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TCGreek said:1. When Jesus said to Nicodemus you must be "born again," Jesus was not saying to Nicodemus that you must contribute to this divine experience, for it is wholly of God and not one iota of humanity involved.
2. That is why decisional regeneration is unbiblical.
All the time! Where do you live, dude --- in Hollywood!!?ReformedBaptist said:Have you ever seen anyone make a free-will choice contrary to their desires?
No -- he's WILLFULLY BLIND to the truth, Amy. What he wants is for us to give in so he can "score" another point for Calvin.Amy.G said:I think you asked the wrong question there, RB. :tongue3:
We (as Christians especially) make free-will choices everyday that go against our desires.
So say the propaganda flyers anyway.TCGreek said:1. When Jesus said to Nicodemus you must be "born again," Jesus was not saying to Nicodemus that you must contribute to this divine experience, for it is wholly of God and not one iota of humanity involved.
skypair said:No -- he's WILLFULLY BLIND to the truth, Amy. What he wants is for us to give in so he can "score" another point for Calvin.
skypair
lbaker said:Sure, like when my wife (Melinda) and I get up and go to work in the morning. My desire is to keep rolling over and hitting the snooze button, or throw the stinkin' clock out the window, but I choose to get on up and start getting ready. (and I'm the "good" one)
Les
TCGreek said:1. When Jesus said to Nicodemus you must be "born again," Jesus was not saying to Nicodemus that you must contribute to this divine experience, for it is wholly of God and not one iota of humanity involved.
lbaker said:Then why did Jesus phrase it as if it was something that Nicodemus "must" do? If Jesus had intended to say it was entirely out of Nic's control wouldn't He have said something like "You will be born again" or "Sorry, but you won't be born again"? Poor old Nic, Jesus tells him something that he has no control over "must" happen.
lbaker said:Then why did Jesus phrase it as if it was something that Nicodemus "must" do? If Jesus had intended to say it was entirely out of Nic's control wouldn't He have said something like "You will be born again" or "Sorry, but you won't be born again"? Poor old Nic, Jesus tells him something that he has no control over "must" happen.
ReformedBaptist said:It's not a must do, but a must be. Plain and simple.
lbaker said:It is still poor Nic, regardless of whether it's "do" or "be".
Your scenario has Jesus more or less telling Nic "unless this happens to you, guess what - you get burned to death over and over forever, and what's even more awesome - you have absolutely NO control over whether it happens or not - hahahahahahahahahahaha!"
I just can't see Jesus being that cold.
TCGreek said:1. VV.3 and 5 are both framed in the indicative, simple statements.
2. V. 7 begins with the negation of the subjunction, "Do not be amazed." However, "You must be born again" is framed in the passive, where the subject must be acted upon.
3. Poor Nic, still doesn't get to contribute anything.
lbaker said:Then why did Jesus phrase it as if it was something that Nicodemus "must" do? If Jesus had intended to say it was entirely out of Nic's control wouldn't He have said something like "You will be born again" or "Sorry, but you won't be born again"? Poor old Nic, Jesus tells him something that he has no control over "must" happen.
You ever notice that Jesus did that a lot. It where I learned it.My question was sincere, not rhetorical. But to answer the question with a question is a way not to answer a question. :smilewinkgrin:
Dr. Bob said:Passive? God does it to you? You mean words have MEANING? Amazing.
Not to the "I've got to DO something crowd."
I'm thankful that God showed Jonah, Nicodemus and Bob "Salvation is of the Lord". :love2:
TCGreek said:Jonah came to his senses and poor Nic, eventually got it (John 19:39).
lbaker said:Now you are confusing me. Wouldn't "Jonah had his senses come to him" and "it eventually got poor Nic" be the more Calvinisticly correct way to put it?
TCGreek said:1. The Calvinist does not deny human responsibility, contrary to how others have portrayed us.Okay, maybe we can explore this for a bit.
How can Nic be responsible for being born again when he has no control over it and must simply "let it be"?