mlqurgw said:
So am I correct if I say that you are malking[sic making] the will of man that which controls God?
No more than a child controls his father whenever they wrestle. The father refrains from using his full strength because he so values the interaction with his child. Similarly, simply because God can control everything does not mean He must. God has given man freedom to choose, but this in no way controls God.
Perhaps you could explain what you eman[sic mean] by determinism. If you mean that God determines both the means and the ends to accomplish His purpose then I am a determinist.
Determinism, in this case, is the idea that God decides your fate apart from your will. Before you were born, He thought to Himself I shall make him go to heaven or I shall make him go to hell. Stronger forms of Determinism assert that everything, even if a branch falls from a tree on to your head, is done by God. The problem with this is very easy to see: it makes God the direct cause of everything, including evil and all of mans rebellious choices. Ultimately, Determinism makes a mockery of the cross of Christ: God made man sin, then He came down to pay the penalty for that sin to forgive them of what He made them do.
If God had intended to save everyone they would be saved.
Only if this were possible. It is not, simply because (as I said before) some people refuse to be saved. As it is, its rhetorical nonsense to say that God can force someone to freely choose Him; the words are there but the meaning is gone. We might as well say God can create a smelly color or a square circle, but this is no limit to Gods power. Nonsense remains nonsense even when we talk it about God.
God doesn't save some because it seems right to Him not to do so.
The question still remains: why does He save some and not others? We would throw a parent in jail for this sort of behavior toward his children. How is it any less vile when we attribute this behavior to God? If God is truly all good, He would save everyone possible (just as a good parent would save as many of his sick children as he could). If God does not save all He can, then the conclusion is grim: God is not all good. This being so, all of morality (having its basis in God) is thrown into utter chaos for if not even God Himself is truly good, by what standard do we measure goodness?
The fact that God leaves some to their own wicked wills doesn't impune[sic impugn] God at all.
Quite right, but this has to be their choice. Calvinism (again, referring to five-point Calvinism) takes that away, placing the choice of their salvation entirely on God. Calvinism takes all ability for goodness away from humans and describes God as saving only some and not all He can, which throws His goodness into question (since an entirely good God would do everything possible to save people, not simply choose some and leave others regardless of their wills).
Also, there is a difference between being a child of God and a creature of God. All men are His as His creatures but not all are His children.
Granted, but as I said before, this really doesnt solve the problem. Instead of asking Why doesnt God save as many people as possible, the question is rephrased to say, Why doesnt God make as many people as possible His children (and thus save them)? Its the same question in a different form.
Most Calvinists I know wouldn't disagree with that statement. Calvinists do not deny that man makes choices but that their choices are determined by their natures. A sinner naturally chooses to sin. What we deny is that man has the inate[sic innate] ability to choose God apart from a work of God in him that enables him to choose God.
You would make the Calvinist in my class very proud.
This response still doesnt dodge the bullet, though. I might as well say, See? My computer chooses whatsoever it desires based on the program I put into it. The reality is that the computer chooses nothing its decisions are what I told it to decide by programming it a certain way. It is not free and therefore cannot be held responsible for the choices it makes (which are really nothing more than the kinds of choices I forced it to make). This really throws morality into chaos. How can we condemn a man for evil if God programmed him that way? He had no choice in the matter. On the same token, how can we praise a man for doing good if his good decisions were forced upon him? He could have done nothing else. It makes no sense at all to hold a person morally responsible for actions he does if he could have done nothing else.
Suppose there is a car salesman who takes a customer to the lot and says, Choose any car you like, but it can only be black. Though the customer may choose what style of black car he would like, we could not hold him responsible for choosing a black car. In the same way, if a person is so predisposed toward a given type of action (whether evil or good), we cannot hold him accountable for evil nor praise him for good because he carried out such actions any more than we can blame the customer for choosing a black car.
While force may be correct terminology in that God does cause us to believe it carries with it an incorrect connotation. God does not force against the will but simply makes it impossible for us to make any other choice.
Yet the problem still remains: God forces the wills of people toward one position or the other. Whether God forces people against their wills or apart from it, it is still force and the people being forced are thus not responsible for what they were forced to do, leaving them neither accountable for bad nor praiseworthy for good.
I willingly chose Christ because God made me see my need of Him.
But by your own admission, you could have done nothing else, so there is really no choice at all in the matter: God made you do it by forcing your will. Saying, I willed this to be so is irrelevant, since what God forced is your will. The only way out here would be to say But people can reject God even after seeing their need of Him, but I have yet to see a Calvinist who would admit such a thing.
If you contend that Calvinism teaches that God forces against the will then you really don't know Calvinism as well as you think.
This distinction Ive seen numerous Calvinists make does them very little, if any, good in escaping the problem of God forcing people to accept/reject Him. The Calvinists have only moved from a God that drags prisoners to Heaven or Hell against their wills to a God who mind controls them into the comforts of Heaven or the miseries of Hell. There is still no love, no moral goodness, no choice, and in fact, no real persons there at all (for if God has to contort and control a persons will in order to save them, He is really not saving them at all, but at best a mere shadow of who they really are).
This is blatant misrepresentation. You are building a strawman.
Oh, its very accurate. I havent had anyone here explain to me how God is not forcing people (by your own admission, Force is the correct terminology) to accept/reject Him. Simply because God is holding the strings of a puppet instead of holding the leash of a rebellious dog does not make God any less forceful or responsible concerning the fates of human beings.
I will let Reformationist answer your statements directed at him other than to say your 'schooling" does not impress me. I have not had schooling but know better than to build a strawman so that I can tear it down .
And if you had taken any courses in philosophy or theology, you would know that simply stating straw man does not do any good. You must explain how it is a misrepresentation of your stance, not merely claim it is. To date, I have not seen this done, so your words here ring hollow.