Uh... lets not lose sight of the obvious meaning of words.Originally posted by God_Is_Truth
there are no innocent people Knight. all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.
It will only cloud the issue for no good reason.
Uh... lets not lose sight of the obvious meaning of words.Originally posted by God_Is_Truth
there are no innocent people Knight. all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.
Excellent post. Great points and welcome to TOL! :up:Originally posted by MST3K
Knight,
I agree with you about Calvinism. I cannot tell you how many times I have lost it over the terrible things people attribute to God.
My husband and I are friends with a Christian couple. The woman of this couple ended up having an affair and their marriage almost ended. She ended the affair and went back to her husband and they are now trying to repair the devastation of her horrible choice to sin.
This couple happens to be Calvinist. When my husband asked them if this affair was God's will, they said, "Yes. It was." Can you believe that? According to Calvinism, it was God's choice for her to commit adultery. She has no responsibility for her sin because it was all God's will in the first place.
So let's think this through with some logic. God gives us a command: Thou shalt not commit adultery. Why does He give us such a command? Because sin separates us from God and sin hurts people. God tells us not to sin so we won't be separated from Him. Simple. However, Calvinism says, God says DO NOT DO THIS, and then creates a scenario for someone to commit the very thing He said DO NOT DO. God did this so the person who committed adultery and was separated from God would come back to Him (also planned by Him) and would be closer to God because of the sin in the first place. It was all part of His plan.
WHAAAAAAAAAAA?!
I will never understand Calvinism. It makes me sick! *YUCK!*
:BRAVO:Originally posted by 1Way
GIT - I say you are partly right and mostly wrong. God establishes like hundreds (thousands?) of times about the innocence of people. That is not the same thing as needing a savior, yes all have sinned and need to get saved, but the shedding of "innocent" blood is a teaching that is just as real. Murder is wrong because we are actually innocent from such treatment. We have a God given right to life based on the fact that we have not committed a capitol offense. Therefore man should not shed innocent blood, and if you do, you should be put to death, thus murder is a capitol offense and serves wonderfully to demonstrate innocence. We have a God given right to life because we are innocent until we commit a capitol offense, then we are no longer innocent and should be put to death.
God never holds anyone guilty until they are no longer innocent. Jesus said, father, forgive them for they know not what they do. Paul said that he was graced out (forgiven) because although he thought he was right, he persecuted God and His people ignorantly! God says that unborn (yet existing, growing) babies have not done good nor evil, i.e. they are morally innocent. Our right to life is based on moral innocence.
Originally posted by 1Way
GIT - I say you are partly right and mostly wrong. God establishes like hundreds (thousands?) of times about the innocence of people. That is not the same thing as needing a savior, yes all have sinned and need to get saved, but the shedding of "innocent" blood is a teaching that is just as real. Murder is wrong because we are actually innocent from such treatment. We have a God given right to life based on the fact that we have not committed a capitol offense. Therefore man should not shed innocent blood, and if you do, you should be put to death, thus murder is a capitol offense and serves wonderfully to demonstrate innocence. We have a God given right to life because we are innocent until we commit a capitol offense, then we are no longer innocent and should be put to death.
God never holds anyone guilty until they are no longer innocent. Jesus said, father, forgive them for they know not what they do. Paul said that he was graced out (forgiven) because although he thought he was right, he persecuted God and His people ignorantly! God says that unborn (yet existing, growing) babies have not done good nor evil, i.e. they are morally innocent. Our right to life is based on moral innocence.
I agree with you. Covenantal Calvinists do not have an adequate answer for this. This is further demonstration of the consistency of the Mid-Acts view with regard to all scripture. If Open Theists would dare to be consistent Mid-Acts adherents, the Open View components of their theology would crumble.Sozo writes: It is the same all!
First of all, it's important to note that the word "all," especially in the Pauline epistles, does not denote "all without exception," but usually means "all without distinction." It is important for Mid-Acts proponents to recognize this and to make application of this fact in developing a proper biblical theology. "All without distinction" is an idea of particular relevance to a group of God's elect that are neither Jew nor Gentile, bond nor free, male nor female before God; that is, they are a group without distinctions. No ethnic, class or gender distinction within Christ's Body and before the Father. So Ro 5:18 is not referring to all men without exception, but rather to the members of the Body of Christ only.Sozo writes: If all men are not offered the free gift, then all men are not condemned.
Thus, every member of the Body of Christ, although elect from the before the foundation of the world, is subject to the warp and woof, ebb and flow, variances and vicissitudes of living in a cursed and fallen world. We must work hard, by the sweat of our brows, for our livelihood. We must endure the hardships of a thorn- and thistle-riddled ground. And we must die (sometimes of cancer) and return to the dust whence we came. So even in this manner (kai houtOs) the death (ho thanatos) passed on to all-[men]-without-distinction (Ro 5:12). The whole chapter is written by Paul to explain in theological terms the current state of the members of the Body of Christ. He answers such questions as, "How is it, if the Body of Christ is pre-chosen, before the foundation of the world, that we have individual sin and suffer the trials of life?" Here is the answer. Because of one man's trangression (Adam), the consequence of that action (the punishment) has passed to the members of the Body of Christ.cursed is the ground for thy sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life; 18 Thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee; and thou shalt eat the herb of the field; 19 In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return.
I conclude that all men referred to in the verse have life. Not all without exception, but all without distinction.Sozo writes: Also, unless the gift is received then you must logically conclude that all men have life.
That's especially true for the Body of Christ, who call the Father "Abba, Father," a term only the Son Himself ever used to address the Father prior to the inception of the Body of Christ.Big Finn writes:
The Bible quite clearly draws a picture of God as not only a father, but our Father.
That's a very western conception and is not altogether accurate, Big Finn. If you were to find yourself under the parentage of a middle eastern family of Jesus's time, you would not have such a sentimental view. Middle eastern patriarchs wielded tremendous authority in their households. They held the prerogative of life and death over their children. They could kill their children with impunity if they so chose (Abraham would not have been charged with a crime for killing Isaac. Jephthah was not charged with a crime of sacrificing his daughter. In fact, his faith was nonetheless commended in Hebrews 11:32). Fathers would choose the spouses for their daughters. They also blessed their families, functioning as patriarchal priests over them. When a father blessed or cursed his children, they regarded him with fear and awe, knowing the power he held over them. This doesn't take away from his tenderness and affection toward his children, but neither does the tenderness and affection warrant the disregard of his awesome and fearsome power over them. The father is to be both loved and feared. The biblical picture is perfect. The western distortion of it is horribly flawed and, frankly, effeminate.Big Finn writes: This is a very human perception. A father is trustworthy, caring, loving, and yet master of his domain.
A father could kill his son or daughter if he wanted. A loving father could rule with nitpicking domination if he so chose. You statement is misguided.Big Finn writes:
A person who rules in love, not nitpicking domination and willing to give his children cancer.
I have no motivation to give "biblical support" for a view that I do not hold. You need to stop misrepresenting your opponents' views.Big Finn writes: ... Give your Biblical support for your contention that this picture of God can be ignored, that it is meaningless.
Why would I want to do that? Do you recognize that the father in the Luke 15 could have killed the elder son with impunity just for the ill-placed anger and disrespect? Bible students should recognize what a risky thing it was for the elder son to express his anger toward his father, knowing that the father had the power of life and death over him.Big Finn writes: Please show Biblically that Jesus' picture of the father in the prodigal son is not an accurate representation of what God is like.
Big Finn writes: Also, if you are able to give this Biblical support for your position ...It's not my position. Are you a liberal, Big Finn?
If I ever run across someone who believes this way, I'll send him your way, so the time you've spent creating your straw man will not have been a complete waste. Don't hold your breath, though. Most straw men do not represent any views held in reality.Big Finn writes: ... show us why Jesus taught this parable that is so far away from the actual reality of who God is.
Question for you, Big Finn: Please list any books you've read by or about Calvinists/Calvinism, pro or con. Then I'll tell you what books I've read by those who espouse your view, whatever that is (please indicate that in your response). Thanks.
Jim
Knight,Originally posted by Knight
You only showed that God punishes the wicked. Nobody disagrees with that.
That would only be stating the obvious.
You have not shown however.... that God randomly torments innocent people which is the point at hand.
Exactly my point! God not only causes the evil to suffer, but He does it to the "innocent" as well! So why is it wrong for the woman to rightly claim that God is the one who gave her cancer to teach her a thing or two?Originally posted by Big Finn
That God OK'ed Satan's afflictions of Job doesn't mean that God was punishing Job. ... Suffering may very well be a part of punishment, and usually is, but not all suffering is punishment.
Job viewed it as consistent with God's nature. And yet he continued to trust this God. I don't know what Open Theists trust God for. He doesn't really do anything.1Way writes: While it is good to honor and respect the authority and nature of God, it is evil and wrong to attribute evil to the very essence and source of goodness.
Uh... the only thing you have proven is your theology is embarrassing.Originally posted by Z Man
Knight,
Quit being a wimp. Your wrong, and I've proven it.
Z Man can you objectively prove that you are not calling evil "good" when you state that God is the cancer giver? Or when you preach that it is God that torments innocent people?Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil; Who put darkness for light, and light for darkness; Who put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter! - Isaiah 5:20
Jim your quick to correct misrepresentations of Calvinism.... your also quick to misrepresent Open Theism. :nono:Originally posted by Hilston
Job viewed it as consistent with God's nature. And yet he continued to trust this God. I don't know what Open Theists trust God for. He doesn't really do anything.
Jim
Can you prove that it was against God's plan for the Galileans and the eighteen crushed by the tower to die?1way writes: But by the Calvinistic view, all things happen according to God's plan, so these examples serve well to dismiss that view.
Who espouses the position that man always follows the will of God?1way writes: ... so also man does not always follow the will of God either.
Why should He? And where did He say He would leave them the way He said He would? If He can give further salvation opportunities to scores of unsaved people by preventing the mass carnage of 9/11, wouldn't it be worth the scattering of a few atoms to do so? Please answer this, Yorzhik, because it sounds like you're dodging the question with arbitrary stipulations.Yorzhik writes:
I know it's just a niggle, but I didn't say "leave them alone". I said "leave them the way He said He would."
Please convince me of the value of thousands of people plunging into hell at the hands of the 9/11 terrorists in the eyes of a God who wants to save as many people as possible.Yorzhik writes:
Sure, if there were no value to suffering. But there is value to suffering.
Are those choices free? Or are they constrained by your preferences and myriad other factors outside of your control? If they are free, then you could choose something you do not want. But you can't.Yorzhik writes:
Hilston, you also have a question wherein you ask OV'ers if they have chosen something they didn't mean to choose.
Obviously, the point of choice is never something that isn't chosen, simply because what is chosen can be defined as that which is chosen.
God doesn't have to "predict." He knows because He has decreed, in meticulous detail, every event, every electron orbit, every hide and hair of existence. If He didn't, then He could not make a single prophecy come true with any certainty.Yorzhik writes:However, if we ask God His view on the matter, He is very clear that Humans are not perfectly predictable in the values they place on certain things that will affect a choice.
Is that what "they" said? Who do you think was talking? The Father? The Son? The Holy Spirit? Was it said audibly, with vocal cords and molecular vibration? Did the other members of the Godhead hear Him say this? Was it heard with their ears, the sound waves vibrating the divine eardrum? What is the Hebrew word for "maybe", Yorzhik?Yorzhik writes: In the garden, He said, "Maybe Adam and Eve will try to get back in."
Do you recognize the importance of due process in scripture? How about anthropopathisms? Do you see any value in these concepts at all? When you and other Open Theists take the linguistic figures of scripture and literalize them, you rob the scriptures of their force and richness. It's really tragic. The funny thing is, God saw fit to use them so frequently that you guys had plenty of fodder with which to build an entire irrational theology.Yorzhik writes: When He told Abraham to sacrifice Isaac a point came where He said, "Now I know."
He is 100% sure because He decreed every case without exception. If there were anything He did not decree, He would not -- could not -- coherently and honestly ask you to trust Him.Yorzhik writes: So, although we always make a choice based on the value of the things at affect that choice, it is clear that God is not 100% sure about the weight of all the values of all the men for all eternity.
Do you mean what is God currently doing?Originally posted by Hilston
Hi Knight,
What, in your view, does God do, if He cannot/will not stop a handful of terrorists from murdering thousands of innocent people?
Jim
Forgive me for answering for 1Way but I gotta!Originally posted by Hilston
Who espouses the position that man always follows the will of God?
Jim