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The thing that frustrates me is God gave us life through His creation, Adam. Then He gave us eternal life through His Son, Jesus. So we are doubly His, and yet some want to believe their life is their own.Lots of "maybes" here.
God is a "maybe" to the unregenerates.
How does that tie back to Calvinism?The thing that frustrates me is God gave us life through His creation, Adam. Then He gave us eternal life through His Son, Jesus. So we are doubly His, and yet some want to believe their life is their own.
All true, but this text in no way demonstrates that God exercises exhaustive control over all events in the Universe. At most, this text shows that what God wants to do, He will in fact do. But it does not justify concluding that He controls everything.
lol. So now is that your argument? That non-Calvinists believe that their life is their own?The thing that frustrates me is God gave us life through His creation, Adam. Then He gave us eternal life through His Son, Jesus. So we are doubly His, and yet some want to believe their life is their own.
So then it is good that TULIP came along and put your thoughts in order.We simply can not understand the interactive, pervasive power of God over what He has made with our understanding,
But it must be understood in a 5 point system.
So then it is good that TULIP came along and put your thoughts in order.
Some of us can actually do well without a 5 point system.
This is absolutely right on.I cannot imagine a God who just lets things go to pot so to speak.
Hebrews 1:3
who being the brightness of His glory and the express image of His person, and upholding all things by the word of His power, when He had by Himself purged our sins, sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high,
And this too as it says, 'in Him all things consist'
Col 1
15 He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. 16 For by Him all things were created that are in heaven and that are on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or powers. All things were created through Him and for Him. 17 And He is before all things, and in Him all things consist. 18 And He is the head of the body, the church, who is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in all things He may have the preeminence.
So we read upholding all things and all things consist in Him, upholding especially speaks of active management.
Besides that verse about not even a sparrow falls to the ground without God.
Matthew 10:29
Are not two sparrows sold for a copper coin? And not one of them falls to the ground apart from your Father’s will.
We simply can not understand the interactive, pervasive power of God over what He has made with our understanding, it just seems to be way to complicated for our imagining God to be in control of all things, and we may think why would God care? But the scriptures tell a different story.
How so?Downey says:
"We simply can not understand the interactive, pervasive power of God over what He has made with our understanding,'
But it must be understood in a 5 point system.
I agree.I believe there are many in the Calvinist and Non Calvinist who are more that 'somewhat wrong'. Of course, many in both camps can be very knowledgable.
Goes exactly to my point about why most really thorough systematic theologies are written from the generally Reformed position. You can't write a thorough systematic theology series and ignore the constant work of the omnipresent and providentially controlling nature of God the way many non Reformed do.But when it comes to the very basics concerning the nature of God, His creation, and His providential control over that creation - Reformed theologians generally have things correct and non Reformed are off by a country mile.
I, an Arminian, agree with this statement. As would Arminius as shown in what he actually wrote.
Yes - "absolute free willy" is an unsubtle dig at the really silly ways that some people approach the relationship of God to His creation.Definitely. But, how many 'absolute free willy's' are there? I have not yet seen any on CF, but I am a noobie here I suppose. Is the 'free willy' phrase in reality just a little wind up ?
Good to see that you're not among the really silly ones who deny His omnipresent and providentially controlling relationship with the creation.In Him we have our being. He has sent forth His Word and has not only brought forth all that we know of. But His Word abides in every creation so as to accomplish all that God sent Him forth to accomplish.
All things are to be eventually summed up in Jesus Christ, His incarnate Word. When this age finally comes to an end, Christ will hand it all back to His Father for the purpose of bringing the Father glory.
Yep
I agree with Spurgeon.And - yes - "all things" means all things - the good the bad and the ugly. God's goodness, mercy and grace as well as His righteousness, wrath, and eternal judgment against everything that does not bring Him glory is all included in the package.
I would agree, as would Charles Spurgeon. His sermon - Salvation by Knowing the Truths states:
"All men," say they; "that is, some of all sorts of men": as if the Lord could not have said "all sorts of men" if he had meant that. The Holy Ghost by the apostle has written "all men," and unquestionably he means all men."
"God our Savior; who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth."—1 Timothy 2:3, 4.
Which is one of the reasons why I identify with Spurgeon.How these things can be while He is omnipresent and sovereign - we can't really understand.
Correct. Spurgeon majored on this.
If Jesus Christ wasn't fully God as well as fully man I'm a monkey's uncle. But point taken anyway for now.Though He slay us - yet will we trust Him. We can trust a God who would die for us.
Not God, Jesus died for us. I know, big discussion point.
No - that kicks the idea that predestination equals deterministic "coercion" in the dust.We armchair theologians have a clear choice - and it is the only choice. We can believe all of the Word of God and include it in our theology - or we can just leave out the parts that trouble us.
Well, that kicks 'predestination in the dust' - we have a choice!
Certainly. That why I try to use a term like non-Calvinist or non- Reformed or non-sovereignty to describe the other side, as it were, rather than Arminian. I sometimes generalize but I try to be as specific as the situation allows.Non-Calvinists covers a broad range of beliefs and interpretations, only one of which is what Arminus actually taught and wrote. Arminius departed from Theodore Beza on DOUBLE predestination as he concluded it would make God the Author of sin.
How so. How is predestining ALL things not in any way deterministic ?.....
No - that kicks the idea that predestination equals deterministic "coercion" in the dust.
We are both in the position against absolute free will (not that I have met any one who is for absolute free will). If God predestined man to sin then surely it is God that is responsible for what God did. How could man close to not do what God predestined him to do ?The predestination of all things that happen in God's creation does in no way negate the fact that the creation is able to make "free" choices and will be held accountable for them.
Beats me how you can conclude this. Even Augustine, who invented predestination, backtracked on it in his later publications.The choices of men are the means that God uses to bring what He has predestined to happen to past. The ability and God given right of men to make their own choices does not negate predestination. It establishes predestination.....
Well, let's think about this.I cannot imagine a God who just lets things go to pot so to speak.
Hebrews 1:3
who being the brightness of His glory and the express image of His person, and upholding all things by the word of His power, when He had by Himself purged our sins, sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high,
And this too as it says, 'in Him all things consist'
Col 1
15 He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. 16 For by Him all things were created that are in heaven and that are on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or powers. All things were created through Him and for Him. 17 And He is before all things, and in Him all things consist. 18 And He is the head of the body, the church, who is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in all things He may have the preeminence.
So we read upholding all things and all things consist in Him, upholding especially speaks of active management.
Besides that verse about not even a sparrow falls to the ground without God.
Matthew 10:29
Are not two sparrows sold for a copper coin? And not one of them falls to the ground apart from your Father’s will.
We simply can not understand the interactive, pervasive power of God over what He has made with our understanding, it just seems to be way to complicated for our imagining God to be in control of all things, and we may think why would God care? But the scriptures tell a different story.
Lol. Choose between a) and a)This is how I understand Calvinism on predestination and man's responsibility for his 'free' choice.
Choice (a) is to be born in sin. There is no other choice.
God: “You may choose between (a) or (a), and you're free to choose whichever is most compatible and consistent with your nature, but you're not free to abstain from choosing, and the choice that you make, will ultimately be YOUR choice. So what's your choice?”
Yes, go to The Westminster Confession of Faith, which will provide you with the full scope of Reformed Theology. It says that God has decreed some for Heaven, and others for Hell.If you want to know what Calvinism teaches, go to a Calvinist source, not their detractors.
That's about the shallowest and most wrongheaded portrayal of the concept of predestination I have ever heard.This is how I understand Calvinism on predestination and man's responsibility for his 'free' choice.
Choice (a) is to be born in sin. There is no other choice.
God: “You may choose between (a) or (a), and you're free to choose whichever is most compatible and consistent with your nature, but you're not free to abstain from choosing, and the choice that you make, will ultimately be YOUR choice. So what's your choice?”
Person: “I guess I choose (a).”
God: “Great. Now I will reveal the gracious gift or perhaps, just punishment for choosing (a).”
Person: “Whoa…wait...what?”
God: “You made your choice! YOU chose it out of your own free agency!”
Person: “Wait! All I had was choice (a). What other choice COULD I make?”
God: “What choice DID you make?
Person: “I chose (a).”
God: “Exactly!”
Person: “But what choice did I HAVE?”
God: “Apparently, the choice that you MADE.”
Person: “But it wasn’t MY choice.”
God: “Sure it was.”
Person: “But I couldn’t choose anything OTHER THAN (a), so how was that MY choice?”
God: “You admitted it yourself. You chose (a). You said so yourself.”
Person: “Ok, I chose it, but I didn’t have any OTHER choice.
God: “Exactly! Finally you admit it.”
Person: “But my choice wasn’t REALLY a choice, since I had no OTHER choice.”
God: “Would you like to know the ramifications of your choice?”
Person: “Not really.”
God: “I chose to be gracious towards you.”
Person: “You did?”
God: “I did.”
Person: “Wait! See, YOU’RE the One who did the choosing.”
God: “I never said that I didn’t make a choice. I simply said that you ALSO had a choice, and YOU made your choice.”
Person: “Well, I guess it turned out ok, so I’m happy.”
God: “Good. I’m glad that you’re happy.”
Person: “What about these others?”
God: “I chose something different.”
Person: “Are they happy with THEIR choice?”
God: “No.”
Person: “Well…they made their choice. They should just accept that.”
God: “Exactly!”
Continued at :
http://examiningcalvinism.blogspot.de/2011/03/determinism-compatibilism-free-agency.html