greatdivide46
Junior Member
- Nov 7, 2011
- 1,390
- 138
- Faith
- Baptist
- Marital Status
- Married
- Politics
- US-Republican
I disagree. It take a powerful lot of strength and love to let a child have their own way even when the parent knows that its the wrong way. Especially in God's case where He has the ability to force His children to stay with Him even if they don't want to. The God I worship would never be the kind of Father who would force His children to do anything against their will. Not that He couldn't do that -- He could -- He just wouldn't.Greatdivide I disagree, that would not be a great powerful god that would be a weak, dead beat dad and he has let the kids take control to their on demise... the kids are on the throne.
I'm sorry but I don't see God allowing His children to have their own way takes Him off His throne. God being on the throne doesn't mean that He is forcing His children to do only what He knows is good for them. God's being on the throne means allowing His children to make mistakes even when He knows they are mistakes.You already agreed that God is on the throne now you are contradicting that
I'm not saying that those things are done in one's own power over God's. What I'm saying is that God voluntarily stays His power to allow those things to happen. But again I must emphasize that I personally can't imagine that they ever would but I can't deny the possibility.You cannot claim you could push God away, walk away or jump out of His hand, then claim that was not something you did in your power over God's...
God is definitely on the throne and His children leaving Him or staying with Him is not the defining evidence of whether or not He's on the throne.If an argument presented creates a contradiction in the biblical text, that argument must change and your argument creates a contradiction. Either God is on the throne or not.
Upvote
0