GOD doesn't have to love everyone just because GOD is love.
GOD gets angry and kicks folks out of His presence and dumps His enemies in the lake of fire.
Good, they are bad to the bone.
GOD doesn't have to love everyone just because GOD is love.
GOD gets angry and kicks folks out of His presence and dumps His enemies in the lake of fire.
Back up to Adam.
Was Adam created with a sinful nature?
From what I can tell, GOD does not have to be good and loving to all, and isn't loving and good to all.
Adam was created with the capability to sin.Nope, Adam had the same nature we do....human.
They just thought they were bad till they shook their finger at GOD.Good, they are bad to the bone.
Adam was created with the capability to sin.
If he wasn't created with the capability to sin, then he could not have eaten the fruit and caused the fall.
But he did eat the fruit, and therefore we know he did have the capability to sin.
Adam was created with the capability to sin.
GOD's creation, including Adam, was called "good".
So there is no reason to doubt that GOD can have the capability to sin and still be called "good" because just having the capability does not mean you will.
Well that's not the heart that Abraham had for the people of Sodom, he wanted to help save as many as he could, even down to ten if possible. And God was willing for him to try. And he's willing for us to try too through Christ.Good, they are bad to the bone.
God have the capability to sin? What? No God can't sin, there is no capability for God to do wickedness whatsoever. God is love and there is no capability for God to sin. To say that, means that satan can tempt God, and God can't be tempted so God hasn't got the capability to sin.Adam was created with the capability to sin.
If he wasn't created with the capability to sin, then he could not have eaten the fruit and caused the fall.
But he did eat the fruit, and therefore we know he did have the capability to sin.
Adam was created with the capability to sin.
GOD's creation, including Adam, was called "good".
So there is no reason to doubt that GOD can have the capability to sin and still be called "good" because just having the capability does not mean you will.
We have the capability to sin because we are in flesh. This flesh is sinful, and we lust after it until God strengthens us through Christ to overcome.
By the power of the SpiritHow does He do that?
Unto what, coercion?By the power of the Spirit
No by showing me where I'm going wrong by guiding, teaching me and prompting me to do what's right. Giving me a strong conscience and strengthening me, helping me daily.Unto what, coercion?
No by showing me where I'm going wrong by guiding, teaching me and prompting me to do what's right. Giving me a strong conscience and strengthening me, helping me daily.
What has GOD ever done that was not for His own good?
There is no authorized Calvinism or Open theism. Every Calvinist and OVer is their own magisterium. You're right to notice that these arguments boil down to homonymy and ambiguity. Nothing's ever solved or resolved or finalized. These things are pointless.So far I've listen to just shy of one hour of the debate. I'm struck by the Calvinist's inability to have a conversation in the English language. All the words have weird and apparently ineffable meanings inside his mind. Notice that he asks "in what sense" repeatedly but never offers any understandable meaning of the words Will uses in his questions other than what they seem to mean. He says that there is more than one sense of (fill in the blank) but never offers what the other sense is or even attempts to define or describe it. The words Will uses in his question a simply loaded with meanings other than their normal meanings that the Calvinist (i.e. all Calvinists) is unable to articulate. Notice also how in one sentence the Calvinist is content with not having the ability to understand something about how God works but wants to charge the the Open Theist with being fallacious on the very same subject! He wants to eat his cake and have it too! You can't hold doctrines that you tacitly admit are irrational and then object to someone else's doctrine on the basis of him having made an error of logic.
Maybe is isn't the way God works that the Calvinist doesn't understand, maybe its the meaning of simple English words like "decree" and "make" and "can" and "ability" and "choose" and "necessary", etc, etc that he doesn't understand! Every thought of that?! And how would he know which of the two errors he was making? (He couldn't!)
Clete
The following is not directed at you, Tambora. I'm not going to say anything you disagree with. I'm just using your post as a springboard here...Adam was created with the capability to sin.
If he wasn't created with the capability to sin, then he could not have eaten the fruit and caused the fall.
But he did eat the fruit, and therefore we know he did have the capability to sin.
Adam was created with the capability to sin.
GOD's creation, including Adam, was called "good".
So there is no reason to doubt that GOD can have the capability to sin and still be called "good" because just having the capability does not mean you will.
There is no authorized Calvinism or Open theism. Every Calvinist and OVer is their own magisterium. You're right to notice that these arguments boil down to homonymy and ambiguity. Nothing's ever solved or resolved or finalized. These things are pointless.
There's no authorized Calvinism or Open Theism. You can say that the OV is definitely this or that, but I'll ask you to prove it, and you won't be able to, because there's no authorized Open View, just like there's no authorized Calvinism either. Debates between Calvinists and Open theists are like trying to pick up watermelon seeds by pinching them. Homonymy and ambiguity.What?
There's no authorized Calvinism or Open Theism. You can say that the OV is definitely this or that, but I'll ask you to prove it, and you won't be able to, because there's no authorized Open View, just like there's no authorized Calvinism either. Debates between Calvinists and Open theists are like trying to pick up watermelon seeds by pinching them. Homonymy and ambiguity.
I don't mind you using any post of mine.The following is not directed at you, Tambora. I'm not going to say anything you disagree with. I'm just using your post as a springboard here...
Ahhh, the word "good" and morality.To say that God is good is a statement of morality. You aren't simply stating that God is pleasing in some aesthetic or superficial way but you are saying that God is MORALLY good which means that God acts in the best interests of others and does not do evil.
Morality, however requires choice. If God only does what He does because He cannot do otherwise then it is meaningless to attribute any morality to His actions. If He has no ability to do otherwise then there is no choice and therefore His actions would be outside the purview of morality. Machines are not moral. Cause and effect is not a moral issue. Only when one chooses does morality enter into it.
The question then is this. Does Calvinism believe that God is good?
They cannot answer the question without redefining the words in the question. Morality, in the mind of the Calvinist, is meaningless when applied to God. Don't believe me? Ask one! Ask them, "Is God good?". They'll say, "Yes, of course He is." then ask them if God could have done something opposite of what He did, like declaring revenge murder to be just for example. Either way they answer, they render the meaning of "good" meaningless when applied to God.
Resting in Him,
Clete