I don't know if I'm off course or not JackRUS, I haven't had time to absorb your reply in full. I have skimmed it a bit but will read it properly tomorrow. Until then:
...His sons, however, did not listen to their father's rebuke, for it was the LORD's will to put them to death.?
How'd I do?
john.
What concern is it of ours what God does with those He owns? Is this what you mean, that you have a concern about the way God treats His property? 1 Sam 3:18 So Samuel told him everything, hiding nothing from him. Then Eli said, "He is the LORD; let him do what is good in his eyes."But I am wondering about the limited list of folks that can do the same. That is what Limited Atonement supports is it not?
Well there must be some credence to this as God swore an oath that no atonement was to be given for Eli's house. If you want to hold to that then what? To say there is no merit in what I say, `The guilt of Eli's house will never be atoned for by sacrifice or offering.' ", then you are not dealing with me as you should. The guilt of Eli's house will never be atoned for means the guilt of Eli's house will not be, not, it might have been atoned for before He said it wasn't to be atoned for. How does God's judgement about their not being covered by sacrifice preclude the possibility that they were not covered by sacrifices earlier in their life? (JackRUS).And I don't how your post lends any credence to your view of Limited Atonement.
Can you see what you are doing? You are saying God speaks idle words to avoid the conclusion that the atonement was not given for the house of Eli when in fact it wasn't. To be saved and then to be told no sacrifice would ever be given for you is a strange thing to me. To be saved is to have the Intercessor intercede on ones behalf to God the Father.And as for 1 Sam. 3:14, don't you know that these men were judged by an oath given by God after having countless opportunities to get saved earlier in life?
...His sons, however, did not listen to their father's rebuke, for it was the LORD's will to put them to death.?
Why? Why didn't the writer start at: 1 Sam 2:25 ...His sons, however, did not listen to their father's rebuke, for it was the LORD's will to put them to death.? That would be a strange way of loving the sheep I think.(see 1 Sam 2:30ff.)
But not if He didn't atone for Eli's house, a thing He swore not to do. Your understanding of 1 John 2:2 is wrong."And He is the propitiation for our sins: and not for our’s only, but also for the sins of the whole world." 1 John 2:2
It is a plain mistake as Eli's house is not included is it?Is that not plain enough for you?
But it wasn't for Eli's household was it? There is only one atonement that is worth anything. The blood of bulls and goats don't cut the mustard.Of course this verse is not an argument for universalism. But rather that Christ's atoning blood is available to all by faith. Rom. 3:25.
So God judges a man before he dies? Judges and condemns him before he dies? Could you explain this for me? If God judged Eli's house before they died then why did Jesus die for them? If free will is such a thing as is believed what right did He have in destroying Sodom? Did they have no right to chose what they wanted to do? They were only doing their thing. Seems to me as if free will can lose it's flavour if it is used.Before the Lord interposed in judgment...
Is it? How much more emphatic can, `The guilt of Eli's house will never be atoned for by sacrifice or offering.' " Be to make it emphatic enough? Eli's household was told that it would never receive an atonement, they were not told 'never again'.Don't you know John that in Scripture the emphatic always overrules the implied when passages of Scripture seen to contradict one another? That is a hard and fast rule of Biblical interpretation.
How'd I do?
john.