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.
This all came about earlier starting in thread 152. I had a good feeling that my comment that "they would be without excuse" would come back and haunt me. I was enjoying the threads pretty well but it looked like John 3:16 was'nt clear. The bible is clear about predestination, and that those who Jesus will call His own are sent from God. I think God makes it clear that He gave (up) His Son to die for the world (all). His atoning blood gives eternal life to those who believe.oworm said:Sorry I must be having one of my thick days. please explain
Normann said:Joshua 24:15
And if it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord, choose you this day whom ye will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served that were on the other side of the flood, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell: but as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.
Thats a pretty high charge you make there my friend.Oh, yes we do make a choice in our eternity. To say God makes it for us is blasphemy.
Remember that the light which you claim to have in bringing such a charge will be the light by which you yourself will be judged.Normann said:Joshua 24:15
Oh, yes we do make a choice in our eternity. To say God makes it for us is blasphemy.
IN THE MASTER'S SERVICE,
Normann
Espada said:On the contrary, we have all made our choice for eternity by commiting[sic committing] sin.
God in his great mercy has chosen to send some of us a life line[sic lifeline] by summoning us to be with him. Neither you nor I have any right to question his choice.
God does not prevent us from resisting him but in his greatness, he will always over power us and we will then come to him.
Jedi said:[/color]
There are some qualifications that must be put in place here. For this to be true, each person must choose to sin of their own accord. If humans have no choice but to sin, there is no sense in holding them accountable when they do. Secondly, sin is not the only choice people make. People are renown for choosing sin at one minute and choosing God the next; that is, they make inconsistent choices about whether or not they want to follow God and His ways. Though one choice of rebellion is enough to separate a person from God, Christs sacrifice gives humanity a sort of second chance, allowing them to respond to the question Is that your final answer?
Youre left with a very serious problem here: why didnt God save as many people as He could? A good parent would save as many of his sick children as he could, a good lifeguard would save as many drowning civilians as he could, so it seems that if God simply chose not to save as many people as He could, He is not a truly good God. People rot in Hell because God did not care enough to save them.
So how does this work? He never prevents us from resisting him, but he will always overpowers us, forcing us to Himself? Im afraid youre stuck with another problem (one that has yet to be answered by anyone here, among others): if God has to contort someones will so that they come to Him and are thus saved, God is really not saving them at all, but at best a mere shadow of who they really are. If I were to exert force upon a young lady and mind control her so that she is drawn to me, who in their right mind would praise me for such an act? Who in their right mind would say that she truly loves me? The fact would be that it is not her at all that I am with; only what I have forced her to be (not her as she truly is). The same problem applies to God forcing people to Himself.
seekingpurity047 said:Rom. 9:19-20
19You will say to me then, "Why does he still find fault? For who can resist his will?" 20But who are you, O man, to answer back to God? Will what is molded say to its molder, "Why have you made me like this?"
EDIT: Might I also add that God saves who He wants to save, not who he COULD save, becuase[sic because] He could save everyone, if it was His will. I mean, He's powerful enough. I think you need to figure out what is God's priority by using scripture.
Jedi said: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.
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.
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.
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?
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).
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.
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.
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.
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.
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).
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.
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.
Normann said:I continue to post in this thread just in case someone reads it with a teachable spirit. My motive is not to try to change the minds of those set on the false teaching of a liar.
Both history and the Bible will show that John Calvin was a false teacher.
IN THE MASTER'S SERVICE,
Normann
Where do you get this idea that a covenant has been established with your household...Is this in the Bible? How is this covenant different than the Jews who were born into the old covenant?I completely agree. For this very reason, I contend that we are only able to truly have assurance our own salvitic state, and even that assurance may ebb depending upon the manner in which we nurture our relationship with our Lord. However, with the Apostle, I am confident that the Lord will finish what He starts and I believe that He has established a covenant with my household.
Basically what I meant was we cant presume someone is elect "until they show otherwise", the man next door could have been the model Christian to us, but what if he later did a major sin like murder. In this case "until" he murdered someone would not be a fair indication of his "showing otherwise" beacuse that is a moment in time and we dont know if his future actions include repenting. (ie his track record means nothing)I don't understand what you mean here.
I agree, thats why outward works are inconclusive.Well, I am not aware that I said that any such thing was indicated but I will say that a person's track record surely doesn't stop God from saving someone if He purposes to do so. Paul is a perfect example of that.
Does God want the reprobate Baptized, prayed for/with, associate with in matters concerning salvation? Isnt that kind of pointless?I have no clue whom God has decreed to reprobate so what is your point? I think I was quite clear that God has not made the identity of His elect public knowledge so my job is to deal with all people as if they are the elect of God, for insofar as my finite knowledge is concerned, they very well may be.
Thats not what I was saying, I was saying how can you have a covenant/promise with God that your children are elect if that election was decided long ago?So you are contending that if God has foreordained, that is, ordained before the foundations of the world, that you CD, will be saved, then His promise to you that you will be saved is worthless or nonexistant? If that is not your contention, why must I assume a different course for my children? If He has ordained that they be saved from the foundations of the world then He will assure they come to faith and He will keep His promise to save them.
What are your responsibilities in general? Would you inform them there is such thing as election and non election and that the non elect dont/cant go to heaven ... If a child were to ask you if they are elect what do you tell them?I don't know that God has guarenteed to save every child of every believer. Regardless, once again I ask you, shall I fail in my responsibilities as a parent to my child simply because I have no assurance of their election?
He did, its just they were already elect and his teachings meant nothing to esau because he was non elect. Both children came from the same parents, yet what their parents did didnt have any influence on the final outcome.Isaac did not raise his children as believers???!!!Pray tell, where did you read such a thing?
Im not sure, I dont believe everything does come from the perfect decree of God, I believe He allows things, but doesnt command they happen. I dont believe Adam was forced to eat otherwise God wouldnt have put him in paradise to begin with. (But thats another topic/thread)Do you always respond in perfect faith to the things that come to pass though you know they come to pass by the perfect decree of God? In answer, though God is perfect, I certainly am not. I didn't say anguish was the proper response. I merely acknowledged that I imagine it would be my response.
I read in ch42:Again, I have never stated that He does so. Additionally, I could only speculate as to the answer to that question. I imagine that it would teach us much about the authority and providence of God were we to face the struggle of having non-believing children. Look at God's dealings with Job. God made it clear that He needn't answer to Job for the things He brings to pass. Was God unrighteous for loosing satan upon Job's family and property and health? God Himself called Job a "blameless and upright man." Despite that, God loosed the devil upon him and allowed the death of Job's children and the loss of his property and health. Why would God do that to a man He had graced as His servant? That is revealed to us in the latter portion of Job:
Im still not sure where it indicates his children were non elect. Just because God ends someone's life doesnt mean they were reprobate, in this case they were kind of innocent bystanders not part of the main story.Job 42:5,6
I have heard of You by the hearing of the ear,
But now my eye sees You.
Therefore I abhor myself,
And repent in dust and ashes.
Job's response is one of Hebrew tradition. This means that his knowledge of God, due to all that had come to pass, was even deeper now than it was before. His response to the majesty of God in spite of all of the trials he had recently endured? He repented. He saw the wickedness of his soul when compared to the mere reflection of God's majesty. He realized he had no right to question God's authority to do as He would with His creation.
How can you say "like Job", your assuming his children were non elect, which I see no basis for.You ask, "Why would God allow an elect to have children that were predestined to hell?" My best answer is that they, like Job, would come to truly see the majesty of God instead of assuming that their superficial submission to God's authority equated to true faith. Tell me something CD, how would you feel toward God if He decreed to take your children from you as He did Job's? Would you be able to proclaim, "Naked I came from my mothers womb, And naked shall I return there. The Lord gave, and the Lord has taken away; Blessed be the name of the Lord. Would you honor God for your loss? Do you think maybe, just maybe, getting through such an event would be a sanctifying experience and lesson on truly trusting God?
Jedi said:Oh, this passage again; a favorite among Calvinists but terribly abused by them. If youll notice, nowhere in Romans 9 is salvation the topic of focus. What you have here is God creating people certain ways (e.g. tall, thin, short, fat, good at math, poor at math, etc), essentially, their lot in life. Being made with certain gifts and being placed in a certain area in a certain time is quite different from God forcing a person to Himself. Long story short, God made you you, but nowhere in this passage does the text promote the idea that the choice you make is decided by God (and hence not your choice at all).
Again, this assertion holds terrible problems concerning the nature of God, as I described above. To copy and paste the problem I described a few paragraphs ago: Why didnt God save as many people as He could? A good parent would save as many of his sick children as he could, a good lifeguard would save as many drowning civilians as he could, so it seems that if God simply chose not to save as many people as He could, He is not a truly good God. People rot in Hell because God did not care enough to save them.
at your remark... I'm sooo sorry... LOL....
cygnusx1 said:If it comes down to a choice between Determinism by God and indeterminism , I will choose determinism every time ......... there can be no more of a mockery of the cross that Jesus dies with his fingers crossed!
seekingpurity047 said:Umm... if that's what you think Paul is talkign about in Romans 9, you are terribly in theological error. Allow us to analyze the whole chapter, shall we?
calidog said:It sounds like, according to John 3:16, that God loved the world (all of us), and that He gave up Jesus for the world (all) and that the believers in Him would be saved. I believed, according to scripture, that Christ died for all, not just for those who would believe. It's those who would believe that would be saved. Not trying to dissect the issue of predestination, just wanted to have clarity here before going to the issue of "who would believe". thanx
calidog said:thanx, it was actually a kind of rehetorical question.
I have a strongs and a thayers, and thayer gives a further definition in context as you have quoted. But for the life of me I havent a clue as to how thayer came up with "believers" from "kosmos" from the original text. If I simply read the text of John 3:15-18 God loved the (whole) world (all). Christ died for all. Those who believe will be saved.
"That the world through Him might be saved", indicates that not all will be saved (believe).
I'll have to stick with God loved the world (all), and that Christ died for all, and that all did not recieve Him. That would make His elect those that have (and will) recieve(d) Him.
calidog said:He was sent by God to die for all.
Honestly, people throw this sentiment around so much that I think they must fail to realize that it meanst that God is either a psychotic [bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse] who dies for people He knows are still going to end up in hell, meaning that His death was of no benefit to them, or, that His death is simply insufficient to atone for a single sin without some contributory effort on the part of man.calidog said:For God so loved (all) the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoesoever (the elect) believes on Him should not perish but have eternal life. If the whole world believes, the whole world is saved. God, by doing this leaves the unbeliever without excuse.
Jedi said:What I mean by accept the cross is to ultimately accept Gods ways over your own. Yet as I pointed out earlier with reference to C.S. Lewis, there are some people who will never have it any other way than their own. Do you want to be with God? Then doing so means following Him and doing things His way. If you do not wish to be with God, the alternative is to be left to yourself, cut off from the very source of goodness (God).
Yet you and I both know that we are not merely carnal beings. When Paul repeatedly speaks of his fleshly desires, he does not suppose those desires are the only ones he has. There is a part of me that is inclined to sin due to its heavy influence in the world, my own tendencies to look out for myself before others, and my own animalistic desires (i.e. desires of the flesh). Yet there is more to me than merely these things: I am also a soul, branching beyond the mere carnal world. Besides, the NASB (the version I trust the most after having been through Koine Greek) renders the first part the mind set on the flesh, that is, a matter of focus for the individual. Long story short, this verse in no way supports the idea that humans are incapable of doing good of their own accord.
I really dont see any basis from which you can stand in this understanding of sin.
If what you say here is true, even a nonbeliever who saves an elderly nun from a bunch of thugs has not committed a good act but a sinful one, because he didnt do it by faith in Christ or out of a desire to obey Him (in the most direct sense).
The way morality works is that whenever a person chooses to do good, they are, in a very real sense, choosing God. Though their choices in these matters have little, if anything, to do with theological facts, they have clearly chosen to do good (that is, Gods way).
This is really quite vague.
Is man capable of choosing good over evil of his own accord or not?
If not, then good and evil have no meaning for humans: if a man cannot choose good, he cant even choose to do a morally neutral act over an evil one with the intent of refraining from evil (since that itself would be a good act). The result, then, is that man can only do evil, but if this is so, how can humans be morally condemned? They could have done nothing else.
We might as well curse water for forming currents: it has no choice in the matter.
Its a matter of what is meant by total depravity. If we use it to mean that people have no sense of what good really is (totally depraved of goodness), then they should have never known they were totally depraved (they would have not known goodness to say they were depraved of it).
Granted, merely calling some ideology doesnt mean it is that ideology, but this still doesnt resolve the issue of differences among adherents to a particular ideology. From what youre asserting here, it would seem to follow that if there are any differences between your thoughts and Calvins concerning ideology, you would not be a Calvinist.
Yet he burned his opposition in a debate at the stake simply because he won (interestingly enough, the debate was held in his home town of Geneva). If Calvin taught this sort of thing through example, and Im presuming you disagree with him in this matter, then you do not agree completely with Calvins ideology. If this is so, by the criteria you listed above, you are not a Calvinist.![]()
You seem to have this funny idea that God can do anything. He cannot. For example, Hebrews 6:18 blatantly states that it is impossible for God to lie.
Im sorry to burst your bubble, but it seems the God of scripture isnt the God youve imagined: a sovereign God in the sense that He is able to do anything.
This is really an unnecessary understanding of Sovereignty and Omnipotence. God is not able to do anything, but able to do anything possible.
Further still, you still did not answer the question: How can God remain completely good and not save as many people as He can?
Even more, how can God save anyone if He has to first force and contort their wills to be with Him (at best, saving only a shadow of who they really are)?
Tell you what, you go ahead and worship that god. Ill continue to acknowledge that the God of Scripture is holy and righteous and omnipotent and He saves everyone willing and never fails, leaving no one behind who wants to come to Him and giving everyone a fair shot at salvation (unlike your arbitrary, tyrannical, less-than-good god).