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Iconoclast

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Sorry, but I am not in need of your help. You do not instruct me. I am not in need of your counsel.

The problem here is your inability to defend your self-contradictory position. Your position is anything but biblical. It is an assault on God's character.
We can leave it here then. Perhaps at another time it can be revisited. Thanks for your responses
 

Iconoclast

Well-Known Member
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We disagree. What God foreknows is not what God decrees, ordained or caused to be. This is at the very least a problem of words and what they mean.

Yes. Some of these topics take time and study to work through.
Biblical foreknowledge is of persons, not actions or events.
Some are suggesting things happen randomly outside of God's control.

Some are suggesting in one way or another God is the author of sin???
This is a theological third rail. God is pure and Holy. God does not sin, God does not make anyone sin
Any attempt in this direction is wrong, completely wrong and not to be entertained..
 

Van

Well-Known Member
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"Some are suggesting things happen randomly outside of God's control."

God causes or allows whatsoever comes to pass. This puts nothing outside of God's control.
 

atpollard

Well-Known Member
Not talking about Job. Did God ordain that Adam sin in the Garden? Does God ordain sexual immorality or criminal activity?
Did you read what I wrote?

Of course God ordained Adam’s sin in the garden, in exactly the same way that God ordained the evil that befell Job and the sin of Joseph’s brothers in selling him into slavery. Not only that, but just as Joseph’s brothers meant their actions for evil (and Adam meant his disobedience for evil), God meant it for good!

Which is better, being an obedient servant of God or being a child of God? Walking and talking with God or being indwelt by the Holy Spirit and having God in you even as you are in Christ?

Does God have the power to stop evil? Yes.
Does God stop all evil? No.
Does God allow evil to happen? Yes.
Apparently, God has some reason for not preventing evil things from happening when he can, so God is at least passively condoning the evil actions (just as he did with Adam and Job and Joseph). Our choice, then, is to either trust that “all things work together for good” as God promised, or to doubt either the ability or veracity of God.

I choose to trust God.
Do whatever seems best to you.
 

GoodTidings

Well-Known Member
Did you read what I wrote?

Of course God ordained Adam’s sin in the garden, in exactly the same way that God ordained the evil that befell Job and the sin of Joseph’s brothers in selling him into slavery. Not only that, but just as Joseph’s brothers meant their actions for evil (and Adam meant his disobedience for evil), God meant it for good!

Actually the situation with Job and Joseph speak to God's ability to use things that happen to us for our benefit. You cannot realistically compare those two situations to Adam's sin in the Garden. God did not ordain Joseph or Job to sin, so those stories don't reveal any parallel to the situation in the Garden. Did God actually ordain Adam to disobey Him? That would make no sense. God doesn't compromise His holiness in that way. God does not command us to do or not do something and then ordain that we sin against Him. That is not biblical and there is NO biblical defense for such a thing.

Which is better, being an obedient servant of God or being a child of God? Walking and talking with God or being indwelt by the Holy Spirit and having God in you even as you are in Christ?
That has nothing to do with anything from my previous post.

Does God have the power to stop evil? Yes.
Does God stop all evil? No.
Does God allow evil to happen? Yes.
That is not in dispute.

Apparently, God has some reason for not preventing evil things from happening when he can, so God is at least passively condoning the evil actions (just as he did with Adam and Job and Joseph). Our choice, then, is to either trust that “all things work together for good” as God promised, or to doubt either the ability or veracity of God.
No, God is not condoning evil, passively or otherwise. To suggest that He does is an offense to His holiness and an assault on His character.

I choose to trust God.
Do whatever seems best to you.
I choose trust him too. I choose not to insult Him and bring reproach upon Him as you have done.
 

GoodTidings

Well-Known Member
Some are suggesting in one way or another God is the author of sin???
This is a theological third rail. God is pure and Holy. God does not sin, God does not make anyone sin
Any attempt in this direction is wrong, completely wrong and not to be entertained..
And yet that is exactly what you have advocated for in your posts by saying that God ordains people to sin.
 

atpollard

Well-Known Member
God did not ordain Joseph or Job to sin, so those stories don't reveal any parallel to the situation in the Garden.
God ordained Satan to sin in the story of Job. For Job’s ultimate good and for God’s ultimate glory ... EXACTLY like placing Satan and a forbidden tree in the Garden with Adam.
 

atpollard

Well-Known Member
Actually the situation with Job and Joseph speak to God's ability to use things that happen to us for our benefit.
[Gen 50:20 NASB] 20 "As for you, you meant evil against me, [but] God meant it for good in order to bring about this present result, to preserve many people alive.

It didn’t just happen, God meant it for good (ordained).
 

GoodTidings

Well-Known Member
God ordained Satan to sin in the story of Job. For Job’s ultimate good and for God’s ultimate glory ... EXACTLY like placing Satan and a forbidden tree in the Garden with Adam.
No, God allowed Satan to sin. God did not decree Satan to sin.
 

GoodTidings

Well-Known Member
[Gen 50:20 NASB] 20 "As for you, you meant evil against me, [but] God meant it for good in order to bring about this present result, to preserve many people alive.

It didn’t just happen, God meant it for good (ordained).
No, God used it. It doesn't say that God ordained it. God knew it would happen and He used that situation for His glory. God can use adversity and the attacks of the enemy for His glory. It doesn't mean that He ordained or decreed those things to happen.
 

Benjamin

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
You have to check out my friend Benjamin for philosophical speculation.


1) Necessarily God has fore determined everything that will happen
2) God has determined X
3) Therefore it is necessary that X will happen

X = Evil

Gt...I do not do much in terms of philosophy.
You have to check out my friend Benjamin for philosophical speculation.
The links I offered are some of the best I know of

Don't feel bad Icon, the guys on those links couldn't disprove a simple logical truth either. ;)
 

GoodTidings

Well-Known Member
Is the Bible accurate and trustworthy when it says that the Lord put a lying spirit in the mouth of Ahab's prophets? (2 Chronicles 18:21-22)
It is truthfully recorded, yes. But whether or not the vision refers to an actual event that happened in Heaven is another thing. God seeking the counsel of angels isn't in keeping with the character of a God who is sovereign and all-knowing.

In addition, it is language that conveys the idea that God had basically given Ahab over to what he wanted. Ahab preferred the lying prophets. He wanted to be guided by the false prophets and God simply gave him over to be guided by them to his demise. That is essentially what the story is communicating to us.
 

Iconoclast

Well-Known Member
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No, God used it. It doesn't say that God ordained it. God knew it would happen and He used that situation for His glory. God can use adversity and the attacks of the enemy for His glory. It doesn't mean that He ordained or decreed those things to happen.
Are you suggesting that God who knows the end from the beginning, is only a spectator who waits to see what happens and then just tries to adjust and use man made events in the best way he can?
 

Iconoclast

Well-Known Member
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1) Necessarily God has fore determined everything that will happen
2) God has determined X
3) Therefore it is necessary that X will happen

X = Evil



Don't feel bad Icon, the guys on those links couldn't disprove a simple logical truth either. ;)
I knew I could count on you Ben lol,thanks
 

GoodTidings

Well-Known Member
Are you suggesting that God who knows the end from the beginning, is only a spectator who waits to see what happens and then just tries to adjust and use man made events in the best way he can?
No, I am saying that God knows what will happen and He already has a plan in place ahead of time to use each adversity and non-adversity for his glory. God does not fore ordain every action or event and there is nothing in the Bible that says so.

Unlike you, I am not saying that God ordains little children to be molested and raped. I have a far better, biblically consistent view of God that doesn't make God responsible for the sins people commit.
 
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