He is sovereign because people have been given the authority to live their own lives by God. They are not in a position of authority over God, thus they are not absolutely sovereign. God does have authority over them and every thing else and so He is absolutely sovereign. Again, sovereignty is not about control, it is about authority.Originally posted by lee_merrill
Hi Clete,
Then God is not absolutely sovereign! That's my point here. Your view here needs to explain how God can be called absolutely sovereign now, when evil happens outside of God's control, and causes harm he didn't want to happen.
There have been people killed by wild animals that tray into town Lee; old woman trampled by Moose and the like. Are you seriously suggesting (of course you are) that God was in complete control of that animal and caused it to trample someone's grandmother while she was walking her groceries to the car?Which is one reason I believe God does control evil! If there's a lion in town, wouldn't you rather it be under complete control? How is it better, if it's not?
That's just it, the way you were thinking is erroneous. "highest authority" is the very definition of the word 'sovereign'. And if you are at the absolute tip top of the heap, then you are the absolute sovereign.I agree! But "highest authority" does not mean "absolute sovereignty" (let's keep the suffix on this word! Absolute Sovereign is different) in the way I think it was being described.
And no it is not different without the suffix. That's the reason I use it that way. It communicates the idea more clearly; it is a position of authority not an act of control.
You would be right if we held to the same definition of the word that you do, which we do not.I think Open Theists want to say this about God, but I don't think they can do this, and remain consistent.
That is not what the verse means. God's love gives us the opportunity to love Him. His love would necessarily have to come first because without it we would no longer exist. And so in a very real sense the reason I am able to love God is because He first loved me. Not because His love CAUSES me to love Him but because it affords me the ability to do so.But that's not what this verse says! Being loved by God is a necessary and sufficient condition, for us to love. God's love, in and of itself, causes love.
If it does not then it is not love. It can't be because of the definition of the word "love".It's pejorative, too! No, I wouldn't put it that way, it's not "He loved Big Brother" against his will, like in George Orwell's story. But does free will even play a part in human love?
We are not talking about biological infatuation or lustful sorts of love but real love, the sort of love that is an act of the will not the whim of one's emotional state of mind.There's indications to the contrary, in Scripture:
Song of Solomon 2:7 Daughters of Jerusalem, I charge you by the gazelles and by the does of the field: Do not arouse or awaken love until it so desires.
So don't love even in this human way by your own choice! Don't we even have this in our language expressions? "Falling in love," "A match made in heaven," "They were meant for each other."
The point in asking my question was to point out that what we believe is of no consequence to the truth. What is true will remain true whether we believe it or not.The truth is what we need, for sure! I think the problem here is that people tend to view the end of the process, when people can indeed love freely, and forget about how they got that way! They didn't get that way by generating love on their own, they got that way, I believe, because someone loved them, because God did.
We either have free will or we do not. If I believe that we do have free will and we actually don't, my belief to the contrary doesn't change the facts.
The point is that saying things like "I believe..." when trying to determine the truth, weakens the strength of your argument. Saying such things here doesn't do much damage because we are both believers but I recommend dropping such things from your vernacular when talking with skeptics because you will likely be met with "why should I care what you believe, I'm only interested in what you can prove!". Beliefs can be blown off really easily by those who don't share those same beliefs. The truth however cannot be rationally denied.
In short it is wrong because you are applying the verse in ways in which it was not intended. You have totally ripped the verse completely out of its intended context and used it to support your pretext of predestination. The verse not talking about predestination not does it have any proper application to it. You are reading gigantic amounts of information into that text that very simply is not there.Well, so then show me how my interpretation is wrong! If "love is as strong as death," human love, then what about God's love?
Your interpretation is reminiscent of Benny Hinn's interpreting "by His stripes we are healed" to mean that all Christians should be free of disease and illness. Or the Seventh Day Adventist using the ten commandments to insist that we should meet for church on Saturday. Or Oral Roberts using the "speak to that mountain..." passage as proof that one's words have power to speak whatever reality you want into being.
It's called proof texting and it doesn't work because you cannot work from a specific verse and work out the overview, you have to go the other way around. You must first have a clear grasp of the overview and then the details become easy.
I can tell that you are sincere in your quest for the truth but I'm curious how you can find anything in Open Theism compatible with Calvinism. They seem to me to be complete opposites.Indeed, I agree with what Open Theists (and Arminians and others) say about the love of God for everyone. Don't know about the measurement, but I'm just trying to hug the truth! Prov. 3:18...
Resting in Him,
Clete