Predetermined indeed.Originally posted by Pastor Larry:
Your position forces you to arrive at a certain position, predetermined before you ever open the Scripture. That is not sound theological method.
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Predetermined indeed.Originally posted by Pastor Larry:
Your position forces you to arrive at a certain position, predetermined before you ever open the Scripture. That is not sound theological method.
I feel the same way about you.Originally posted by Pastor Larry:
For you call me misguided makes me wonder if you even read the text carefully. The text says what it says. I cannot imagine why you guys are so intent on denying Scripture to maintain your position. That boggles my mind.
This verse is talking about a man's inability to please God while in the flesh. IT SAYS NOTHING ABOUT MAN'S INABILITY TO COME OUT OF THE FLESH THROUGH FAITH.Romans 8:7 because the mind set on the flesh is hostile toward God; for it does not subject itself to the law of God, for it is not even able to do so, 8 and those who are in the flesh cannot please God.
You need to read this last paragraph while looking into a mirror.I say often, and I say it again now, we have to get back to the text of Scripture and put aside our biases that we carry in with us. You have approached this text with a presupposition about what it can and cannot say. Your position forces you to arrive at a certain position, predetermined before you ever open the Scripture. That is not sound theological method.
Originally posted by Skandelon:
I feel the same way about you.[/uqote]Feelings are really irrelevant. We have to get to what the text says.
So you don't think that coming to God is a part of pleasing him???? That confuses me. I pointed out the same contradiction to Helen and she simply ignored it. She didn't even make an attempt to answer it. God has commanded man to come to him; therefore, coming to him is something that pleases him. Unsaved man is unable to please him. Therefore, unsaved man must be unable to come to him, or Paul is not telling the truth here.This verse is talking about a man's inability to please God while in the flesh. IT SAYS NOTHING ABOUT MAN'S INABILITY TO COME OUT OF THE FLESH THROUGH FAITH.
And the person can believe, if he wants to. He doesn't want to. His is kept from believing only by his own choice to continue in sin. His own sin is what makes him unable.If you were to say to your child, "Son you cannot please me while you are lying." Would anyone in their right mind interpret that to mean that your son couldn't tell the truth? Of course not.
Actually, the statement you made says nothing about his inability to get to his room. It is a statement of fact that he cannot clean his room if he is in the kitchen, for the mere reason that he cannot reach it (unless he lives in the kitchen). That has nothing to do wiht Rom 8.Or, "Son you cannot clean your room if you are in the Kitchen." That must mean its impossible for the son to walk to his room! This is ridiculous, yet that is what you are doing with Romans 8.
Actually it does in the next verses where it talks about the Spirit.This verse says nothing about how one stops living in the flesh because it says nothing about man's response to the gospel and it says nothing about Faith.
This occasion was his own disciples I believe. But it is their failure to believe. That is not God's fault. If your son does not go clean up his room, it is not your fault that you didn't carry him there. It is his fault. Don't go blaming God for something man does.men are unable to have faith then why does Christ rebuke men for their lack of faith? Shouldn't he rebuke himself for not giving them the faith?
I wrote it knowing full well that I have done the homework on these passages. I have spent the time and effort in it. That is why I know what it says. I would encourage you to do the same.You need to read this last paragraph while looking into a mirror.
In the end, this is not solved by analogy because they are all flawed. It is solved by exegesis.
I didn't insult you Helen. We have both been very direct about talking about what we believe and you know as well as I do that that is not insulting.Originally posted by Helen:
Larry, rather than trying to respond to you yet again and then having to read your insults in return again,
But as you should know, reading Calvin is not the issue. I have read more Calvinists than you, I am quite sure. But that is not the issue. You are the one claiming to know what Calvinism believes and yet I am merely asking you to support your claims with actual Calvinists. When all is said and done, what matters is what Scripture says. The reason I don't need to read Calvin is becuase he doesn't matter to me. I am a devotee of Scripture.I would simply want to remind you that you yourself stated that you have only read one or two pages of Calvin. I have read more.
Or perhaps not. Perhaps, as it seems in this forum, you simply think you know Calvinism better and in reality you don't. That is not meant to be offensive, but I cannot understand how someone claiming to know Calvinism makes these kinds of errors about what we believe.I know Calvinism better than a number of Calvinists I have met and talked to.
This is funny Helen. Go out and start having conversations with people who have these conversations every day. This is the way they use the terms. Calling someone an "arminian" does not mean they adhere to everything Arminius taught. I am not accusing you of that. When the term "arminian" is used in general terms, it refers to someone who denies the personal sovereign election of God. Calvinists didn't make the dichotomy up. It is there.You are also exhibiting ignorance of the general subject when you say I am essentially an Arminian. I assure you most heartily I am not. I am not Arminian any more than I am Calvinist. That dichotomy is something Calvinists have made up, possibly to reassure themselves of their correctness!
But that is what I believe and follow. And you don't agree with me. How can you believe the Bible???But there is a third way.
It's called the Bible.
Helen, I don't think you want to go down this road again. It has not been that long since you tried it, and I responded by showing from your posts where you did the very thing you accused me of. That means there is an inconsistency on your part. I have no problem with you being direct and sayign what you think. In fact, this morning I edited a post of someone who said something inappropriate to you. The bottom line is that you have accused me of twisting Scripture; you have accused me of lying; you have accused me of twisting your beliefs. In short, you have done to me everything you complain about. You know when you come in here that it is not a ladies' tea party. If you don't like that, then perhaps you should reconsider posting. But do not try to enact a double standard.Originally posted by Helen:
No insults, Larry?
Here, from that last long post of yours -- and I'm not going to take the time to look up all the others where you have slammed me with similar:
But not necessarily at the same time. Election is from eternity past. Salvation happens in time.First of all, it would be unheard of in Calvinist doctrine for any one of the elect not to be saved.
I agree, but that wasn't the point you made. You said 16. "The unsaved elect"???? How can the elect be unsaved? I am stunned that intelligent people can argue in such circles and do it with a straight face. I don't mean that to be insulting, but I am truly amazed. The answer is that the elect are always unsaved until they believe. Their salvation is assured, but that does not exempt them from believing. You very slyly tried to change the subject.Larry, I have to get going, but there is no other election other than to salvation in Calvinist theology.
Scripture separates them by saying that election is to salvation.Now, you are separating the two, and that leaves you in a bit of a dilemma.
It is a part of it.For if election does not equal salvation, then the WORK of man in believing (for Calvinists accuse it of being a work if it is before salvation...) must be added for salvation to be efficacious.
Secondary causation is accepted by most Calvinists I think. I don't know of any who deny it.So second causes do not work theologically is God is totally responsible for everything that happens.
Not any more than election to the presidency equal the presidency. Every single president this country has ever had has been elected before he was president. Now, there is about a 75 day window when he is "elect" but not "president." The same is true in salvation.But election to salvation means that election equals salvation.
I completely agree. I have known that for a long time. The same is true of Calvin. 500 years has brought a lot of refinement to be sure. I don't "throw these terms around." I use them the way they are generally used, as I have explained.As far as Arminius goes, Arminian doctrine is quite different from much of what he preached and was.
I didn't say it was your fault. I said I use the terms as they are generally used. The fact that you don't like it or don't accept it is not my fault. Call yourself what you want; it really doesn't bother me. But be accurate in your descriptions of what I believe.The fact that you 'don't know any other way to characterize' my position is not my fault. I am not Arminian and I resent that you should insist on labeling me as that.
Actually, I am discussing for the sake of truth. I would really like to see you start trying to connect the dots here. There are some big gaps in what you are saying.Originally posted by Helen:
Larry, all you seem to be doing is arguing for the sake of arguing.
I didn't avoid them. I commented on them. I said, they did not appear to be relevant to what we were discussing. Those citations say nothing about election being the same as salvation, or about election not requiring belief. The citations may have some things that we could discuss about them. There is nothing greatly controversial in them, as I read them. The most controversial thing for most is that God deemed it necessary for the first man to fall. But we must ask the question, if the death of Christ was determined in eternity past, before there was creation and therefore sin, for what purpose did God ordain teh death of Christ? If there was a chance that Adam would not have sinned, then there was no reason for God to ordain the death of Christ in eternity past.You avoided completely the quotations YOU asked me for in evidence of my points before.
I have no doubt about that at all.I might also mention that just because the majority of anyone, Calvinists included, accept or believe something, does not make it true.
No, not at all. Salvation is always secured by the atonement of Christ. Yet in the OT, people were not told to "look ahead to the cross and have faith" to be saved. Their faith was in God; the content of their faith was different. What exactly did Job understand by "Redeemer"? We don't know. It was be pure speculation that he envisioned a MEssiah hanging on a cross.If you are going to separate election from salvation by a matter of time, and that salvation is not efficacious until belief kicks in, then what are you going to say regarding the Old Testament saints who believed on the Redeemer of Job and were saved through that faith? Christ had not yet been crucified according to earth time -- was their salvation sham?
yes it sounds like you have dug very deep into this. i am looking forward to you post and study on this. who knows you may now be a calvinist.Originally posted by Helen:
massdak,
This is a fascinating study. I am learning a lot. I am still working on it. So far I have spent about four hours researching every time 'elect' or 'election' is used and all the references the various authors used in verses containing these words. In addition I want to cross-check that word in the Greek to see if it is translated any other way and what those ways indicate.
I have to get my day started now apart from this, so it will still be some time before I can post you a response. I want to thank you for this challenge. I truly am amazed at what I am learning. Because the paper I am putting together is ten pages on the Word file right now, I'll start a new thread with it when I am finished. I hate for that much work to be buried down here!
Thank you again for your 'inspiration.'
Helen