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Is Salvation a choice? If it is, whose choice is it ?

BPPLEE

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Joshua 24:15 (KJV)
And if it seem evil unto you to serve the LORD, choose you this day whom ye will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served that [were] on the other side of the flood, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell: but as for me and my house, we will serve the LORD.
 
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Mark Quayle

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Do you think a person who "loves darkness", who is a seeker may be in a better position to be found by Christ than if he wasn't a seeker?
Are you suggesting that, in and of his own volition, he has endeared himself to Christ, or in some way made it more likely that Christ would choose him? Is this to show that God elects people based on what he knew they would do, or is it using that assumption to draw the reasoning that a 'seeker' is in a better position, though still in darkness? See, either way, it seems to me circular reasoning.
 
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Mark Quayle

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Joshua 24:15 (KJV)
And if it seem evil unto you to serve the LORD, choose you this day whom ye will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served that [were] on the other side of the flood, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell: but as for me and my house, we will serve the LORD.
Any commentary on why you posted this verse? Are you suggesting that this verse, which demonstrates the principle of valid choice, defeats the notion that God would choose who will serve him—i.e., the elect—without regard to their choosing him?
 
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zoidar

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Are you suggesting that, in and of his own volition, he has endeared himself to Christ, or in some way made it more likely that Christ would choose him?
I wouldn't say endeared. More like if you ask you are more likely to get a response (even you don't want to know) than not asking at all.
Is this to show that God elects people based on what he knew they would do, or is it using that assumption to draw the reasoning that a 'seeker' is in a better position, though still in darkness? See, either way, it seems to me circular reasoning.
I believe God chooses people to salvation from from where they are in life, not from where He knew they would be in the future. God acts in the present moment.
 
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Mark Quayle

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I wouldn't say endeared. More like if you ask you are more likely to get a response (even you don't want to know) than not asking at all.

I believe God chooses people to salvation from from where they are in life, not from where He knew they would be in the future. God acts in the present moment.
He also acted in the past, no? Has not everything been known from the beginning? I'm not saying, as you know from past conversations, that he doesn't act in the present as well, but that isn't as though he is responding to something he didn't know to begin with.
 
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BPPLEE

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Any commentary on why you posted this verse? Are you suggesting that this verse, which demonstrates the principle of valid choice, defeats the notion that God would choose who will serve him—i.e., the elect—without regard to their choosing him?
You think that God saves people against their will?
 
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Mark Quayle

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You think that God saves people against their will?
I don't think their will has anything to say about it until after they are born again, (just like their first birth). Salvation is entirely of Grace. Monergism.
 
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fhansen

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I don't think their will has anything to say about it until after they are born again, (just like their first birth). Salvation is entirely of Grace. Monergism.
There's no need or evidence that such should be the case. With our physical creation or birth God gives man the free gift of existence. With our spiritual life or rebirth God gives man the choice. Adam chose death by his act of disobedience-disbelievng God that he would die- but man was not created to die. That was an option, clearly demonstrated by God's command against it. Likewise, man chooses life when he turns back to God, even as God must reach down and draw him. Apart from God=death. With God=life. That's what we're here to learn.
 
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zoidar

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He also acted in the past, no? Has not everything been known from the beginning? I'm not saying, as you know from past conversations, that he doesn't act in the present as well, but that isn't as though he is responding to something he didn't know to begin with.
God knew everything from the beginning, yes. I however don't believe God chooses people for salvation from that foreknowledge, but in the present moment when a person repents. What would be your strongest verses showing God chose people for salvation before time?
 
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Do you think a person who "loves darkness", who is a seeker may be in a better position to be found by Christ than if he wasn't a seeker?
Good day,

Jesus is the seeker.... so your point is moot.

A person that love's Darkness would never ever desire to seek the light he hates.

What do you think would be the effective and sufficient cause that would make a lover of darkness to hate the darkness that he loves, and love the light he hates?

In Him

Bill
 
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BBAS 64

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God "calls" every person to come to repentance and belief. Jesus Christ "chooses" to grant eternal life to those who believe and are faithful—still obedient to his commandments—at the time they die. 1 Timothy 2:3-6, Revelation 2:10

Romans 1:18-23
For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and wickedness of those who by their wickedness suppress the truth. 19 For what can be known about God is plain to them, because God has shown it to them. 20 Ever since the creation of the world his eternal power and divine nature, invisible though they are, have been understood and seen through the things he has made. So they are without excuse; 21 for though they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their senseless minds were darkened. 22 Claiming to be wise, they became fools; 23 and they exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling a mortal human being or birds or four-footed animals or reptiles.

Romans 2:14-16
When Gentiles, who do not possess the law, do instinctively what the law requires, these, though not having the law, are a law to themselves. 15 They show that what the law requires is written on their hearts, to which their own conscience also bears witness; and their conflicting thoughts will accuse or perhaps excuse them 16 on the day when, according to my gospel, God, through Jesus Christ, will judge the secret thoughts of all.
Good day, Jan

God command's repentance and he is the cause of it

Eze 36:26 A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you; and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you a heart of flesh. And I will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep mine ordinances, and do them.

God removed the heart of stone and writes his law on the heart of flesh which he provided:

2Co 3:2 You are our epistle, written in our hearts, known and read of all men; being made manifest that ye are an epistle of Christ, ministered by us, written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God; not in tables of stone, but in tables that are hearts of flesh.

The result and the intention of all His work:

Heb 10:16 This is the covenant that I will make with them After those days, saith the Lord: I will put my laws on their heart, And upon their mind also will I write them; then saith he, And their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more.

He gives
He takes out
He puts
He causes
He writes
He remembers no more

C.H Spurgeon We believe, that the work of regeneration, conversion, sanctification and faith, is not an act of man's free will and power, but of the mighty, efficacious and irresistible grace of God.

Salvation is of the Lord the beauty of the NC!

In Him
Bill
 
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BPPLEE

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I don't think their will has anything to say about it until after they are born again, (just like their first birth). Salvation is entirely of Grace. Monergism.
Reading your Toggle signature I should have known
 
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Mark Quayle

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There's no need or evidence that such should be the case. With our physical creation or birth God gives man the free gift of existence. With our spiritual life or rebirth God gives man the choice. Adam chose death by his act of disobedience-disbelievng God that he would die- but man was not created to die. That was an option, clearly demonstrated by God's command against it. Likewise, man chooses life when he turns back to God, even as God must reach down and draw him. Apart from God=death. With God=life. That's what we're here to learn.
Interesting. No evidence after 92 posts to only one of who knows how many threads on this issue on only one site? Eph 2 and Romans 8 and pages of references besides should do it. I think you know better than that.

Or do you think 'evidence' should be empirical, as though our experience has empirically evidential merit?

By the way, we are talking about two different things. Salvation is directly God-derived. What you are talking about is not being denied, but irrelevant to the question of what causes our salvation. There is no need?? We indeed DO decide--I would insist that if we don't decide, we are continuing to reject him and that we in fact are not saved. It is logically necessary, because you have someone at enmity with God doing something eternal and good. That is logically self-contradictory, according to Romans 8--those at enmity with God CANNOT please God. And yes, you are right, they choose to reject Christ. Always.

The other day I saw some meme or something, where somebody was being praised for quoting Invictus, "I am the master of my fate; I am the captain of my soul." Really?? Good luck with that!

Of course we decide, but if we choose Christ it is because we belong to God, and he has given us faith, or we are fooling ourselves. If our choice has any integrity, it didn't come from fickle human faith.
 
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Mark Quayle

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God knew everything from the beginning, yes. I however don't believe God chooses people for salvation from that foreknowledge, but in the present moment when a person repents. What would be your strongest verses showing God chose people for salvation before time?
Well, I guess I could quote the whole of the Scriptures. In part, though, the use of Scriptures depends on a proper understanding of what God is. If he is the only omnipotent, self-existing one, then everything comes from him --all fact. I'm sure you have scripture for that. If not, read John 1. Then, add to that, that he had to have a reason to create --and consummated in Rev 21. God with us, and we his people. THAT is the reason he created. If you have some better reason, let me know. Those imply purpose from the beginning, and purpose all the way through, and chain of cause-and-effect that necessarily includes all fact. That we choose, I insist on, but that is for his purposes, as ordained.

Verses:

Ephesians 1: "Chosen from the foundation of the world", when one hasn't forgotten what God is, necessarily implies God PLANNED this, (to use human terms). Look at the human notions of self-value that feed the idea that God depends on our free will in order to decide who to choose. It is silly, frankly. Why should he bother to choose, if it depends on us anyway?? Did he look forward in time to see we would choose him and then do what it would take to bring that choice about???

Ephesians 2: "You were dead;" "God made us alive;" "it is by grace" Nothing there about him looking forward, nor in the moment seeing what we would do.

Romans 8: "For whom he foreknew, he also predestined." The word translated into English "foreknow", is not anthropomorphic. He is not like us. Because of what God is, it necessarily includes, as always concerning God, his providential and purposed causation. He knew because he purposed it. Take a look at how much complication is involved to explain how instead we can see him considering him to wait on our silly rebellious choices. That isn't omnipotent, self-motivated, "pure actuality". He is not experimenting here, to see what, all by itself, by chance pops up and shows integrity.

Romans 9: "For the children not yet being born, nor having done any good or evil, that the purpose of God according to election might stand, not of works but of Him who calls"

Isaiah 46: "Declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient times things that are not yet done, saying, ‘My counsel shall stand, and I will do all My pleasure"

1 Corinthians 2: "Who has known the mind of the Lord that he should instruct him?"

If those aren't enough, pages more won't convince you either. If you look at these through a self-deterministic lens, you won't see his sovereignty, his self-derived purpose. This is how God loved us: He gave his only begotten Son, for the end that those believing in him would not perish, but have life everlasting. Romans 8, Ephesians 2, 1 Corinthians

Was the Lamb not slain from the foundation of the world? Acts 2: "This man [Jesus] was handed over to you by God’s deliberate plan and foreknowledge..." Was this plan B?
 
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Lost Witness

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As a Child of God It’s impossible for me not to see God being in complete control.
Romans 8:28 legit says exactly that.
ALL things, work according to HIS purpose
Salvation is all God.
 
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zoidar

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As a Child of God It’s impossible for me not to see God being in complete control.
Romans 8:28 legit says exactly that.
ALL things, work according to HIS purpose
Salvation is all God.
God is in complete control... However God doesn't need to meticulously control every atom in the universe to be in complete control.
 
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zoidar

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Well, I guess I could quote the whole of the Scriptures. In part, though, the use of Scriptures depends on a proper understanding of what God is.
Fully agree, yet we come to very different conclusions.
If he is the only omnipotent, self-existing one, then everything comes from him --all fact. I'm sure you have scripture for that.
I don't what you mean by saying "all fact" comes from God.
If not, read John 1. Then, add to that, that he had to have a reason to create --and consummated in Rev 21. God with us, and we his people. THAT is the reason he created. If you have some better reason, let me know.
Well yes, I believe God created the universe out of love, specifically for all mankind.
Those imply purpose from the beginning, and purpose all the way through, and chain of cause-and-effect that necessarily includes all fact. That we choose, I insist on, but that is for his purposes, as ordained.
But you can't find anywhere in Scripture where it says God ordained our choices.
Verses:

Ephesians 1: "Chosen from the foundation of the world", when one hasn't forgotten what God is, necessarily implies God PLANNED this, (to use human terms). Look at the human notions of self-value that feed the idea that God depends on our free will in order to decide who to choose. It is silly, frankly. Why should he bother to choose, if it depends on us anyway?? Did he look forward in time to see we would choose him and then do what it would take to bring that choice about???
Is it silly to throw a lifebuoy to a drowning man, since he needs to cling on to it to be saved?

No, as I have said I don't believe God looked ahead in time to see if we would choose Him. I believe God knew, but He chooses the person in the present moment when the person repents, not because of His foreknowledge.
Ephesians 2: "You were dead;" "God made us alive;" "it is by grace" Nothing there about him looking forward, nor in the moment seeing what we would do.
The verse descibes the condition of being under the condemnation/death sentence. It has nothing to with whether we can respond or not.
Romans 8: "For whom he foreknew, he also predestined." The word translated into English "foreknow", is not anthropomorphic. He is not like us. Because of what God is, it necessarily includes, as always concerning God, his providential and purposed causation. He knew because he purposed it. Take a look at how much complication is involved to explain how instead we can see him considering him to wait on our silly rebellious choices. That isn't omnipotent, self-motivated, "pure actuality". He is not experimenting here, to see what, all by itself, by chance pops up and shows integrity.
This view has a few problems as I see it. First it's impossible to be morally responsible if we only do what God has decreed for us to do. Further, the reason there is sin is because of libertarian free will. I can't see how sin could exist if God has purposed all our choices or else God is the creator of sin.
Romans 9: "For the children not yet being born, nor having done any good or evil, that the purpose of God according to election might stand, not of works but of Him who calls"
This is not about salvation of individuals, but from which bloodline the Messiah would come.
Isaiah 46: "Declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient times things that are not yet done, saying, ‘My counsel shall stand, and I will do all My pleasure"
This is clearly showing God being in control of everything, not a description of meticulous control of every atom in the universe.
1 Corinthians 2: "Who has known the mind of the Lord that he should instruct him?"

If those aren't enough, pages more won't convince you either. If you look at these through a self-deterministic lens, you won't see his sovereignty, his self-derived purpose. This is how God loved us: He gave his only begotten Son, for the end that those believing in him would not perish, but have life everlasting. Romans 8, Ephesians 2, 1 Corinthians
I don't know what a self-deterministic lens is. It doesn't sound like anything I believe in.

Read John 3:16-17 along with John 12:46-47 and you see that Jesus came and died so everyone might be saved through Him.

For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life. For God did not send the Son into the world to judge the world, but that the world might be saved through Him.
— John 3:16-17

I have come as Light into the world, so that everyone who believes in Me will not remain in darkness. If anyone hears My sayings and does not keep them, I do not judge him; for I did not come to judge the world, but to save the world.
— John 12:46-47



Was the Lamb not slain from the foundation of the world? Acts 2: "This man [Jesus] was handed over to you by God’s deliberate plan and foreknowledge..." Was this plan B?
Of course God's plan was always to let Jesus die for our sins. But it's huge leap from this to say it means God has decreed every single event, thought or deed.

To sum this up, none of the verses you provided said God chose people from the beginning to salvation. And why didn't you. For the simple reason there are none.

Christ love! ❤️✝️
 
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zoidar

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Good day,

Jesus is the seeker.... so your point is moot.

A person that love's Darkness would never ever desire to seek the light he hates.
The question was not whether a person who loves darkness can seek Christ or not, but whether it can matter to salvation to be a seeker of meaning and purpose or not.
What do you think would be the effective and sufficient cause that would make a lover of darkness to hate the darkness that he loves, and love the light he hates?

In Him

Bill
The sufficent cause would be the Holy Spirit, shaping a new heart in the believer. Repentance follows conviction by the Holy Spirit. A person does not need to love Christ to be convicted, it's quite the opposite: a person loves Christ after repentance, not at conviction.
 
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Mark Quayle

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Fully agree, yet we come to very different conclusions.

I don't what you mean by saying "all fact" comes from God.
The existence of anything, principle, ethereal, principle, material, spirit, physical and metaphysical, abstract notions, art, maths, beauty, falsifiable and non-falsifiable claims and concepts--whatever is, besides God, is a result of God creating. It all logically descends causally from God.
Well yes, I believe God created the universe out of love, specifically for all mankind.
Do you have scripture for that? Or is it an aggregate of many scriptural concepts? Does anything come right out and say that? (By the way, I'm not saying you are wrong, but seeing as how our notion of love doesn't match God's love, the statement is suspect in the implications we draw from it, and lopsided. He made us for himself, and that, for his praise. "For from him and through him and for him are all things.")
But you can't find anywhere in Scripture where it says God ordained our choices.
Would you agree that God's choosing to do something is not governed by time? That we see it played out in time doesn't qualify God's ways. But, if you don't want that reasoning, look at 2 Timothy 1:9 (the last one on the list below).

I can find places in Scripture where it says God ordained our choices. I have mentioned some many times in the past, but here are some:

  • Proverbs 21:1 "The king’s heart is a stream of water in the hand of the LORD; he turns it wherever he will." (God's actions are not governed by time.)
  • John 6:29 “The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent." (God's actions are not governed by time; is there any difference to him when this happened, or were we predestined to believe? For God to predestine something is to cause it to happen.)
  • John 1:3 "Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made." (Our choices are things.)
  • Romans 8:28 "All things work together for good, for them who love him." (And, God's actions are not governed by time.)
  • Philippians 2:13 "For it is God who works in you both to will and to do according to his purposes." (And he is not governed by time.)
  • Ephesians 1:11 "In him we were also chosen,[a] having been predestined according to the plan of him who works out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will."
  • Romans 8:29 "For those God foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son... And those He predestined, He also called; those He called, He also justified; those He justified, He also glorified." Are our choices not involved here?
  • 2 Timothy 1:9 "He has saved us and called us to a holy life—not because of anything we have done but because of his own purpose and grace. This grace was given us in Christ Jesus before the beginning of time." (My underline). (Does this not involve our choices?)
Now, I will grant you that these don't mention ALL choices, but if they mention any choices, is not free will encroached upon?
Is it silly to throw a lifebuoy to a drowning man, since he needs to cling on to it to be saved?
Yes, if that man is born dead, and unable to cling to anything. Read Ephesians 2 again, Dead. Romans 8, unable to do anything spiritually valid. 1 Corinthians 2:14, unable to even understand what's going on here, to know to reach.
No, as I have said I don't believe God looked ahead in time to see if we would choose Him. I believe God knew, but He chooses the person in the present moment when the person repents, not because of His foreknowledge.
Do you understand the notion of God being the root and reason for all fact? I won't go again into the idea of his 'timelessness', though that is a very human way to put the fact that he is not subject to time. The idea of God only reacting, and not causing, simply doesn't add up, if he is the omniscient, and, therefore, intentional beginning of all fact. Our very existence continues to depend on him. Is there some reason to think he did not plan our very choices? Is something left up to mere chance? If to you, him planning (and/or causing) our choices renders them invalid, I would like to know why. After all, if God is the root and reason for all fact, our choices cannot be valid, unless he established them. We don't operate on his level.

Mark Quayle said:
Ephesians 2: "You were dead;" "God made us alive;" "it is by grace" Nothing there about him looking forward, nor in the moment seeing what we would do.
The verse descibes the condition of being under the condemnation/death sentence. It has nothing to with whether we can respond or not.
Does not "Dead" imply inability? But, as to Romans 8, do you consider the person described by, "mind of flesh", (as opposed to mind of the Spirit"), or the other renderings, ("realm" of the flesh, "mind governed by" the flesh, "sinful nature", mind "set on" the flesh, "corrupt nature", etc) to not apply to all the unsaved? This person in Romans 8 --whatever else he is-- is unable to please God. Unable. Verse 8
This view has a few problems as I see it. First it's impossible to be morally responsible if we only do what God has decreed for us to do. Further, the reason there is sin is because of libertarian free will. I can't see how sin could exist if God has purposed all our choices or else God is the creator of sin.
All those are axioms made by human reasoning. You asked, below, about my term, "self-determinism" or "self-deterministic". Maybe it would help if I said, "those insisting on self-determinism". I'll explain more below. Those insisting on self-determinism see humans and human nature as basic to fact, and God as unknown subject to conjecture. They do not see, even though they will confess to it, that God is the root and reason for very reality. They consider God subject to things (willed moral agents) from outside of himself. They do not understand omnipotence, aseity. They don't say so, but they see God as subject to realities outside of himself. They are abhorred by such theological notions as the Simplicity of God.

Let's look at a corollary, or a definition from the negative, of God's decree, that includes his very omnipotence: If God did not decree it, it cannot happen. If you can show me somehow that God can cause uncaused things to come about--that is what you are undertaking here with these axioms. (Either that, or you are invoking a notion that mere chance governs [some] outcomes, which is self-contradictory--no thing can happen by chance). There is sin because of God's decree, and Adam's sin, and human sin ever since (yes, the will is involved; libertarian will, not so much). You, I expect, will say that if a person doesn't knowingly choose to sin, he has not sinned. That is a mistake too. (The very nature of a human God has not reborn from above by the Spirit is corrupt). You probably will say that the command implies the ability to obey. It does not. (The command demonstrates our inability to obey apart from Christ in us.) God can cause that there be sin, without being the author of it. He is at least that much above us. But, if you like, we can get into that too. Consider the fact that sin is rebellion against God. If he didn't plan redemption (remember Acts 2:23), then this was all Plan B, and Plan C etc.

God is not a resident with us within a larger reality. God MADE reality. The only "just is" is God. If there really is libertarian free will, then God caused it, which contradicts "libertarian free". If there is sin, God caused that there be sin. It did not spring out of nothing, nor did sinners.


This is not about salvation of individuals, but from which bloodline the Messiah would come.
I did not intend it concerning salvation of individuals, but about God doing things not in reaction to somebody doing good or evil, but according to God's purposes.
This is clearly showing God being in control of everything, not a description of meticulous control of every atom in the universe.
You allow that he is "in control of everything", but then attempt to say he is not in control of everything. If he is in control of everything, he is in control of the smallest particle. But, again, if he made everything, as John 1:3 says, then he made the atoms too. You can say, that like our "free wills" there are principles by which the atoms operate. Ok, who made the principles? He uses our wills to make what he decreed would come to pass, as means to make them come to pass. You separate 'natural' from 'God-caused'. Not so. Do you think what is natural caused itself?
I don't know what a self-deterministic lens is. It doesn't sound like anything I believe in.
Self-determination is a simple fact of life. We do decide, we do order our lives, what we do has real results concerning us. There's nothing wrong with that. We are self-interested by nature; even Adam and Eve were, before they sinned. We live our lives. But what I'm referring to by "those who insist on self-determinism", and see through that "self-deterministic lens" consider themselves to be the only cause of their decisions. It is a step beyond mere will. They are declaring independence from the First Cause --from God Himself-- granted, possibly without realizing that they are doing so.

Generally, this is what I see in their worldview: That they are the masters of their own fate--that captain of their soul. They operate separately from God, (not that he isn't a help), in order to perform some duty for God, that he will appreciate and approve of. This, they call obedience. They consider it theoretically possible that a person can be worthy of Grace. They say that God cannot do what he set out to do without their cooperation/obedience. They think God is affected by their will, that he gains knowledge by their deeds, that he is not in control of all fact, but must wait to see what will happen, before deciding to create mankind for the purpose of redeeming the Bride. They think God has set in motion governing principles that do not depend on him for their very essence and continuing operation. They don't see God as the very source and power of continued existence. They think their minds capable of understanding God's love, and deriving doctrine from that understanding.

I could go on.
Read John 3:16-17 along with John 12:46-47 and you see that Jesus came and died so everyone might be saved through Him.
John 3:16-18 and John 12:46-47 don't say he died so that EVERYONE might be saved through him. The Greek subjunctive does not denote unknown possibility, but purpose. All those believing will have life everlasting.
For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life. For God did not send the Son into the world to judge the world, but that the world might be saved through Him.
— John 3:16-17

I have come as Light into the world, so that everyone who believes in Me will not remain in darkness. If anyone hears My sayings and does not keep them, I do not judge him; for I did not come to judge the world, but to save the world.
— John 12:46-47
Nothing there about who is believing. It is true that anyone that believes on him will have life everlasting. If I was to take the subjunctive to mean that anybody at all, independent of God making them alive, could become saved by deciding to believe, then I'd have to also take the subjunctive to mean that some who believe will not be saved. But he says ALL those believing... There is no question of chance going on.
Of course God's plan was always to let Jesus die for our sins. But it's huge leap from this to say it means God has decreed every single event, thought or deed.
How did those come to be? You will say, "libertarian free will", I expect. But, as I noted above, nothing can come to be that God has not caused, whether directly or through means --means which he also caused. Omniscient omnipotent God created, knowing what would happen, and went ahead and created anyway. He intended it to happen, is the only conclusion I can come up with.
To sum this up, none of the verses you provided said God chose people from the beginning to salvation. And why didn't you. For the simple reason there are none.

Christ love! ❤️✝️
Read the list of verses above. Oh, and remember what I said about us thinking we know what God's love is, in some way worthy of drawing from that concept, worthy axioms.
 
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fhansen

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Interesting. No evidence after 92 posts to only one of who knows how many threads on this issue on only one site? Eph 2 and Romans 8 and pages of references besides should do it. I think you know better than that.

Or do you think 'evidence' should be empirical, as though our experience has empirically evidential merit?
My objection was to your linking physical birth with spiritual birth, as if the fact that we have no choice in our physical birth should necessarily support the concept that we have no choice in our spiritual birth-and I’m maintaining that there’s no reason at all to believe such is the case; the two births are very distinct-and for a good reason. Read my post in light of that. Adam had no say in his creation and yet he did have a say in accepting or rejecting God-as his God, with death the result of his choice. And God’s business in “salvation history” ever since has been to patiently guide man back to choosing Him as their God again, and thereby back to life.

In the fullness of time Jesus shows us the true God as He’d never been revealed before, a God truly worth believing in, hoping in, and loving. Many men preferred/prefer darkness, however, even after receiving the grace to believe and even though Scripture tells us that Jesus died for all, that God loves all and wants all to repent and none to perish. Romans 1, in fact, tells us there’s no excuse for unbelief- for anyone.

In Eph 2:8-10, Paul tells us:
‘For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by works, so that no one can boast. For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.”

The dynamics of how this works is highlighted and clarified in Rom 2:7
“To those who by persistence in doing good seek glory, honor and immortality, he will give eternal life.”

And echoed in Rom 8:12-14
"Therefore, brothers and sisters, we have an obligation—but it is not to the flesh, to live according to it. For if you live according to the flesh, you will die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the misdeeds of the body, you will live. For those who are led by the Spirit of God are the children of God.”

And this is all consistent with John 15:5-6
“I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing. If you do not remain in me, you are like a branch that is thrown away and withers; such branches are picked up, thrown into the fire and burned.”

Salvation is a choice, aided by grace, a daily choice to pick up our cross, acknowledging God as our God as we enter into and remain in relationship with Him, the Vine, who nourishes us with His own life and apart from whom we can do nothing, apart from whom we're dead.

And so the following chapters in Ephesians, chapters 4-6, instruct and warn believers, as Paul does in most of his letters, against returning to the flesh, living as the world does, not doing away with the old man, because of the very possibility of their failing to do so, failing to live up to the standards that would identify them as children of God.

By the way, we are talking about two different things. Salvation is directly God-derived. What you are talking about is not being denied, but irrelevant to the question of what causes our salvation. There is no need?? We indeed DO decide--I would insist that if we don't decide, we are continuing to reject him and that we in fact are not saved. It is logically necessary, because you have someone at enmity with God doing something eternal and good. That is logically self-contradictory, according to Romans 8--those at enmity with God CANNOT please God. And yes, you are right, they choose to reject Christ. Always.
A distinction without a difference: either we play a role in deciding or He totally decides for us, by causing our choice, by causing a change in us that we cannot resist. And while He certainly could do that, that’s not His plan which is why He didn’t do that from the very beginning but instead made salvation to be a journey, through mankind’s history corporately, and through man’s history-each of us- individually.

Historically, Christianity believed that grace is absolutely essential in man‘s turning to God; there’s no way to be saved without it, without Him, IOW. But, by His wise discretion, God allows that grace to be resistible, making it something that we can be challenged by, refined by, and grow in- or that we can ultimately reject. Salvation, election, is worked out and confirmed and made sure throughout one’s life with whatever time and whatever gifts we’ve been given. To say we can necessarily predict our own perseverance or the continued fruitfulness of our soil is to put the cart ahead of the horse.
The other day I saw some meme or something, where somebody was being praised for quoting Invictus, "I am the master of my fate; I am the captain of my soul." Really?? Good luck with that!
Yes, good luck with that. That would be Pelagianism which the church formally rejected some 15 centuries ago.
 
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