- Mar 18, 2003
- 47,577
- 27,117
- 76
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Non-Denom
- Marital Status
- Married
- Politics
- US-Republican
Upvote
0
Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
God created living things to reproduce after their own kind. That implies that He does not directly create out of nothing every blade of grass, every tree, every baby animal or every baby human. He created all living things to have the ability to reproduce.
So, Adam was a child of God. All who came after him are children of Adam, and only those born again are children of God. God's children are so by two births. God does not have grandchildren...
We had been discussing human beings, and that is the scope at this point. Every human being is a child of God.
Are you denying that some people are in fact children of God?
If so, then who created them? Do you contend that the devil created people also?
I agree with Kittel's scholarly treatment of the subject, see his article on psuche, that the Bible does not teach dichotomy.
God created living things to reproduce after their own kind. That implies that He does not directly create out of nothing every blade of grass, every tree, every baby animal or every baby human. He created all living things to have the ability to reproduce. Adam and Jesus were the only 2 humans directly created. And, before someone jumps to a false conclusion, when I say Jesus was created, I mean Jesus' humanity.
God created a new man and the Son became one with the newly created human at the moment of its creation. Jesus was (and still is) the Second Adam. Jesus did not inherit or come into being as a human through any agency of man, nor was any part of Adam's race a part of His humanity. Mary was the world's first surrogate mother. that which she carried was supernaturally created, in toto, not God taking one of her ova and fertilizing it, as some wrongly assume.
So, Adam was a child of God. All who came after him are children of Adam, and only those born again are children of God. God's children are so by two births. God does not have grandchildren...
Does a person's family tree trace back to God?
Archierieus said:When did 'born again' start happening? At the time of Christ?
No, we were discussing the family of God. That was the scope.
Yes, in the sense that all are in the family of God. All are born under Adam, into sin. In order to have God as your heavenly Father, you must be born again.
Why do you avoid dealing with what is actually said?
Does the name Enoch ring a bell? How about Abel? But, let's just focus on Enoch. Do you think Enoch was taken up, without physical death, to God without being born again?
Archierieus said:So it is your position apparently that the new birth, born of water and the Spirit, was occurring even before the Flood?
The original issue had to do with humans, and that is the direction this student intends to follow at this time. Angels are a different type and order of beings generally, and Satan's case is distinguished as well. I wish to hold off on any discussion of angels until some other time.
Then what is the line of succession for those who you suggest are not children of God? Do they or do they not trace their ancestry back to God Who created Adam and Eve, the first humans?
Do your children and grandchildren deserve your love? Your protection? Your intervention in their behalf? Why, or why not? What if they make bad choices, or fall into a sinful lifestyle, or go to jail for a crime, do they no longer deserve your love or your protection or your intervention in their behalf? Is your love for them performance-based? These questions are directly relevant to the issue you have raised.
If that is your preference, very well, then for starters, please provide textual evidence from 'where we are at' which distinguishes between the general call you had mentioned in earlier posts and the call described in vv. 29, 30--if that is your position, as you said in a recent post, distinguishing betwen the 'general call' which is given to everyone, as you described it, and the 'special call,' as you described it, in vv. 29, 30.
Of course the physical lineage traces back to Adam and Eve.
But you are trying to establish the idea that all mankind are children of God, ignoring how that term is used in reference to those who are in Christ.
Based on the clear fact that Jesus berated Nicodemus for not knowing what the New Birth was, and the fact that OT saints were saved, as saved as you or I, by Grace through Faith, yes the new birth happened even back before the Flood.
Now, answer my question about Enoch. If you can....
I just realized that we haven't gotten a response yet from Arch.
So, Arch, do men deserve salvation? Yes or No. It is a simple question.
Are you saying that there is no general call?
Are you saying that all are called?
Are you saying that all are justified?
If only the foreordained
and predestined are called in v.30,
then either this refers to every person on earth, or it is a specific call.
I don't see another option. I am not necessarily describing a special call in v.30, but that is the way I understand it because of the way it is used in the text. You have given no other explanation, except to say that this is incorrect.
You have not explained what Paul is referring to when he says those who are called are justified.
So it seems obvious to me that you either don't know what is said,
or you don't want to admit that this passage supports a Calvinistic view,
Already been addressed several posts back. Answer my question, and I will answer your question. As mentioned ealier, the answer would be the same for both.
You haven't answered the question, you are squirming around it.
I stand corrects on the fact of foreknown instead of foreordained. Should have read my sig.No
Yes, per Christ's command to preach the gospel to every living person.
No
The verse says 'foreknew,' not foreordained. Different words.
The verse does not say 'only' those He foreknew and predestined have been called. You have added 'only.'
No language of exclusion or restriction appears in reference to the 'call' in v. 30. It cannot be stated either way from that verse.
I have said it is not so stated in that verse. And it is not.
That has been addressed by this student a number of posts back.
One cannot accurately go beyond the passage as it reads.
As it reads, it does not.
Already been addressed several posts back. Answer my question, and I will answer your question. As mentioned ealier, the answer would be the same for both.