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No, but this is rather a side issue to that thread, and I'm not sure entirely legal for me to tie it to that thread. (I don't have a problem with doing so, but someone else might, so I'll leave it as is for now.)
You may if you choose continue this by private message.Oh ok.
Those are all nice scripture but they do not eradicate the logic that I posted, If as you say God is in control of all things and man has no free will then God is responsible for sin, obviously man has free will and sins due to his own free will.See Romans 9:16-23. Think that over.
God holds man responsible for Adam's sin (Romans 5:18).
That alone condemns you (John 3:18--"already," John 3:36--"remains;" Ephesians 2:3--"by nature").
And herein lies the problem. . .they are "nice Scriptures," but are not authoritative to you, it is your human logic that is your authority.Those are all nice scripture but they do not eradicate the logic that I posted,
I do say God is in control of all things, andIf as you say God is in control of all things and man has no free will then God is responsible for sin,
obviously man has free will and sins due to his own free will.
So there's several uses of 'made'. The point being, though, regardless, we do as God designed, even when we don't achieve the design humans were built for. There we see again, the 'two wills' thing. The 'Hidden Will' very specific, and will happen regardless. The 'Revealed Will' general. Here you have pointed at the disobedient, not doing as God willed, and not doing what they were designed for as humans. But behind it all, obviously, what they do and don't do, is all specific by God's design for each individual. The 'hidden will' is not 'policy' by which to abide. We don't know the 'hidden will'.And yet the bible bascially screams that man does not necessarily do what he's made to do.
Argue with the Bible, then. "By grace through faith" did not begin with Luther. If people get confused, it is through lousy teaching, lousy interpretation, or, possibly, lousy representation of what is really taught. Or, possibly, refusal to listen to Biblical truth.I didn't say that, but what I stated does mean that the doctrine of Sola Fide has opened the door to confusion on this point at to whether or not man is still obligated to be righteous. Faith does not stand in for or replace righteousness nor does it in any way release us from the obligation to be righteous and live accordingly.
I got that opinion directly from the parts of it you quoted. I've never read it before, unless bits and pieces. Have no interest in it.What you posted here is little more than speculation or guess-work. The RC view is essentially consistent with the historic view of the church east and west along with the ECFs-and Scripture taken in its fullest context. The church cites Scripture constantly in her teachings along with quotes at times from those who've grown in wisdom as they've been impacted by the faith recorded in it-and so have something worth hearing. You've been influenced by a novel gospel that was one variation among many that resulted when men basically ignored historic teachings and relied on private interpretations of Scripture.
I doubt the notion, "choice", will even present itself there.Grace and choice.
You do realize, of course, that the elect were made for their specific place in heaven? Luck of the draw, randomness, chance, have nothing to do with how things turned out, nor did anything superior about them, except God's mere choice, for God's own reason. God's choice.The few lucky ones.
As God's revealed will to Pharaoh was, "Let my people go."So there's several uses of 'made'. The point being, though, regardless, we do as God designed, even when we don't achieve the design humans were built for. There we see again, the 'two wills' thing. The 'Hidden Will' very specific, and will happen regardless. The 'Revealed Will' general. Here you have pointed at the disobedient, not doing as God willed, and not doing what they were designed for as humans. But behind it all, obviously, what they do and don't do, is all specific by God's design for each individual. The 'hidden will' is not 'policy' by which to abide. We don't know the 'hidden will'.
I see. I think. Guess we just don't know then.So there's several uses of 'made'. The point being, though, regardless, we do as God designed, even when we don't achieve the design humans were built for. There we see again, the 'two wills' thing. The 'Hidden Will' very specific, and will happen regardless. The 'Revealed Will' general. Here you have pointed at the disobedient, not doing as God willed, and not doing what they were designed for as humans. But behind it all, obviously, what they do and don't do, is all specific by God's design for each individual. The 'hidden will' is not 'policy' by which to abide. We don't know the 'hidden will'.
I know...you should though. Otherwise its just you and the Book, centuries after the fact.I got that opinion directly from the parts of it you quoted. I've never read it before, unless bits and pieces. Have no interest in it.
I have no idea why not. For example, I'm dealing with a beloved drug addict right now. I give her all the grace: all the support emotionally and monetarily I can give, all the love, and yet that won't necessarily turn her from her slavery to the drug. At the end of the day she must also want what I want for her. And that's how it works with God. And this is important in understanding the gospel.I doubt the notion, "choice", will even present itself there.
The church has always taught by grace through faith, as the foundation, the beginning of a journey to salvation. Never faith alone. So the church taught at Trent:Argue with the Bible, then. "By grace through faith" did not begin with Luther. If people get confused, it is through lousy teaching, lousy interpretation, or, possibly, lousy representation of what is really taught. Or, possibly, refusal to listen to Biblical truth.
Your post is a logical contradictionAnd herein lies the problem. . .they are "nice Scriptures," but are not authoritative to you, it is your human logic that is your authority.
I do say God is in control of all things, and
I did not say man is not free to choose what he prefers without external force or constraint,
which is the Biblical meaning of "free will" (which term is not found in the Bible apart from the nomenclature for one of the OT sacrifices, and which means "voluntary").
We do know what we are told to do and not to do.I see. I think. Guess we just don't know then.
Not at all —it is me and what you posted. The quotes from the Catholic Catechism you posted demonstrate pretty plainly, that there is a lot of philosophical thinking not derived directly from the Bible. It almost reads like they had to come up with something in order to be the authority.I know...you should though. Otherwise its just you and the Book, centuries after the fact.
How so?Your post is a logical contradiction
Notice how easy it is to lapse into the vague, poetic sounding, Arminian-style thinking. It reads like a Christian meme on Facebook.I have no idea why not. For example, I'm dealing with a beloved drug addict right now. I give her all the grace: all the support emotionally and monetarily I can give, all the love, and yet that won't necessarily turn her from her slavery to the drug. At the end of the day she must also want what I want for her. And that's how it works with God. And this is important in understanding the gospel.
About 15 centuries ago the church formulated and set down its teachings on grace, using Augustine's writings mainly that stemmed from his battle against Pelgianism some 75 years prior. In no uncertain terms the church insisted that it was absolutely impossible for man to turn to God in faith and so be justified apart from grace, apart from God taking the intiative because man is lost, incapable of reaching up and finding God; He must find us.
But now justifed, now in union with God, man can work out his salvation together with Him, epuipped with grace, the power of the Spirit by which he can be futher sanctified and do the good he must do and put to death the deeds of the flesh in order to gain eternal life. A choice, and a series of choices to pick up our cross daily, and follow. Or not.