Not to beat a dead horse, but it still seems to be breathing. Here I go again:Originally posted by ScottEmerson:
[QB]Just as we, as created beings, are responsible for our own sin, we, as created beings, are responsible for not spreading the message. God is not responsible for our sin (even though He created us) just as He is not responsible for our failure (even though He sent us).
Yes, people who fail to evangelize are responsible to God for their sin. That does not absolve God for not choosing a means of evangelism that would NOT fail, thereby giving everyone equal exposure to his truth. If you want a fair God, you have to defend his fairness on ALL counts.
Explain what you mean by culpability, because my answer depends on your definition.Does responsibility equal culpability? Why or why not?
Romans 2:11 doesn't prove God is fair in the sense that you suggest. "God is no respecter of persons" proves that God doesn't base his choice on our merit. It in no way denies God's right to choose based on other grounds (such as his own sovereign pleasure incomprehensible to the human mind).Romans 2:11 would disagree. God is not a respecter of persons, and as such, is a fair God. Does justice not require the judge to be fair?
Revelation 4:11 states that the purpose of all God's creation is his own pleasure. Earlier in the verse he is worthy to receive glory, honor, and power because of his creative acts. If God's stated purpose was to bring himself pleasure and ultimately glory, is it conceivable that God could have created a world that would have done a better job of it? If he could have, he failed to accomplish his own objective. The concept of God failing is incomprehensible to me.Do you have Biblical support to back up your statement that "God could not possibly be more glorified in the world that he created?"
I have found a number of other passages that are consistent with that view. I'll try to report on them tomorrow.
Does every person receive the same level of persuasion, in both quality and quantity? If not, those who get less can claim if they got what someone else got they would have responded.It's not about God working harder at all. How is his persuasion inconsistent? All that is required for fairness is one visit of the Holy Spirit.
I thought God was no respecter of persons. Why are some gifted and not others? That doesn't seem fair. (I don't really believe that. I'm just using the argument to illustrate that God gifts some more than others according to his sovereign pleasure, just as he elects some and not others on the same grounds.)There is no more unfairness in this than in the fact that some people are gifted and others are not.
Because humans did a poor job of spreading the gospel message.</font>[/QUOTE]And it seems that God really blew it on the planning side by not devising a more reliable vehicle for his message, following that logic.</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />But what about the Chinese who only heard it once and rejected compared to the Americans who heard it a thousand times and finally accepted? Why did the Americans get more of God's attention?