Jedi said:
I have already answered this question on numerous accounts and have given quotes from others answering this question. Once again, in a nutshell, it is because there are some people who will never have it any other way than themselves.
This doesn't answer the question. It just begs another question. You see, now I have to simply ask, "Why will some people never have it any other way than themselves and some are willing to submit to the Lord?" I'm trying to get to what you see as the root reason as to why some come to the Lord and some don't. It isn't enough to simply acknowledge that it happens or even that it happens "because that's what they want." I want to know what you believe determines what they want. You see, I have absolutely no problem answering this question. I am well aware that man is born in a state of rebellion against God and will gladly remain that way, never seeking God, never having faith, never submitting to God's authority
unless God changes their nature. When He does so, their spiritual polarity is changed as well. Where before they lived according to the spirit of disobedience, they now live as sons and daughters of God, striving to serve their new Father in obedience because they no longer view Him with enmity but, rather, love. So, in a nutshell, I agree that people come to God because they want to. I also acknowledge that those that want to, want to because God has given them the desire to do so when He regenerates them from death in their trespasses and sins to life in the Lord Jesus.
Again, you have no scriptural basis for this.
Really? I said that carnal man is at enmity against God and is incapable of submitting to His law. You claim that I have no Scriptural basis for this. What then, is this:
Romans 8:7
Because the carnal mind is enmity against God; for it is not subject to the law of God, nor indeed can be.
Carnal mind...enmity against God...cannot be subjected to the law...yup, all there. Guess you're wrong again.
You may say that the man whose mind is entirely set on the flesh is opposed to God, but you have yet to demonstrate that all men have their minds entirely set on the flesh.
I needn't demonstrate any such thing. I merely need to show that Scripture describes that man is
naturally that way. When the Lord is gracious enough to regenerate man and give him a new nature, he is no longer opposed to God but, instead, strives to obey Him because he loves him and desires to serve his new Master. Do you need to see Scriptural support for the notion that man is naturally opposed to God and that this corruption yields only sinful desires?
Then case closed: you cannot hold man responsible for his sins. He has no choice in the matter, he cannot change, thus he is not responsible for his own actions any more than water is in forming currents. Ultimately, you have just taken away the sinfulness of sin. Congratulations.
Ultimately, you have just shown yourself to be unwilling to think before you speak. Not uncommon for one who holds themselves and their free will in such high regard. What's I've said, for those who are not too blind to see, is that man's inability to choose any good pertaining to righteousness stems from the corruption of his heart. He chooses, as is a necessity for volitional creatures. However, his choices, which are predicated by his desires, are always sinful because his desires are always sinful.
Please tell me youre joking. The way you abuse this text would have everyone who so much as goes to the restroom without thinking I shall do this from faith be guilty of sinning. That is not what the passage is saying at all; when you rip things out of context, you often get meanings the author never intended to convey. The context is making your brother stumble by doing things that he mistakenly believes to be wrong (like eating meat sacrificed to idols). The person doubting in this instance is the person who doubts the legitimacy of what Paul has been talking about (and the implied result is that he would eat regardless of whether or not it caused his brother to stumble). The phrase from faith in this verse is a clear reference to the sort of behavior that lines up with God, not meaning that a person has to have the correct doctrinal ideas on his mind in doing every action. Faith in this verse is used not as a reference to thinking theological thoughts every time you do something, but a reference to having your actions line up with the very nature of God.
My apologies for assuming that you were willing to use that big old brain for something other than trying to impress others. When I posted Romans 14:23 I had assumed that you were aware that the passage deals with moral choices, which "going to the restroom" surely is not. Additionally, I never once stated that the verse had anything to do with one having the correct doctrinal ideas about what they were doing. My point, which obviously flew over your head, was simply that the actions of non-believers are never predicated by a desire to do the will of God because they never have such a desire. So, for the cheap seats, this means that every moral choice they make, no matter how outwardly compliant it appears to be, is not a righteous choice because it is never motivated by the righteous desire to obey God.
This being so, even a nonbeliever can do good things. An agnostic saving Billy Graham by pushing him out of the way of a speeding car isnt sin, because it lines up with the nature of God. Once again, you have no basis on which to stand to say that man is completely incapable of doing good of his own accord.
As I previously stated, God's grace rains on the just and the unjust alike. However, no action of the non-believer is righteous because no action of the non-believer is completely selfless and God centered.
Your assertions and objections hinge upon this understanding of omnipotence. You seemed quite shocked that I would suggest there are limitations to God in that He cannot save everyone, but only everyone possible. Your shock is expressed in the phrase He's God. Maybe you forgot that. Who is it that God could not save were He to purpose it? Oh that's right....according to you, it's anyone who simply refuses Him. So much for a sovereign God that accomplishes all that He purposes, which heavily implies that you reject any notion of limitation of God. If you believe God is only able to do anything possible, how is it that you see God as pitiful being only able to save everyone possible (and not just flat out everyone), as if He were too weak for your tastes?
Jedi, the reason that I call such an idea, i.e., God is only able to save everyone possible, a pitiful view of God is because it is God's eternal choice to save someone, and His subsequent and monergistic work of regeneration, that makes it not only "possible" that someone be saved, but ensures that they be saved. The limitation you put upon God isn't imposed by God, which would be a perfectly acceptable limitation. Your claim is that God is incapable of saving someone simply because they reject Him. This, unfortunately and invariably leads one to ask, why are they inclined to reject Him when others, who He is apparently able to save, are inclined to accept Him. Your insufficient answer to this question is, "there are some people who will never have it any other way than themselves," again begging the question, why are some willing to have it another way and these people are not? What makes them willing Jedi? Is there any part of your philosophy that is not centered around the wellspring of goodness you seem to believe inherent to natural man?
This is quite untrue. God cannot possibly have this power for as long as people truly are people. In other words, if God has to contort and twist the wills of people in order to save them, he is not saving them themselves, but a contortion of who they are. In essence, He turns them into someone else in order to save them (though He is really not saving them at all).
So tell me, who is it that regulates God's ability to save a person? Is it the person? Is the person created for their own glory? When created, do they become the masters of their own destiny?
It is not a matter of deserving salvation, but how God can be completely good and not save all He can.
Everyone that God has, in eternity, purposed to save, end up saved. This isn't coincidence. It's the reality of a sovereign God. There is no such thing as a person created by God that God is incapable of saving. There are, however, people that are created by God that God chooses, for His own reasons, to not redeem.
No one has even touched this question, which doesnt surprise me.
It is a question that glares Calvinists straight in the face: How can their God, who is supposedly all-good, not be good enough to save everyone He can?
On the contrary. I, myself, have addressed it numerous times, and do so again. Your self serving error is that you assume that God's attribute of goodness is established by the number of people He manages to save. It simply isn't so. In truth, God is just as glorified in condemning the wicked and exacting His wrath against unrighteousness as He is in the dispensation of His mercy and grace. You, like many others, simply cannot stomach the idea that God is not a care bear. He is glorified in all that He does, even in the destruction of the wicked, for it pronounces His holiness.
A wholly good God would never refrain from helping those in need whom He is able to help and that is exactly what the God of Calvin does.
And here is a poignant example of your man centered notions of goodness. God's goodness isn't defined by whether He helps those in need, no matter how badly you wish it to be so. I do not shy away from what reformed doctrine says on the matter because it is merely a reflection of what the Bible says on the matter. God chooses to refrain from redeeming those He reprobates and He is glorified in doing so. You attack reformed doctrine because you are too spiritually immature to acknowledge that God's authority is not regulated by what you deem "good."
But you have purported this very thing: that God forces people to Himself by making them desire Him (i.e. irresistible grace, that those God chooses cannot reject Him). Since this is what you have stated, you need to face the problems that cling to that statement.
Yeah. Sure. Well, I'll simply reiterate that I do not contend that God does that, and I know that I do not do so no matter how vehemently you claim otherwise. I'm not going to engage in your silly little game of "yes you do say that, no I don't say that" because, well, I'm not a child. Who knows. Maybe you are.