Originally posted by Clete Pfeiffer
Z Man,
It is not the Scripture that makes God look bad but your interpretation of it that does.
Until you find an interpretation that does not make God look bad you will not have found the correct interpretation.
Indeed, your interpretation of Scripture does more than make God LOOK bad. If your interpretation is correct then God IS bad, I don't care how many times you insist that you have no problem with these passages and that they do not cause you to see God as unjust.
So you agree then, that the passages of Scripture that I keep posting, if taken in 'context', without bringing in any 'pre-concieved' doctrines or theology or illusions about who God is, that yes, they tell us God does ordain 'evil'?
My question to you; why do you feel that YOU have to redefine the terms and the interpretation of these passages to create a God who DOES NOT ordain evil?
The plain and simple fact is, as I said before, if Pharaoh could not have done differently then for God to have punished him for what he was forced to do would be, by your own definition, unjust. No other conclusion is possible without redefining the terms.
Pharaoh sinned of his own will, because God hardened his heart. You make it sound like God 'bound' Pharaoh against his will and FORCED him to sin; as if Pharaoh was an innocent person, just minding his own business when suddenly God came along and tied him up, as Pharaoh screamed in the inside of his heart to be set 'free'. God hardened Pharaoh's heart, and he willingly refused to let the Israelites go.
The only preconceived notion that one has to bring to the story in order to understand this is simply the definition of the word justice. You don't have to understand Open Theism or any thing else, just the English language!
Your assumption about justice, however, is that we are not subject to God for *ANYTHING*, UNLESS we've somehow done wrong on our own. You assume that men are innocent, and God cannot do anything to innocent men. He is not free to sovereignly create, destroy, bring peace upon or to bring evil upon, unless there are conditions that that person has met.
According to your view, instead of God controlling us with His will, we control Him with ours. You have forgotton what it takes for the Creator to be the Creator...
Why do you assume that God hardening Pharaoh's heart is the equivalent of forcing him to disobey? It is not! Pharaoh could have repented at any point but CHOSE not to.
Wrong. The reason God hardened Pharaoh's heart was so that he would be stubborn and NOT heed Moses plea to let the Israelites go. There was no chance for Pharaoh to repent; he never wanted to, and God made sure of that. God wasn't primarily concerned about Pharaoh's 'well-being', but rather, in the ultimate display of His awesome and wonderous glory to the Egyptians. If hardening a person's heart was what it took to do that, then so be it. God will always seek to display His glory and nothing else, for that is His primary and ultimate priority in anything that He does.
Our happiness, and satisfaction, or 'well-being' is not God's primary concern. You have to understand that. God's 'universe' is not centered around man; it's centered around Himself.
You see, there is simply nothing here in this or any other story which requires one to conclude that God forces anyone to do evil. If you read a story, any story in the Bible and come away from it thinking that God forced someone do something evil then it is an incontrovertible fact that you have misunderstood the story. God does not tempt us or anyone with evil.
I agree. I do not believe that God literally 'forces' anyone to commit a sin, or crime, or some 'evil' persay. He never 'forces' anyone to do something against that persons will. Whatever God ordains/decrees a person to do, they do it because they want to.
God ordained that David take that census, and yet, David knew he had sinned. And because of it, God punished David - for doing exactly what God had told him to do.
How do YOU explain that, according to your view?
Therefore God did not FORCE Pharaoh to do evil, Pharaoh did it on his own and God's punishment was not unjust.
I agree.
Do you see how nicely that last sentence flows logically? No qualifiers have to thrown in or anything. All you do is read it with all the normal definitions of the words intact and it makes perfect sense.
Now let's try it your way...
God did FORCE pharaoh to do evil, Pharaoh did not do it on his own and God's punishment was not unjust.
HUH???
Yeah, I'm confused too. What makes you think that I believe God 'forced' Pharaoh against his will? What makes you think I believe Pharaoh 'did not do it on his own'?
Clete,
You have yet explained to us how you interpret these passages of Scripture, since you believe God would be unjust for doing these things:
- Jesus wept over Jerusalem because the things of the kingdom were "hidden from [their] eyes", yet He clearly tells us that it was God who hid these things from their eyes (Luke 19:41-42; Luke 10:21)
- Jesus felt compassion over those who were sick, yet it is God who is finally and decisivly in control of sickness (Matthew 14:14; Exodus 4:11; 1 Samuel 2:6)
- God opposes hatred toward his people, yet ordained that his people be hated in Egypt (Genesis 12:3; Psalm 105:25 "He turned their hearts to hate his people.").
- He hardens Pharaoh's heart, but commands him to let his people go (Exodus 4:21; 5:1; 8:1).
- He makes plain that it is sin for David to take a military census of his people, but he ordains that he do it (2 Samuel 24:1; 24:10).
- He opposes adultery, but ordains that Absalom should lie with his father's wives (Exodus 20:14; 2 Samuel 12:11).
- He forbids rebellion and insubordination against the king, but ordained that Jeroboam and the ten tribes should rebel against Rehoboam (Romans 13:1; 1 Samuel 15:23; 1 Kings 12:15-16).
- He opposes murder, but ordains the murder of his Son (Exodus 20:13; Acts 4:28).
- He desires all men to be saved, but effectually calls only some (1 Timothy 2:4; 1 Corinthians 1:26-30; 2 Timothy 2:26)