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God knows everything,he cannot make any mistakes, he does not have a redo button!Incorrect. I believe that if you were to have a face to face chat with him, and he trusted you enough to be completely open with you, he would tell you that what he said to Job in chapters 38-41, while accurate enough on the surface and in accordance with what he believed at the time, was the single biggest mistake he ever made. "Might makes right" was a horrible precedent to set...the logical conclusion being that, if Satan can acquire more power than our God (his desperately desired aim), then he deserves to be worshiped and honored for having that power. I say no; I say that he would then need to be held to account for his abuse and misuse of that power. And I say that the same applies to our God...except that in His case I believe that He agrees enthusiastically.
Smells of Open Theism!No God doesn't need to learn or go through bumps and bruises to get there.
that is heresy.
Depends upon how you define heresy. If heresy = 'Not in accordance with accepted doctrine', then you're right. If heresy = 'false' or 'untrue', then I'm convinced that you're wrong.No God doesn't need to learn or go through bumps and bruises to get there.
that is heresy.
God knows everything,he cannot make any mistakes, he does not have a redo button!
Agreed. Absolute heresy, God does not make mistakes.No God doesn't need to learn or go through bumps and bruises to get there.
that is heresy.
Agreed. Absolute heresy, God does not make mistakes.
God never has made a mistake, is not making mistakes, and will never make a mistake."Does" or "Did"?
What's at the center of every pearl?
God does not make mistakes.
Once again, I believe that you're thinking in linear time. I'm thinking sequence.God never has made a mistake, is not making mistakes, and will never make a mistake.
God makes no honest mistakes and God has no necessity to learn seeing that he himself possesses all wisdom and knowledge. The scriptures are clearOnce again, I believe that you're thinking in linear time. I'm thinking sequence.
The deeper question is, if you make an honest mistake... but take responsibility for it, make restitution for it, learn from it, and never repeat it again... then was it really a mistake?
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God makes no honest mistakes and God has no necessity to learn seeing that he himself possesses all wisdom and knowledge. The scriptures are clear
What does it mean that God is omniscient?
I would suggest that you contemplate the effect upon your faith if it turned out that your position was wrong, as I have the effect upon mine if my position is wrong.
Isaiah 8:20 To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.
You speak not according to the law of God nor of his testimony in his word, therefore there is no light in you.
Jeremiah 8:9 The wise men are ashamed, they are dismayed and taken: lo, they have rejected the word of the LORD; and what wisdom is in them?
Friend I would suggest that you repent and bring your own thinking into line with the word of God.
Why such a fixation on using these red flag terms: inerrant and infallible? Can't you just agree that Scripture is truthful, reliable, authoritative, normative?
Except it was David Dockery (Gospel Coalition council member) who expressed those sentiments back in 1990!When some do not like to see Inerrant/Infallible being used, reminds me of when some do not like to have justification/propitiation still used in translations, like somehow those words no longer are good to use.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (BP)--Speakers at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary's Pastor's School discussed ways to move Southern Baptists "beyond the impasse" in the denomination's current theological debate.
During sessions on "Four Views of the Bible among Southern Baptists," seven scholars spoke at the Louisville, Ky., school about the nature of biblical authority and interpretation. They also proposed ways for Southern Baptists to find common ground in the present theological controversy.
During the conference, Dockery said Southern Baptists will have to decide if "we can hold together tensions on various views about the Bible as well as various views of interpreting the Bible." Southern Baptists must understand the Bible is truthful, authoritative and is both a divine and human book, said Dockery.
"A lot of us get quite hung up on terms like inerrant and infallible," he said. "I think it is very possible to move the discussion forward and still talk about the nature of Scripture without using those particular red flag terms"...."I would prefer that we talk about the Scripture as truthful, reliable and authoritative and see it having to be the normative guide for the church, for our lives and for the Christian community"
Another speaker, R. Albert Mohler Jr., editor of the Christian Index, newsjournal for Georgia Baptists, said Southern Baptists need to try to build a theological consensus....Mohler described inerrancy as "an important issue" but it "isn't the most important word about Scripture."
Do you, then, believe in dualism?And I say that the reason that he knows everything is that he does have an undo and a redo button and he has used both in the past. Satan has similar tools as well, but...that's another can of worms.
God exists and operates from outside of our space-time continuum, or He could not be the Creator. He sees all of history at a glance. His omniscience precludes error.Once again, I believe that you're thinking in linear time. I'm thinking sequence.
You are referencing the omniscient God here, yet this statement has no basis in theology. What passage in the Bible can you use to defend it?The deeper question is, if you make an honest mistake... but take responsibility for it, make restitution for it, learn from it, and never repeat it again... then was it really a mistake?
Do you, then, believe in dualism?
Here is a "what if"...I would suggest that you contemplate the effect upon your faith if it turned out that your position was wrong, as I have the effect upon mine if my position is wrong.
God exists and operates from outside of our space-time continuum, or He could not be the Creator. He sees all of history at a glance. His omniscience precludes error.
The question has been asked of you, and I hope you will answer: do you hold to open theism?
You are referencing the omniscient God here, yet this statement has no basis in theology. What passage in the Bible can you use to defend it?
According to what you say, God is not omniscient. Is that your belief?