patman
Active member
STONE said:Gen 45:8 So now it was not you that sent me hither, but God: and he hath made me a father to Pharaoh, and lord of all his house, and a ruler throughout all the land of Egypt
amen
STONE said:Gen 45:8 So now it was not you that sent me hither, but God: and he hath made me a father to Pharaoh, and lord of all his house, and a ruler throughout all the land of Egypt
No one says God causes sin except Open Theists and the gainsayers of Roman 9:19. Please try to keep up.patman said:Something for all of you who think God causes sin:
Didn't Jesus say a house divided against itself will fall?
Luke 11:17 But He, knowing their thoughts, said to them: “Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation, and a house divided against a house falls.
How you say he causes sin? Our holy father's house would fall!
To plan something is not the same as causing something. The architect plans a building, but he doesn't cause it.patman said:Gee, apparently according to our own english language, when someone says something plans or authors something, he can be considered the creator with intent to bring about that thing once it is actually happened. In context, that is just what they are saying, in fact.
Not so. The principle doesn't apply to God (because He's God). God is able, because of His exhaustive omniscience, to author murder and evil for good purposes. If an author writes a story in which evil actions are purposed for good, that does not constitute sinning by the author. Likewise, God has pre-written all of time and creation, and has planned evil and murder for good purposes.patman said:So let's see. Jesus tells us that even the thought of hate towards a brother is the same as murder because of intent. So God can't murder because he can't sin, so he wouldn't intend to murder on the same principal.
God doesn't cause people to fall. He decrees it for good purposes, but He doesn't cause it. The very ones who would commit the sin that Christ condemns are decreed by Christ for good purposes.patman said:Jesus also says that it would be better for someone who caused a little one to fall if he were thrown to the bottom of the sea..... So that goes to say God wouldn't cause someone to fall, not only in action, but intent as well, because as stated above, intent can be sin too.
Not so. The Triune Godhead has decreed all things according to the purpose of him who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will. There is no division within the Godhead.patman said:Jesus plainly says a house divided against itself will fall. So God wouldn't go out intending for someone to sin because that causes division.
Because Hiilston doesn't speak greek. That post was directly for him and things he said before. He is very outspoken, so I just want everyone to see that he really thinks God "authored" sin. It should speak for itself, his opinion of God is blaspheme.themuzicman said:However, OVTists ARE good a Greek. Since the bible was written in Greek, maybe you should use the definitions and nuances of that language, rather than the translted one.
Muz
No one.Knight said:Jim, if God is NOT responsible for our salvation, who is?
No one is responsible for our salvation???????Hilston said:
But then how do you intend something you don’t control?Patman said:We can all read what the text is saying, God meant the evil for good. But that doesn't go to say he caused it.
But this is over thousands of years, since Isaiah, and even up to our day. This is not prediction based on character solidification, I would say!Lee: how could Paul know, how could Isaiah know that by God's sentence, only a remnant would be saved, from Israel?
Muz: Present evidence. Israel's blindness to the Messiah was an ongoing obstruction to many of them being saved. That's what Paul is lamenting in the first few verses of Romans 9.
You may perhaps know her story. And so then these are not glib words.Lee: "God is not cleaning up after the devil" (Joni Eareckson Tada)
SentientSynth: Now there's a woman who understands the sovereignty of God.
Well … God is:Patman said:After all, is God speaking, or is Joseph?
Hey Lee,lee_merrill said:Well … God is:
Psalm 105:17 and he sent a man before them-- Joseph, sold as a slave.
"The text says, 'You meant evil against me.' Evil is a feminine singular noun. Then it says, 'God meant it for good.' The word 'it' is a feminine singular suffix that can only agree with the antecedent feminine singular noun, 'evil.' And the verb 'meant' is the same past tense in both cases. You meant evil against me in the past, as you were doing it. And God meant that very evil, not as evil, but as good in the past as you were doing it.”
“And to make this perfectly clear, Ps. 105:17 says about Joseph's coming to Egypt, '[God] sent a man before them, Joseph, who was sold as a slave.' God sent him. God did not find him there owing to evil choices, and then try to make something good come of it. Therefore this text stands as a kind of paradigm for how to understand the evil will of man within the sovereign will of God." (John Piper)
Blessings,
Lee
Glad you enjoyed it! Jewish humor is fun...patman said:Nice joke![]()
But that was the point of the quote, God sent Joseph, he didn't find him on the way and try and make something good come out of it.... you and I still disagree that God caused evil.
But the grammar demonstrates that it was the very deeds that his brothers did that God meant, and how do you have an intent for a deed you are uninvolved in? "I intend that Patman's next post be for encouragement for the Yankee fans." No, that doesn't work, I cannot have a purposeful intent for something you do, though I can have an intent as to how to work with that. But God intended the deed.It doesn't matter what gender the word is, what matters is the who did the evil to begin with.
Genesis 45:7-8 But God sent me ahead of you to preserve for you a remnant on earth and to save your lives by a great deliverance. So then, it was not you who sent me here, but God.And the verse makes it clear that the brothers did it, not God.
lee_merrill said:Glad you enjoyed it! Jewish humor is fun...
But that that was the point of the quote, God sent Joseph, he didn't find him on the way and try and make something good come out of it.
But the grammar demonstrates that it was the very deeds that his brothers did that God meant, and how do you have an intent for a deed you are uninvolved in? "I intend that Patman's next post be for encouragement for the Yankee fans." No, that doesn't work, I cannot have a purposeful intent for something you do, though I can have an intent as to how to work with that. But God intended the deed.
Genesis 45:7-8 But God sent me ahead of you to preserve for you a remnant on earth and to save your lives by a great deliverance. So then, it was not you who sent me here, but God.
That would indeed be perfectly clear! But for (I would say) the opposite conclusion.
Blessings,
Lee
Of course not. What's so difficult about understanding this? Tell me who holds God responsible for salvation? You? Me? To whom does God give an account? Here's what the Bible asks, rhetorically:Knight said:No one is responsible for our salvation???????
What "word games" are you referring to? How often have I said that Open Theists are guilty of the very thing they accuse of others. This is no exception. Moreover, if anything is being trivialized in this debate, it is Open Theism, given their lack of response in so many areas that keep growning: Open Theists cannot answer how God's decretive will is contrary to His prescriptive will, Open Theists contradict scriptures that show God plans evil for good, Open Theists cannot answer how God moved David to number Israel, against His own prescribed will, all for God's good purposes, Open Theists contradict their own espoused theology by their theory of prayer, Open Theists insist on corporate election even though the scriptures abundantly demonstrate individual election as well, and Open Theists cannot defend their abuse of language and of the metaphors of scripture.Knight said:Jim, your quest for winning the word games has trivialized you as a force in the debate.
Lets look at number 2 shall we?The definitions of 'responsible'*
responsible adjective [ predic. ].
1. having an obligation to do something, or having control over or care for someone, as part of one's job or role : the department responsible for education.
2. being the primary cause of something and so able to be blamed or credited for it : the gene was responsible for a rare type of eye cancer.
3. [ attrib. ] (of a job or position) involving important duties, independent decision-making, or control over others.
4. [ predic. ] ( responsible to) having to report to (a superior or someone in authority) and be answerable to them for one's actions : the team manager is responsible to the league president.
5. capable of being trusted : a responsible adult.
6. morally accountable for one's behavior : the progressive emergence of the child as a responsible being.
You call them word games, but they're not. I gave abundant, copius bibliography on the correct and biblical understanding of the word. Your murky, nebulous obscurantist approach to theology is threatened by clarity and precision; you won't stand for it. So you inanely accuse me of word games, despite the unequivocal documentation of the long-standing meaning of the word through the ages, across continents and languages and cultures, from (almost) the beginning of time.Knight said:Here is the deal Jim.... you like the fact that you can play word games with the word responsible when it comes to the idea that it gives you opportunity to escape making the claim that God is not responsible for evil.
Don't you wish that were the case. Apparently, Philetus gets it, much to your consternation and horror. And you just can't stand it. So what do you do? You beat him down. You intimidate him. You're like a jealous little girl whose best friend is enjoying talking to someone you loathe with every cell in your body. I've had other Open Theists send private communication to me about things they're reluctant to share in public. I wonder whom they might be afraid of?Knight said:But those same word games look absolutely ridiculous to everyone reading this thread ...
There's no shame in that, as long as the word "responsible" is understood etymologically, theologically and rationally.Knight said:... when you are forced to assert that God is NOT responsible for our salvation, and in fact NOTHING is responsible for our salvation. :kookoo:
Apparently, Philetus disagrees with you, however reluctantly.Knight said:Jim, it's just plain goofy! You know it, I know it, everyone reading this thread knows it.
There is no equivocation on my part (here's another example of the Open Theist being guilty of the very thing he accuses of others). The definition is consistent and precise, and you can't stand it.Knight said:You can try to equivocate all you like it just makes it even more comical.
So very desperate, aren't you? Actually, it's a good suggestion. I'll add it. Thanks.Knight said:Hey Jim, your link at the bottom of your post states....
"Why God is not responsible for salvation."
Curious... why did you leave off the word "our"? :think:
Ignorance is your weapon, Eric. You deliberately ignore the proofs I offered, with no counterargument. You deliberately ignore the scriptures that affirm those proofs, with no counterargument. You deliberately ignore the examples I offered to corroborate the definitions, the scriptures and the logic, with no counterargument. All you have to offer is the deliberately ignorant assertion that my definition of responsible is ...:Knight said:OK, humor us. Since "responsible" is being redefined by you ...
Again, with no proof, no support, no counterargument. And you warn me about being trivialized? Please.Knight said:a narrow useless meaning ...
The Author.Knight said:... what word would you replace it with?
You fill in the blanks....
God is __________ for our salvation.
It can't apply to God. No finite being has grounds upon which to judge God, be it for blame or for credit. This is what we have to get through our heads, all of us. If we presume to judge God, to evaluate Him, we put ourselves in the shoes of Adam, who dared to ponder whether or not God was good or evil on the basis of his own presumed autonomy. We are extol God's greatness based on what He has revealed about Himself. We do not judge God as great. We get this knowledge from Him; not we ourselves. No one has seen God and lived. No one can, on their own experience, authority, judgement or opinion, declare: I hereby credit God for my salvation. It is insolence. It is presumption. We praise God and extol His greatness based on His revelation of these truths to us. We think God's thoughts after Him. Those who presume to judge good and evil (credit or blame) apart from God's revelation, do so according to Luciferian thinking. "Hath God said ...?" is the question that is uttered from the one who presumes to credit God autonomously.Knight said:Lets look at number 2 shall we?
2. being the primary cause of something and so able to be blamed or credited for it : the gene was responsible for a rare type of eye cancer.
Take note of... "being the primary cause of something and so able to be blamed or credited"
Or credited.
Or credited.
Therefore if "Or credited" is as acceptable as "to be blamed" (per your own reference) we could say... responsible means: being the primary cause of something and so able to be credited for it.
No, not as it applies to God.Knight said:Jim is that an acceptable definition of the word responsible?
It doesn't matter what the careless and mindless masses do; the dictionary definition is clear, as is the Bible's treatment of the subject; as is the meaning that spans the history of language, culture and continents. If someone wants to protest my usage, then they do so in arrogant opposition to historical usage, logic and scripture.Knight said:... And wouldn't you agree that most people use the word in just that way?
Sure, and those people are sloppy with their use of the word "responsible."Knight said:Just a note:
Websters Online Dictionary goes on to say... "being the cause or explanation "
Based on that definition (in your own example) most normal thinking people acknowledge that God is responsible for their salvation.
No. Not according to that definition. We can only think God's thoughts after Him. He declares Himself to be the Savior and the author of our salvation; we acknowledge that and declare God's words on the matter. We do not autonomously "credit" Him. It's insulting. It's presumptuous.Knight said:Which makes me also wonder, according to Jim....
Can we credit God for our salvation?
See post 4237.Hilston said:Knight, thanks for your friendship. It's nice knowing that my friends won't let me use a dictionary to define words, but rather insist on using the vague and sloppy definitions, determined by the lowest common denominators of society.
If I didn't care I wouldn't bother correcting you.Thanks for not caring one whit about what my statements mean and what points they're trying to convey.
Jim I am doing my best to help you see how silly you are making yourself look.It's good to know that when you're doing your best to turn over a new leaf and to be friendly toward me,
See post 4237.There's no shame in that, as long as the word "responsible" is understood etymologically, theologically and rationally.
See post 4237.Again, with no proof, no support, no counterargument. And you warn me about being trivialized? Please.
I agree, and your own definition proves my point beyond any doubt. See post 4237.It doesn't matter what the careless and mindless masses do; the dictionary definition is clear
The above paragraph is pure silliness!Hilston said:It can't apply to God. No finite being has grounds upon which to judge God, be it for blame or for credit. This is what we have to get through our heads, all of us. If we presume to judge God, to evaluate Him, we put ourselves in the shoes of Adam, who dared to ponder whether or not God was good or evil on the basis of his own presumed autonomy. We are extol God's greatness based on what He has revealed about Himself. We do not judge God as great. We get this knowledge from Him; not we ourselves. No one has seen God and lived. No one can, on their own experience, authority, judgement or opinion, declare: I hereby credit God for my salvation. It is insolence. It is presumption. We praise God and extol His greatness based on His revelation of these truths to us. We think God's thoughts after Him. Those who presume to judge good and evil (credit or blame) apart from God's revelation, do so according to Luciferian thinking. "Hath God said ...?" is the question that is uttered from the one who presumes to credit God autonomously.