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Originally posted by Clete Pfeiffer
And Peter was not destined to deny Jesus, He could have repented and if He had then there would be yet another prophecy in the Bible that did not come to pass. Had this been the case, God would have been amazed and elated at Peter's faith. He would not have been upset and worried about how Peter had just ruined the whole Bible and destroyed Jesus' credibility.
Sorry to butt in here but this just got me to thinking. I can just imagine if Nineveh hadn't repented. Their destruction would have been lumped in as a predestined plan of God just as Peter's denial was supposedly predestined. And you could be making the same argument for them as you did for Peter in your above quote saying exactly what you said but replacing Peter with Nineveh.
And Nineveh was not destined to deny God. They could have repented and if they had then there would be yet another prophecy in the bible that did not come to pass. Had this been the case, God would have been amazed and elated at Nineveh's faith. He would not have been upset and worried about how Nineveh had just ruined the whold bible and destroyed God's credibility."
Had Nineveh not repented and God carried through with His prophecy, I could just hear the Calvinists saying "There's no way Nineveh could have repented. God prophecied that they would be destroyed and there's no way He could go back on that."
Peter could have repented just as Nineveh did. There's no difference. God didn't respond to Nineveh's repentance with "Oh great, now look what you did? You messed everything up!" Neither would He have responded in this manner to Peter had he not denied Jesus.
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