Originally posted by Rolf Ernst
See, Clete, that is a demonstration of your problem. Just because you THINK you have found a verse that contradicts a verse whose message you don't like, you run to the verse whose message SEEMS
contradictory to the other and choose the verse whose message you THINK is the one agreeable to your own doctrine. The truth is that the verses you prefer do NOT contradict the other verses. You just can't see how they fit together
On the contrary, I believe that both sets of verses mean pretty much exactly what they say; that there is no conflict between them whatsoever. Can you say the same? If so, by what means do you determine that your interpretation is the correct one? You accuse me of leaning on one set and effectively ignoring the other but give no reason for anyone to think that you are not doing the exact same thing in reverse. In fact, I believe firmly that you are indeed doing just that.
You are so far from seeking to understand how all verses are woven into a faultless whole that you take delight in verses which SEEM to contradict.
As I said, they do not seem to contradict. There is no contradiction, there is no apparent contradiction. The only one's who see such contradictions are Calvinists who read their theology into the texts. The Open View allows one to take all of them at there face-value rather than reading any theological position into them as you clearly do.
THEN, without fail you always adopt between the two the verse which, according your interpretation, diminishes the glory of God.
I believe the Open View presents a more powerful, wiser, more loving, more just, more glorious version of God than Calvinism ever could.
For Example, there are many verses which teach that God that God is immutable in His being and purposes; but you don't like that, so you look for one that SEEMS contradictory to the verse which clearly states that Gods IS immutable.
God's character and personality are immutable, but He is not. I don't have to look very hard to find Scripture to prove this. All one has to do is know the Gospel. God BECAME a man, DIED, and ROSE from the dead and is alive forever more. All of which are real, dramatic, and permanent changes!
Having found that SEEMING contradiction you make no effort to understand how both verses fit together without contradiction. You are happy to leave the tension there in your mind. The important thing to you is that you found a verse which--to your mind--refutes the doctrine of God's immutability which you find distasteful.
Stop attempting to figure out what is in my mind. You're not very good at it and every time you try it, you make yourself look foolish. Again, there is no conflict in these passages at all.
To maintain that idea, you disallow any anthropomorphisms OR any possibility that God may be speaking in scripture through the perspective of men; both of which are often the case in scripture; but you will accept nothing other than the idea that God is NOT immutable OR all knowing OR really ABSOLUTELY SOVEREIGN.
On the contrary, there are, in fact, figures of speech on every single page of the Bible, every single page. I simply make effort to remain on the same page that God is on and accept that which cannot be a figure of speech as meaning what it says and accepting figures as just that. The difference between you and I is that I can explain what the figures mean and you cannot. This is because what you insist must be figures because they suggest that God is not immutable, are not figures at all. Instead, you take obvious figures and treat them as though they aren't figures at all. The result is confusion, and self contradiction at almost every move.
BUT this you can be sure of, Clete--God is infinitely perfect in all His attributes.
I agree with this completely.
There is no excellence which He does not possess to an infinite degree.
Sounds good but what does it mean exactly? There's at least a dozen things that you could be saying here. If it is merely another way of expressing what you said in the last sentence then I agree with this as well.
Therefore, if you see two verses which SEEM to be contradictory, that verse which more fully ascribes glorious perfection to God is the verse whose clear meaning should be accepted as the clearer statement in regard to Him, and the theologian who prefers to honor God rather than accept a diminished view of Him knows by that the misunderstanding has to do with the verse which SEEMS to contradict the verse which ascribes glory to God.
Your definition of glory is convoluted, you definition of power is twisted, your definition of sovereign is simply wrong, and your understanding of what it means to be perfect is out of whack as well. Further, you do not take your own advise! You say that the verses I quoted are all figures of speech but cannot explain what those figures of speech mean if they don't mean what they plainly say in which case they wouldn't be figures of speech. You render whole sections of Scripture completely meaningless in order to maintain a caricature of God which more resembles the stone idols and fairytale gods of the Greeks, which He hates than anything else.
A theologian who, on the other hand WANTS to find less than infinite perfections in God will hunt feverishly for verses which seem to deny His glorious attributes. Such a theologian is obsessed with a desire to whittle God down to his own size. The verses you cited above are some of the verses you misunderstand. They DON'T contradict those verses which more clearly ascribe glory to God. In my next post, I will begin to deal with them one by one.
I cannot wait! I really am interested to see how you explain how these passages mean one of two things.
1. Nothing at all.
2. The complete total opposite of what they say.
Resting in Him,
Clete