Clete said::chuckle:
Does being a glutton for punishment count as being crazy? :freak:
My banishment was a good little break. I should be banned more often.Clete said:You have been pretty respectful since your return from your temporary banishment and so I am inclined to give you another chance and suspend entirely my boycott of threads in which you are active.
Honestly, I wasn't really interesting in discussing figures of speech, per se, but rather if patboy knew what figures were. It seemed as though he was belittling the settled view because settled viewers see that scripture is replete with figures.If you can continue being respectful I would like to engage you on this issue of figures of speech.
I agree. Certain figures can be difficult to spot, especially when dealing with archaic languages. A recommendation that I would make is to pick up "the Book of Job" by E.W. Bullinger, which includes discussion of the book itself and a translation which takes figures of speech into full consideration. You may disagree with ol' Bulli in regards to the discussion aspect of the book, but the bulk of it is the new translation. Also, if you have the Companion Bible, then you have the new translation, but you may not have the full explanations that Bulli gives in the book.In regards to detecting them, that is a more difficult question to answer because there usually isn't anything in the text itself that let's you know that the word or phrase is being used in a figurative way.
I must admit that I'm a little blind-sided by this admission. So many times those who oppose limited atonement do so on the basis of verses that include this word "all" or sometimes the word "world." I forget where I read it in Gill's commentary, but he relates an occassion where two men were having a conversation, and "all" was used to denote only these two men. Just a factoid.There are certain words that are almost always figurative such as the word "all" for example. It virtually never means "every single last one". It often means "most" or "some" and even "a few" and can even mean "just this single individual one". The only way to tell is by the context.
I agree.Determining when a word or passage in the Bible is or is not a figure of speech and what it means if it is a figure is the work of hermeneutics.
:shut:If you've read Battle Royale X then you know that much of the debate over Open Theism revolves around figures of speech and whether certain passages are to be taken literally or as figurative. And, if you have read that debate, then you also know that the Open Theist's hermeneutical principles have a Biblical basis whereas the Settled View's has a philosophical basis. Open Theism's Biblical basis being that one's power and authority is founded upon one's righteousness, including God's (Psalms 89:14; 97:2) and the Settled View's basis being Aristotle's philosophy that the perfect is immutable.
Thus the Open Theist will interpret passages in such a way as to preserve His righteousness, justice and loving character (i.e. His qualitative attributes) over and above His power or sovereignty (i.e. His quantitative attributes) and the Settled Theist will interpret passages in such a way as to preserve His power and authority over and above His righteousness. This results in the Settled View theist accusing the Open View theist of having a weak and powerless God whereas the Open View accuses the Settled View of having an unjust God who is the author of sin, which you guys interestingly seem to no longer deny.
Yes. Thank you.Does that answer your question?
Mr. Hill, I became sarcastic with you only after you demonstrated a thorough lack of respect for the debate. You accused me of "jumping to wrong conclusions only because want to", remember?Bob Hill said:I've gotten tired of sarcastic statements.
Not me. I respect God's sovereignty. He has the best in mind for me, and I don't always know what's best for myself or the ones that I care about. He, in the other hand, does. So if "I don't get my way", then I understand that God has something else in store, something that He desires to accomplish through means that I haven't considered. God works in mysterious ways.Lighthouse said:Has any Calvinist, or other settled viewer for that matter, gotten mad, or upset, when their prayers were not answered the way they wanted them to be answered?
See ya later little fella! :wave2:sentientsynth said:Mr. Hill, I became sarcastic with you only after you demonstrated a thorough lack of respect for the debate. You accused me of "jumping to wrong conclusions only because want to", remember?
You've ignored point after point that I've made, only to make false accusations about me.
So ... whatever. Sit on your thumb and twirl, Mr. Hill.
Does the magical dancing banana thing work when others make me mad? It would seem that SS is no longer a problem! :BRAVO:patman said:In some cultures, maybe.![]()
He is only pretending to be respectful, his respect for the conversation is still where it was a month, year, decade ago. But good luck, you have more patience than I.
If he makes you mad, just come back to this post and look at the magical dancing banana! It will help
:bannana:
Bob Hill said:Muz,
Clete was right.
Bob
Clete said:Does the magical dancing banana thing work when others make me mad? It would seem that SS is no longer a problem! :BRAVO:
Is Knight cool or what!
:knight:![]()
Deut. 8:1-9
1 Be careful to follow every command I am giving you today, so that you may live and increase and may enter and possess the land that the Lord promised on oath to your forefathers. 2 Remember how the Lord your God led you all the way in the desert these forty years, to humble you and to test you in order to know what was in your heart, whether or not you would keep his commands. 3 He humbled you, causing you to hunger and then feeding you with manna, which neither you nor your fathers had known, to teach you that man does not live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of the Lord. 4 Your clothes did not wear out and your feet did not swell during these forty years. 5 Know then in your heart that as a man disciplines his son, so the Lord your God disciplines you. 6 Observe the commands of the Lord your God, walking in his ways and revering him. 7 For the Lord your God is bringing you into a good land--a land with streams and pools of water, with springs flowing in the valleys and hills; 8 a land with wheat and barley, vines and fig trees, pomegranates, olive oil and honey; 9 a land where bread will not be scarce and you will lack nothing; a land where the rocks are iron and you can dig copper out of the hills. Deut. 8:1-9 (NRSV)