Because not doing so would mean he was being less than truthful with them
Well first, that's not true. God is under no compunction to tell us everything all at once. He may choose the time to let us in on the facts.
Second, God stated, "In the day you eat you shall die." That happened in some way. That's the basis for total inability. Death is a pretty total inability.
Btw, that's not stated as a curse. That's stated as a consequence that ensued directly from the sin.
I don't know for sure but i doubt that he does. However when he does choose to he always clear and forthright about it.
I think you'll find that clarity is often obscure when it comes to blessings and curses. When we're punished the cause is not always clearly delineated by God.
I believe he imposed the entirety of the curses immediately. Do you think he needed time to mull things over?
Then that day they died.
The verses you sight are the beginning of Pauls summation of an arguement he bigins in Chp1 vs18. His arguement beiing that evreyone both jew and gentile can not earn rightousness with God on their own merits. This much I know we agree on.
Um, actually, no, I don't think this way. I think Paul's point spreads far beyond. Merit-righteousness was an issue four centuries after Paul. Paul isn't ignoring merit-righteousness. He just goes far beyond it.
The statement of Paul's begins with his first main point in 1:18. The argument is that God is against the unrighteous who act in their unrighteousness (ch. 1); that thinking you're righteous or reading the Law ("bein' spiritual") or following its ceremonies ("bein' religious") doesn't make your righteous (ch. 2); that all
are unrighteous (ch 3:1-19), even in desire for God (see 3:9-10), and unrighteousness even to show God's righteousness is not going to vindicate us in the end (cf 3:1-8).
I've marveled a little that it's always put in terms of merit-justification. Yes, the Pelagian argument is skewered to death because of these chapters. But Paul is much more expansive. His indictment is more extreme than that. We're unrighteous by every measure: works, religion, desire, pursuit.
His ultimate conclusion can be found in vs 20. No one will be declared rightous in his sight by observing the law. Bur rather through the law we become conscience of sin ( the purpose of the law).
Not really. If it were, then everything from 1:18 to 3:20 could be pressed toward that argument.
Yet "No one seeks after God" isn't some legal observance of the Law. It's a will-based statement, and nothing else. There are myriad other statements about "our unrighteousness" and our rejection of God, our desires, and our hearts, and our Spirit.
you must aleays keep in mind the 1st three rules of hermauneutics. context context context.
I agree. That's why, when the context hammers away at heart issues, I point out: "the heart is the thing."
And at that point, Total Inability is dead on. It says with the heart being corrupted, whatever you desire is from a corrupt desire, wherever you turn, it's from a corrupt motive. You're sunk. Your desires will kill you. Your spirit -- well, as I said, it's already dead in God's sight.
I read this several times to make sure i understood you completely. If your saying that total depravity means only that some are unwilling to choose God then I agree.
But that means that this whole calvinism thing is much ado about nothing since all christians would agree with that assessment.
Um, I would have to say that this argument against calvinism really is much ado about nothing. It's based on a massively mistaken assumption. Feel free to read Calvin's "Eternal Predestination" for confirmation -- or even the Institutes. At that point Calvin says, if all "free will" were about was the power given man to do as he pleased, we have no objection. We just think such a definition is too shallow to expose anything about how God sees and deals with the human heart.
But there's still a serious difference. Many Christians disagree with Calvinists over where that unwillingness originates. Calvinists insist it originates by God's intent in creating. That's where the argument truly appears. It's always shoved away, and toward this direction we're arguing right now. To me that's a sad commentary on the opposition's unwillingness to confront the fractures in their own theology. But =shrug=, I agree. The argument implied onto Calvinism is much ado about nothing.
The point of Calvin's is that
God made that will which so willingly opposes Him. That will wasn't set on a sea of chance or independence to choose or not choose. God made wills that way; He planned each the way they result; He places them in history at their appointed times; and He does what He intends to do with them.
That's what normally twists people around the axle.
I hope this helps recognize the scene as we come upon it.