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Predestination/"Free Will"

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rnmomof7

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It is a bible used by the JW's and considered by some a paraphrase more than a translation . Note he added his words to the text


Moffatt, James: Greek into English but one man translation, whereas all other major translations had between 40-100 different scholars involved in the translation. Regarding James Moffatt, he was a professor at Union Theological Seminary, one of the most radical liberal institutions.

His attitude toward miracles and the supernatural is illustrated by the following quotation from his book "Introduction To The Literature Of The New Testament": "A similar consideration bears upon Luke's treatment of the supernatural. On the one hand, the presence of miraculous anecdotes ... is no proof that they are unprimitive

. A comparison, e.g., of the historical traditions gathering around figures like St. Patrick or even Thomas a Becket will show that it is the most natural thing in the world for such stories to spring up within a man's lifetime, and the mushroom of legend appeared under certain conditions as rapidly in the East an in the West. This applies in some degree to the miracles in Acts as well as in the gospels." (page 302). Clearly, Moffatt regards the miracles of the Bible, such as Jesus' virgin birth and His raising of the dead, as mere myth or legend. Moffatt claimed that the traditions of national unity and supernatural guidance "are at the heart of the tales and traditions within the first five books of the Bible." He believed portions of the Bible were badly edited and arranged, so he tried to improve on them. He rearranged entire chapters to suit himself.

http://www.bible.ca/trinity/trinity-translations.htm
 
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CCWoody

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Ragman, these are your words:  As for having a governmental view of the atonement.  I do not have a governmental view.  I have a personal view.

My interpretation is not private.  I have a host of people who share this identical intepretation of scripture.  I have been freely sharing this on this very thread.

Now, please address this directly.  You have yet to directly address this which completely shreds the idea that Christ's reconciliation of the world means all died with Him as all died with Adam:

  • Do you not know that as many of us as were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into His death? Therefore we were buried with Him through baptism into death, that just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. For if we have been united together in the likeness of His death, certainly we also shall be in the likeness of His resurrection.
Your friendly neighborhhod Cordial Calvinist
Woody.
 
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Ragman

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Woody,

When I say that I have a personal view, I am not saying that the view is mine personally, but that my view of the atonement is based on the "person" of Christ. Thus a "personal" view.

Now you are asserting that this verse is saying that not all died in Christ in His death as stated in 2 Cor 5:14 "For the love of Christ constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if one died for all, then were all dead:"

Here are some possibilities for your verse:

1. It could be speaking of "identifying" with the death of Christ. Certainly as a good Calvinist you will not say that one's act of baptism "makes" them dead in Christ.
2. It could be speaking of "participating" in the baptism and death of Christ that has taken place objectively in the person of Christ.
3. It could be speaking of an outward show of what has already taken place in the life of the person.

Now what would completely shred the idea that the whole world was reconciled in the life, death, resurrection and ascension of Jesus Christ would be for God to say "Oops, I didn't mean the whole world when I said that I was reconciling the world" or if He said, "Oops, I didn't mean "all things" when I said And, having made peace through the blood of his cross, by him to reconcile all things unto himself; by him, I say, whether they be things in earth, or things in heaven."

But, I don't see that happening.

As for a host of folks who share one's interpretation ..... Athanasius, Ireneaus, Gregory of Nanziansus to name a few are not bad company to share a view of God with.

But the real issue here is not my view of scripture or your view of scripture, but who is God and what is He like, and how does He feel about people. And the God that limited atonement projects is not the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ; the friend of sinners, the good shepherd who searches for the lost sheep. The one who prostitutes, tax collectors and all variety of "sinners" loved to be around, while the religious folks got the hebejebies because of His great love for people without reservation. Woody, God is not as you say. For you would make yourself better than God. Because I'm willing to bet that you would not think of fathering children for the sole purpose of tormenting them in hell for the result to be other folks saying, "Wow, glory to Woody, he fried his own children. What wonderful justice!" And Woody, you are no better than God. If you can't find glory in doing that to your own children, how can you tell anyone else that God finds glory in it?
 
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FineLinen

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What I believe is not what we are discussing my friend. I assume that you are referring to "the times of the restitution of all (some) things of which God has spoken from the earliest ages through the lips of His holy prophets." Is that what you mean by universalism? But let's get back to the original questions presented to you and begging an answer..... Can you tell us what Scriptures in the earlier post mean some and not all? Which ones are a synedoche/metonymy?
 
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FineLinen

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I truly hope that the J.W's are using the James Moffatt translation of the Holy Scriptures, it will be a wonderful enhancement to the N.W.T. This is the deal. I have the James Moffatt translation sitting in front of me with 25 or so other excellent translations. After....(AFTER) you declare which words are a syndedoche I will be happy to present any (ANY) Scripture from the James Moffatt translation (Old Covenant or New) with a minimum of 20 other translations for comparison. Have you ever read the translation and compared? I have!
 
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Mandy

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4th April 2003 at 09:05 AM rnmomof7 said this in Post #192




Do you believe that God demands "double jeopardy"? God forgave all the sins on the cross but men have to pay for them again? Is God a liar or an Indian giver?


LOL, not even close to what I said.  My point was that one cannot divide God's attributes or character.  Jesus paid the penalty for everyone, period. 
 
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Mandy

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I would like to know why calvinists insist that those who believe that Jesus died for the sins for the WHOLE world, as the Bible very clearly states btw, are universalists? Jesus dying for the sins of the world doesn't mean that the whole world will be saved, what it means is that Jesus' death was sufficient to save everyone, because He literally carried the sins of the world on the cross. It is clear that while salvation is the work of God, yet, we also must choose to turn to Christ.
 
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OldBadfish

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This is the way I see it too. Hi Mandy

Even Calvinists will be saved. j/k guys and mom
 
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Ragman

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Mandy:

There are all kinds of reasons why Calvinists feel that way, among these reasons is their concept of the sovereignty of God.  According to their concept God's sovereignty does not allow for persons to not choose to be saved, or for God's grace, such as the work of Christ on the cross, to be performed without the intended result being accomplished.  For example, if Christ died for all and all are not saved then Christ's work on the cross was of no value for those who are not saved.  Therefore, if Christ died for all then God intended for all to be saved and will be saved and that would be universalism according to their logic.  Also, their concept of irresistible grace.  That is, the salvation of a person is entirely accomplished by the grace of God, and by God's sovereign election.  Therefore, in accordance with God's election, if God grants the person saving faith and grace, they would be unable to resist that grace and would be saved.

Forgive my crude explanations, for I am not a Calvinist.  But you asked the question and I did not see any Calvinists answering.
 
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rnmomof7

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Well if the Greek word PAS always means all without exception then all men then all must be saved..

thus the universalism
 
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rnmomof7

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4th April 2003 at 06:49 PM Mandy said this in Post #207




LOL, not even close to what I said.  My point was that one cannot divide God's attributes or character.  Jesus paid the penalty for everyone, period. 

But that is what you said Mandy, you just have never really thought about it before.

If Jesus paid the price for ALL men , then their sin debt is paid and for God to send them to hell is to demand that they pay again for what Jesus already paid. or "double jeopardy.
Was the blood of Christ sufficent or not? He said "It is finished" So why then are some that were saved by His blood punished again?
 
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rnmomof7

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If man has the choice who is sovereign?
 
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rnmomof7

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5th April 2003 at 01:31 PM decenso said this in Post #211

Other than Pharoah in Romans, what other references in the NT speak of INDIVIDUALS being predestined, i.e, in contrast to the corporate predestination of a body referred to in Ephesians 1?

LOL Ephesians a 'corporate predestination'.. Paul carefully lines out INDIVIDUAL predestination in Ephesians as do all the writers in the NT. The US is the invisible church..made up us individuals The invisible church is predestined.

Act 2:47__ Praising God, and having favour with all the people. And the Lord added to the church daily such as should be saved.


Act 13:48__ And when the Gentiles heard this, they were glad, and glorified the word of the Lord: and as many as were ordained to eternal life believed.


Act 22:14__ And he said, The God of our fathers hath chosen thee, that thou shouldest know his will, and see that Just One, and shouldest hear the voice of his mouth.

The church is a corporate boy made up of individuals each of which were ordained to believe before the foundation of the earth ..so their election may stand as Gods will not mans works

The disciples understood that and so stated when they wrote their Epistles

_ 1Th 1:4__ Knowing, brethren beloved, your election of God.
__
_ 1Th 1:5__ For our gospel came not unto you in word only, but also in power, and in the Holy Ghost, and in much assurance; as ye know what manner of men we were among you for your sake.

Jam 1:18__ Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth, that we should be a kind of firstfruits of his creatures.

1Pe 1:1__ Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ, to the strangers scattered throughout Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia,
__
_ 1Pe 1:2__ Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through sanctification of the Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ: Grace unto you, and peace, be multiplied.

_ Jud 1:4__ For there are certain men crept in unawares, who were before of old ordained to this condemnation, ungodly men, turning the grace of our God into lasciviousness, and denying the only Lord God, and our Lord Jesus Christ.
 
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frumanchu

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5th April 2003 at 01:31 PM decenso said this in Post #211

Other than Pharoah in Romans, what other references in the NT speak of INDIVIDUALS being predestined, i.e, in contrast to the corporate predestination of a body referred to in Ephesians 1?

How about Jacob and Esau?
 
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nikolai_42

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 I have seen this text used many times to try and disprove 'all'. It is apparent to the reader what this all means because a single negative is needed only to prove its uselessness.  However, in the things of God, we are talking about something different. 'All' necessarily carries a different weight, and therefore its use is to be considered far more true. It's all very well to follow that passage up with an assertion that one believes the bible to be entirely true and inspired and perfect, but even the bible doesn't point to the written word or letter as infallible etc... but the Spirit. So as far as using 'all' in that phrase goes, it doesn't advance or retreat either cause one whit.



  •  Which begs the question why it wasn't translated 'all manner of' in all (truly ALL) instances.

     And as much as I appreciate Arthur Custance's works (and I do), we are instructed to do good to all. I don't see how prayer is any different. We are instructed to live at peace with all men (as far as it is possible with us). Are these 'all's to be limited as well?

     
    Revelation 21:19 --"all manner of precious stone"


  •  That bolded passage, as written, simply asserts that we should then pray to have God's will that WE be saved. If every man could pray that, then for another to pray it on someone's (everyone's) behalf is simply the same thing. Praying to affect the will of God. According to Calvinism, the elect are predestined, so trying to add to that number is ineffectual. In the end, what is proposed here is simply trying to change God's will (or make sure that God doesn't forget to include us in it). It is still the will of man moving the will of God. There is no need to pray it if it is already either so or not. Why waste the breath?


    Personally, I see this as referring to the fact that there is no one without excuse. The light has come. That light is Jesus Christ.

Now, I say that this verse best agrees with Scripture if the Greek word pavntaß is here read (as is the most common and regular usage in Scripture), "all manner of sorts, without distinction".


 In other words, Christ did not die for every man, not every man ever had a chance at salvation, and the 'free gift' was not offered to all.

"The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance."
 2 Peter 3:9

 So let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die! Or, on the other hand, if we are the elect, it won't matter anyway.

 If we read 2 Peter 3:9 with Calvinist filters in place, we must conclude that God doesn't want some to repent. He wills that some won't repent - and it will be by His own hand that they will be prevented from doing so.
 
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nikolai_42

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4th April 2003 at 12:10 PM rnmomof7 said this in Post #187


If it is God's desire that all men be saved they would be..
All that He desires to save He will.


 On this we fully agree.



Isa 55:11 So shall my word be that goeth forth out of my mouth: it shall not return unto me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, and it shall prosper [in the thing] whereto I sent it.



  So what of 2 Peter 3:9 ?

"The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance."

 2 Peter 3:9

 Now it is shown that in Timothy there is a positive sense of God's will (He DOES will that all men come to a knowledge of the truth), and in 2 Peter, a negative sense of His will (He does NOT WILL that ANY perish) in regards to the salvation of men.Why not use the word many? It has been used many times in the NT Greek and without ambiguity (i.e. not meaning a few, and not meaning all).

 
 
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Ragman

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Who did Jesus pay off for sin?  God?  The devil?  Who are you suggesting that Jesus "paid" when He "paid" for sin? 

One of the problems of western christianity is our insistence to make the incarnation and cross and legal matter when it is not.  It is an organic/personal problem not a legal problem.  To be sure we are sinners, but God's rationale is not "How do I get them off the hook" but "how do we heal them so they can enjoy the life that I have in myself, that is shared between the Father, Son and Spirit?"  The grid through which we westerners see the gospel has been so influenced with that of Augustine and Tertullian, not to mention Plato, that we have such a hard time seeing it any other way.  We actually think that "holy" means that God cannot look at sin.  That God can't have anything to do with us because we are sinners.  That until Jesus comes and "takes a whipping" from the Father on our behalf, God won't like us.  We have created this pyscho/schitzophrenic God who is mad as h*ll at us until Jesus comes along, yet somehow He's loving, then He gets nice and gracious, but only because Jesus came and bore all of His wrath which God intended for us.  Yet He still will send (because He created them for this purpose) the majority of the human race to be tormented in hell for eternity with no chance of getting out, and this somehow gives Him pleasure.

Is it any wonder why the world is not listening to us.  This legal view is as crazy as any horror movie that has ever been made.  Yet we westerners are soaking it up.
 
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rnmomof7

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What of those that never hear the gospel? What of the Muslims today or the Bush man in the 1700"s?
 
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