Where is the middle ground between unconditonal and not unconditional election?
Ro 9:18 Therefore hath he mercy on whom he will have mercy, and whom he will he hardeneth.
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Where is the middle ground between unconditonal and not unconditional election?
Lazarus said:I think the better question would be "Is a gift a gift if everyone is entitled to it? Does is not become an entitlement?"
I have an actual life. Unfortunately it has recently involved a herniated disk in my back that has me flat on my back and unable to do much. Plus my renewed dedication to worthwhile acccomplishment at my current stage of life and ministry has caused me to cut back on the amount of time I spend here.PL!! I been wonderin' where you bean!
So where is the middle ground between God unconditionally chooses individuals to salvation and God doesn't unconditionally choose individuals to salvation?There is "middle ground," Lar.
That's incoherent. To "elect" is to "choose." (Look it up.) It is not both unconditional and conditional. This is one reason why I don't spend much time in here recently. We have people who don't even know the meaning of words.God "unconditionally elects" those whom He "conditionally chooses!" Do you get that?
This is pure Calvinism.God has a plan for the life of those who believe and that they could not even remotely prepare themselves for!
No, that's not what the Bible says.Amy.G said:Doesn't God really elect those who will come? Those that won't come aren't elected.
Hi NP,npetreley said:No, that's not what the Bible says.
All the Father gives Me will come to Me. It doesn't say, "may come to me if they so decide", after which I'll call them the elect/chosen. We WILL come. And we come because we have been chosen and given to Him.
Doesn't God really elect those who will come?
I think it's unconditional/conditional election.menageriekeeper said:So which is the defining point: Total Depravity or Unconditional/Conditional Election?
It comes down to the question of how God chooses (elects) those whom he will bring to salvation. Does he choose based on something within them (like his forseeing that they will come to faith), or not?I believe I understand Total Depravity, but where is the line drawn betweem conditional election and unconditional?
But the five points of Arminianism don't preclude a belief in eternal security. Here's a comparision chart, and you'll see thatThe problem with calling non Calvinists, Arminians, is that many like myself don't believe in a fall from grace. That is, once one accepts Christ it is impossible to lose or forsake one's salvation.
and the original Remonstrants (those who developed the five points of Arminianism) left the question of whether believers are capable of falling from grace open.All Arminians have not been agreed on [whether a believer can lose their salvation]; some have held that believers are eternally secure in Christ--that once a sinner is regenerated, he can never be lost.
So believing in eternal security doesn't mean someone is not Arminian.But whether [believers] are capable, through negligence, of forsaking again the first beginning of their life in Christ, of again returning to this present evil world, of turning away from the holy doctrine which was delivered them, of losing a good conscience, of neglecting grace, that must be more particularly determined out of the Holy Scripture, before we ourselves can teach it with the full confidence of our mind.
Amy.G said:Hi NP,
Maybe the Father only gives to Jesus those He forsaw (is that a word? :laugh: )would say yes?
29 For whom He foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be the firstborn among many brethren. 30 Moreover whom He predestined, these He also called; whom He called, these He also justified; and whom He justified, these He also glorified.
Amy.G said:Doesn't God really elect those who will come? Those that won't come aren't elected. Doesn't God know from the beginning of creation (or before) who will and who won't come to Him? Those He forsees will come to Him, He sends His Spirit to draw them.
So how can that be middle ground between the two sides if both sides affirm it?
Lazarus said:The reason it's a gift is because it's given to someone who God has chosen and does not deserve it. Would anyone who understood the true value of a gift really refuse it? I don't think so, and as far a repentance goes, anyone who ever stood in the presence of God fell to their knees and even their face's. When God's touches a heart that person knows the holiness of God and they know their own sinfulness. This contrast is so strong that they need God to forgive them. Eventually, everyone who is called falls to their knees, not because it's not a choice but because the choice not to is not an option.
Ya'll are making my brain hurt! :laugh:menageriekeeper said:Green: This goes back to the purple comments. EVERY knee will eventually bow. NOT every knee will accept willingly and this is where I'm having a snag. God can and will force everyone to submit to His will in the end. What makes the difference between those who accept the fact of His Godhead on judgement day and those who accept it while they live on earth?
Blue: Really now, there are all sorts of reasons why one might turn down a gift they know is valuable.
npetrely said:Yeah, I was drafted without any choice in the same way I might have been forced to enjoy a free all-expenses paid no-limits vacation on a tropical island with a Shania Twain look-alike. Oh, how cruel a God to force me to endure such a thing as salvation!!!
Lazurus said:Ro 9:18 Therefore hath he mercy on whom he will have mercy, and whom he will he hardeneth.
Amy.G said:Doesn't God really elect those who will come? Those that won't come aren't elected.
Lazarus said:If God called me because He knew I would except, would'nt I then be able to brag about it?
God can and will force everyone to submit to His will in the end
2pe 3:9The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
If I walk into a room filled with people and offer $100.00 to anyone who excepts, I guarantee there will be a stampede. At least in my circle of friends. :thumbs:
You have a different circle of friends than I do
In the end, God will force everyone to submit. But the key word here is force. When a man is saved, he is not forced to his knees. He is brought to his knees because of sin and his need to repent. God's holiness in contrast to a man's sin is profound. If anyone says they are saved and have never experienced that gut wrenching guilt which conviction brings then they should re-examine their relationship with God.
2pe 3:9The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all (who were called) should come to repentance.