steaver
I see you skating around the question, dont worry about it..
Are you serious? I gave you my answers and they are specific. Now were is yours?
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steaver
I see you skating around the question, dont worry about it..
Could you elaborate on this? Are you now saying Adam was not perfect before he sinned?
You obviously don't take your point of view to its logical conclusion. Satan also was created without a sin nature yet he consieved pride in his heart. How is this possible if he did not have a sin nature and God Decrees all things? Following this logic to its conclusion lays the blame of Satan's fall, Man's disobedience soley at the feet of God and thus makes calvary nothing more than God cleaning up his own mess. God therefore decreed satan would fall, and man would fall, but that only certain men based on a random system of choice (uncondition election) would be saved by calvary. Thus ultimately God is the cause of sin which is impossible according to scriptures.I'm not sure we could say "pride" was any part of the sin. Afterall, Adam was without any sin nature. Pride would not have existed within him.
What in reallity was the choice Adam was given? Was it eat or not eat? Was the test a test of obedience?
I say we must look beyond the tree, beyond the command even. What really is the choice God presented to Adam and Eve?
Think about it a bit more Thinkingstuff, this is a good brain exercise for a screen name such as yours. Lol. I know you will see it plainly if I say it, but I want to give you a bit more time before I say.
God Bless!
Let us cut to the chase. The Bible explicitly denies that God can be tempted with sin or can tempt man to sin:
James 1:13 ¶ Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of God: for God cannot be tempted with evil, neither tempteth he any man:
On the other hand you are charging God with the purposed intention to tempt man not only to sin but set him up purposely so he would sin.
Furthermore, James explicitly states there is no shady side to God's nature as he is wholly righteous without sin:
James 1:17 Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.
On the other hand, you are charging God will sinful motives as you make him the author of sin.
Moreover, James explicitly states that sin exists if one fails in only one point in all the law:
James 2:10 For whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all.
Jesus was the revelation of God in human flesh and concerning Christ it is said that he Knew no sin, did no sin and neither was sin found in him and He is the Creator (Jn. 1:1). However, you claim that sin found its origin in the Creator as you claim he purposed sin and conceived it by His plan to set up Adam to fail.
These scriptures IN PRINCIPLE flatly contradict your theory.
James 1:13 ¶ Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of God: for God cannot be tempted with evil, neither tempteth he any man:
It does create somewhat of a quandary I must admit? But then there is Job....
"And the LORD said unto Satan, Hast thou considered my servant Job,"
"What? shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil? In all this did not Job sin with his lips."
Again I ask, who's plan is it?
I don't see any PRINCIPLE contrary to my belief in this scripture. The Sovereignty of God in even sin is a strange thing for us to understand indeed. Yet it is there to glorify Jesus Christ. Read what Job had to say about the evil that came upon him. He said it was from God.
This response is irrational. You are assuming your own position matches God's plan! That is circular reasoning. The problem is not Whose plan it is, the problem is your understanding and interpretation of that plan.
No, it actually came directly from Satan - read the story. God simply gave Satan permission. God uses Satan to glorify himself and allowing Satan permission was not without restrictions was it? Hence, the principle in Psalm 96:10 is at work in the story of Job.
Actually, the scriptures in James in principle directly contradict your theory in the most blantant way possible.
1. You say God tempted man to sin by setting him up purposely to sin - James says that is not possible.
2. You say God is the author/source of sin- James and clouds of other inspired writers vehemently deny that accusation claiming He is perfectly holy and without sin, He knows no sin and cannot sin and in him there is no "shadow" but pure light of righteousness.
3. You say God is the creator of sin but God says when he created ALL THINGS they were "very good" and God says he cannot look upon sin with approval.
Your theory flatly contradicts the explicit teachings of scriptures and the scriptures you attempt to pit against the explicit statements about his character, his creation, his motives can be intepreted to perfectly harmonize with them instead of contradicting them.
Jesus sure never preached "TULIP", but this is what He taught:
Matthew 11:28-30
28 Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
THe same could be said of TULIP's theory of TD and IG.
Another play with words. What is the difference between "allows" and "causes". I believe God is Sovereign and acts upon HIs own Providence and Purpose.
God did set Adam up to fail, this is fact seeing how it is God who implemented His plan with full knowledge of the outcome. God could have said no to this plan and developed another that would not envolve sin, but He didn't, He chose the BEST plan. Thus, the quandary raised with James. Maybe a closer look at what James was refering to is in order.
However, they will not repent unless God grants repentance, not according to justice but according to grace:
Acts 11:18 When they heard these things, they held their peace, and glorified God, saying, Then hath God also to the Gentiles granted repentance unto life.
Paul teaches very clearly that by "ONE MAN'S DISOBEDENCE" many were made sinners, many were condemned and by ONE MAN death came upon all men. And by that ONE MAN'S DISOBEDIENCE all men sinned in Adam and absolute proof is that infants die, who have not committed any individualized sin by choice.
I believe that Adam intentionally (exercise of free choice) chose to rather die with Eve than to live without Eve (1 Tim. 2:13) because of misdirected "love" for her. Misdirected, because it was not evil to love Eve and it is honorable to give up your own life out of love for another. However, the evil here, is that he chose to "love" Eve ABOVE God. The same is true in Lucifer which in reality becomes "self" love.
Of course this is just theory, no scripture states it is so. But I would point to Adam's response to God in Gen 3:12 which pretty much throws Eve under the bus. Doesn't really support your love theory much.
And Steaver too -- had I not read every post in this entire thread, I would get the impression that Steaver is arguing for Calvinism and Dr. Walter is arguing against it.
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Of course this is just theory, no scripture states it is so. But I would point to Adam's response to God in Gen 3:12 which pretty much throws Eve under the bus. Doesn't really support your love theory much.
Dr. Walter,
I have found your posts illuminating, well articulated, and a thoroughly accurate exegesis of scripture. That being said, I wholeheartedly disagree with your conclusion that TULIP is an accurate theology. Whatever version of TULIP you are advocating, it is spectacularly divergent from any common view of Calvinism I've ever heard. For example, I don't know any Calvinists who believe in free will. They believe so strongly in the Sovereignty of God that free will infringes on that sovereignty. (I believe Deuteronomy 30:1, 19 show that God gives us a choice)
Your interpretation of Acts 11:18b is that God must grant someone repentance in order for them to change their heart condition from darkness to light.
This is an incorrect interpretation for the following two reasons:
1) By the context we see that the point in question was whether salvation was for the Jews only, or if God made it available also to the Gentiles. The point of the verse is not to say that God must grant salvation to a person before their heart can change, but rather to say that God has included the Gentiles in the plan for salvation, and it is not specific to the Jews alone.
2) The verse lacks individual specificity. The verse says "Well then, God has granted to the Gentiles also the repentance that leads to life." Had it said "God has granted Maximus repentance" or "God has granted him repentance," then it would refer to an individual. However, the verse states that God has granted "the gentiles" the repentance that leads to salvation. "The gentiles" is a pretty broad group of persons who have been "granted repentance." Under your interpretation of this verse, "all gentiles" must necessarily have had their heart changed from darkness to light.
Dr. Walter,
In question is Romans 5:12 -
Rom 5:12 Therefore, just as through one man sin entered into the world, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men, because all sinned
You also say the fact that infants, who have not committed a sin, die is proof. The biggest reason for this misinterpretation is that - Jesus died. Does this prove that Jesus was a sinner?
His rational occurred BEFORE his fall into sin. After the fall into sin we see the effects of sin trying to escape his previous decisions - that is what sin does, it turns you on self. Indeed, his original rationale was reality a selfish pattern of thought but when implemented it produced a self-centered man.