canadyjd
Well-Known Member
Arminians argue that man must have free will to decide whether to choose to love God, or not, otherwise such love would be meaningless. If a man is irresistibly drawn by the Spirit to Christ and must respond in faith to such a work of Holy Spirit, as the (so-called) "Calvinists" believe, then such faith means nothing because it didn't originate within the man, but with God.
If we assume the argument of the Arminians is correct, then it raises Questions:
1. Is God bound (in a sense) to always act according to His nature... which is Holy and righteous and pure? Can God act contrary to His nature?
2. Does God have the "free-will" to choose not to love man, even if that man calls on the name of Christ for salvation?
3. If God always acts according to His nature, which is Holy and righteous and pure, does that make the love He shows toward us meaningless since He could not have chosen otherwise but to love us according to His nature?
4. Is the love of man toward God, then, more precious than the love of God toward man, because the love the man shows toward God had to be chosen and God could have been rejected, whereas the love of God toward man is according to the nature of God and could not have been otherwise?
peace to youraying:
If we assume the argument of the Arminians is correct, then it raises Questions:
1. Is God bound (in a sense) to always act according to His nature... which is Holy and righteous and pure? Can God act contrary to His nature?
2. Does God have the "free-will" to choose not to love man, even if that man calls on the name of Christ for salvation?
3. If God always acts according to His nature, which is Holy and righteous and pure, does that make the love He shows toward us meaningless since He could not have chosen otherwise but to love us according to His nature?
4. Is the love of man toward God, then, more precious than the love of God toward man, because the love the man shows toward God had to be chosen and God could have been rejected, whereas the love of God toward man is according to the nature of God and could not have been otherwise?
peace to youraying: