fruit. You really believe that about Jesus' nature???
Now --- everyone please focus on what's happening at the end of John6.
"He who eats My flesh and drinks My blood has eternal life, and I shall raise him up the last day".
...many of His disciples said, "This is a difficult statement; who can listen to it?"
Jesus said, "Does this cause you to stumble? ...It is the Spirit that gives life; the flesh profits nothing, the words
........that I have spoken to you are spirit and life. But there are some of you who do not believe."
Jesus knew from the beginning who they were who did not believe, and who it was that would betray Him.
Jesus said, "No one can come to Me unless it has been granted him by the Father."
As a result of this many disciples withdrew, and were not walking with Him anymore.
Jesus said to the twelve: "YOU aren't going to go away TOO, are you?"
Peter said, "Lord ...you have words of eternal life; we believe ...and know You are the Holy One of God."
Jesus said, "Dd I not choose you, the twelve, and one of you is a devil?"
To put that in more concise terms:
Many disciples were LEAVING.
Jesus said to the twelve: "YOU are not going to leave TOO, are you!"
Peter: "No; we know You're the Messiah."
Jesus: "Did I not choose ALL TWELVE of you, and ONE is a devil?"
Jesus asked the twelve, "YOU aren't going to leave, ARE you?"
Jesus said, "I chose ALL TWELVE, and ONE has already left Me."
Tell me what else Jesus could have meant, but "any ONE of you COULD leave because one of you twelve is ALREADY A DEVIL!"
If Jesus wasn't saying "ANY of you COULD leave", then why did He say vs70, in response to Peter in vs69?
1. "Are YOU leaving?"
2. "No; You're the Messiah."
3. "I chose ALL TWELVE, and ONE is a devil."
See if anyone can disconnect #3 from #1; "ONE of you IS leaving". Tell me how Jesus didn't mean "the REST of you COULD POSSIBLY leave like the ONE."
Quoted by MamaZ:Nope --- this is one that must be answered.
Good try Ben but still Far from truth. For judas did bear the fruit for which he was chosen. He was never saved. He was not chosen to be saved. He was chosen to fulfill scripture. Which he did.
Ben said:1. Was Judas "chosen to bear fruit that remains"?
Ben said:2. Was Judas chosen to bear BAD fruit (his sin was predestined)?
Ben said:3. Was Judas chosen to bear GOOD fruit that remained?
Ben said:4. Were the OTHER ELEVEN at the same risk of leaving, in Jesus' words?
Ben said:#1 can only be "yes".
#2 can only be "no" --- God is not cause of sin. Jesus came to DESTROY sin, He CANNOT ordain it.
3. No way can "I chose ALL TWELVE" be divorced from "I chose and ordained you to bear fruit that REMAINS"
4. Jesus could not have meant anything ELSE
Ben said:I don't see any way out for "predestinationists", "MamaZ". Either Judas was ordained to SIN (impossible), or he was not ordained at all (impossible --- "I chose YOU TWELVE") --- or he was ordained for GOOD and FELL.
There is no way that "Reformed THeology" can answer this...
No, yourself, Ben. MamaZ is correct.
Yes, indeed. Your problem is that you think that there was only one fruit.
His sin was prophesied, therefore it was pre-ordained. Prophecy deals with certainty, not chance. It was prophesied that Jesus would be betrayed. So it is clear that this sin was ordained to happen, prophesied to happen, and Jesus chose Judas, knowing that it was Judas who would betray Him. Jesus did not choose Judas "in the hope" that Judas would not betray Him. It was a deliberate choice, made with full knowledge of what would certainly happen, with full knowledge of that certainty.
So the answer to #2 is an unequivocal "YES"
Given the answer to # 2, NO. Judas was chosen to bear BAD FRUIT, which remained. Can you deny that Judas played an integral part in the events leading up to the Crucifixion? Can you deny that the Crucifixion was fore-ordained to happen, given all the prophecy in the OT about it? Was the crucifixion predestined? Scripture says "YES".
In reality, this has nothing to do with Judas directly. But, the answer to the question is, while there was the potentiality of the other eleven leaving, the actuality was that they didn't, and Jesus knew they wouldn't. He asked them the question, not because He didn't know, or needed to know, but to elicit from them an affirmation of faith in Him.
Your canned answers show just how close-minded you are, and how much you refuse to see. Your questions are slanted and do not correctly state the problem.
Reformed Theology answers it just fine, Ben, The problem here is that you refuse to accept any answer that does not agree with your already-decided-on outcome, which is flawed. You ask, nay demand, answers to questions that you have no intention of ever considering those answers as anything other than fodder for you to shoot at. You refuse to be corrected about anything. You refuse to accept that you could have missed the Truth on anything. This is amply demonstrated by the record of posts and interactions with you going back literally years, and can be confirmed by any number of other posters here.
Bottom line, it is your theology that leaves questions unanswered, or answers them wrongly.
James 1:13-18
13When tempted, no one should say, "God is tempting me." For God cannot be tempted by evil, nor does he tempt anyone; 14but each one is tempted when, by his own evil desire, he is dragged away and enticed. 15Then, after desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is full-grown, gives birth to death.
16Don't be deceived, my dear brothers. 17Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows. 18He chose to give us birth through the word of truth, that we might be a kind of firstfruits of all he created.
Sin is not simply rebellion against God; rather, it is the refusal of God's grace, which aims to bring the sinner from death into life, from bad news into good news. It would be absurd to think that God desires the ugliness of death or the self-destructiveness of sin God wants to rescue us from the terrible results of sin.
None of which addresses the clear fact that Judas' sin was predestined and pre-ordained, prophesied, and therefore certain. Jesus chose Judas knowing that Judas would betray Him, not in the hope that He could prevent Judas from doing so.
Judas played a part in the events leading up to the Crucifixion, which was also fore-ordained before the foundation of the world, prophesied to take place, and therefore as certain to happen as the rising and setting of the sun.
Your weak and feeble attempt to dodge these clear facts shows that you deny God's Sovereignty over all things, and all events, and that you view God as merely reactive to Man, making Man the real power in control of all that happens.
It appears that you believe that God is the author of sin.
Do I misunderstand you?
You have misunderstood me from the beginning. And, you regularly engage in inflammatory and offensive terminology. I will not go any further with such garbage until you define exactly what you mean by that phrase, "author of sin".
the clear fact that Judas' sin was predestined and pre-ordained
You wrote:
I assume you mean that this sin was ordained, ie. decreed or enacted , by God.
This is contrary to biblical teaching.
If this is not what you mean, what do you mean?