seekinganswers
New member
Z Man said:DUCK!!!
Here comes the flak...
And yet before I said this people were amiable to my position.
Peace,
Michael
Z Man said:DUCK!!!
Here comes the flak...
Freak said:To recap, all of the following translations, speak of God sending an evil spirit.
God sent an evil spirit between Abimelech and the men of Shechem; and the men of Shechem dealt treacherously with Abimelech: (WEB)
And God sent an evil spirit between Abimelech and the men of Shechem; and the men of Shechem dealt treacherously with Abimelech: (ASV)
And God sent an evil spirit between Abimelech and the townsmen of Shechem; and the townsmen of Shechem were false to Abimelech; (BBE)
And God sent an evil spirit between Abim'elech and the men of Shechem; and the men of Shechem dealt treacherously with Abim'elech; (DBY)
Then God sent an evil spirit between Abimelech and the men of Shechem; and the men of Shechem dealt treacherously with Abimelech: (KJV)
Then God sent an evil spirit between Abimelech and the men of Shechem; and the men of Shechem dealt treacherously with Abimelech: (WBS)
And God sent an evil spirit between Abimelech and the men of Shechem; and the men of Shechem dealt treacherously with Abimelech; (JPS)
and God sendeth an evil spirit between Abimelech and the masters of Shechem, and the masters of Shechem deal treacherously with Abimelech, (YLT)
seekinganswers said:There is nothing in this world that is,
that truly is,
that is not also grounded in the Creator.
A God who must stop something is a God in whom that something is not grounded. God need not stop things, for God is the grounding of all things, and evil is nothing more than a distortion of what God has made.
God's will comes about not be fighting what is against God. God's will comes about because it is the only reality.
Peace,
Michael
ZMan,I've never implied, nor meant to imply that God is literally 'in' a phenomena - God caused Katrina, but I don't believe He was literally 'in' Katrina.
I would say that God is the necessary cause of all things, that He is the required precondition to casuality itself. In other words, by Him all things consist (Col. 1:17; Heb 1:3). Typically, I equate primary cause will efficient cause. For example, the efficient cause of a hurricane is converging winds toward a low-pressure system, evaporative heating of water, and the Coriolis effect, while the necessary cause is the uniformity of nature, which is the active outworking of God. But this, perhaps, is mere hair-splitting. In the final analysis, God is the author of all things and nothing that happens does so without His foreordination.I simply believe the Scriptures claim God to be the 'primary cause' of such events.
We could ask ourselves, Would these things have happened had God not passed by? No. They would not have. God did cause them. But He is not in them, just as you say.After God 'passed by', the phenomenal events began. I believe He caused the wind, earthquake, and fire, yet, as the Scriptures state, I do not believe God was 'in' them.
Looks good to me.In context, Elijah is upset because the Israelites have turned against God and are seeking to kill him, who happens to be a prophet of God himself. God asks Elijah to stand on the mountain, which after passing by, is stressed by wind, an earthquake, and fire (possible volcano?). Later, God assures Elijah, "I have reserved seven thousand in Israel, all whose knees have not bowed to Baal, and every mouth that has not kissed him". In other words, despite what we may see in the physical realm, God is behind the scenes working everything out according to His will.
Therefore, I interpret the incident on the mountain to be a lesson from God to Elijah, that despite what seems like turmoil and certain doom in Israel (as was the scenario on the mountain), God also works behind the scenes protecting Elijah from harm (despite Israel's hostility, God has reserved those who have not turned).
God causes calamities, but we shouldn't look at the events to find God. I believe God caused Katrina, but I'm not going to expect or tell people to 'look for God' in the storm's havoc. Instead, we should look for God in the aftermath - see Him working through people's lives as they sacrifice their homes for refugees, or give their money to those in need. God was telling Elijah to not look for Him in the calamity, but instead, in the quiteness. I do not believe this passage of Scripture is saying that God does not cause calamities.
Secret sister said:All things are subject to Gods authority, including Satan, demons and evil.
To believe otherwise sets up a system of Dualism
Isaiah 45:7 I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things.
Lam 3:38 From the mouth of the Most High does not go out the evil and the good.
seekinganswers said:The problem I have with an open future is that it assumes that there is a posibility for evil (as if, once again, evil had a place in this world). The posibility of evil is an affirmation of its reality. Evil is not a thing; evil doesn't take up space (or time). Evil is attatched to the good, feeding off of what is in order to bring about its own reality. But in the end, the reality brought about by evil is either nothing at all (that is a lack of future) or is simply the accomplishment of God's own will (as can be seen in the exhiles of Israel, and in the cross of Christ). The future is not open in the regard.
What is open is the present, i.e. us. We are given choice only because we are grounded in the reality that is God (we have life). And it is only in our present life enclosed within a beginning and telos that is God's that we are open. God has enclosed us within God's own will (life) so that we might be able to choose life or death. The future is not open, for God's will is the future of Creation. We will be moved from chaos to rest along with the rest of Creation, whether we come willingly or not. God's will is driving this world (for the good is grounded in God; and the good is reality).
What is open is now, and the now becomes a reflection of eternity. We can either participate in the good that is God's, or we can choose not to and find that we are unable to sustain it.
Peace,
Michael
Two excellent reasons to be suspicious of your theology, as both of these men founded their theology on Neo-Platonic philosophy rather than strictly on the Word of God.seekinganswers said:I hope everyone realizes that what I am saying is entirely grounded in a very Platonic view of the good, and comes directly from Augustine and Aquinas.
Peace,
Michael
"theologically masochistic" :chuckle:Clete said:Sounds sort of theologically masochistic to me. :hammer:
You people never cease to amaze me. :wave2:Clete said:Most of this is cobbligook but would it interest you to know that I do not believe that the future exists, nor the past, but only the present? All that exists, exists now.
Resting in Him,
Clete
Maybe you are just being sarcastic, but what makes you any different than atheist if this is your belief?Clete said:Most of this is cobbligook but would it interest you to know that I do not believe that the future exists, nor the past, but only the present? All that exists, exists now.
Resting in Him,
Clete
Actually, anyone should believe that anything that exists exists now.Evee said:Maybe you are just being sarcastic, but what makes you any different than atheist if this is your belief?
No, I'm not being sarcastic at all. The past is remembered, the future is anticipated, existence is now. Time travel is impossible because you cannot travel to places which do not exist.Evee said:Maybe you are just being sarcastic, but what makes you any different than atheist if this is your belief?
Offensive might not be the right word. I think people tend to fear uncertainty. Some of it may come from an incomplete understanding of OT.drbrumley said:I'm not understanding why it is so impossible for you folks (settled viewers) to say the future is non existant.
I guess the most relevant question is:
God knows all there is to now. That's a fact. What are we saying that offends so many?
Clete said:Most of this is cobbligook but would it interest you to know that I do not believe that the future exists, nor the past, but only the present? All that exists, exists now.
Resting in Him,
Clete
Isaiah 45:7God_Is_Truth said:Well, you have to at least consider that your interpretation of Isaiah 45:7 could be wrong.
Yes, we need to figure out what Jesus is saying apart from certain theological positions, but NOT apart from God's Biblical character. If God clearly states in Isaiah 45:7 that He creates calamity, I'm sure we can apply that statement throughout the Bible. It's a given when Jesus talks about the tower - a certain calamity - that God must've been the cause, given the creditials we read about His character throughout the rest of the Bible.The real question is "what does the text actually say, and do I need to change my interpretation of other passages because of it?" Verses don't trump each other, they fit together. If two pieces don't fit, then one piece needs to be changed. So again, we need to figure out what Jesus is saying apart from certain theological positions. Don't you agree?
Don't underestimate the wisdom of God. What about the weakness and shamefulness of the cross would bring God glory? God uses weakness and calamities to display His glory:I agree that the people were no worse sinners. But you end your explanation with "God uses tragedy to display His glory". How would having a tower fall on people give God glory? What about that event brings him glory? What glory might it bring him?
I don't think Jesus has to say 'glory' everytime He speaks for us to understand that glory is always given to God.And further, why does Jesus not mention anything about glory in this passage? We see it in the blind man, but it seems to be absent here. Doesn't that suggest a difference? Doesn't the absence of any explanation at all from Jesus suggest that it wasn't from God?
I don't think, as you have stated earlier, that we should build a doctrine upon one verse, let alone one word within a parable, because of it's 'vagueness and generalities'. Personally, I don't believe Jesus is promoting the idea of a world governed by chance in the parable of the good Samaritin. I believe He was using a figure of speech known as 'tropes'. Tropes has several sub-categories to it, such as hyperbole, antonomasia, auxesis, and euphemism, to name a few.The proverbs passage is indeed interseting, though I'm hesitant to build much doctrine upon it because of it's vagueness and generalities. But, you say nothing is left to chance. Why then would Jesus say in a story that a man came by chance? (Luke 10:31) Indeed, if nothing is left to chance, shouldn't Jesus have said "Now as God had intended, a certain priest came down..." instead of "Now by chance a certain priest came down" ? Doesn't this suggest that Jesus believed in some chance? Doesn't it suggest that not everything happens for a reason?
I'm not so sure that I'd agree with you on that one. I mean, I don't think it's logical to believe in God - it takes faith. The doctrine of the Trinity itself is illogical - it takes faith. For God to always have existed is illogical and incomprehendable to me. For everything to come out of nothing by God's spoken word is illogical and incomprehendable. Nothing about God can be explained logically - Christianity is a belief grounded in faith. Faith goes where logic cannot.Also, does not God use the same logic as we do? Logic is logic, right?
We cannot make the mistake of holding God accountable to our attributes and characteristics. He's not human - He can do anything He pleases. His very existence is baffling to us; why doubt that He can control all things?For any being, just because you control some things does not mean you control all things. Correct?
Clete said:Two excellent reasons to be suspicious of your theology, as both of these men founded their theology on Neo-Platonic philosophy rather than strictly on the Word of God.
Why do you bring up a point which you know will cast suspicion on your theology? Sounds sort of theologically masochistic to me. :hammer:
Resting in Him,
Clete
seekinganswers said:And would it intrest you to know that for me my life now is held in God, as are the lives of all those who came before us (even those in the grave). And God's purpose for life in the future gives me hope for the future. The past, the present, and the future (telos or culmination) are held in God, while I am resigned to the present. But through Christ I am compelled to be united not only with those who come before me, but also in faithfulness to those who will come after me. God is greater than the now. If he holds the lives of all who came before us, than he is greater than the present. The question is whether God holds the future as well. In Christ that is assured (there is hope for the future; it is not uncertain). And it is the past, present and future reality of Christ that assure us of this hope.
God does not live in the present. God resides within God's own will, which encompasses time and space and the Creation itself.
Peace,
Michael