Clarify? How can God save everybody? He would have to compromise holiness, justice, truth, etc. for universalism to be true. The governmental issues preclude Him from arbitrarily saving people. There are conditions that are necessary, not just nice.
He did not have to save anyone initially, but now that the plan of redemption is in place, He cannot be fickle (in light of His character) about salvation (hence double predestination is not an option). As you point out, salvation is relational and is not caused or coerced. It is more than will or will not (He wills to save everyone), but can and cannot, based on truth. He wants to extend mercy to all, but there are reasons He cannot do so (including man rejecting His provision).
Your inclusion/exclusion statements sound too arbitrary. Don't get me started on lex rex vs rex lex.
Godrulz, my friend;
We are in agreement about this!
How many times have you said that ability isn't the same as certainty?
Notice the bold
could in my previous statement. I said
could. Maybe what I should have said is 'He could have' or 'has the ability to'. I didn't say did or will or even might. God is free to do what ever God wants to do (e.g. save a remnant or everybody or nobody.) What God has done limits what He will do to some extent. It's relational, for sure. And our assurance is based on His faithfulness revealed in His Word and our own experience of His faithfulness. God can change His mind about the particulars, given changing circumstances, but to remain faithful to Himself and His creation He doesn't fudge on the general. Given the relational aspect of salvation
how could He save anything BUT a remnant? That is all I was getting at.
Lee seems to be unwilling to give up what
he thinks God can/could do based on what
he thinks God has said He will do or even must do. Just look at all the speculation about the particular details that are subject to contingencies that Lee (and others) keep throwing up as proof of exhaustive foreknowledge, not to mention RobE chasing his tail for the past decade looking for middle ground.
We keep falling for it. We have been saying it over and over in basically the same way, using the same words ... why not stop nitpicking with each other and try to find a way to say it that pushes their envelope a little or totally ignore them and just work on it for a while. Sometimes you guys are worse than 'doctors of the law." If anyone departs from your buzz-words you flip out.
Sooooooo...........
My faith isn't based on Abraham's faithfulness, Jesus' ability to know what Judas would do, or any other particular historical fact in this fallen fickle confused world. Nor is it based on my hope that God can make it all work out in the future either through predestination or manipulation.
My hope results from my faith, not the other way 'round. I trust God; not Abraham, not Israel, and not the church. They are all fickle. Only God is absolutely faithful. The faithfulness of the historical Jesus (His life, death and resurrection) is the only ground for faith I have and that alone gives me hope. His Spirit is present 'proof'. That is all I need. After centuries of being preoccupied with the future and dividing and destroying the unity of the faith maybe it is time to really come to terms with the fact that THE FUTURE DOESN'T EXIST except in visions, dreams and imaginations both divine and human.
The only reason we can expect God to make good on His word is that He isn't subject to Romans 7 the way we are. But, that doesn't eliminate the possibility that God
could wash His hands of the whole mess and just forget we ever existed or else your future is almost as settled as theirs. That is why I trust in God -- not in
any future open or closed. He alone is faithful and trustworthy and will not deny Himself. Fudge on Open Theism all you want. It isn't really even about the future anymore. It is about what God has done and what that means in the present -- being in Christ here and now.
Lest you think I'm miffed ... I'm not. It needs to be clarified! And Open Theist must not shrink back, but boldly go where their convictions and theology takes them. That requires risk.
Philetus