lee_merrill
New member
Somehow we stopped discussing how God knows a remnant will be saved, and only a remnant, and then "all Israel"...
Somehow we stopped discussing how God knows a remnant will be saved, and only a remnant, and then "all Israel"...
How, may ask, am I misinterpreting this text? This is a problem for the Open View if it means God knows future free decisions. I think the Open View says such decisions are free, Muz notwithstanding, and clearly God knows about them. Thus and therefore, Q.E.D., as they say.This is not usually presented as a problem for OT. You are misinterpreting a proof text out of the context of all of Scripture.
2)Use real building materials. I know you have some language helps and these are substantive for language, but you appear to be loosely tying them into your theological arguments and not seeing the big pictures on a lot of your reasoning and conclusions.
3)Do your homework. It isn't good to reject all tradition outright. There is a rich history on these doctrines that a superficial glance will not take care of. OV will 'never' be able to convince if all you see are your misconceptions about the traditional stances. You can argue that Greeks built my house, but all I am seeing is a very sturdy house, I don't really care 'who' built my house as it is a proper house of doctrine that stands up quite well and has for centuries.
4) Be gracious. When someone like Nang comes along behind you with a good refutation, it is wise to acknowledge the good argument.
This isn't a game. It isn't 'who wins the debate.' That is too narrow for the existence of TOL. Either we are in this for truth or we are just playing semantic games. Keep the goal in mind always. It is always about Him and His truth or we are missing not only the big picture, but His presence and truth in these discussions. Our driving force is His glory, or nothing significant at all.
5) Look for the truths. You tend to throw babies out with your bathwater too often. You look for a reason to chuck the whole thing. If I were to do that, TOL would be history. You do not have to agree with the wheat and the tares leading to EDF discussion, but to say the analogy doesn't support the ideas I've presented is disingenuine.
The Noahic story is a different plan than the wheat tares analogy of what is presently going on. For this discussion I would bring in covenant and dispensational points. Both see God working differently and so should we.
What is your hang-up with the wheat/tares that I'm not seeing? Honestly, I don't know why you are taking this tack other than just to argue. I'm not seeing your point and this specifically is why the 5 suggestions. I'm trying to decide if you are just arguing to argue, if you have an OV concern, or if it truly is something substantial that I must address.
I'm endeavoring to be honest, forthright, and transparent here.
Acts 11:14 He will bring you a message through which you and all your household will be saved.Does the text say that Joe will be saved and Sue will not be and that the dog will scratch his head at 1:02 p.m. April 1, 2012?
I think you are meaning "all Israel" here--but what about "only a remnant"? Is God exercising his influence so that most Jewish people will not repent?This is general and predictable based on God's influence as long as it takes...
But it means in any case many if not most, correct? After only a few...It also does not mean literally all will be saved, but is talking about a corporate restoration (even in Old T Israel, not all shared in her destiny).
Anyone with modest reading comprehension skills would understand that I'm not implying that God wills one to put their palms up or down in this scenario. The only way one could believe I'm implying that God wills one to put their palms up or down in this scenario is if they are adding a number of assumptions to my statement without telling us. Adding assumptions to a statement without making those assumptions clear appears to a subsequent reader as stupidity.Yorzhik said:"God has decreed your palms will be up because He foreknew your will would determine to turn them up."
If your will is to do the opposite of whatever God says, then your palms would be turned down. Or are you saying that man cannot will to NOT do what God says?You're implying that God wills you to turn them up or down.
I'm obscuring? No, Rob, I'm being clear. What you are obscuring is the meaning of "decree". Has God decreed every event from before the foundation of the world? If God has not decreed every event before the foundation of the world, does God know, exhaustively, every event before the foundation of the world?What you obscure is that God has simply decreed to allow you to act independently of Him in turning them up or down. God hasn't decreed they will be up, God has decreed a creation in which you choose to turn them up.
Does God know, exhaustively, every event that He allows?RobE said:I'm saying that God has either decreed 1. to allow the event or 2. He will intervene to influence the event to be carried out by you freely.
Then… what?RobE said:The joke per se is that creation is an action of God, so if God has no idea as to the outcomes of His own actions then.........
God knows before we choose. Whether it be moments before or a longer time before.Circular reasoning. Even in the OV, God knows before we choose at the moment of choosing. You agree that He knows the thoughts of David before he speaks them (as Psalms tell us). Take the logic as your own. What do you mean by this? Does even moments before eliminate David's freewill to speak? I hope this is a warning bell for OVer's. There is a logical clarification needed, but it doesn't exist between OV and tradition. That is an illusion made to make OV look like it has all the answers. It has the exact same problem no matter how you slice it and an illusion of 'solve.' It has solved nothing: Think about it.
Are you really an openist? :squint:God knows before we choose. Whether it be moments before or a longer time before.
Why would you ask? Have you not been listening to what we open viewers say?Are you really an openist? :squint:
But this cannot be an estimate:There is a difference between proximal vs remote foreknowledge, between exhaustive definite foreknowledge, and some foreknowledge based on probability or God's ability to make it happen as predicted.
The point however, is when God knows a future free decision, and is not estimating, whether near or far. This is impossible, according to the Open View.Yet the distant future is unknowable (at least as far as free will agents are concerned) because no present knowledge is helpful in determining the choices that non-existent beings will make. In other words.... God doesn't know the choices that my great, great, great, great, grandchildren will make because they don't exist yet.
Uh... that is the VERY definition of an estimate. :doh:But this cannot be an estimate:
Romans 9:27-28 Isaiah cries out concerning Israel: "Though the number of the Israelites be like the sand by the sea, only the remnant will be saved. For the Lord will carry out his sentence on earth with speed and finality."
Wrong, this is exactly the type of thing I referred to in my previous post.Nor this:
Acts 11:14 He will bring you a message through which you and all your household will be saved.
Wow.. you must think that unless God has a "tape of the future" He is a moron. What makes you think God cannot make an accurate prediction without having to have settled the future in advance?And does God act to prevent people from repenting?
Mark 4:11-12 But to those on the outside everything is said in parables so that, "'they may be ever seeing but never perceiving, and ever hearing but never understanding; otherwise they might turn and be forgiven!'"
Uh... do you mean like this...."I tell you the truth" means this is certain. This is impossible, according to the Open View, if Peter's decision here was free. If it was not free, then how can we read Jesus saying "truly, truly you will remain faithful under martyrdom"? How would forcing Peter's hand here bring special glory to God?
Blessings,
Lee
You imply:God knows everything knowable which includes our intentions. Therefore God can know what we will choose before we choose it. The more determined we are the more God will know about our upcoming choice. God also knows all the other variables that might effect our upcoming decisions and therefore He has a great deal of knowledge regarding our future choices (much more than we have).
Yet the distant future is unknowable (at least as far as free will agents are concerned) because no present knowledge is helpful in determining the choices that non-existent beings will make. In other words.... God doesn't know the choices that my great, great, great, great, grandchildren will make because they don't exist yet.
Anyone with modest reading comprehension skills would understand that I'm not implying that God wills one to put their palms up or down in this scenario. The only way one could believe I'm implying that God wills one to put their palms up or down in this scenario is if they are adding a number of assumptions to my statement without telling us. Adding assumptions to a statement without making those assumptions clear appears to a subsequent reader as stupidity.
Yorzhik(A) said:"God has decreed your palms will be up because He foreknew your will would determine to turn them up."
Yorzhik(B) said:If your will is to do the opposite of whatever God says, then your palms would be turned down. Or are you saying that man cannot will to NOT do what God says?
Originally Posted by RobE
You're implying that God wills you to turn them up or down.
Yorzhik said:Does God know, exhaustively, every event that He allows?
Yorzhik said:I'm saying directly that man can will to NOT do what God says. Do you agree, Rob, that man can will to NOT do what God says?
I'm obscuring? No, Rob, I'm being clear.
Yorzhik said:What you are obscuring is the meaning of "decree". Has God decreed every event from before the foundation of the world?
If God has not decreed every event before the foundation of the world, does God know, exhaustively, every event before the foundation of the world?
Does God know, exhaustively, every event that He allows?
Lon, what RobE has written here is complete nonsense. Do you agree with it?
"Will carry out his sentence"? "With finality"? Surely this has the essence of a sure prediction.Uh... that is the VERY definition of an estimate. :doh:
"Will be saved" must be read some surprising way then, can you show me where some commentary takes this as an estimate?Wrong, this is exactly the type of thing I referred to in my previous post.
But my question was whether God ever prevents people from repenting.Wow.. you must think that unless God has a "tape of the future" He is a moron. What makes you think God cannot make an accurate prediction without having to have settled the future in advance?
Yet "truly, truly" means "this is true," and sure, and only definite knowledge will allow someone to say "this will happen."Even us lowly humans can make these types of accurate predictions and we only have a infinitesimal fraction of the knowledge that God possess.
Yup, God drove them out. No Canaanites etc. in Canaan now.Uh... do you mean like this....
Joshua 3:10 And Joshua said, “By this you shall know that the living God is among you, and that He will without fail drive out from before you the Canaanites and the Hittites and the Hivites and the Perizzites and the Girgashites and the Amorites and the Jebusites
So that must have been a certainty also eh Lee?????
God knows before we choose. Whether it be moments before or a longer time before.
Yorzhik said:The OV doesn't posit that knowing a decision causes the event.
Yorzhik said:But this is what the OV says; if a chain of events is started by someone, and that person knows in exhaustive detail every event in the chain, then the events are caused by the person that started the chain of events. Therefore, if you want to say that God knows every future event in exhaustive detail, and God created the initial events, then God caused all events. The events are not caused because God knows them, the events are caused because God caused creation.
Yorzhik said:Can you please admit now that the OV does not say that events are caused because they are known?
Secondly, have you seen RobE's claim that God doesn't know what He's doing? How do you explain that?
Why would you ask? Have you not been listening to what we open viewers say?
God knows everything knowable which includes our intentions. Therefore God can know what we will choose before we choose it. The more determined we are the more God will know about our upcoming choice. God also knows all the other variables that might effect our upcoming decisions and therefore He has a great deal of knowledge regarding our future choices (much more than we have).
Knight said:Yet the distant future is unknowable (at least as far as free will agents are concerned) because no present knowledge is helpful in determining the choices that non-existent beings will make. In other words.... God doesn't know the choices that my great, great, great, great, grandchildren will make because they don't exist yet.
Cake and its eating said:The more determined we are the more God will know about our upcoming choice.