TheTravelingMinstrel
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THAT'S WHAT I'M TRYING TO SAY!Originally posted by sturgman:
First of all who said God had to be fair?
God does as he pleases.
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THAT'S WHAT I'M TRYING TO SAY!Originally posted by sturgman:
First of all who said God had to be fair?
THAT'S WHAT I'M TRYING TO SAY!Originally posted by TheTravelingMinstrel:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by sturgman:
First of all who said God had to be fair?
Semantics. Hate = love less. So what? The point is God doesn't treat everyone the same which is the point you have made by admitting that God loves some people less than others.Originally posted by Ray Berrian:
Dr. James Strong in his "Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible says, 'As it is written, Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I {miseo} (miseho) detested or loved less. [Greek Dictionary of the New Testament in rear of the book page 48 -- right top column.
I know you were, that was my version of an Amen, and let me word it differently. I was speaking to the ones that are arguing that God has to be "fair" as far as the "chance" thing, I see many arminians saying it is a chance, and it is not, it is a condition. What lifeguard looks down from his chair and says "DO YOU WANT ME TO SAVE YOU!" to the guy at the bottom of the pool.Originally posted by TheTravelingMinstrel:
I used the word 'chance' because I couldn't think of a better word. (hence, the quotation)
my whole point from the start was that God does as he pleases and He doesn't have to be 'fair'
Again let me point out this is not our "ultimate proof". Our proof is the whole of scripture. You cannot say that the bible does not define election. It is all over the place. To believe otherwise is to not believe bible. The problematic verses you define by those verses that are not problematic. Augustine - Let scripture interpret scripture.Originally posted by Eric B:
The interpretation being referred to at the beginning of the thread was mainly suggested by me, as the other non-calvinists didn't seem to be answering John 6 at the time, and the Calvinists were of course running off with this as the ultimate proof of their view.
No, because God is faithful. He is not swerving in this. Our assurance is not based on whether we meant a prayer it is based upon the faithfulness of our God.Originally posted by Eric B:
Also, people are getting carried away with "god does as He pleases". That is true, but the way it is being used, He could still decide to send the "elect" to Hell after all,
I believe it was not us who said that but Paul in Romans 9 "Who are you Oh Man to talk back to God? How can you say "why did you make me like this, or does not the potter have right over the clay?"Originally posted by Eric B:
...then [/i] claim "His ways are higher than yours" to silence the other side.
Eric,[You don't expect to be able to teach some position as scandalous as this (God leaves many without possibility to get saved) and then claim "His ways are higher than yours" to silence the other side.
So what you're saying is that Augustine inserted the verses, 'Therefore He has mercy on whom He wills, and whom He wills He hardens. You will say to me then, "Why does He still find fault? For who has resisted His will?"' in order to create the context of mercy and God's pleasure. Fascinating! I never heard that before.Originally posted by Eric B:
Nobody thought about such things back then; it was Augustine who first posited the idea, and people after him who became offended at it.)![]()
Is that what Augustine said? That's a serious question, because I'd never heard that. Can you quote Augustine on that?Originally posted by Eric B:
No, Augustine didn't insert verses, he hastily interpreted them to mean what he thought they meant (God "hardens" in order to permanently shut people out of salvation)
But that's not what you said. And as far as I've seen, that's not what any of the Calvinists here say. If, as you say, many of us really "do say God intentinally damns people for His glory" then perhaps you can provide a quote or two so we'll know that you aren't simply making it up. Otherwise, you probably owe us an apology for repeatedly putting words in the mouth of Augustine and Calvinists regarding the motives of God.Originally posted by Eric B:
The problem is, there are many different stripes of Calvinists, and many do say God intentinally damns people for His glory. that's where the whole "Is God Unjust/and you say who are you man to reply back/God hardens who He will" interpretation came in. Then somme of you didn't like this, and tried to refine it so that God is not so active in damning.
My reference to Augustine meant that he was the first to interpret the scriptures as meaning that God is willing to save only some, and pass over the rest.
James White in The Potter's Freedom states:God prepares the non-elect for destruction in order to demonstrate His wrath and make His power known in destroying them. If God did not prepare vessels of wrath, God could not fully display His wrath. But if God did not fully display His wrath, then the vessels of mercy--those who are saved--would not fully appreciate, see, or understand the riches of God's glory. It seems that in order for the elect to fully appreciate the greatness of God's mercy, they need to see and understand the wrath that God's mercy had saved them from. Therefore God prepares vessels of wrath to endure His wrath in order to highlight to the elect the riches of His mercy that couldn't otherwise be highlighted. As a result of there being "vessels of wrath fitted for destruction," Christians will have a greater appreciation of God's mercy, thank Him more deeply for their salvation, and have a wonderful and more complete delight in the riches of His glory forever.
I have also read elsehwere quotes from Calvin himself, Pink, and other professed supralapsarian double-predestinarians, but those two should be example enough. And the rest of you use the same passages, which lead to the same thing, so people need to come to grips with what their own doctrine really implies instead of accusing others of misrepresenting.God has has the perfect right to do with His creation (including men) as He wishes... [These 'vessels of wrath'] are said to have been specifically 'prepared for destruction'. That is their purpose
Originally posted by Eric B:
[QB]I was in a mad rush out the door when I wrote the response about Augustine, so it didn't come out as well as it should. Maybe he didn't phrase it in terms of intentional damning, but his doctrine of election led to that idea. Yet now it seems you're calling into question whether any Calvinists ever believed God intentionally damns people.
This is from a website someone here linked to a few months ago:
ROFL!!! Why don't you simply apologize? It would be much easier and far less embarrassing, IMO.God prepares the non-elect for destruction in order to demonstrate His wrath and make His power known in destroying them. If God did not prepare vessels of wrath, God could not fully display His wrath. But if God did not fully display His wrath, then the vessels of mercy--those who are saved--would not fully appreciate, see, or understand the riches of God's glory. It seems that in order for the elect to fully appreciate the greatness of God's mercy, they need to see and understand the wrath that God's mercy had saved them from. Therefore God prepares vessels of wrath to endure His wrath in order to highlight to the elect the riches of His mercy that couldn't otherwise be highlighted. As a result of there being "vessels of wrath fitted for destruction," Christians will have a greater appreciation of God's mercy, thank Him more deeply for their salvation, and have a wonderful and more complete delight in the riches of His glory forever.
You accuse Augustine of the following...and I quote YOU, NOT text from a web site: "he hastily interpreted them to mean what he thought they meant (God "hardens" in order to permanently shut people out of salvation)" Of Calvinists, you say, "many do say God intentinally damns people for His glory." Once again, I quote YOU not some off-site text.
And as your defense, you find an off-site link that states something entirely different. The above quote does NOT say that God intentionally damns people for His glory. It says He demonstrates His wrath against people who are already damned. ALREADY DAMNED. Are you following me?
Now as to the matter of shutting people out of salvation: The only way for the statement "permanently shut people out of salvation" to make sense is if one assumes men can desire or choose salvation without the enabling power of God. It is impossible to shut someone out of something they cannot possibly desire or choose to desire in the first place.
If men had free will, then you might have a case, because then to say that some men are vessels prepared for warth might mean God is preventing them from using their free will to come to Him. But that's your error, not the error of Calvinism.
So your statement takes an Arminian premise, applies it to Calvinism, and then you accuse Augustine and Calvinists on this board of saying it!! And for your evidence that Augustine and Calvinists here are guilty, you present text from some other web site, and that not even by Augustine!!
That makes a great comedy routine, but it's not much of an argument.
Worse, the very fact that the Bible DOES talk about vessels prepared for wrath creates the problem of shutting people out for YOU, not for Calvinists. Calvinists assume that everyone would experience God's wrath had He not saved SOME, so there's nothing shocking about God preparing anyone for wrath. Only YOU are burdened with explaining why God would prepare some vessels for wrath if these same men could exercise their free will to avoid being damned. No doubt you have an elaborate explanation, but I'm not particularly interested in it because it starts from a false premise and has nothing to do with your accusation against Calvinists.
As for double-predestination: Others may have a problem with double predestination. I don't know if it's strictly true or not, but I have no problem with it. Nevertheless, double-predestinatino, even if it were true, is not the same thing as "intentionally damning people for glory" or "permanently shutting people out of salvation". You have, indeed, misrepresented these views.