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Featured Salvation Is By The Interposition And Mercy Of God Alone

Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by KenH, Sep 14, 2024.

  1. CJP69

    CJP69 Active Member

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    As Augustine and Calvin taught it, yes. All of the omni doctrines are overstatements of the biblical truth.

    Of course He can be!

    Genesis 6:6-7 "And the LORD was sorry that He had made man on the earth, and He was grieved in His heart. So the LORD said, 'I will destroy man whom I have created from the face of the earth, both man and beast, creeping thing and birds of the air, for I am sorry that I have made them.'"

    1 Samuel 15:11 "'I greatly regret that I have set up Saul as king, for he has turned back from following Me, and has not performed My commandments.' And it grieved Samuel, and he cried out to the LORD all night."

    Jeremiah 19:5 "They have also built the high places of Baal, to burn their sons with fire for burnt offerings to Baal, which I did not command or speak, nor did it come into My mind."

    Exodus 32:14 "So the LORD relented from the harm which He said He would do to His people."

    Isaiah 5:3-4 "And now, O inhabitants of Jerusalem and men of Judah, judge, please, between Me and My vineyard. What more could have been done to My vineyard that I have not done in it? Why then, when I expected it to bring forth good grapes, did it bring forth wild grapes?"​

    First of all, I do not suggest that God can sin, nor have I said anything here about God lying. However....

    I Kings 22:19 Then Micaiah said, “Therefore hear the word of the Lord: I saw the Lord sitting on His throne, and all the host of heaven standing by, on His right hand and on His left. 20 And the Lord said, ‘Who will persuade Ahab to go up, that he may fall at Ramoth Gilead?’ So one spoke in this manner, and another spoke in that manner. 21 Then a spirit came forward and stood before the Lord, and said, ‘I will persuade him.’ 22 The Lord said to him, ‘In what way?’ So he said, ‘I will go out and be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his prophets.’ And the Lord said, ‘You shall persuade him, and also prevail. Go out and do so.’ 23 Therefore look! The Lord has put a lying spirit in the mouth of all these prophets of yours, and the Lord has declared disaster against you.”​


    I'm quite aware of the passage. The context has to do with God's righteous character, which is quite immutable.

    However, the doctrine of immutability isn't merely about God's character but about is existence, His being and every aspect of it. Augustine and Calvin taught and based their doctrine on the premise that every single aspect of God's existence is absolutely immutable and they both believed that if God were to change AT ALL then He would no longer be perfect and therefore no longer be God.

    His character is constant but His mercy is contingent and predicated on justice and does not have to be offered at all and has not always been offered in equal measure at all times. Just ask anyone of Noah's neighbors.

    This question always takes me by surprise. I just cannot understand it.

    Do you have anyone in your life that you trust? Can your children trust you? Why?

    Is God not greater than you?

    Matthew 7:11 If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give good things to those who ask Him!​

    What is it about God being able to change His mind that makes it so that you can't trust Him? What is so off putting about acknowledging something as blatantly and obviously true as that God becoming a human being, suffering and dying and then rising from the dead, being real changes that God underwent for our sake? What is it about the incarnation that would imply that God is untrustworthy? He's existed for an infinitely long period of time and we have the testimony of all three members of the Trinity that each has treated the others with love and respect and affection and all other manner of righteousness for all that time but the testimony of those three witnesses is somehow no sufficient to convince you? You can't bring yourself to trust a God who CHOOSES to do rightly but insist that, if he wants your trust, He must be a stone idol who cannot have an emotion, cannot think a new thought, cannot change His mind and cannot be moved by anyone or anything, including love.

    By the way, with this verse you quoted, you've now cited all three of the most commonly used proof-texts that Calvinists typically site (whatever translation you're using is less than terrific but it'll do). Notice that none of them teach the doctrine of immutability. They teach that God is good and that He will always be good and cannot be otherwise. This much is both biblical and not in dispute. It also answers your question!

    I have no doubt that this is true but the problem is that their comments aren't illogical. That is to say that are logically consistent with their premises. If you accept their premises, which you clearly do, then you don't get to escape their logical consequences just because you don't like them. Ideas have consequences and if it is our goal to have a rationally consistent worldview then we don't get to cherry pick which truth claims we want to accept and which we don't. It's precept upon precept or else your doctrine is no more sound than if you simply made it up out of whole clothe. You just don't get to have your cake and eat it too.

    Calvin was wrong but he wasn't stupid. His doctrine (actually it was Augustine's doctrine. Luther was an Augustinian monk and Calvin just wrote down a "reformed" version of the same doctrine.) was very methodically and logically derived from the Aristotelian understanding of immutability, which goes well beyond simply saying that God's character is unchanging. On the contrary, it is ontological immutability that Augustine, Luther and Calvin believed and upon which Calvinism's distinctive doctrines logically flow from.
     
  2. CJP69

    CJP69 Active Member

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    You are a one liner, waste of band width.

    BORING!
     
  3. Earth Wind and Fire

    Earth Wind and Fire Well-Known Member
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    A
    Amen:Thumbsup
     
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  4. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    Your own theology has people saved prior to creation. For someone to be saved by Gods' grace would mean that they have met His stated requirement faith in Him. So while I can say I was saved by the grace of God I am not sure how you can claim such considering your theology.
     
  5. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    So you say but you continue to put forward their talking points.
     
  6. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    You write a lot to say very little. I do not care what Augustine or Calvin said. The bible shows me all I need to know about God. God regretting something is not Him changing. He has a plan for His creation and it will be carried out through means.

    I have seen from some of your posts that you do have a rather high view of yourself.

    You can continue to have your low view of God but why would you think others would follow your errant view.
     
  7. Van

    Van Well-Known Member
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    You were. :)

    I have actually studied the text and I have presented my authentic interpretation. Rather than rebuttal by snide aside, try challenging the basis of each point upon which you disagree. Then we will see just who is reading into the text!

    1) I have posted a thread on the actual contextual meaning of foreknowledge. It actually addresses information acquired or formulated in the past, but being utilized in the present. God had a plan to redeem believers, thus His target group was foreknown (known beforehand) and He had implemented His plan in the present, taking the actions stated.

    2) I have posted a thread on the errant translation of "pas" as "all things" as that rips the word out of context and applies to it the "everything imaginable" meaning. Utter nonsense.

    I could go on, but what would be the point?
     
  8. Earth Wind and Fire

    Earth Wind and Fire Well-Known Member
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    Paul said, "Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers" (II Corinthians 6:14a). "Be not carried about with divers and strange doctrines. For it is a good thing that the heart be established with grace...

    So I have no desire to interact with erroneous man made doctrine that relies on things not based on grace…of that I’m quite serious.
     
  9. KenH

    KenH Well-Known Member

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    Yes, that is what is revealed in the Bible.

    Ephesians 1:3-6 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ: according as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love: having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of his will, to the praise of the glory of his grace, wherein he hath made us accepted in the beloved.

    2 Timothy 1:7-11 For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind. Be not thou therefore ashamed of the testimony of our Lord, nor of me his prisoner: but be thou partaker of the afflictions of the gospel according to the power of God; who hath saved us, and called us with an holy calling, not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began, but is now made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour Jesus Christ, who hath abolished death, and hath brought life and immortality to light through the gospel: whereunto I am appointed a preacher, and an apostle, and a teacher of the Gentiles.

    "Justification is an act of God's grace, flowing from his sovereign good will and pleasure; the elect of God are said to be "justified by his grace"; and as if that expression was not strong enough to set forth the freeness of it, the word "freely" is added elsewhere; "Being justified freely by his grace" (Titus 3:7; Romans 3:24 ). Justification is by many divines distinguished into active and passive. Active justification is the act of God; it is God that justifies. Passive justification is the act of God, terminating on the conscience of a believer, commonly called a transient act, passing upon an external object. It is not of this I shall now treat, but of the former; which is an act internal and eternal, taken up in the divine mind from eternity, and is an immanent, abiding one in it; it is, as Dr. Ames expresses it, "a sentence conceived in the divine mind, by the decree of justifying." Now, as before observed, as God's will to elect, is the election of his people, so his will to justify them, is the justification of them; as it is an immanent act in God, it is an act of his grace towards them, is wholly without them, entirely resides in the divine mind, and lies in his estimating, accounting, and constituting them righteous, through the righteousness of his Son; and, as such, did not first commence in time, but from eternity."

    - excerpt from John Gill's A Body of Doctrinal Divinity
     
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  10. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    You must have a different bible than I have as I do not see John Gill listed in mine. You should get your theology from scripture not what some man tells you scripture says.
     
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  11. CJP69

    CJP69 Active Member

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    I say very little that you care to respond to, you mean.

    I didn't say you did. What I said is that those are who your doctrine came from and I also told you where they got it from and it wasn't the bible. Do you care about that?

    Every Christian says this and yet they believe that God is arbitrary and that He knows things that even He said He didn't know.

    Meaningless.

    The Calvinist doctrine of regeneration is the opposite of biblical. They load meaning into the word that the bible doesn't teach and that no one would believe if not for Augustine importing pagan Greek philosophy into the church in the 4th century.

    Not myself, per se, just in my own ability to defend what I believe with sound reason and the plain reading of the text of scripture. A skill I have learned over decades of study and practice.

    Is it errant because you say so?

    What have I claimed that I have not provided biblical evidence for; evidence that you ignore and then show up here to slander and insult me, one single sentence after chiding me about having a high view of myself.

    The history of Calvinistic doctrine as I have presented it isn't even in dispute, nor could it be because it's super easy for even a total novice to look up. Calvinists themselves will tell you the history of their doctrine and they're proud to do so. They do not care that the arguments they use proceeded first from the mouth of homosexual Greek philosophers. You don't seem to care about it either and want to stick your head in the sand concerning this undeniably factual history and then talk to me about how all you need is the bible when major aspects of your doctrine do not come from the bible and make God into a stone idol that would break if He so much as lifted a finger because that would be a change and that change would mean that God either hadn't been or now is no longer perfect, as Socrates, Aristotle and Plato taught - NOT THE BIBLE!!!
     
    #51 CJP69, Sep 19, 2024 at 4:05 PM
    Last edited: Sep 19, 2024 at 4:13 PM
  12. CJP69

    CJP69 Active Member

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    Funny how they think that if they show up and quote someone else stating their doctrine that it counts as some sort of actual argument when its just them finding a way to repeat themselves.
     
  13. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    Why do you continue to go back to calvinism? Is it the bogeyman that you can not deal with? If you have read many of my posts you will see that I have pointed out the pagan foundation calvinism many times.

    What you think re the bible is your choice but it does not impact what I think. You have read the bible to find the view that you hold but that is just your opinion.

    You say God is not immutable and I say that He is so we disagree. Here is a quote that I think sums it up quite well:

    "The plans of God never change; and all the hope which we can have of heaven is founded on the fact that his purpose is immutable. {does not change}
    If He changed his plans; if He was controlled by caprice; if He willed one thing today and another thing tomorrow, who could confide in Him, or who would have any hope of heaven?
    No one
    would know what to expect; and no one could put confidence in Him." Barnes

    Yes I know that Barnes was a calvinist but he does express the biblical truth quite well and I think better than I would have.


    Gods' plan was always to provide a means for man to be saved Genesis 3:15 and we see this brought to completion in Christ 1 John 2:2 so that the desire of God could be fulfilled 1 Timothy 2:4. Now you may not agree with me and that is your choice but I have no problem in trusting in our unchanging sovereign God.

    So I have to ask, why do you question the attributes of God? Which ones do you not agree with?

    If I did not think your view was in error then we would be in agreement and thus we would not be having this exchange now would we.

    FYI my biblical view did not come from either calvinism or arminianism as I had not heard of them until just a few years ago. They are just mans' way of trying to systematize how God deals with His creation and why / how they are saved.
     
  14. CJP69

    CJP69 Active Member

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    I am not responding to your previous posts. I am responding to what you've written and "The doctrines of Grace" is specifically and explicitly a Calvinist term. If you quack like a duck then don't get offended when someone responds to you as though you've got feathers and webbed feet.

    Besides, whether you call yourself a Calvinist or not, the term "Calvinism" is an excellent word to use in reference to the doctrines which you are defending. It is precisely because of silly reactions such as you are displaying here that I often include the term "Augustinian" which covers every single variant of the doctrines, including those held by Catholics, Lutherans, Episcopalians, Baptists and whatever other flavor of the doctrine you care to name. The point is that it doesn't matter what you call it so long as what we're talking about is being communicated.

    Is that really what you believe; that everyone's doctrine is nothing more than a collection of their own personal opinions?

    That must surely include your own, which is a stunning admission on your part.

    First of all, there is no need to alter the font color when posting a link. It changes on it own and when you do it, if forces the person responding to you to go in and undo your change or else their response looks like this.

    Barnes was a fool and so are you if you agree with that pathetic line of stupidity. It's nothing at all but a glaring display of the opposite of faith. He is saying that if God had a choice, He'd betray everyone and the only reason He can be trusted is precisely because He has no choice.

    Question: What does this mean in regards to God's moral character?

    Answer: Blank out.

    And so what's your problem with me using the term "Calvinist"?

    More importantly, how is it that the pagan foundation of that utterly unbiblical and even blasphemous nonsense doesn't cause you to reject it? Which should be the bigger motivation to reject that doctrine? The pagan origins that you yourself concede and claim to have pointed out to others, or the fact the it removes all meaning of the word "righteous" when applied to God's character? I mean, either one is more than enough! Pick one and run with it!


    This argument makes no sense. God does not have to be immutable to have a plan and to succeed in getting it done. On the contrary! If God is immutable then He the arsonist who showed up to put out the fire that He started and then demands a hero's praise for have saved a tiny percentage of the people that He set of fire! What sort of plan is that?

    If God is an "unchanging sovereign" God, then He wins the chess game because He predestined all the moves, not because He more clever, more wise or mightier than His enemies but because He's rigged it! Such a god is like the marionette that puts on a scene where the "good guy" wins and then declares to the audience "See what a great god I am! You think that's awesome? Watch this! I can become one of My own puppets and pull my own strings along with everyone else's! Wow! I'm am I the G.O.A.T. or what?!"

    It's just completely asinine from start to finish!

    The biblical ones!

    First and foremost God is living, personal, rational, relational, loving and righteous ('righteous' includes a whole list of other things like faithfulness, patience, justice, etc.) and all perfectly so. These are what I refer to as the qualitative attributes of God, in that they deal with the quality of God's nature. These qualitative attribute do take precedence over what I refer to as the quantitative attributes of God which deal with how big God is, how much power He has, how much God knows, etc. These are where the omni-doctrines come in, and while I have no objection to the use of those terms in general use, their use in regards to debating doctrine lends strongly toward creating a lot of confusion because they are so loaded with meaning that goes well beyond what the bible actually teaches. With that in mind....

    God knows everything that is knowable but is not required to know every detail of all existence.
    God can do anything that is doable. (i.e. God cannot do the absurd. He cannot make spheres with flat sides, He cannot go to or be in a place does not exist, He cannot justly punish a non-volitional act, etc.)
    God is everywhere He wants to be at once.

    God is also sovereign but not in the sense you use the word which is a religious (specifically an Augustinian) modification of the word's meaning. God is the highest authority that exists but He has delegated real authority to others and has given them the ability to exercise that authority to make real decisions that have real consequences that God Himself can and does deal with as they happen. Being sovereign, He is, of course, able to recall any delegated authority at His sole discretion.

    Psalm 89:14 Righteousness and justice are the foundation of your throne...​

    There are volumes more that could be stated in answer to your question but that'll do for now. If you can refute a syllable of it, I'll hear it gladly!

    Shall I start calling you Capt. Obvious?

    This is just such a pathetic thing that Calvinists constantly say to me! It is almost always a lie and when it isn't, it just displays the weakest ability to think that I can imagine. It doesn't matter whether you believe in Calvinism because you read Calvin. The fact is that whoever taught it to you got it from Calvin or whoever taught to that person got it from Calvin. The source is still Calvin (and Augustine before him and Aristotle before him) regardless of how many generations of theologians it to took to get it to your ears.

    Your argument is like standing in my yard while I'm watering the grass and then denying you got wet with tap water because the water that got you wet fell from 30 feet in the air. Never mind the fact that it was up there because it had been sprayed from my lawn sprinkler that was attached to a hose which was in turn attached to plumbing in my house.

    It isn't the motive that's the problem, it's the premises from which they proceed to take on that task. Their premise is a false pagan Greek philosophical idea, not a biblical one.
     
    #54 CJP69, Sep 20, 2024 at 11:53 AM
    Last edited: Sep 20, 2024 at 12:02 PM
  15. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    I only had to read the first few lines to see that you are so misinformed that it is beyond belief. The doctrines that I am defending are not calvinist but they are biblical. You do not seem to understand the difference. You should spend more time in bible study since you do not understand what Gods' attributes are.

    You continue to give your opinion and that is your right but we do not have to accept your views.

    I am surprised that you would condemn me for reading calvin since you must also read him if you say I do. Further to that do you not think it is a good idea to understand what the other person thinks if you are going to argue with them. I have also read some of the Quarn, does that make me a muslim? What about the NWT does that make me a JW or the doctrine & covenants and pearl of great price am I now a mormon?

    Your logic is flawed.
     
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