No. The poor logic continues. You make a rule that there can be multiple replacement plans. You don't know that.
Huh? How does "plan B" equate to
multiple replacement plans? I can see why you're having trouble with my logic when you can't count to 1.
Then you enumerate them according to their sequence, when there was only one real plan all along.
Which you don't know from scripture. Rather you say that as a fact, then try to wrestle scripture into your belief.
God is not lying! Where's the lie, if I'm right? "God would have, but you disobeyed", is not the same as to say, "God had planned to, but you messed it up."
In this case it is exactly the same. Thus, your view says, "God wouldn't have, because He will cause you to mess up." there is no contingency.
Here's another one:
Luke 13:34 KJV — O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, which killest the prophets, and stonest them that are sent unto thee; how often would I have gathered thy children together, as a hen doth gather her brood under her wings, and ye would not!
Jesus willed to do one thing, the people of Jerusalem willed another. How many times did the people thwart the will of God? OFTEN!
No. It is not contradictory to "indeed God would have." Saul did not, thus it is plain that God did not. If Saul had, it is rather obvious that God would have had a different plan from the one he did have.
Remember we're talking about a plan decreed before Saul existed. So the single plan must have been that Saul would mess up, and God knew Saul would mess up, so there is absolutely no possibility that Saul would not mess up. It's not a contingency, in that case.
By the way, how did God know Saul would mess up?
I constantly find it amazing that people think we are the ones to derail God's almighty, omniscient plans. Not even Satan can do that.
You find it amazing because you insert it into the description. Satan can't do it in your view because Satan's actions are completely controlled by God (He's sovereign, right?), so God fits in the camp of a divided kingdom, according to Jesus.
Matthew 12:25 KJV — And Jesus knew their thoughts, and said unto them,
Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation; and every city or house divided against itself shall not stand:
Wrong again. The contingency is real. IF this, THEN that. Simple. And like it, IF not this, THEN not that. Where is the implication that it would have been possible for something different to happen, than what did happen?
The phrase "contingency plan" requires the possibility of the other. From Definitions from
Oxford Languages:
a plan designed to take a
possible future event or circumstance into account.
If it was impossible for Saul to do well and remain the king and pass it on to his children, then God is disingenuous to throw it in Saul's face as if he somehow had a way to keep the kingdom. That makes God a liar.
This is your problem, that you change the meaning of words (contingency, sovereignty, etc.) to suit you. It makes a conversation nigh impossible.
It is only a human assumption that says so. Don't judge reality by human mindset.
Did God intend for Joseph's brothers to sell him into slavery?
Instead of them murdering him, yes. God is able to save us from harm. Did God want him enslaved? Only as a means to an end, as a way to use for good what men meant for evil. In other words, even though the brothers were trying to be rid of Joseph forever, God used those desires, protecting Joseph from death, to save the brothers from death.
Just to make sure you aren't misrepresenting what I'm saying, I don't think God set out to sin.
No, you don't think so, but your doctrine says so (and says not so at the same time). God set out to cause
humans to sin, in your view. In doing so God became responsible for their sin. That's authorship.
God did not sin, nor did he set out to sin. Just making sure that is not going to be taken wrong, here. God is NOT, according to me, the author of sin.
Which is contradictory to the part where you say that God decrees sin. If your doctrine is self-contradictory, it's time to start questioning your doctrine.
There is a big difference between being First Cause, and planning that there be sin, from being the author of sin.
Not just planning, but planning on such a way that there is no way for the humans to avoid it. That's authorship.
But that is a rather protracted argument. I'm just trying to point of that no, I do not think God is the author of sin. If you think you can prove that my theology comes down to that, have at it, but that is off the OP, I think.
I have already. But here's the deal: if I'm right, that your view has God as the author of sin, then it proves that Calvinism is heretical, don't you think? This is spot on for the OP. If you need to prove that Calvinism is not heretical, then you are remiss in not providing that protracted argument.
But, FWIW, God causing that sin be, is how the Redemption became necessary, and, in fact, if not redeemed, there would be no Bride of Christ. Yes, this was planned.
So God had to fix a problem He intentionally caused? And if He had not caused a sinful humanity, then He could have just created a righteous bride? It makes no sense. It's a kingdom divided: God had to cause all sin to defeat sin.
Imagine that our government wants to stop all murders. And to do that they force 1/3rd of the people murder 2/3rds of the citizens, and then murder stops. Was it worth it?
The faulty logic continues.
That's what I'm saying about yours! I'm glad you agree.
Do you not see in the Bible at least two different uses of the term, "God's will", (and other terms to that effect)? God gives us instructions to follow —commands, things he tells us to do— these are his will for us to do. He also has what the Reformed refer to as his decree. This is his will concerning all things that will come to pass —his plans— in every detail.
Which makes Him the author of sin. If everything that comes to pass is His will, then He decrees/desires sinfulness in humans--His plans--in every detail. You said it yourself.
He has not shown us much of this, except in the past, and in the end, what little we can know about it from here: Heaven and being with him. These will not fail to be completed, accomplished. God is seeing to it.
I agree the ending is His plan. I agree the beginning was His plan. The middle is the part we are arguing about--whether EVERYTHING in the middle is His plan, or whether the middle part is humans trying to ruin His plan, and Him overcoming human sinfulness to make sure His plan comes to fruition. If part of His plan is overcoming His own plan, it's a divided kingdom, which He tells us cannot endure.
The logic is faulty also because it is self-contradictory. God causes a creature to cause something God did not intend? Huh?
Agreed. That's why your view makes God the intentional author of sin.
How do you know what being made in God's image is?
I'm asking you if there's anything left that can in any way be considered His image. If there's nothing, then your view is unbiblical on its face (which makes it heretical).
Not to denigrate the status of humans compared to brute beasts or robots, but really? I can't personally think of any effect that is not also a cause. So, you've said nothing in saying that we are causal agents. But the notion that we can do anything outside of God's intentions necessarily invokes cause by mere chance, which, by definition of "chance", is also self-contradictory.
How can cause by an agent be chance? If I set a pair of dice on the table showing 5 and 2, would you call it chance?
Here's what you are missing. If God makes a man who can choose good (what God wants) or evil (what God hates), and allows the man to decide without decreeing the decision, then God remains righteous, man retains responsibility for his own sin. Why is this idea so offensive to you?
If "freewill" is necessarily uncaused, it is also necessarily non-existent. Only God is uncaused.
Who said freewill is uncaused? My question is, if freewill is caused by God, and every resulting act of freewill is caused by God, where's the "free", and where's the "will"? Only God has it, and then you're saying that God freely willed sin (known as "authorship").
This is heretical, according to reformers, even, at least those who agree with the Westminster Confession.