Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
Winman, you just don't get it. God caused the prodigal to demand his inheritance and He caused him to spend his money on alcohol, parties and hookers and He caused him to work in a hog lot and He caused him to come home and then He caused him to repent. And then God caused his brother to act like a horses behind.
We are nothing more than God's little chess pieces being moved about by God just because He can. Don't you understand this is what glorifies Him??????!!!???
![]()
Winman, you just don't get it. God caused the prodigal to demand his inheritance and He caused him to spend his money on alcohol, parties and hookers and He caused him to work in a hog lot and He caused him to come home and then He caused him to repent. And then God caused his brother to act like a horses behind.
We are nothing more than God's little chess pieces being moved about by God just because He can. Don't you understand this is what glorifies Him??????!!!???
![]()
That is why some time ago on another thread I asked him what the difference was between his view of the nature of God, and Islam. Both believe in fatalism.Yes, I do believe this is exactly what Luke is saying. God is impersonal to him. He is just a tyrant who controls every little event in the universe to please himself. I sense no love here whatsoever. He doesn't care about us at all, we are simply instruments or tools that he uses for his pleasure.
This is very different from my conception of God.
I completely agree with your sentiment. God desires me to glorify him, by my choosing to do so. He does not NEED me to, nor NEED me to sin so that He can be even further glorified. This questions the asiety of God.
Luke, did you see my reply to you at post 65
It does not matter what you think or what you feel or what you believe or what comforts you or what disturbs you. All that matters is what is true.
It most certainly does matter what we believe. It will determine where we will spend eternity. It will determine what kind of lives as believers we live, whether one pleasing to God or one of rebellion.
That is why some time ago on another thread I asked him what the difference was between his view of the nature of God, and Islam. Both believe in fatalism.
If God determines or ordains evil, terrorism, abortion, etc. then "it is the will of God." That is fatalism.
The Muslim believes that when a terrorist act occurs, an abortion occurs, a murder occurs, as abhorrent it may even to them, then it must be the will of Allah. He decreed it to be so. It is a basic tenet of Islam called "Kismet" or "fatalism."
I realize that there is a great difference between our respective "Gods," but the way of how we view this doctrine (if this is the way it is viewed), is basically the same, is it not?
Yes, it is fatalism. I cannot imagine how different my own viewpoint would be if I believed this, nothing would really matter. In fact, I can only imagine that a person would soon surrender to complete apathy. Does it matter if I am good or not? What is the difference? It is not really me doing it anyway, it is God moving me, whatever it is. If he wants me to do good I will despite myself, if he wants me to do evil it is the same. There is nothing I should be ashamed of, whatever I do was decreed, it was meant to be. Likewise, there is nothing to joy about, does someone love you? No, they are simply moved to appear so. We are all simply being moved about, shuffled about, not knowing why, not being allowed to ask, but if we do, that too was decided for me long before I was born. I am just a fleck of dust blowing here and there, all is randomness to me.
That is because you lack the capacity to think past your own caricature of the DoG.
God is a personal God.
God is intimately involved in the lives of his people, calling upon them to cast their cares upon him and to pray unto him and he answers those prayers.
He loves his people.
Only someone totally ignorant of church history and the DoG would argue that Calvinism leads to fatalism or an impersonal god.
This is why I continue to implore you to get some decent training before you deal with these issues which are right now too great for you.
The personal insult concerning intelligence is not needed.That is because you lack the capacity to think past your own caricature of the DoG.
God is a personal God.
That is the position that every non-cal takes. You have yet to demonstrate how a God that determines and ordains evil is personally involved to the extent that he answers prayer when those prayers and the answers are already determined and ordained before the creation of the world.God is intimately involved in the lives of his people, calling upon them to cast their cares upon him and to pray unto him and he answers those prayers.
We agree.He loves his people.
Do away with the insults please, lest you find all of your posts edited.Only someone totally ignorant of church history and the DoG would argue that Calvinism leads to fatalism or an impersonal god.
You have been quoted portions from a well-known Calvinist, and yet disagree. Your come back is for others to get a decent training. What about yourself? Your arrogance is unbecoming of this board. If you can't answer a post then say so, but at least say it politely.This is why I continue to implore you to get some decent training before you deal with these issues which are right now too great for you.
If I lack the capacity to reason, it was decreed. Why fight fate?
Does God love me? Then why does he not trust me to make my own decisions?
Why should I call upon him to save a loved one, it was decided long ago, and nothing can alter his decree.
If he answers a prayer, it is only because he moved me to pray for that which he had already decided to grant. If I pray and he does not answer me, it was decided before as well. And why think on prayer? If he has decreed I will, I will. I will wait to see what happens, that is all that is left to me.
Even a freshman in bible college knows the difference between Fate and Predestination.
Fate is an impersonal, unintelligent force. You need to get this right.
You keep regurgitating the same tired old mess that has already been shown to be false.
Every man makes his own decisions.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
Maybe one day you'll get this.
You see, we Calvinists get frustrated with you because you never debate us. You don't have the slightest idea what Calvinism is as is clear yet again from the words of this very post. So you are forever debating some straw man constructed from a total ignorance of theology which you possess and your condition seems incurable.
Even in this weird nameless theology you espouse, even in this strange theology which you invented for yourself, God decided long ago who would be saved.
So what is your point?
Yea, it would be unthinkable that God would have to move your depraved self to do something. Oh, NO! You do not need GOD to move you to pray!!!! You can do it yourself!! Who needs God??
And it is your denial of omniscience that drives you to keep indicating that perhaps God has NOT already in eternity past decided to grant or not grant your prayers.
Of course he HAS!
:laugh:
Even a freshman in bible college knows the difference between Fate and Predestination.
Fate is an impersonal, unintelligent force. You need to get this right.
You keep regurgitating the same tired old mess that has already been shown to be false.
Every man makes his own decisions.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
God does not force people against their will.
Maybe one day you'll get this.
You see, we Calvinists get frustrated with you because you never debate us. You don't have the slightest idea what Calvinism is as is clear yet again from the words of this very post. So you are forever debating some straw man constructed from a total ignorance of theology which you possess and your condition seems incurable.
Even in this weird nameless theology you espouse, even in this strange theology which you invented for yourself, God decided long ago who would be saved.
So what is your point?
Yea, it would be unthinkable that God would have to move your depraved self to do something. Oh, NO! You do not need GOD to move you to pray!!!! You can do it yourself!! Who needs God??
And it is your denial of omniscience that drives you to keep indicating that perhaps God has NOT already in eternity past decided to grant or not grant your prayers.
Of course he HAS!
:laugh:
fate
[feyt]
noun, verb, fat·ed, fat·ing.
–noun
1. something that unavoidably befalls a person; fortune; lot: It is always his fate to be left behind.
2. the universal principle or ultimate agency by which the order of things is presumably prescribed; the decreed cause of events; time: Fate decreed that they would never meet again.
3. that which is inevitably predetermined; destiny: Death is our ineluctable fate.
4. a prophetic declaration of what must be: The oracle pronounced their fate.
5. death, destruction, or ruin.
6. the Fates, Classical Mythology . the three goddesses of destiny, known to the Greeks as the Moerae and to the Romans as the Parcae.
–verb (used with object)
7. to predetermine, as by the decree of fate; destine (used in the passive): a person who was fated to be the savior of the country.
Exactly, thanks.
1fate
noun \ˈfāt\
Definition of FATE
1
: the will or principle or determining cause by which things in general are believed to come to be as they are or events to happen as they do : destiny
2
a : an inevitable and often adverse outcome, condition, or end b : disaster; especially : death
3
a : final outcome b : the expected result of normal development <prospective fate of embryonic cells> c : the circumstances that befall someone or something <did not know the fate of her former classmates>
4
plural capitalized : the three goddesses who determine the course of human life in classical mythology
You cannot see that he is a person like us.
Yes... he is a person.
God is ... is a person.
It tells me that you are messed up.
You may sin because you want to, but I sin even though I don't want to. My heart's desire is to please God. Paul understood this war in me.
Romans 7:18-20 For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh,) dwells no good thing: for to will is present with me; but how to perform that which is good I find not. For the good that I would I do not: but the evil which I would not, that I do. Now if I do that which I would not, it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwells in me.
Pray tell what greater good is accomplished by my sin or yours?
God commands us to sin NOT. You have God causing us to rebel against Him. That doesn't even make sense.
The Merriam-Webster makes it even clearer than dictionary.com:
And so we see that no reputable theologian would compare Fate to even the most hyper version of the DoG.
Fate is the force doing the determining where, in ALL Christian theology, GOD, who is all wise and perfect and holy, is doing the determining.
These are the second and third definitions of the ones given for fate.2. the universal principle or ultimate agency by which the order of things is presumably prescribed; the decreed cause of events; time: Fate decreed that they would never meet again.
3. that which is inevitably predetermined; destiny: Death is our ineluctable fate.