Equivalent? How can a noun be equivalent to an adjective? I'm a "fatuous"? That's brilliant.Clete said:My use of the term [dork] is equivalent in meaning to the word fatuous.
:loser:
AATGD, OC,
:j
Equivalent? How can a noun be equivalent to an adjective? I'm a "fatuous"? That's brilliant.Clete said:My use of the term [dork] is equivalent in meaning to the word fatuous.
I hope Clete's good friend has a good and friendly talk with him and will kindly explain how he blew it*.Clete said:I gave Jim another chance at the request of a good friend and now I'm done.
Because there is no contradiction. God is sovereign; man is responsible. There is no contradiction. God is immutable in His essence, but mutable in His actions. There is no contradiction.RobE said:I know you've already answered this question, but would you do it again please.
Why does the antinomy which Clete presents not exist in reality?
No one cares that the writer calls this an antinomy except Clete. My point has ever been that Calvinists qualify immutability and simplicity. Period. Whether or not they call it an antinomy is beside the point. Clete thinks he's found some chink in my armor by going after Calvinistic antinomy claims. I couldn't care less. He can declare until the cows come home, all blue in the face, that Calvinists appeal to antinomy. I will agree with him. They certainly do. But it doesn't negate the bald misrepresentation of Open Theists that continue to this day, despite all the quotes that belie their specious claims.Clete said:Further, you agree that the author of that article makes qualifications all over the place and pretend like I'm too stupid to notice that fact and then you completely gloss over the fact that he comes right out and says that the issue of God's sovereignty and man's responsibility presents an antinomy, which means you completely missed the point of my having presented the article!
That's so totally non sequitur as to render logic incomprehensible. Just because Calvinists view immutability or simplicity as contradictory to other premises does not negate the fact that Open Theists, as a matter of course and deliberate strategic distortion, mischaracterize their opponents' view of these doctrines.Clete said:... The fact that the article is chocker block full of so called "qualifications" goes to my argument that your insistence that these men very narrowly focusing their comments on everything about God except His manifestations is falsified by the fact that these men see and accept the fact that their positions are contradictory.
So what? Open Theists still misrepresent Calvinism. It would be nice, for once, to agree with Open Theists about where Calvinism is wrong. But since Open Theists are so distracted by pinning beliefs on Calvinists that they don't even hold, we can't get past square one. I disagree with Calvinists because of what they believe. Open Theists disagree with Calvinists for imaginary beliefs.Clete said:... They see the contradiction and right it off as an antinomy.
Don't you mean "Come on Clete"? Have you read his posts?!Knight said:Come on Jim.![]()
RobE said:If God foresaw that he would be sorry he made man, would he really have made man? Or is it that he really wasn't sorry he made man.
Yes, to achieve a greater, glorious purpose.
....
God was really sorry. What 'twist' are you speaking of?
Maybe you are able to show me what I don't see as occuring.
Knight said:Jim, Rob do you guys realize you look very much alike?
Come to think of it, I have never seen the two of you together at the same time. :think:
![]()
:ha: self deprecating humor, I love it.RobE said:If I was Jim I wouldn't take this kind of insult. :chuckle:
As a point of trivia my name is Jim as well.![]()
James Robert Mauldin
Clete said:NO NO NO!!!
They do not say that there is a "perceived antinomy"!!! They insist that two concepts that they can clearly see contradict one another are nonetheless TOTALLY ACCURATE AND TRUE!!! When that sort of thing happens they call it an antinomy. Something that only APPEARS to be a contradiction WOULD NOT BE AN ANTINOMY!!! If the contradiction is real then the term antinomy does not apply. Get it?
You're wrong. People who accept the concepts of Calvinism DO NOT DENY that the concepts contradict one another. They very simply do not deny it. They simply accept it and make no attempt whatsoever to reconcile the idea in a rational way because they do not believe that any such reconciliation is possible. The term they attach to such things is "antinomy". If the contradiction did not exist there would be no need for the term in the first place.
Hilston said:No one cares that the writer calls this an antinomy except Clete. My point has ever been that Calvinists qualify immutability and simplicity. Period. Whether or not they call it an antinomy is beside the point. Clete thinks he's found some chink in my armor by going after Calvinistic antinomy claims. I couldn't care less. He can declare until the cows come home, all blue in the face, that Calvinists appeal to antinomy. I will agree with him. They certainly do.
Hilston said:Hi Rob,
Thanks for your question.
Because there is no contradiction. God is sovereign; man is responsible. There is no contradiction. God is immutable in His essence, but mutable in His actions. There is no contradiction.
patman said:Does God really love those who are going to hell rob?
He is sacrificing them at the sake of us according to you.
And he knew it all this time.
He knew his creation would lead to person x going to hell.
And he is able to do anything, so he knew how to make creation where person x was saved by his own freewill by his future knowledge.
So is this picture of God loving to you?
Note: no rebuke here for Clete. One does get a little weary of the carte blanche for Open Theists here. One reason I have been a bit absent here, of late.Knight said:I agree, you should both just ignore each other.
One L in “tolerate,” Clete.WHY DO YOU PEOPLE TOLLERATE THIS JERK?!!!
That's a good question, but similarly, why would God "bind all men over to disobedience, so he may have mercy on them all"? (Rom. 11)Knight said:Doesn't the story of Jonah and others like it show that there are wills in play besides God's? Jonah's will was not to go to Nineveh. God's will was that Jonah go to Nineveh. God "pushed" and "prodded" Jonah to influence His will so that Jonah would do God's will (go to Nineveh). If God had the only "will" in play why not just decree that Jonah go to Nineveh in the first place? Why not skip all the giant fish stuff? Or better yet, why not decree that Nineveh not be an evil city and then Jonah wouldn't have had to go in the first place, or better yet why not decree that Adam not sin etc., etc., etc. ?
Unless at times, by the Lord’s decision we choose to disobey him.Notice God says "lean not on your own understanding", this is a reference to our will when it is NOT in line with His will.
No you are fatuous and therefore a dork.Hilston said:Equivalent? How can a noun be equivalent to an adjective? I'm a "fatuous"? That's brilliant.
:loser:
AATGD, OC,
:j
"There is no contradiction...there is no contradiction...there is no contradiction."Hilston said:Hi Rob,
Thanks for your question.
Because there is no contradiction. God is sovereign; man is responsible. There is no contradiction. God is immutable in His essence, but mutable in His actions. There is no contradiction.
This is an admition that the point has been ignored by Jim and that my claims concerning his near complete unresponsiveness are entirely true.No one cares that the writer calls this an antinomy except Clete.
And the damn is breached!My point has ever been that Calvinists qualify immutability and simplicity. Period.
Thank you Jim for conceding the debate (such as it was). Your position that these people narrowly focus their remarks about immutability on God's essence cannot survive your admittion that they appeal to antinomy. If their comments were so narrowly focused they would proclaim in unison with you that "there is no contradiction!". But they don't; they instead declare the obvious contradiction as an antinomy and elevate God above logic and divorce themselves from rational discourse all in order to preserve their worshiped and adored stone idol god who cannot move or be moved by anything including love.Whether or not they call it an antinomy is beside the point. Clete thinks he's found some chink in my armor by going after Calvinistic antinomy claims. I couldn't care less. He can declare until the cows come home, all blue in the face, that Calvinists appeal to antinomy. I will agree with him. They certainly do. But it doesn't negate the bald misrepresentation of Open Theists that continue to this day, despite all the quotes that belie their specious claims.
On the contrary! Their appeal to antinomy is proof that we do not misrepresent their views. Calvinists really do believe that God cannot change in any way whatsoever. I've even quoted them as saying just exactly that! It's all because they put a premium on God's quantitative attributes and sacrifice His qualitative attributes on the alter of immutability by the flaim of antinomy.That's so totally non sequitur as to render logic incomprehensible. Just because Calvinists view immutability or simplicity as contradictory to other premises does not negate the fact that Open Theists, as a matter of course and deliberate strategic distortion, mischaracterize their opponents' view of these doctrines.
This is Jim's never diminishing claim but he has yet to prove it. And what's more is that he has set his position up in his own mind in such a way that for him it is unfalsifiable. Whenever a quote from Augustine or some other author who is speaking on any of these issues says something that contradicts Jim's claim, Jim blows it off by saying that the quote only proves that the author was a "fallible human being".So what? Open Theists still misrepresent Calvinism. It would be nice, for once, to agree with Open Theists about where Calvinism is wrong. But since Open Theists are so distracted by pinning beliefs on Calvinists that they don't even hold, we can't get past square one. I disagree with Calvinists because of what they believe. Open Theists disagree with Calvinists for imaginary beliefs.
I just want everyone here to know that each time Jim says this "Trusting the Rock" line, he commits another intentional lie. This habit came about during his one on one with Acts9-12out where Jeremy pleaded with Jim to stop worshiping a rock (lower case r). Jim twisted the point and responded to it as though Jeremy had used the Biblical analogy knowing that this is not what Jeremy meant. It is a blasphemous lie for Jim to use the term "Rock" in the sense that he does. What he worships is a stone idol, which is immutably deaf, dumb and dead.Trusting the Rock,
Jim
Each man is responsible for his own actions. By "responsible" is meant "held accountable." Not merely being the one who performs the action, but being held culpable for said action.RobE said:Are you able to elaborate on this more than a little? Man is responsible for what? Are God's action different than His essence or are they the same as Eckhardt presumes? Why would o.v. people believe differently?
Rob
Notice two things.Hilston said:Each man is responsible for his own actions. By "responsible" is meant "held accountable." Not merely being the one who performs the action, but being held culpable for said action.
But they are yet part of Him as a person's character is defined by their actions. Thus God is not simple (He has parts) and His action are imperfect according to the logic that says that only that which is imperfect can suffer change.God's actions are not essential and cannot be equated with His eternal essence.
As though that matters. Jim knows full well that Eckhardt would almost certainly agree that God's actions are not the same as His essence. Jim also knows that Eckhardt would affirm divine simplicity and Jim knows that Eckhardt would not even try to reconcile the obvious contradiction and immediately appeal to antinomy as the ultimate theological trump card.God's actions are therefore different from His essence. I don't know Eckhardt or his position on divine immutability.
An intentional and outrageous lie. Jim is a liar. That much we can know for certain.OV people believe differently because they want to tear God down (i.e. denigrate His essence) and to raise themselves up (i.e. elevate themselves to demigods).
This is also untrue although I wouldn't count this as an intentional lie as I think he actually believes this nonsense. It is a classic throwing mud tactic reminiscent of political T.V. ads. He is praying on your likely ignorance as to the nature of existentialism. It sounds really, really bad and Jim wants to create an emotional reaction that says "OH MY! Not existentialism! EEEK!!"In order to facilitate this strategem, the have become existentialists.
Jim means that we either assail or dismiss his wacky and seriously convoluted and irrational idea about God's essential attributes.They either assail or dismiss God's essential attributes.
Someone should make Jim produce evidence for such a claim.Some refuse to even acknowledge the concept for the sake of discussion, as we've seen here many times.
For "willing to understand" read "willing to not hold my feet too close to the fire about all these wild claims that I'm making without substantiation and to tolerate my cryptic use of the English language and my intentional lies and blatant misrepresentations of my opponents views."Keep asking questions if necessary. As long as you're willing to understand, I am willing to help.
Well, sir Clete, you left outClete said:God's essential attributes are as follows...
God is Living, Personal, Relational, Good, Loving
His power, presence (size), knowledge and all His other quantitative attributes take a back seat to these qualitative attributes and are in fact founded upon them according to the Scripture.
Psalm 89:13 You have a mighty arm;
Strong is Your hand, and high is Your right hand.
14 Righteousness and justice are the foundation of Your throne;
Mercy and truth go before Your face.
Psalm 97:1 The LORD reigns;
Let the earth rejoice;
Let the multitude of isles be glad!
2 Clouds and darkness surround Him;
Righteousness and justice are the foundation of His throne.
Well... I asked my question first.lee_merrill said:That's a good question, but similarly, why would God "bind all men over to disobedience, so he may have mercy on them all"? (Rom. 11)