HP said "God being Sovereign can do that……or is this yet one other thing a Sovereign God cannot do"
Can a Soverign God lie? Shall NEVER perish?
Can a Soverign God lie? Shall NEVER perish?
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JK: Watching too much Dancing with the Stars? lol You tried to point out to us something YOU was wrong about.....so you now avoid Shall NEVER perish text? Come now lets be reasonable.
HP: I am not avoiding anything. I simply was not thinking of that text when I posted. I was right about the text I had in mind, and as I recall you never posted a reference anyway. If you desire to be understood correctly, post a specific reference next time. It you desire to address that issue in particular, start a thread concerning it. If you want to discuss the issue at hand on this thread, address the questions and subject of the OP.
Tell us JK, are there any conditions to salvation?
I am waiting for you to give a "right" answer for you incorrect answer from before. Please don't ask if you cannot finish what you started.:smilewinkgrin:Tell us JK, are there any conditions to salvation?
No, God cannot lie, but He can breach or revoke a promise without lying.
Matt 18 provides the example given by Christ of "forgiveness revoked"
John 15:1-6 gives the example provided by Christ of "branches in Me" that are "removed" and cast into the fire.
Romans 11 gives the warning via the writing of Paul "you should fear for you stand only by your faith - if He did not spare them neither will He spare you".
The references keep going - but you get the general idea.
Of course there is no such doctrine as "forgiveness revoked." It is a unique "Bob Ryan" doctrine
.
If you knew by allowing your child to ride the bike your child would be killed, would you still allow your child to ride the bike?
:jesus:
For every effect there is said to be a cause. If one is saved there must be a cause. If God is the sole cause, and no conditions are in effect, God must of necessity be the sole cause of salvation. If God is the sole cause of salvation, man plays no other part than a lucky recipient of salvation, and those that are lost are lost for a lack of being chosen to salvation. If God is the sole cause of salvation, He of necessity would be the sole cause of those not receiving salvation. In any event, logic demands that double predestination rules, just as Calvin clearly understood it to be so.![]()
HP: I was right about the text I had in mind,
If God KNEW Lucifer would fall and become the devil - would God have made Lucifer a "robot" instead?
Are you sure you thought that one through??
in Christ,
Bob
Steaver: If you knew by allowing your child to ride the bike your child would be killed, would you still allow your child to ride the bike?
>Indeed - unconditional election turns into "arbitrary selection"
Does it matter if the null position is "elect?" and people must opt out to avoid their being saved? In other words, is there any theological implication to the statement of Lot's wife, "Curse God and die?"
Allowing "for evil" is like saying "I showed my child how to ride the bike - but I am allowing for the condiition that they just might fall a few times while riding that bike
Thus to "allow for a condition" in which they might fall -- by not physically putting your hand on the bike and never letting them ride the bike alone - is not the same thing as "making them fall".
The parent always wants the child to grow and learn.
The parent knows this will not happen if you treat the child like a toy doll and never let him/her do anything on their own.
Bob said:If God KNEW Lucifer would fall and become the devil - would God have made Lucifer a "robot" instead?
Are you sure you thought that one through??
I am on my chess game :thumbs:
Just waiting ...
>Indeed - unconditional election turns into "arbitrary selection"
Does it matter if the null position is "elect?" and people must opt out to avoid their being saved? In other words, is there any theological implication to the statement of Lot's wife, "Curse God and die?"