Originally posted by lee_merrill
Yes, but there's still responsibility, even for a possibility.
Are you just dead set on blaming God for sin or what?
God took a risk that we would hate Him so that it might be possible for us to love Him. The two always go together, otherwise they are both meaningless. But He didn't just flippantly create us on a whim. He thought it out very carefully and made plans based on what He knew could, and perhaps probably would, happen.
God is not stupid and He doesn't play sucker bets. He knows what He is doing now and He knew what He was doing when He created us. I can promise you that things will end up better because He created us than they would have been had He not done so. God has not taken such a great risk that He could possibly end up as anything but the absolute victor in this battle between good and evil. If this were not so, He would not have done it.
Yes, I am indeed not a full-fledged Calvinist, though the Calvinists I have read tend to waver a bit in this area, saying "allowed" when in the next paragraph they write "ordained," etc. And I don't think I've ever read any Calvinist saying explicitly that God ordains and decides all motives and even thoughts. That's where I drew back! There seems to be Scripture that says the opposite, even, Prov. 16:1.
The other four points of Calvinism are wrong for the same reasons. They are logically inconsistent and unbiblical.
But this was in reference to whether God was just in ordaining what happened to Job! I think this shows he was, this was for a good purpose. Now whether God can fail at this, and whether he overcomes free will is another question.
There was never any question as to whether or not God was just. God is just, period. But if God overcomes one's free will then testing is meaningless. What would He be testing if your reaction was predestined by the one giving the test? It makes no sense.
Then God is in complete control, where he makes predictions, and that's definite knowledge of the future, and predestination. And in the area of salvation! As in the verses about "only the remnant," and "all Israel," will be saved.
What? Where did you get this out of what I said? It's not definite knowledge of the future and more than your prediction of tomorrow's whether is definite knowledge. The more information you have the more accurate your prediction about the weather might be but that doesn't mean you absolutely know for certain where and when it's going to rain.
Now, weather isn't the best thing to use as an example because it is one thing that God can indeed absolutly control if He decides He wants to but as long as you don't stretch it to its breaking point, the analogy works well. The point is that when people have a free will, there are things that are not knowable, even by God and thus there are things that simply cannot be predicted with absolute precision.
But Jer. 18 only says what will happen under general conditions, not what will happen in a specific situation, Jer. 18 does not tell us whether a given group of people will repent or not, Paul, however, does.
Jeremiah is talking about a very specific group of people, namely the nation of Israel. And God expect for Israel to repent several times and each time was met with disappointment and He reacted appropriately as Jer. 18 sets forward.
Which specific group of people are you referring to that Paul speaks of?
Is "I will make a new heavens and a new earth" also a guess?
No! Of course not! God is not guessing anyway. You will not win this debate or convince me of anything by using loaded words like "guess".
You have to put some effort into staying on the same page with me here. God cannot know for an absolute certainty what I will do, but He certainly can know what He will do Himself.
Or "There will be no more pain." What if people in heaven decide to sin? Couldn't free will ruin it all, and spoil even these … guesses?
Again, these are not guesses. Man that really burns my backside when you say that. You do understand that if I am right that you aren't simply making emotional points by casting the debate in such terms but that you are insulting the God you serve.
These aren't even predictions much less guesses. These are declarations made by God Himself. The order of things after this creation is ended cannot even be intelligently discussed. We simply do not have a slightest clue what we would be talking about. If God says that there will be no more pain then I cannot but believe Him. And I suspect that we will remain perfectly sinless in spite of our free will in the same manner that God Himself does. The point is we cannot know how; we'll simply have to wait until we get there to find out what God has in store for those who love Him.
But I'm wondering if we have solid footing here, not how easy or accurate such predictions might be…
Zechariah 13:9 This third I will bring into the fire; I will refine them like silver and test them like gold. They will call on my name and I will answer them; I will say, 'They are my people,' and they will say, 'The Lord is our God.'
Maybe not? Maybe this won't happen?
So you are willing to sacrifice the ability to truly love on the alter of your desire for a feeling of solid footing? You know what? Trust God and let the chips fall where they may. Then you won't need solid footing; you won't even need feet. Whether this happens as predicted or not. The point being that if it doesn't happen, it will be because a just and righteous God changed His mind in accordance with changed circumstances that justly warranted such a change of mind. It doesn't make God a liar or a wavering sheet, blowing in the wind; it makes Him alive and reactive to the creation which He loves and has a real relationship with. God is a real person and He really is specifically interested in having a genuine personal relationship with you and me and anyone else who would like to have such a relationship. He really does desire to call us friend. This truth is magnified a hundred fold in the Open View. The genuine personhood of God and the reality of love is its primary presupposition.
Yes, but you all are holding that God gave enough control up, for his will to be crossed, thwarted and frustrated.
Only to a certain point. God will not be ultimately defeated, that much we can know for certain. In fact, if His ultimate defeat was even a possibility then He would not be absolutely sovereign.
Being able to control it all does not make someone absolutely sovereign, any more than David was absolute king over Israel...
That's my line.
Control doesn't make you sovereign, authority makes you sovereign. The ability (power) to control, whether that ability is exercised or not, is certain part of what makes you sovereign, but control and sovereignty are not synonyms.
Resting in Him,
Clete