James Is Back
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- Aug 21, 2014
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Nevermind it's gone. Must be seeing things!
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It might have been. It was on page 22 when I started the post above yours now we're on 23.
Yeah, RickOtto and I had an interaction that is no longer there. I don't think I dreamed it, so we've been ninja'd. :/
I can't imagine the two of us having anything to say to each other that would require deletion.Yeah, RickOtto and I had an interaction that is no longer there. I don't think I dreamed it, so we've been ninja'd. :/
That makes for one powerful pastor. Can't get to heaven without the church/pastor?
Well, there's an official answer to that one (Romans 9:19-24):
You will say to me then, Why does he still find fault? For who can resist his will? But who are you, O man, to answer back to God? Will what is moulded say to its moulder, Why have you made me like this? Has the potter no right over the clay, to make out of the same lump one vessel for honourable use and another for dishonourable use? What if God, desiring to show his wrath and to make known his power, has endured with much patience vessels of wrath prepared for destruction, in order to make known the riches of his glory for vessels of mercy, which he has prepared beforehand for glory even us whom he has called, not from the Jews only but also from the Gentiles?
There are indeed difficult questions here. But the answers do not involve us telling God that He doesn't measure up to what we think He should be.
And we cannot "put ourselves in God's shoes" either, because those shoes are infinitely bigger than we are.
I can't imagine the two of us having anything to say to each other that would require deletion.
The non-sequitur is to say that if evil exists and God is omnipotent, HE caused the evil. Suffice it to say that no respectable theologian would agree to that. You could say that he permits it, but not that he is the "cause" of it.
Most Christians believe in Original Sin. Even the EO believe there is a consequence that we inherit although not quite as the Western churches think of it. Why wouldn't THAT be just as unacceptable a proposition? Yet we don't hear it advocated here very often, and whenever it is, it is immediately denounced as Pelagianism. When it comes to Election, however, the logic is used without hesitation.
How can it be just that any of us wind up in an eternity of hell when, let's face it, being sure of what God wants of us is very very very hard for us
sin-dimmed humans to discern? No parent would treat a disobedient child that way, but we consider it fair of God to do.
One thing I've learned around this place is that "requiring deletion" and "being deleted" are two very different things.
Though I suppose it could just be a server snafu of some sort. I'll try not to be paranoid.
At any rate, I had said that the problem with the idea that God does not love everyone was that Jesus told us to love our enemies. You asked why that was. (I didn't dream that part, right?)
My response was that that would mean that Jesus was commanding us to do something, in the name of the Father, which the Father Himself is unwilling or unable to do.
And if that is the case, if one can say of the Father "do what He says, but do not do what He does", then by Jesus' definition, the Father would be a Pharisee.
Jesus is the fly in every theological ointment.
Your question puts the cart before the horse.
Repentance is the result of having been given eternal life (being saved).
Nor did I say that they are the same.So no, I don't think it's the same thing at all.
Well, here's my point again: If you think being tabbed to be one of the reprobates (which a belief in Predestination does not require), so that they wind up in hell, it is equally "unfair" of God to allow men to save themselves knowing that they--or most of them--cannot. They all wind up in the same place.I'm speaking of those ones supposedly created just for the sake of condemning them to hell, who have no hope of salvation, ever. That is a very different scenario than I consider the world as a whole to be subjected to. I realize not everyone teaches this, but my original intent was to understand those who do.
And by that logic, he can choose to create people predestined to either heaven or hell.My point was that, in my opinion, God makes it POSSIBLE for mankind - every individual - to be saved. God can choose to be merciful in conditions at His own whim.
The oft-quoted verse doesn't say that, however. It says that he would have all to be saved.God loves mankind and WANTS man's salvation.
The problem comes when Jesus commands us to love our enemies.
No man can save himself. But he can certainly participate in his salvation, working it out with God who works in him, to whatever degree he can and to whatever degree God deems appropriate.Well, here's my point again: If you think being tabbed to be one of the reprobates (which a belief in Predestination does not require), so that they wind up in hell, it is equally "unfair" of God to allow men to save themselves knowing that they--or most of them--cannot. They all wind up in the same place.
No man can save himself. But he can certainly participate in his salvation, working it out with God who works in him, to whatever degree he can and to whatever degree God deems appropriate.
Romans 12:19
Do not take revenge, my dear friends, but leave room for Gods wrath, for it is written: It is mine to avenge; I will repay, says the Lord.
Do you see the same problem here too?
You don't see a problem with loving those that God hates? You don't see a problem with God telling you, through His son, to love those that He hates?
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And what would God base that on? Man's desires or efforts?
Maybe that is a function of the division into trinity.
The Father's wrath being a function of justice, and He placed the elect in Christ, so that Jesus could apply His mercy, which trumps His justice.
I'm spitballin' here...