Clete,
You say you understand very little of what I believe. You say I claim one thing but believe another. You say I offer no explanation. You say I offer no clarification whatsoever. You say I communicate in language that isn't understood. What is with you people?
On this page alone you have definite unequivocal statements about what I believe that is opposite of what 1Way has written. For example:
... God decreed everything without exception, exhaustively, meticulously, purposefully, including the fall of Adam. This is why it can be said that the Son was slain from before the foundation of the world (before creation), because God decreed and planned for man's fall (evil) and redemption (good).
Have I ever claimed anything other than this? Have I ever indicated that I believe otherwise? Is this not an explanation? Does this not offer clarification? Is this not language you understand?
Further down, I wrote:
God hates unjust murder, yet He decreed it for His son. God hates unjust violence, especially against someone as truly innocent as His Son, "Yet it pleased the Lord to bruise him; he hath put him to grief. Isa 53:10. God decreed the unjust violence against His Son.
Have I ever claimed anything other than this? Have I ever indicated that I believe otherwise? Is this not an explanation? Does this not offer clarification? Is this not language you understand?
From these statements, do you know what I believe about the extent of God's foreordination of future events? Can you tell from these statement what I believe about God's decrees? If not, then you really need to go back to grammar school or take an ESL course at the local community college.
How about these statements from the previous page:
I believe God did in fact exhaustively design/decree all of biblical history, ...
Have I ever claimed anything other than this? Have I ever indicated that I believe otherwise? Is this not an explanation? Does this not offer clarification? Is this not language you understand?
On the same page, I explained my view of the incarnation and God's absolute authority:
... the incarnate Son of God emptied Himself of His inherent power and authority, submitted to only the empowerment of the Spirit in obedience to the Father, and exercised only the authority that was given Him by the Father. Thus, He was fully submitted to the Father's authority and could only do those things which the Father gave Him and empowered Him to do. Jesus was addressing the question of whether His judgment was righteous and on what basis. Having emptied Himself, He could not speak with His own authority, or even assert His role as Messiah. His works had to testify that He was the promised One in the flesh; the Father had to testify of Him as well. Jesus appealed to the prophetic scriptures as evidence testifying to His works; Jesus appealed to the declarations of the Father as evidence testifying to His obedience to Him. The triune Godhead does not submit to any court, let alone requiring the testimony of witnesses to justify Him."
Have I ever claimed anything other than this? Have I ever indicated that I believe otherwise? Is this not an explanation? Does this not offer clarification? Is this not language you understand?
From other pages in this discussion, I explained my view of God's foreordination of the evil against Christ:
The Bible says that the Christ was delivered by the determined purpose and foreknowledge of God, whom the Jews had taken by lawless hands, tortured and executed (Ac 2:23). The Bible says that Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and the people of Israel, gathered together against Christ to do what God's hand and purpose predetermined to be done (Ac 4:27,28). The Bible says the Jews executed the Christ in ignorance. But the things they did to him things are what God has thus fulfilled which He foretold by the mouth of all His prophets, that the Christ would suffer. (Ac 3:17ff).
Have I ever claimed anything other than this? Have I ever indicated that I believe otherwise? Is this not an explanation? Does this not offer clarification? Is this not language you understand?
I wrote:
I have no problem with [God being the first one to think of evil in the world], knowing that God has a justifiably good purpose in everything, even the evil, He has decreed. That is why I trust Him. That is why I put my confidence in Him.
Have I ever claimed anything other than this? Have I ever indicated that I believe otherwise? Is this not an explanation? Does this not offer clarification? Is this not language you understand?
I wrote:
I don't know why He decrees what He decrees except to say that He purposes good in all of it, according to the scripture. God works all things together for good for those who love God and are called according to His purpose.
I wrote:
It first came into God's mind that the evil actions of Joseph's brothers, by selling him into slavery, would result in the salvation of Israel from famine. It first came into God's mind that the evil actions of the Jews and Romans against Jesus would result in the salvation of elect Israel from damnation. Thus, all history is predetermined. Including the famine itself. Including the sin of Adam.
Have I ever claimed anything other than this? Have I ever indicated that I believe otherwise? Is this not an explanation? Does this not offer clarification? Is this not language you understand?
How about the original topic of this thread. Do you know what I believe about that? I wrote:
The reason the woman developed cancer is possibly genetic, or possibly environment, and most likely a combination of both. God did not give her cancer. She acquired it quite naturally, without any special divine intervention. However, God did in fact decree that she would have cancer, and that she would ignorantly distort the facts concerning Him. God also controls meticulously every cancer cell in her body, holding their atomic structure together, maintaining their existence and preventing them from obliterating.
Have I ever claimed anything other than this? Have I ever indicated that I believe otherwise? Is this not an explanation? Does this not offer clarification? Is this not language you understand?
Way back on page 4 of this thread, I wrote:
there's a difference between God's will being thwarted and someone resisting the Holy Spirit. The former refers to what He has decreed. The latter refers to rebellion in people. God decrees rebellion, and that decree cannot be thwarted. Judas could not resist the decrees of God, nor did he want to. We are all slaves to our natures, preferences, proclivities and circumstances -- and in some cases, slaves to the righteousness of Christ. You never choose what you do not want to choose. Ever.
Have I ever claimed anything other than this? Have I ever indicated that I believe otherwise? Is this not an explanation? Does this not offer clarification? Is this not language you understand?
About the nature of Christ's prayer in Gethsemane, I wrote:
John 12:27 "Now My soul has become troubled; and what shall I say, 'Father, save Me from this hour'? But for this purpose I came to this hour."
Don't be deceived by traditional theology or the English translations. The Greek is emphatic. Jesus rhetorically asks if He should ask the Father to save him out of this hour. The answer is no. So that is not what Jesus is asking the Father in the Garden. He was asking the Father to save Him from permanent death -- i.e. the dregs of the cup, not the cup itself. Jesus prayed that the cup be removed, and His prayer was heard (Heb 5:7). In Matthew 26:42, the Greek says "Since this cup may not pass from me unless I drink it, thy will be done." That is, the cup passes after He drinks it. It is a prayer to be saved from the grave, that His body would not be left to decay in the tomb, and the Father answered: Yes.
Have I ever claimed anything other than this? Have I ever indicated that I believe otherwise? Is this not an explanation? Does this not offer clarification? Is this not language you understand?
About the extent of the atonement, way back on page 15, I wrote:
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.
Furthermore, the word "condemned" is misleading. It should rather be translated "punishment." The word katakrima only occurs in verses 16,18 and Romans 8:1 in the Greek scriptures. It also occurs in the LXX in Sir. 43:10 and there are several instances of the word in the papyri. Based on its usage, the word denotes a punishment declared as a consequence of the verdict given in krima (judgment). In the context of Ro 5, it refers to the punishment declared as a consequence of the verdict rendered in judgment (krima) of Adam's sin in Gen 3:17-19.
hus, 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.
Have I ever claimed anything other than this? Have I ever indicated that I believe otherwise? Is this not an explanation? Does this not offer clarification? Is this not language you understand?
Someone asked me what the fruit of the Spirit meant to me. I wrote:
What does the "fruit of the Spirit" mean to me? It means that God, by His Spirit, is working in my will to do of His good pleasure. He is causing me to desire things I would naturally reject. He is driving me into the scripture to learn more of Him and to teach others what I am learning. He is meticulously moving in my life, my mind, my heart and my circumstances to bring about the good works in me that He prepared in advance for me to do (Eph 2:10).
Have I ever claimed anything other than this? Have I ever indicated that I believe otherwise? Is this not an explanation? Does this not offer clarification? Is this not language you understand?
Sometimes I wonder, is it me? Am I deluded into thinking that I explain things, but really I don't? Could it be that I'm so scattered that the Open Theists are right about my lack of clarity? Then I spend a lot of time looking at my own posts, reading what I've written, and find out that I'm wasting my time. Of course I'm clear. Of course I explain. Of course I use language that is understood. The problem is not "how many fingers am I holding up," but who is cross-eyed here? From the ample witness supplied above, you have no warrant to call yourself "Truthsmacker." You can't "smack" truth until you're able to comrpehend the language with which you presume to "smack" it.
Cheers.