You still aren't getting it.
There is no "that world."
There is only "the world."
You keep reading your beliefs into the text as if that makes them correct, but it doesn't.
The world was dead. God gave His life, His own received Him not.
Those are the facts.
Saying it doesn't make it so.
Lazarus was told to "come forth." He wasn't given anything other than a command.
You have yet to establish this, and I have already debunked it.
Again, Lazarus was given a command to come forth, and naught else.
If you're going to continue to use Lazarus as your defence for calvinism, I'm going to point out that if you're right, then Jesus saying what He said in John 11:14-15 makes no sense at all.
Then Jesus said to them plainly,
“Lazarus is dead.And I am glad for your sakes that I was not there, that you may believe. Nevertheless let us go to him.” - John 11:14-15
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=John11:14-15&version=NKJV
As Dr. Leighton Flowers puts it:
"If effectual grace causes faith, then it would seem superfluous to refer to a miracle as helping them to believe. The Bible never once relates Lazarus' death or his resurrection to our individual salvation.
A better understanding of the idiomatic use of deadness in the New Testament is to understand it as separation from God due to our rebellion. Jesus' parable of the prodigal Son is a perfect example of one who was separated from the father due to rebellion. As the father concluded upon the son's arrival home, 'for this son of mine was dead, and he is alive again. He was lost, and is found.' Luke 15:24.
His deadness is in reference to his lost-ness, or his separation from the father due to rebellion. not a lack of moral capacity to respond and to humbly return home in humiliation." |