This is a long-overdue response to Yorzhik's post
#1037:
Yorzhik writes:
Instead of straining at gnats ...
This is the first of two occasions where you allude to Jesus' critique of Jewish hypocrisy in Mt. 23:24, seemingly to divert the discussion away from the details in favor of some larger picture. Insodoing, you miss the point of Jesus' rebuke in that figure. Given the track record or your handling of figures of speech thus far, I am concerned about your use and understanding of them.
The Jews were correct to strain out gnats. They were forbidden from eating them in Lev 11:41 (q.v.). They were also forbidden from eating camels (cf. Lev 11:4). The gnats represent the less weighty things of the law, such as spice tithes, but the camels represent the weightier things of the law, such as judgment, mercy and faith. It was hypocrisy to be concerned about one and not the other. They were to be duly concerned about
both. (
Mt 23:23 Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye pay tithe of mint and anise and cummin, and have omitted the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy, and faith: these ought ye to have done, and not to leave the other undone.). You might want to reconsider using that allusion in such contexts. It doesn't apply at all.
Yorzhik writes:
Instead of straining at gnats on this miracle issue, let's try and crystallize.
I prefer to "strain out gnats," for it is proper and needful to do if we are to clarify the terms and conditions of the Open View. Neither will I "swallow a camel," but I hesitate at this point to comment on what the referrent to such an act would be.
Yorzhik writes:
The reason we are even talking about miracles that change situations to enhance the possibility that humans will love God is because Hilston has put forth the premise that the OV God would do it that way.
And the reason I propose that is because the OV claims that God is loving and merciful. I'm trying to find a way for God to work things together for those who love Him. I'm trying to find a way for God to behave consistent with the alleged desire to save all men without exception. I'm trying to find a loophole according to OV terms that will allow Him to do so. I would expect an OV proponent to be very helpful with this. What if this is that one thing I need to get around in order to embrace the OV system?
Yorzhik writes:
... Let's look at miracles, overt and covert, taken to Hilston's logical conclusion:
To make a better world, with more people that are apt to love God, God can do indirect miracles to create the best conditions. It wouldn't be hard. God can secretly, whenever someone has evil thoughts, let a few atoms loose in the nervous system somewhere that would cause intense pain. Quickly, humans will notice a pattern: think evil, experience intense pain? think good thoughts, avoid pain. And it wouldn't be blamed on God because He wouldn't be obligated to tell anyone what exactly He is doing. Would God be loved? I honestly don't know. What's your prediction?
We already covered this, Yorzhik. I already said, over and over again, that God would not choose or obligate Himself to intervening in
every case, thus making reasonably certain no one could know for sure when He was intervening, if at all. But you seem to just ignore what I've said. Why are you doing this? You don't seem to be following the terms I've stipulated, despite my best efforts to find a loophole for the OV conception of God. So far, it's not faring very well. So of course, if God knows that miraculous intervention turns people away from Him, He is smart enough to make it seem random enough that no one would know. Why am I having to go over this again? Of course, He would limit His intervention to events in which such intervention would be statistically favorable to larger quantities of people having more opportunities to choose to love Him. But I already covered all this. And here I am doing it again.
Yorzhik writes:
On the other hand, then, let us say, that God appears personally at the formation of every evil thought, announces "I heard that" and inflicts intense pain on the offender. ...
Are you deliberately ignoring what we've already established? Why do you keep going back to your earlier misunderstandings of the scenario that I've since corrected? If you refuse to get this and to respect the discussion, I'll just have to place your name under the heading of Open Theists who refuse to answer questions along a simple line of reasoning.
Yorzhik wrote previously:
Any situation can be improved.
Hilston replied:
I want to make sure you really want to say this before I go after it. Do you stand by this claim, or do you want to revise it?
Yorzhik writes:
You are right. I need to add to it:
Any situation that God would be displeased with (i.e. the ones we are talking about) can be improved. Obviously, God will not change situations He is pleased with.
Two questions:
(1) Was God pleased with the way His Son was beaten, whipped, tortured, mocked, spit upon, His bones dislocated, beard torn from His face, and murdered? And
(2) Is God pleased with the number of people currently being saved?
Hilston wrote previously:
That's the rub of this debate, isn't it? I focus on verses that seem to teach this. You focus on verses that seem to oppose this. Both kinds of verses are found in scripture. Do you agree with those statements?
Yorzhik writes:
For the most part I agree.
Progress! So would you then agree that it doesn't come down to "who has scripture that backs his view," but rather who is interpreting the scripture correctly?
Hilston previously wrote:
It seems to me that your view of God presents Him as partly arbitrary (giving Himself rules) and also subordinate to a higher authority ("reality" as you call it). I wish I could impress upon you how absolutely denigrating these statements are to God's infinitude, authority, and holiness. On the other hand, I should not be surprised, coming from one who views God as a big super human (and somehow "much more").
Yorzhik writes:
Actually, the rules He gives Himself are at their foundation just more reality. For instance, He abides by the rule of Justice actively, because He is Just.
Is God "Just" because He keeps His self-imposed rule? Or was He already Just before the rule was stipulated?
Yorzhik writes:
... He has the power to violate that rule, but His character will not allow it.
Would you equate that power (to violate the "rule of justice") to the power to "create a rock too heavy to lift"?
Yorzhik writes:
Justice is just reality.
Does Justice ever change? For example, justice once called Sabbath-breaking a capital crime (i.e., the offender was executed). Justice no longer requires that. According to the OV, murder was not a capital crime (worthy of death) prior to the Flood, but it was afterward. So Justice was served differently. Please explain this on your view of Justice.
Yorzhik writes:
What I then mean by "reality" is that He doesn't actually have to actively avoid making square circles, but He must abide by that rule because it cannot be done.
If it cannot be done, then God is powerless to do it. So
can God [i.e. does He have the power to] violate the rule of justice or not? Above you said He has the power to do it.
Yorzhik writes:
BTW, God will be thrilled to know that I know Him well enough to understand Him in the way He has presented himself.
I assure you that God is not thrilled with the contradiction you've just stated. Or perhaps you did not say what you actually meant to say. Going by your words, you're on the horns of a dilemma. I look forward to its resolution.
Hilston previously wrote:
I'm coming to the conclusion that Open Theists do not understand God's holiness. Of course the innocent go straight to hell.
Yorzhik writes:
Hell is punishment for the guilty, and the innocent, by definition, are not guilty.
Did you even read my previous post on this? Didn't I say that "'innocent' does not mean pure as the driven snow"? Do you remember my saying that? If you're being forgetful, please work on that. If you're deliberately ignoring what I've previously written, we're done.
Yorzhik writes:
Perhaps we can get through this if you tell me why this subject is something you want to bring up.
I'm trying to understand the Open View. Your conception of God and His dealings with men is part of that view.
Hilston originally wrote:
Amazing. Is that what all Open Theists believe? You're really not sure about this?
Yorzhik writes:
I think that's what they believe. If someone is not guilty (the definition of innocent), then God could not punish them and remain just, so what does He do with the innocent? I don't know.
What do you believe Ro 3:10 and 3:23 mean? Are there
any who do not deserve hell? I certainly deserve hell. Don't we all?
Hilston previously wrote:
By the Open View measure. Didn't you just agree that there are certain innocent people who do not deserve certain consequences?
Yorzhik writes:
Yes, certain consequences, but death in the twin towers isn't one of them (horrific or not).
So to clarify, are you saying the innocent people who died in the WTC deserved those consequences?
Yorzhik previously wrote:
But they don't help us to relate and understand if they are figures.
Hilston replied:
Then you don't know the importance or the power of figurative language, yet you use it all the time.
Yorzhik writes:
You took my reply out of context. I was replying to your explanation of the figurative speech you claim relating to anthropomorphic/anthropopathic figures. Not all figures.
But you certainly do seem to have a problem with more than just anthro-figures. You totally missed the gnat-camel figure in Mt 23:24.
Yorzhik writes:
My point was that if we use the *those* passages as figures, then they become largely devoid of coherent meaning.
How so? Please explain, because they are richly saturated with emphatic meaning on my view.
Hilston previously wrote:
Yorzhik, I didn't say they "show God as transcendent." They communicate otherwise unfathomable traits and attributes. How can God or anyone communicate the infinite to finite creatures unless figurative language is used? Language itself is finite, Yorzhik. Surely you see this.
Yorzhik writes:
Okay, fine; Because they don't communicate otherwise unfathomable traits and attributes. They show God to be unable to communicate.
That's funny. Because on my view, it shows amazingly vivid and meaningful communication. On your view, they become literal and denigrate the knowledge and character of God.
Hilston previously asked:
How is it a different context? [Comparing God's words to Abraham ("Now I know ...") and God's words to Adam ("Where are you?")
Yorzhik writes:
Because the context is not about "Does God have the attributes of the author of free will", the context is that authors, and their attributes exist, and that God can use those, too.
Hilston previously wrote:
You're already supposed to know that going in. You're supposed to know that God is omniscient.
Yorzhik writes:
I belive God is omniscient going in. I don't believe God can know about something that doesn't exist. I only say that because God says so.
Would you quit playing that inane trump card? Didn't we agree that God's Word has verses that support both sides? I can end every one of my claims with "I only say that because God says so." It doesn't further the debate. It's childish.
Hilston previously wrote:
While that is the meaning conveyed, the figure is unduly weakened by replacing it with my words.
Yorzhik writes:
I don't think so. But that's just my opinion.
Which again shows that you don't understand the importance of figurative language.
Hilston previously wrote:
Again, you've utterly missed the point of figures. You're not supposed to replace them.
Yorzhik writes:
That's not my point, actually. My point is that you *can* replace them. Since your theology (and I mean the collective "your") has been so resistant to such a simple test, it makes us (collective OV'ers) think you want to be illogical.
That's your perception, Yorzhik. My view embraces the figure and the meaning it conveys. The resistance is in your understanding of figurative meaning. Tell me, Yorzhik, if you understand my "resistance to such a simple test," what is my view of Jonah 3:4?
Hilston previously wrote:
Again, here is the crux of the debate. I view God as transcendent, far above human feelings.
Yorzhik writes:
And far above human logic as well. I don't mean that in a derogatory way, but would this be true in your view of God?
To you, this seems to be a forgone conclusion, but you can't prove it. You say God is the master chess player, yet He couldn't figure out that Abraham would obey Him. That's illogical.
Hilston previously wrote:
That's because human nature does not deviate. If (hypothetically speaking) God were to communicate with dogs, He would not deviate from a consistent presentation of Himself in dog terms. Open Theist dogs would assume that God is a big super dog.
Yorzhik writes:... and much more.
Can I quote you?
Yorzhik previously wrote:
Because each figure is taken in context. The context of the discourse with Adam is of one type, and the context of the discourse with Abraham another.
To explain, Yorzhik writes:
Because Adam's behavior is explained prior to God's take on the situation. Even you could have figured out what happened, so God already knew what happened. Since God could see that Adam was not out in the opened, He knew Adam was hiding. It wasn't a test.
Both were tests, Yorzhik. Adam failed. Abraham passed. Both figurative statements were made after the tests were complete. One conveyed reprobation, one conveyed righteousness.
Yorzhik writes:
The context of Abraham was that the behavior was the test, and until, like Adam, God saw the behavior, God said He didn't know. So one was in the context of known behavior, and one in the context of unknown behavior.
Where are you getting this stuff, Yorzhik? God statements in both cases occurred after He knew what the results of the tests were.
Yorzhik previously wrote:
He will let me reject Him and leave heaven when I get there. At least that is what "until" seems to mean.
Hilston remarked:
Wow.
Yorzhik writes:I'd rather not start anther topic, but I don't suppose you could make a short reply on why you are surprised.
Sure. One the planks of my critique of Open Theism is that there can only be lipservice paid to trusting God. Statements like that are the kind that my friends and I sit around and talk about in utter amazement. "No, really. I'm not making this up. They really do believe this." They say the same thing I do: "Wow."
Yorzhik previously wrote:
What do you think "solved the game of chess" means?
Hilston replied:
It means nothing if He can be surprised by something that never entered His mind.
Yorzhik writes:
Nope, that's not what it means. I'll think you're going to have to ask someone.
What would you say of a Master Chess Player who admitted that something could happen in a game that "never entered his mind"?
Hilston previously wrote:
What was written was unreasonable in light of OV claims.
Yorzhik writes:
What OV claim precludes this analogy?
The OV claim that God could be surprised by something that "never entered His mind" precludes the Master Chess Player analogy.