Originally posted by Hilston
Hi Clete,
I don't think it's difficult at all. Neither does my wife, who answered my questions without hesitation whilst standing in the kitchen preparing dinner.
Is this supposes to be some sort of veiled insult?
Do you have a verse to back this claim?
Do I need one? Who wrote the verses of the Bible, Jim?
Why do ask such waste of time questions?
This is false. No law legislates over God. God is above all law and above responsibility. He is transcendent.
I didn't say there was a law I said that there is a principle. Laws can be just or unjust, thus justice and law are not the same thing.
Job 36:23 Who hath enjoined him his way? or who can say, Thou hast wrought iniquity?
Isa 40:13 Who hath directed the Spirit of the LORD, or being his counsellor hath taught him? 14 With whom took he counsel, and who instructed him, and taught him in the path of judgment, and taught him knowledge, and shewed to him the way of understanding?
These questions are rhetorical in nature. The implied answer is "no one."
I agree that God has never done anything wrong, of course. But that doesn't mean that someone cuoldn't make an accusation. If someone did make an accusation, then God would have a propper defense, not that He would be obligated to give that defense, but the point is, He
could give one if He decided He wanted to. God would be able to say that "I did such and such for this or that specific reason and therefore My actions were right and good." Just saying, "My action was just because I say so" is hardly a propper defense especially if that's ALL the defense one was
able to give.
It's not that complicated. Nor is it circular. Justice is determined by God's Word. Precisely which law and precisely what sort of justice applies are determined by God's Word, which indicates with specificity the laws/justice prescribed for a particular dispensation (household law).
I agree that this is so for us human beings, who are under the Bibles authority but that is not the question we are discussing.
Was God Himself just before the Bible was written and if so why?
That is the question?
I agree, and I can say this with full assurance. But how do you know this to be true?
I personally know this to be true because I know God. I know God through His Word. But again, this is not the question at hand. No one disputes that God is just and that the Bible is the primary,(some might say the only) way that the concepts of justice are comminucated to us. But the question isn't, "How do we learn about justice?", but rather, "What is justice?".
Your presupposition that justice is whatever God says it is renders the statement, "God is just." meaningless. In you presuppositional world, it would make more sense to say, "God is arbitrary." Or would you agree that for God the words "justice" and "arbitrary" are synonimous with each other?
Exactly what, on your view, makes it the wrong thing to do?
What makes rape, murder wrong?
Well the injustice of the acts for one thing. One who commits such acts is steeling from their victims. They are taking by force that which they do not have the authority to take.
The important point to make here though, is that these things would be wrong, whether God said so or not. In fact they were wrong before God said so. Murder was wrong long before the Bible was written, that's for sure! And it will continue to be wrong from now on. There will never, ever be a time when rape and murder will be good because they are wrong by definition in that that they intale actions which the purpotrator does not have the authority to commit.
Didn't you agree with Big Finn's claim of innate justice? And doesn't God give authority to sinful and fallible men to carry out justice (such as David and Solomon)? If both are true, then there would be adequate judges all over the place who could rightly punish such an act. The Bible doesn't require sinlessness as a prerequisite to be able to rightly judge.
First of all, I agree with what Bigg Finn said, not how you are twisting it. Justice is intuitive, at least to a large degree. Just as the belly knows good food, the heart knows truth. We are not saying that the intuitive nature of justice is the basis upon which we should judge. We are simply pointing out the fact that God has wired us up in such a way as to make it easy for us to recognize justice or injustice when we see it.
Actually, you're wrong here. God can righteously judge and punish us, precisely because He is our creator and bigger than we are.
So power is what makes things just? Is that what you are saying? God
can squash us like a bug, so if He does so it is just by virtue of the fact that God is able to do it?
You simply cannot believe that. Even you have that little voice of intuition inside telling you that this would be the equivalent of being a bully and that God is not a bully.
Why should we fear God? Because He is not a hypocrite? Jesus gives the answer here: Mt 10:28 And fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.
God is not a hypocrite He’s just bigger than we are. A non-hypocritical bully is still a bully.
I agree, of course, that we should fear God. But God is not good because He’s powerful.
No wonder this is difficult for you. You're mixing apples and oranges. David, an adulterer, was still King over Israel and was obligated by God's law to enforce the law against adultery. David's guilt did not abrogate or excuse him from having to administer God's law. Why is this so? Because the law is the standard of righteousness, on God's authority, not on God's behavior. It is based upon God's revealed standard of justice, not David's behavior. The law (not David's behavior, not God's behavior) is the standard to which David and Israel were held and by which they were judged.
Once again, we are not discussing law.
Of course David was subject to the law of God, but what made those laws just laws? Right and wrong are not defined by the law; quite the reverse. Just laws are just because they are good. Right and wrong existed before the law and they will exist long after the law is gone.
"We can intuitively see ..."? Who is "we"? The majority? Is that how justice is established? Majority rule?
Why do you say such things? You know I don’t believe this! Why even waste your time writing such nonsense? Just because something is intuitive doesn’t mean that it is fundamentally based upon that intuition. You are definitely taking my point about the intuitive nature of truth and justice too far. I am not saying what you apparently think I’m saying.
Didn't you claim that you would just "trust God" whenever you did not understand the justice He meted out for certain offenses? Why wouldn't you just "trust God" here and assume that the "very, very evil" act was somehow justified?
Because this particular act CANNOT be justified, even by God Himself. This is precisely the reason I chose such a grotesquely sinful crime. Which, by the way, seemed to conjure up in you an intuitive desire to vomit, just as it should have.
Do these "principles" of justice and righteousness have authority over God?
Does truth and logic have “authority� over God?
God is subject to the limitations of reality.
How can you be sure? Aren't you supposed to "trust God" whenever you don't understand what He does or commands?
The question is what is that trust based upon? What makes trusting God a right thing to do? If God is not good then trusting Him isn’t either. Thus the principles of right and wrong must apply to God or else it wouldn’t mean anything to say that God is good.
Didn't you agree with Big Finn that it is innately known?
Innately known? Yes, at least to a large degree, but this is not the foundation of justice. We are intuitively aware of justice because God has made us that way. This, however, does not speak to what justice is or where it comes from.
There you have it. The Open View leads to these kinds of confusions and misunderstandings. My wife, without any advanced study in philosophy or theology, and without hesitation, was able to answer this question: "Would you say that God is 'just' because He does 'just' things, or is God 'just' because ..." And before I could finish the sentence, she blurted out, "... because He says so." That's the biblical answer, Clete. My wife is a presuppositionalist without even trying. You and Big Finn are evidentialists, and your reasoning is fraught with question-begging assumptions. It is internally incoherent and does not comport with sound logic or the consistent exegesis of scripture.
WHAT!!!!????
Are you suggesting that we should base what we believe on our own presuppositions rather than on objective evidence?
Bad guess. Justice, right and wrong are not absolute. They are determined according to God's laws. Sabbath breaking was a capital crime for Israel. It is not so today. Violations of food laws were justly punished in Israel. The food laws are completely abrogated today. Punishment for violating them would be unjust. Truth, however, is absolute, as is logic. What is true and what is logical comprise universal and invariant laws of the universe that reflect -- but do not define -- and they describe -- but do not limit -- the very nature, essence and existence of God.
Jim! Forgive me, but this is simply the silliest thing you have ever posted on this site (at least that I have read).
I can’t even believe that you could say such a thing as “…right and wrong are not absolute.�
You’ve just given a way the whole store to the enemies of Christianity. The whole basis of Christianity is the absoluteness of right and wrong. If right and wrong are not absolute then Christ died for nothing! All that would really have been required is for God to have simply declared evil things good and been done with it.
Indeed, perhaps the clearest proof that the principles of justice and of right and wrong do apply to God is that God was able to simply wink at sin and declare by the power of His might that those things which were evil are now good. If God wanted to save any of His creation, the death of His own Son was THE ONLY WAY HE COULD HAVE ACCOMPLISHED IT
JUSTLY!
Creation is not reality? Do you believe that God is transcendent in any way?
Creation is only part of reality, not reality itself? There was a time before creation. Do you suppose that reality didn’t exist then? If God wiped out His creation from existence would reality go with it, or would the nonexistence of God’s creation be a reality?
God is not transcendent of reality. If He somehow managed to transcend what is current reality, then reality would move with Him. Reality is what ever is real. God is real and thus is within reality.
Is it right to impose symbolic food restrictions on others or not? In Acts 15:28,29, the apostles in Jerusalem, and the Holy Spirit, imposed symbolic food restrictions on the Gentile believers. Paul says these restrictions are abrogated in Col 2:16.
It is if the one imposing those restrictions has the authority to place those restriction and has a non-arbitrary, just reason for doing so.
Justice, right and wrong all imply a standard of righteousness. Sin is "missing the mark," falling short of a standard. Justice and righteousness share the same root, and in some cases are the same Greek word. Justice, right and wrong are not a "principles" of existence as in the case of truth and logic. Neither are they universal invariant absolutes as in the case of logic and truth. They are determined according to God's declared law, which changes according to the respective household administration (dispensation) in question.
What about before the law Jim? Would it have been wrong for Adam to rape and murder Eve in the Garden of Eden?
Your simplistic view flirts with pantheism, Clete. The reality of creation is not God Himself. That which is real, reality, according to God's decreed design of human experience, was created and is sustained by God Himself (Col 1:16,17). Creation is other than God. God is infinite, and therefore all that is finite (all of creation) is contained within Him, yet it is separate from Him. That which is real (reality) exists because God has caused it to exist and sustains its existence. This does not apply to Himself. He transcends His creation. He did not cause Himself to exist. He could not cause Himself to unexist.
Why do you argue against points I never made and with which you know I do not agree?
I agree, but what does that say of truth and logic as compared to justice, right and wrong? Truth and logic exist as involuntary attributes of the Creator. Justice, right and wrong are not in the same category. What is right and what is wrong will vary according to God's commands to His creation, i.e. the standard of righteousness in place at a given point in biblical history. Before creation, God imposed no standard or law, and therefore "justice" and "right and wrong" were inapplicable concepts.
So you would agree then, based on this logic, that to say, “God is good� would have been a meaningless thing to say prior to God make up the rules.
I disagree with you completely. God is, has been, and forever will be good, just and loving. Not because He says so but because He is, period.
Further, on what basis do you make the claim that justice, right and wrong are not in the same category as truth and logic. That category being, as you put it, “involuntary attributes of the Creator�?
Personally, I would put it slightly differently. I would say that truth, logic, justice, right and wrong are all involuntary attributes of reality. Anything that is real is subject to them.
Only if you're an evidentialist. From a presuppositional standpoint, God's Word provides the standard of righteousness for each dispensation. Righteousness and justice are determined on that basis. It begins with God's Word and ends with the administration of justice in accordance with His Word. All men of this dispensation will be judged according to Paul's gospel (Ro 2:16). They will not be judged according to Peter's gospel (a different standard of righteousness/justice). This is not circular at all. It is quite linear, logical, coherent and consistent with the determinist view of scripture.
Again, was there right and wrong before the Bible? If so, what was it based upon?
While your concession and candor are commendable, you might want to reconsider accusing ZMan of having "backward" thinking until you get your own circularity resolved.
Z Man knows as well as anyone on this board that if I can be shown to be wrong then I am wrong and am willing to admit it. I’ve done it before, and I’m sure I’ll do it again in the future. My circularity probably has more to do with the way I’m analyzing the problem more than it has to do with whether or not I’m right or wrong about this particular issue. Time will tell.
Resting in Him,
Clete