atpollard
Well-Known Member
Forgive me, I am less than a HACK at Greek, but the first word in Hebrews 6:4 is "ἀδύνατον" (roughly "not possible" or "impossible") and I was under the impression that Greek placed the most important ideas at the beginning (rather than the English subject-verb word order). So isn't the point that the author is trying to emphasize what is IMPOSSIBLE (a second restoration) rather than what is POSSIBLE (falling away)?And so, once again, you fail to acknowledge that Hebrews 6 states very clearly that it is possible for a person to fall away. Since that is stated first, deal with it first before you try to explain what comes after. Don't just try to twist or ignore that it is possible for a person to fall away because that doesn't fit your determinist theology. Just acknowledge it.
Free will is the truth. If it is not, salvation is an illusion -- salvation that cannot be accepted or rejected is no salvation at all, and humans are just puppets and robots with god as a puppetmaster. This bears no relation to the God of the Bible. Calvinist determinist fatalism is a lie from the pit of hell. The Old Testament says 'choose life', but you deny that humans can choose, thus you deny scripture. Your position is an affront to the nature of God, Who gives every sentient being the freedom and right to choose. Love without choice is not love but compulsion. If you could force your wife to love you, would you be sure that she actually did?? If you could do such, you might end up with a knife in your back rather than a kiss on the cheek.
I am neither secular nor humanist, nor a deterministic Calvinist whose god has much more in come with Allah than the God of the Bible.
About Satan: Did he have a choice to rebel, or was he compelled to? Was Satan created a sinner, or did he choose to sin and rebel?
[I yield to others with even a modicum of skill in Koine Greek .... it was just an observation.]