Thanks for the lesson about that figure, Jim. I already knew this figure, but what you said was concise and well written. I'll have to remember it when this topic is dicussed.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…
Okay, I see we have a communication disconnect here. When I say "don't strain the gnats" I mean we should "don't discuss the details", but discuss the foundations of an issue first (foundations would be like the base of a pyramid – big relative to the top). We should do this instead of the arguing conclusions or other things based on the foundational issues (which would be like what is above the base of a pyramid – small relative to the bottom). There you have it. Big and small. Gnats are small relative to camels, and tops of pyramids are small relative to bottoms of pyramids. The foundation of an argument is a big thing; it is wider, as it were, because it holds up every discussion above it. So, in an exaggerated sort of way, we want to get the camels (foundations) taken care of first before we move on to the gnats (the issues that stand on the foundation).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.
I am not, nor ever was, trying to evoke a direct correlation with Matt 23:23. I was merely referencing a biblical principle that there are big things and little things, weightier things and lighter things. I even added words to qualify what I was saying ("let's try to crystallize") so that you would know that we were going to try and make things more clear first before moving on to the details. The details would be the small things, hence the allusion to gnats, and making things more clear would be finding out what all these small things are based on – because at this point in the discussion we apparently cannot see the base of this discussion. I didn't refer to camels because I wasn't using the Matt 23:23 passage directly. Okay?
Great. I don't remember you being so succinct in this context before.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?
So, do you expect that God is working things together for our good here on earth?
And I've never accepted your reason that God would not intervene in every case. Why not? He can mask every miracle if He wants, thus making reasonably certain no one could know for sure when He was intervening, if at all, and get the desired result you claim that the OV God is looking for far more effectively.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.
Here is the problem I'm having with your scenario. In your scenario God is doing secret miracles, here and there, to get the greatest effect, so that people have the best chance to love him. But that doesn't make sense. If He wanted the greatest effect, as you say the OV God wants, and He is not restricted to miracles here and there, which you have to agree the OV God isn't, then He would also be consistent with what we know of His character - and He would do miracles for everyone. In fact, if the OV God where doing miracles so the most people would be apt to love Him, then He would have created a "secret" pain just for Eve as she was contemplating the fruit on the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.
Also remember that if you give one child a treat just because it is a nice day, it would be said to be unfair not to give your other child a treat as well, all other things being equal. I realize you are not obligated to treat your other children, but I know you try to be fair with them as well. I know I wouldn't feel right if I gave one child a treat just because it was a nice day but ignored the other child (all other things being equal).
I'm not! I have been clear why I reject your reason that God would not do miracles for everyone. IF God is going to do miracles so all men without exception will be apt to love Him, THEN God will do miracles for everyone. Covertly if need be. God is very smart, your concern that God will be found out if He does miracles for everyone is not an issue. Do you have a GOOD reason why God would not do miracles for everyone? I won't ignore your next reason, just as I haven't ignored your first reason.But you seem to just ignore what I've said.
Why is random the only way to keep people from knowing it is Him? Your stipulation is not being followed because it doesn't make sense.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.
Let me see if I can state it in a clearer way. Here is the response to your scenario in one sentence: The OV God will not do miracles for some people, because if He did miracles for some people, He would do miracles for everyone. Now, you can draw some conclusions from that response.
Here is the simple line of reasoning – If God was doing miracles for some people so that they would be more apt to love Him, He would do if for everyone. I created two outcomes for your proposal. The first is in keeping with your proposal, and the second you can ignore if you want. I'm sure lots of people reading would ask, if the second example were not provided, "why not overt miracles?"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.
No, and no. He could have improved each situation with secret miracles.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?
I'm glad this makes you happy. I'm not so sure you can call this "progress" because I would have agreed with this statement before the beginning of this discussion. But with your interpretation of scripture that should be taken literally as taken figuratively, I seriously doubt your ability to interpret correctly.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?
No, God keeps the rule because He is "Just". There was no "before the rule" God was Just from everlasting, and as long as God is real, reality exists, and Justice is just a part of reality.Is God "Just" because He keeps His self-imposed rule? Or was He already Just before the rule was stipulated?
No. Creating a rock to heavy to lift would be the same a making a square circle.Would you equate that power (to violate the "rule of justice") to the power to "create a rock too heavy to lift"?
No, you are talking about laws. Laws change. Justice never changes.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.
Yes, God is powerless to make a square circle, but He is not powerless to violate justice if His character is not taken into account.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.
Please point out the contradiction. I don't see it. God is happy with people that understand Him. I understand Him to the extent that He has presented Himself. Therefore God is thrilled. One might say "thrilled" is too strong, but that isn't a contradiction.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.BTW, God will be thrilled to know that I know Him well enough to understand Him in the way He has presented himself.
Again, we'll need to get to the foundation here. I haven't ignored what you've written, and I remember you said the innocent were not pure as the wind driven snow, too. I also remember that I've continually rejected your reasoning, so I don't understand why you are acting like this. The basis for your seemingly being upset is that "not pure as the wind driven snow" means anything. I took that into account and my answers stand as stated.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 responded:Hilston said previously:
'm coming to the conclusion that Open Theists do not understand God's holiness. Of course the innocent go straight to hell.
Hell is punishment for the guilty, and the innocent, by definition, are not guilty.
But like I said, we need to get to the foundation. According to the OV, who are the innocent? According to the OV, who are the innocent that go to heaven? According to the OV, who are the innocent that go to hell? According to the OV, who are the innocent on earth? And so that I can understand what you view as the problem, in your view, what are the answers in your view to these questions?
Hilston, I knew this already. I meant the question in the context of our discussion of the "innocent going to hell".I'm trying to understand the Open View. Your conception of God and His dealings with men is part of that view.Perhaps we can get through this if you tell me why this subject is something you want to bring up.
After I've been covered by the blood of Jesus? No, I don't deserve hell after that. Also, children, before they can make a decision to choose to love God or not, don't automatically deserve hell. However, I'm not sure how God will deal with them. Rest assured, it will be Just.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?
They deserved those consequences as much as we all deserve to die because we are all mortals living in a fallen world.So to clarify, are you saying the innocent people who died in the WTC deserved those consequences?
I didn't miss the gnat-camel figure. You missed my use of big and small, foundational and detail.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.
But back to anthro-figures. This is quite a struggle. Your example is fine, as I've mentioned, but your example is a figure. What you said is not what you meant, and that it could be replaced with what was really meant. But this would be different from an anthro-figure in that what is said is exactly what is meant to humans, but what is said is intrinsically meaningless to God because of the nature of God. So an anthro-figure really cannot be replaced, but neither does it mean what it says to both parties communicating with each other. So, as it seems we keep running into, we should stop talking about the details and get to the foundational issues.
BTW, the reason I came to this understanding is because I spoke to a number of Rabbis about the Jewish tradition concerning this passage. They don't take it as a figure. Never have. In a nutshell, and I hope giving the short answer is acceptable, they count it as part of the non-transcendent part of God interacting with man on his level. Therefore, it is read exactly as it is written. They freely admit this is Jewish mysticism. Your usage seems to be the same way (minus the Jewish mysticism), is that correct?
Emphatic? If you want to call them figures, then you're fooling yourself; you cannot give the emphatic meaning for each of the figures in the bible. You cannot give an emphatic meaning to "now I know" that I discussed immediately above. If all the figures are so emphatic, you could rattle off a replacement for any figure in the bible. I can. But as it is, it's like pulling eye-teeth to get a replacement phrase from you or anyone else that incorporates your view that these phrases are figures. Maybe it's better to not call them figures?How so? Please explain, because they are richly saturated with emphatic meaning on my view.
You can say "they are richly saturated with meaning on my view.", but don't use the word emphatic if you still want to call them figures. Unless, of course, you are using the word "emphatic" as a figure of speech.
They only denigrate the knowledge and character of God if what I say isn't true about God. What are the interpretations of the passages that show God is transcendent above descriptions that can also be used on humans? And I'm not trying to get you to just list the passages for your side, I'm asking about the interpretation of those passages to see if we can determine what interpretations have the most weight.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.
So you'll agree that I already knew that God is omniscient going in, right?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.
No, really, "you passed the test" is much clearer than "now I know". –or- "I knew you could do it" is clearer and just as meaningful as "now I know".Which again shows that you don't understand the importance of figurative language.Yorzhik writes:Hilston previously wrote: While that is the meaning conveyed, the figure is unduly weakened by replacing it with my words.
I don't think so. But that's just my opinion.
God needed to hope that anyone who read it would have a presupposition that God was transcendent and immutable if He wanted the passage to be understood as a statement by a transcendent immutable God. It is a hopelessly confusing phrase if whoever read it was actually trying to understand the character of God using only a historical grammatical method when it is supposed to be a figure.
And my perception is correct. Every figure has a meaning other than what is written/said. In the context of this discussion, this is the test that allows you to make sense. But you only complete the test when pushed because you somehow don't think you need to make sense. You think everyone should just agree or believe you because…That's your perception, Yorzhik.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.
I don't understand your resistance to such a simple test. It should be as simple to replace the figure, if you want to call it a figure, as you would explain the "short hand" figure in Num 11.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?
Probably not. But I'd say that a God that decrees that a man do some evil, and then hold him responsible for doing that evil is pretty good evidence that something isn't right about your view.To you, this seems to be a forgone conclusion, but you can't prove it.
Sure.Can I quote you?Yorzhik writes:... and much more.
You are correct, I'm unclear. I also think that the Rabbi has a more cogent explanation than you do. However, in the OV, when God asks the question in the Garden of Eden, it doesn't matter where Adam is. The statement to Abraham, however, is required for God to justify why He is stopping the 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.
I realize I've just jumped into a foundational issue again, and it probably won't help if we keep talking about Adam and Abraham until the foundational issue is resolved.
Yes. I'll try to be more clear, as always.Where are you getting this stuff, Yorzhik? God statements in both cases occurred after He knew what the results of the tests were.
Ahhh, I see. Okay.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."
No it isn't. But let's go straight to your other comments about the master chess player that has solved for the game of chess:You say God is the master chess player, yet He couldn't figure out that Abraham would obey Him. That's illogical.
– and -What would you say of a Master Chess Player who admitted that something could happen in a game that "never entered his mind"?
Let me ask bluntly again; what does "solved the game of chess" mean? Let's just get the definition for now, and we can add the dynamic of how it relates to God afterward.The OV claim that God could be surprised by something that "never entered His mind" precludes the Master Chess Player analogy.