Where did I say that it was not the sins that we had previously committed? When we are saved, our sins are forgiven - past, present and future. We are washed whiter than snow. This was written to a particular kind of person though - the ones who believe on Jesus Christ.
That's a contradictory statement, whether your recognize it as one or not. Anyone can become a believer in Christ, and that includes those who currently are in their sin and without hope. Their sins, too, are being "passed over" as we speak. As for this ...
This is a work of God's - not our work. But it is because those sins were not just ignored - but covered by the blood of Jesus Christ, the spotless Lamb of God.
Not until that latter group of people comes to saving faith are those sins "covered by the blood." They are currently held against them, and will condemn them if they do not repent in faith. But they are not subject to the immediate consequences of their sin, to the fate they deserve, which is death. They go about their business blithely unaware they are under condemnation, and will remain so until they die, or believe, one or the other.
I guess we can ignore the passages that speak of sin from birth, right? Psalm 58:3 says "The wicked are estranged from the womb;they go astray from birth, speaking lies." But according to Pearl, they are an incomplete moral being. I'll go with God on this one.
So, obviously you're a Calvinist or you wouldn't include that passage in your arguments. And if you will "go with God on this one," perhaps you'd best stop picking and choosing your passages, but read His
whole word, You apparently believe that "the wicked" cannot be won to Christ. But this is utter nonsense.
Isaiah 65, NASB
1 "I permitted Myself to be sought by those who did not ask for Me;
I permitted Myself to be found by those who did not seek Me.
I said, 'Here am I, here am I,'
To a nation which did not call on My name.
2 "I have spread out My hands all day long to a rebellious people,
Who walk in the way which is not good, following their own thoughts,
Clearly God is capable of hearing the cries of all men. There are none "specially chosen only for salvation, while the rest of mankind will perish." That is the essential philosophy, or rather the folly and arrogance, of the five-point Calvinist.
And I see you ignore my other quotes from the book - just a few of MANY that I can post that would make a person's toes curl.
To address all your misconceptions about those passages would have taken up far more space than I care to use. These segments of Pearl's book only "make your toes curl" if you utterly fail to understand what he said, and while I don't entirely agree with what he writes, you make him out to be a monster he is not. At one point you wrote:
(page 9)
She wasn't being punished but instead "conditioned" (he states this numerous times with passages like this) - and he hit a 5 month old infant with a stick.
What a load of malarkey!! There was no "hitting" involved. There were, as he put it, "little spats" on her legs, and it wasn't a "stick," it was a "switch" which he describes as a very thin, leafy branch off a plant. It wouldn't even squish a fly. But you, like so many who oppose corporal punishment, are an alarmist who seems to think what the Bible teaches about discipline "doesn't really mean what it says." The Bible -- and Pearl, for all his flaws -- doesn't teach child abuse.
And you object to the word "conditioning"? That is the essential meaning of the Hebrew
chanak from Proverbs 22:6, "Train up a child in the way he should go. Even when he is old he will not depart from it."
All he is looking to do is conditioning - not discipling your children or guiding them in the ways of the Lord.
He's talking about a
FIVE-MONTH-OLD INFANT!! Try reasoning with one, if you haven't before. Good grief, Ann, your failure to grasp this whole concept, and most of this discussion, is exasperating, and is indicated by this:
My goal is not to have "happy and obedient children". From the time they were even a cell in my body, my goal has been to raise them to be GODLY children and that is how I dealt with them from before they were born. Heck, I don't even "condition" my horse the way Mr. Pearl says to. It's a dangerous, hateful, sinful way to deal with beast and child.
Obedience must come first before any spiritual or intellectual training can be accomplished. You don't even see to realize that, before you could provide godly training to your children, you had to do these things too. You completely fail to realize you did them, though obviously with different methods. That's fine, because as I've
repeatedly stated, Pearl's methods are far from the best, but they are not the monstrous plot you are making them out to be. We've wasted far too much time and irritated trillions of electrons unnecessarily in discussing a second-rate book that doesn't even make a blip on the radar among parenting guides, so I'm truly done here, and wish you well and God's blessing. I'm sorry I violated my intent to abandon this thread, but I assure you, I won't do that again.