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Quote:
Originally Posted by BenjaminRandall
While the Arminian model might not completely satisfy these issues, it does have several advantages.
First, God in his sovereignty decreed to dignify humanity with a free will, so as to avoid a simplistic determinism. Consequently, man (Adam and Eve) freely chose to disobey God, rather than mindlessly and unavoidably fulfilling some irresistible decree.
And some Calvinists also favor the infralapsarianism position. But falling from grace does not necessarily allow a regaining of that fellowship with God of our own ability.
Quote:
Originally Posted by BenjaminRandall
But, logically, the Arminian position makes God look much less like the cruel God of some Platonic determistic philosophical construct and more like the God of the Bible who was so deeply concerned for them all that he sent his Son to taste death for "every man."
No, this makes God into a kitten, to be controlled by his creation, a plaything to be taken off the shelf when we want him, and placed back on the shelf if we decide we don't want him anymore....
And you are left with the conundrum of how Christ could pay for the sins of all of humanity, and how hell could still exist and be justified if those sins are handed back to us after this payment. This makes Jesus a liar, or everyone in hell is innocent since those sins were paid for, or hell must be denied in spite of what the Bible says about its existence.
So Arminianism's sovereignty is more sovereign than Calvinism's sovereignty, by taking away God's sovereignty and "endowing" humanity with it. Less sovereignty is more sovereignty. Now THAT is an amazing statement!Quote:
This is an amazing statement. Apparently, God is not sovereign enough to endow humanity with the ability to choose. Apparently, if God endows humanity with free will, he becomes a slave to them.
Exodus is a fairly large book, so if you could elaborate as to which verse(s) you'd like me to address, I would appreciate it.This is fine rhetoric, and I can imagine some Calvinist standing opposite Moses on the mountain and saying the same thing when Moses confronted the people with two options: Choose life or choose death.
When Joshua confronts the people in his old age, he told them "Choose this day whom you will serve.... As for me and my house, we will choose the Lord."
To which the articulate Calvinist, in defense of his deterministic semi-Sovereign God says, "Now Joshua, you're making God into a kitten."
I don't have any argument with your last statement because this is what Calvinists believe. Those who are united with Christ, are the elect.KJ7 writes,
This argument against Arminianism fails to take seriously the doctrine of Union with Christ. The payment has been made for sin, but only those who are united with Christ by faith are reckoned righteous.
How is it weak? You have just affirmed payment for sin for everyone, but if some are cast into hell, are those sins handed back? If so, wouldn't this make Jesus a liar? Did he pay for them or did he not?Calvinists might feel free to argue about what "by faith" means, but the whole "innocent in hell" scenario is a weak argument against unlimited atonement.
And yet you say Christ died for all, payment in full. If. Which makes it not a payment after all. At most it's a roulette wheel, a down payment that depends on a final payment with a decision for Christ. Not so, Christ bought and paid for those whom the Father had given him. Free delivery via the Holy Spirit.Will anyone actually come out and say "Your sins are forgiven and you are counted justified prior to being united with Christ"? Of course not. So, the whole double payment argument is nil.
If Joe doesn't believe, this can only mean that the Father did not give Joe to the Son. Atonement was never provided, if it was then Joe would have been effectually called and his eyes opened.If Christ died for Joe, and if Joe doesn't believe, then he doesn't get united with Christ, and he dies without the payment actually made to his account. And so, he goes to hell with his sin debt unsettled despite atonement having been provided.
"His own" would have to refer to the Jews, who had long ago forgotten the heart and lived by law alone for their salvation. These were not his sheep, and they did not know his voice.This squares well with the depiction of Jesus ministry which indicates that, to be sure, Jesus indeed came to his own proclaiming the good news of the Kingdom, but despite his proclamation to his own, his own refused him.
Exodus is a fairly large book, so if you could elaborate as to which verse(s) you'd like me to address, I would appreciate it.
Sorry. Actually, I had in mind the concluding chapters of Deuteronomy which form a single narrative unit in which the Israelites are confronted with an offer of life or an offer of death, of blessing or of cursing.
Of course any natural reading of the ending of Deuteronomy (or the ending of Joshua) would assume that the individual Israelites had the ability to make choices about whether they would live or the Lord or not live for him, which is an entirely consonant with an Arminian perspective.
It's pretty incredible to conclude that such an Arminian perspective makes God into a cuddly kitten, given the curses listed in Deut 29 for failure to choose life.
Given such a portrait of God, if he is a kitten, I'd hate to see the lion! The cute kitten language may be effective rhetorically, but it doesn't give an accurate portait.
. Consequentl said:if hell is necessary, then God shouldnt have created us in the first place. simple as that. if he is nice.
Whose standard of nice are you judging God by? Would mercy be known if evil didn't exist? Would kindness, patience, longsuffering and forgiveness mean anything if we didn't need it? Does God have to submit to your standard? These are some of the questions I have been working on and as soon as I can get all my thoughts together on them I will PM you.. Consequentl said:if hell is necessary, then God shouldnt have created us in the first place. simple as that. if he is nice.
So then Christ paid more debt than was due? That isn't justice. He either put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself or He didn't. If He did all those whose sins He bore in His own body on the tree have no sin to be judged. If He didn't then none of us have hope. You make Christ to have bought something He may never take possession of. If atonement has been made the debt is settled. If it isn't settled atonement means nothing, the sacrifice was pointless and the blood has no real value. If God is satisfied by the death of Christ for sin, which He is because Christ is raised from the dead, then how can He again punish any for whom Christ shed His blood? It ain't possible. No wonder we have such a warped system of justice in this country. It comes from Arminian theology.KJ7 writes,
This argument against Arminianism fails to take seriously the doctrine of Union with Christ. The payment has been made for sin, but only those who are united with Christ by faith are reckoned righteous.
Calvinists might feel free to argue about what "by faith" means, but the whole "innocent in hell" scenario is a weak argument against unlimited atonement.
Will anyone actually come out and say "Your sins are forgiven and you are counted justified prior to being united with Christ"? Of course not. So, the whole double payment argument is nil.
If Christ died for Joe, and if Joe doesn't believe, then he doesn't get united with Christ, and he dies without the payment actually made to his account. And so, he goes to hell with his sin debt unsettled despite atonement having been provided.
This squares well with the depiction of Jesus ministry which indicates that, to be sure, Jesus indeed came to his own proclaiming the good news of the Kingdom, but despite his proclamation to his own, his own refused him.
Whose standard of nice are you judging God by? Would mercy be known if evil didn't exist? Would kindness, patience, longsuffering and forgiveness mean anything if we didn't need it? Does God have to submit to your standard? These are some of the questions I have been working on and as soon as I can get all my thoughts together on them I will PM you.
i'm judging 'nice' by human standaards. isnt that ok? i got my standards from the bible.
ok thanks.
Go ahead, pips, keep kicking against the goads. God will do one of two things; eventually change the bitterness in your heart towards Him into gratitude and rejoicing; or leave you to your own devices to descend into darkness and finally have a firsthand knowledge of that hell you abhor. All your protestations and complaints will in the end be irrelavent. You will submit to the will of God whether you want to or not.i'm judging 'nice' by human standaards. isnt that ok? i got my standards from the bible.
ok thanks.
Go ahead, pips, keep kicking against the goads. God will do one of two things; eventually change the bitterness in your heart towards Him into gratitude and rejoicing; or leave you to your own devices to descend into darkness and finally have a firsthand knowledge of that hell you abhor. All your protestations and complaints will in the end be irrelavent. You will submit to the will of God whether you want to or not.
Pippa, you need to understand, many of us have been through the doubts and trepidations that you are experiencing now. There really is no silver bullet solution to your dilemma. Either God will show you your error and grant you relief from your strivings, or He will not. The reality is that these problems arise from unbelief and bitterness. I know this because I have wrestled with these enemies myself in the past, as some here might be so long in the tooth as to recall. But God had mercy upon me beyond measure, and for that I am grateful to Him as much as I am able while yet in the body.it's not that i'm rebelling against God. its that i'm wondering if i've been mistaken in believing in him, and believing in the bible. because it doesnt seem to add up. if i'm going to burn in hell for noticing things which dont seem to add up, he must certainly be extremely cruel.
First, this is an ad hominem attack. Of God. Saddam Hussein was not kind, but he wasn't kind because the thoughts and intents of his heart were evil.how is hell kind then?
was sadam hussein kind?
pippa
this defines cruelty without its connotations. You can't promote the denotation of "intense, severe, painful" consequences into "therefore wrong".if God has to punish people with such a horrible thing as hell, it was cruel of him to create the world in the first place.
And here is probably the source of your confusion, Pippa. You are not convinced of the horrendous character of most people's sin, and especially your own. I can't remember who I heard this from, maybe Sproul, but the example was that we tend to want to see ourselves as closer to Christ on a scale between His righteousness and Hitler's immense evil. Wrong! It is more accurate to say we are in a bear-hug with Hitler on that scale. We are abhorrant abominations before God without the covering of the blood of His Son.Tell me that Hitler, or Stalin, or Mao, or Pol Pot are so pitiful that they don't deserve the resolution, the consequence of their sins.
And then show me that the origins of their sins are not the same as mine.
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