Quote:
Originally Posted by
Brother Bob
1. Did God have to change your heart so you would believe in Christ?
Yes. He had to take a stubborn rebellious heart and soften it toward him.
(So we see God, being partial)
Originally Posted by Hanna (why didn't you tell Hana that?
WHAT? Am I reading that right? Are you saying God makes an offer He doesn't mean or that He doesn't intend to fulfill??
russell;
No, he makes the offer, "Believe and be saved" to all, and he means it. On this, calvinists and non-calvinists agree. Calvinists just say that, based on the testimony of scripture, there's more to it than that. The offer, in and of itself, isn't enough to actually save anyone, not because the offer isn't genuine, and not because
God really wouldn't save anyone who believed, but because fallen people invariably reject the offer. In order for anyone to be saved, more is required of God than just offering salvation through faith: we also need God to work faith within us.
Quote:
2. What reason did he change your heart and didn't change maybe your brother's or someone close. Maybe even you child?
No reasons within me, but reasons within him. If the reasons were within me, that would mean that in some little way, I merited my salvation by providing the reason--or the grounds by which--I was saved.
(So, God either liked you better or he said eny meny minty moe.)
Quote:
3. He lets the rest go to Hell but he had just as much reason to change their heart as he did yours is that right if He chose to?
Yes, he had as much reason
within me to change anyone else's heart as mine. I have no grounds within me to call down his rebirthing power. It comes by grace, which means it's unmerited. That means the grounds for it (or reasons) can't be within me.
But that doesn't mean that God has no reason. The reason is that so that
his purpose according to
his choice might stand.