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It aint no mystery just flat out denial of what has been revealed. God can create any wicked thing He wants and it would not affect His Holiness one bit..furthermore you dont know the True God of the bible nor His Holiness, you serve a idol god..ormly one that aint wort the pot i spit in..
Sorry you cant rationalize it away God creates evil rah and to deny it is to deny the plain teaching of scripture..
Excellent point JAL, that most will argue against when speaking of God's sovreignty; His Holiness being an absolute against all manner of evil. Therefore, when reading that passage there is something more that must be considered. It would be like saying God created disobedience or, sin. Folks who are not of the freewill mindset have great difficult reconciling such scripture; relegating what they can't know to, "Its a mystery".
I made a reference to the context - the contrast set up in the passage such that evil is not the opposite of peace.
My reading is possible because it satisfies both (a) the demands of the context and (b) the demands of Hebrew vocabulary and (c) the need to avoid contradicting God's holiness.
So far your reading only addresses B, as far as I can see. You're batting 1 for 3.
But I'm the one who's rationalizing away the truth? I think I'm about done here.
I think you and I are seeing the same problem here. And I would take a similar approach to passages such as "Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated." This poses a logical conflict with God's love. We have to resolve it.
Fortunately we have a precedent. The word "hate" can be used hyperbolically. Jesus said,
"If any [man] come to me, and hate not his father, and mother, and wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be my disciple" (Lk 14:26).
Clearly, God does not want us to hate our family. In Ephesians Paul tells us to love our wife as Christ loved the church. So this is a case where we cannot take Scripture (i.e. "hate") at face value.
Situations like this is why I differ with most evangelicals as to our most valuable exegetical tool. Most evangelicals think it to be linguistics (Greek and Hebrew). I think it to be the law of noncontradiction. Whenever we come up with a reading of one passage that blatantly contradicts our interpretation of other passages, something is wrong.
On the other hand I cannot go as far as Van does in his disdain for Calvinism. I cannot in good conscience say that it has no exegetical support. Indeed I believe that many of its elements are true, and even those elements that I disagree with rest on an EXTREMELY plausible, EXTREMELY tempting exegesis. I have great respect for Calvinism. Stated simply, if it weren't for the law of noncontradiction, I would be a full-blown Calvinist! (That's just my opinion - I can't recall your feelings on the issue because I haven't been following your posts).
God creates evil in all its meanings of the word regardless of context..He creates peace in all its meanings regardless of context, He creates light in all its meanings regardless of that context , he creates darkness , in all its meanings regardless of that context God has created all for Himself and you cannot be His child and deny that..
I have a family engagement but I will get up with you later on this. . . . and yes we agree on much of this, [I think]![]()
I was literally unable to suppress a burst of laughter in regard to your apparent insinuation that I am not a Christian if I don't agree with your exegesis.
I don't intend to keep debating with someone who keeps asserting his position in the face of a contradiction.
Thank you so very much.God creates evil in all its meanings of the word regardless of context..He creates peace in all its meanings regardless of context, He creates light in all its meanings regardless of that context , he creates darkness , in all its meanings regardless of that context God has created all for Himself and you cannot be His child and deny that..
Thank you so very much.
Up until now I am the only person I've heard say that.
It's incredible how epidemic the notion that the action, not the motivation determines guilt.
Philosophically ....You're trying to have it both ways. You're calling him pristine and sinful at the same time. Doesn't work.
My original post was on target. Your view has God creating him with a sinful element and then blaming him when that element eventually manifests. Unacceptable theodicy.
A just God does not author evil. Your view of God makes Him the author of evil and hence unjust.
The passage about sin being found in someone doesn't prove your point. All it shows is that upon initial examination no sin was found. After the sin, then yes, sin was found. This does not prove God authored sin.
Philosophically ....
Authorship requires intent. Intent isn't shown. So your argument doesn't really carry.
Evil also requires intent. Intent isn't shown. So the author isn't necessarily evil.
Within the broader context I'd agree with you that God intentionally planting evil intent into someone with the ultimate intent of evil isn't really a manageable view.
However, there's a range of manageable views that make sense of this.
God could intentionally plant evil intent with the ultimate intent of good.
Within the broader context I'd agree with you that God intentionally planting evil intent into someone with the ultimate intent of evil isn't really a manageable view.
However, there's a range of manageable views that make sense of this.
God could intentionally plant evil intent with the ultimate intent of good.
I really dont know what you are saying here. By the way, Calvinists have done nothing convincing to show that free will can be completely purged from theology. If there is no free will, there is no real guilt. Period.A good God creating a reality that results in evil had better be an explanation -- else there would be no explanation for why God is good. Free will doesn't cover for this deduction.
Now you are trying to come up with an obscure definition of sin to cover up the whole contradiction. (A favorite technique of theologians is to use obscure, highly technical language to avoid charges of contradiction). Sin is now human limitations. Absurd. If God creates me finite or weak, He is the one responsible. He is then a liar to judge me immoral or deserving of hell for my God-given limitations.God could also intentionally create limited beings. Sin being a lack of good, a limited human creature could reach the state of sin through his limitations. Again, there's no clear way to establish that limited creatures can't conclude a good God -- because of course we're already admitting the point of limited existence. Free will doesn't cover for this deduction.
Sin is freely willed evil. Any other definition of sin is unintelligible. Now I will accept, in a loose sense, that an act resulting from an addiction (and thus uncontrollable) may be also called sin, even though not freely willed as long as the addiction originated in freely willed sin which CAUSED the addiction.Sin being a lack of good, it may well be that anything independent of God is sin. That would smash human free will to pieces -- it would be free of dependency on God.
No such thing. Sin is bondage, nothin' free at all about it.Sin is freely willed evil
RickOtto said:No such thing. Sin is bondage, nothin' free at all about it.
What is obscure to you is that responsibility & guilt are not inextricably linked.
Once you understand that, you'll have a clue how predestination doesn't eliminate personal responsibility.