Originally posted by Scott J:
There is if the choice to accept is rewarded while the refusal to accept is punished.
Accepting what is offered is not a reward for accepting what is offered. It is just accepting what is offered. The refusal is not punished. The punishment was already there.
Read it again. God chose to salvation. The salvation was through (by this method) sanctification and belief.
I read it again.
1. God chose us to salvation.
2. God chose us to salvation through sanctification and belief.
These are two different sentences and mean two different things. If the first sentence were the end of it then we would not be having this discussion. The second sentence (The one in the Bible) says that it is through the method, means, process, of sanctification and belief that He has chosen to bring us salvation.
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Heb 11:6 But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.
No disagreement at all. This scripture has nothing to do with why men ultimately come. It doesn't say what initiates the faith and belief.</font>[/QUOTE]You keep mentioning the "why" as though believing is not a reason "why". God keeps telling us to believe and then we will be saved and your position keeps telling me that God supplies the saving and then I will be able to believe.
So you don't believe in God's foreknowledge?
Yes, I just don't buy into all of the "If...then..." conclusions that many require of that.
So if I show you scripture that specifically says that believers were chosen before the foundation of the world... you will accept that timeline and interpret the Galatians text by it?
Just as soon as I wake up from the shock.
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The natural man cannot understand the things of the spirit for they are spiritually discerned. IOW's, unless God changes a man's "natural" spirit, he cannot believe this foolish preaching.[/QUOTE]
I agree that the natural man cannot, on his own, receive the things of God but that is not taking into account the conviction of the Holy Spirit. It is not necessary for the natural man to be fundamentally changed, regenerated, saved, in fact "born again" for the Holy Spirit to draw a person to God. It is this drawing that can bring a person to the point where they can come to belief.
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That's the problem. We have to accept all of scripture and demand that our interpretations conform to all of it. [/QUOTE]
Ok, So, when are you going to make your interpretations conform to mine?
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It is either by grace- God ultimately caused it or else by merit- man ultimately chose it strictly out of his own goodness. [/QUOTE]
This is the problem with human logic. We say it is either this way or that way and no other and not both. God says it a different way. He says it can be both. Not logical but truth, nonetheless.
(Totally off topic but on the topic of logic.)
Rev 17:8 The beast that thou sawest was, and is not; and shall ascend out of the bottomless pit, and go into perdition: and they that dwell on the earth shall wonder, whose names were not written in the book of life from the foundation of the world, when they behold the beast that was, and is not, and yet is.
It is not and yet is. Now that is totally illogical and a prime example of the impossible. If I made the statement that something "is" and "is not" at the same time I would be laughed at by anyone who wasn't familiar with that verse.
I do not find Calvinism compelling.
I do not find Arminianism compelling.
I do not find philosophies compelling.
I do not find logic compelling.
I find scripture compelling. I see belief as the entry point to salvation taught repeatedly. I never see regeneration taught as the entry point to belief.