it was the Will of God that His people as a whole would reject Him, God would preserve and save out a faithful remnant, and through their rejection salvation be offerred to both Jews/Gentiles alike...
HOW was that a "failure to having His will done?"
Do non-cals believe in omniscience?
Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by Luke2427, Feb 14, 2012.
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As I stated before: I concede that if one accepts the typical God 'foreknows and permits all things view' of the 'Arminian' (which I also believe is speculative in that it is anthropomorphic language) then their is a problem of: Why didn't God prevent instead of permit evil, and why did he ALLOW all those people to make free choices to reject Him and go to Hell?
But that is a much DIFFERENT problem than that of the determinist (compatibilist). As the question for a determinist would be: Why did God cause (determine) evil and then hold all those billions of people responsible for it?
Yes, both are problems, but they are very different problems. God permitting evil to enter the world and allowing billions of people to suffer the consequences of their free moral choices, is a very different problem than God causing evil to enter the world (through secondary means etc) so that billions of people would certainly suffer the consequences of God's decreed choices so as to bring Himself glory.
To equate those two as being equal problems is a fallacy of the the greatest magnitude. And is the "YOU TOO" fallacy to which I was referring... You can't answer the problem with your system so you point to a PERCEIVED problem within mine instead, but our problem is not near as severe as your problem and in fact, our problem is ONLY a problem IF one refuses to appeal to mystery regarding divine knowledge as it relates to God's creation of time and finite creatures with morally accountable wills. -
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Show me where Jesus ever said it was his Father's will that any person be lost. -
Let me put this another way:
Suppose you have a dad in your congregation who is having a problem with his rebellious teenage daughter. He knows that you too have a daughter, so comes to you for counsel.
He tells you that he gets up every morning a slips a mind altering drug into his daughters orange juice every morning without her knowing which causes her to be unable to obey him, so when she doesn't obey he punishes her, pleads with her to repent and she just keep rebelling.
After hearing this you say, "Bro, stop drugging you daughter, you are causing her to remain in her rebellion and then punishing her for rebelling and that is unfair."
He responds and says, "Well, you are doing that too."
You say, "What?! How am I doing that to my daughter?"
He says, "Well, before having kids didn't you KNOW for certain that they would rebel and sin?"
You say, "Yes."
He says, "See, but you chose to have her anyway, right? So, you caused her rebellion."
You say, "Bro, that is TOTALLY different from what you are doing."
He says, "NO ITS NOT...and puts his fingers in his ears and runs away."
That is what I feel like in this discussion. I know, this analogy is just an analogy and it doesn't perfectly represent all the claims of your system, but its not meant to. Its meant to show you the DISTINCTION between someone merely FOREKNOWING and permitting sin versus PREDETERMINING sin. We don't believe God's knowing something before it happens is what fixes it (i.e. 'it must happen because God knows it' vs. 'God knows that it will happen.'). Such arguments are all based in linear timebased, finite constructs. -
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NONEof us were "good people/able to decide to allow God to save us!" -
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See the difference?
By the way, 'because they freely happened' ('them' being the subject) is an unbiblical fallacy and illogical, basing the whole thing on chance happenings, instead of upon the God who has chosen those who are saved.
To Calvinists He causes salvation, contrary to the human determinism of Arminian theology which Edwards describes with great acumen, that it is the persons will that is deterministic (in their theology), and he is spot on.
Again, to 'us' we see it is God that is the determining factor, not our will. -
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Calvinists mistakenly presume God wants all the glory for himself when clearly in His infinite wisdom and grace He has always planned for our glory. In so doing he makes the riches of his glory all the more known. They think they are doing God a favor by painting him as a omni-everything, deterministically sovereign being who is really only interested in his own pleasure and glory. But, it baffles me as to how one would think such a view of God is glorifying. Horrifying maybe, but glorifying?
God is love. He is gracious, long-suffering, patient with sinners, longing to gather them under his saving wings, not wanting for any to perish but all to come to repentance and reconciliation. He is HOLY, and doesn't even tempt men to sin, much less effectually and unchangeable decree it. -
I won't tarry long with you here. Have you seen the numerous times in Scriptures where those chosen are glorifying He who had chosen them?
And yet you ask how can He get glory in choosing?
Surely you've seen this truth of God being glorified by those whom He has chosen, and for this fact. The NT epistles are laden with this truth. Acts is another example.
Have you not read in the Scriptures examples of those whom God rejects? If one thinks it unfair then they refuse to trust God, and cannot glorify Him for His Omniscience, Sovereignty and purpose. -
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Here was my answer:
Your question was plain and to the point, I answered it, now you're dodging and changing directions pretending you meant something else completely? Come on. I'm not buying it. You're being disingenuous.
God rejecting others is not Him rejecting Himself. That's utterly ridiculous and unfounded in Scripture.
Answer my post where I showed your error in your questioning 'how can God be glorified if He chooses us.' (to paraphrase your question)
Answer it and stay on track and quit dodging, and show or acknowledge how in Scripture He is glorified in choosing us, as I alluded to, and show how you acting as if you don't get it is unreasonable when it is plainly taught throughout the Scriptures.
I answered you, now you want to ignore this as if it doesn't exist and doesn't show your error.
I find it quite odd how you and others make pretense of desire to be faced with truth, yet when you are, you do not own up to what is plainly showed you, and want to change the channel as if you meant something else altogether. Will we talk next that what you really meant is what was Noahs Ark made of? -
God ALWAYS INTENDED to share His GLORY with man... Okay. There is a term for that concept. REBELLION. -
He seemed to think you were asking how God's get glory from choosing, when it is clear you were asking about how God gets glory from causing (by irresistible grace/regeneration) a select number of people to choose him.
It's the difference in finding a wife who genuinely loves you and freely chooses to marry you versus the casting a spell method like you see in the movie Sheik where a love potion causes someone to love another. The first clearly is more glorious.
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