N
Nelson
Guest
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Larry: You said, on various issues, that God either “cannot” or “should not” do thing that God has clearly done.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>My answers were not ambiguous.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Yet you do not answer the question…Then you ignore the text.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>As mentioned before, Larry’s position renders God as the author of sin and evil with reference to the example of the raping of an 8-year-old child. No answer has been given to extricate God from such a conclusion.
And, again, I have responded to the verses in question. Please cite any verses I have not answered.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>The deciding issue is the grammatical-historical interpretation. Your position, as has been and will be shown, cannot withstand that level of examination.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Whatever examination is proposed, the interpretation should not contradict clear Biblical truths and common sense. If it does, its legitimacy should be in doubt.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson: However, the view Larry has expressed would, I contend, logically lead to that conclusion and is tantamount to asserting that God is evil. I believe the views I hold are less tenuous than Larry’s.I am still under the impression that Larry’s view, as he has explained it, leads to the idea that God is the author of sin.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Larry: I do not believe this and I have said nothing to make you believe this.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>As quotes above demonstrate, I did not say Larry believes God is evil. I did, however, show that his position could reasonably lead to such an assertion.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>With all due respect, your logical conclusion is dead wrong and my position has been uniformly defended for centuries by people who hold my position.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>A position held for long centuries, while impressive, does not necessarily guarantee validity.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>I am willing to leave God in control and believe that he does not contradict himself or impugn himself. I am willing to let the texts of Scripture stand as they do.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>That Larry is willing to “leave God in control” (exhaustive and minute control would not be erroneous to add), I agree. That Larry believes God does not contradict himself or impugn His own character, I agree. That Larry is willing to let the “texts of scripture stand as they do” – apart from the Reformed/Calvinistic tradition – is questionable.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Then you contend that I misunderstood my own questions. That does not even make sense.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>I agree. It didn’t make sense to me either that Larry didn’t understand his own questions.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson: On post of 1/6/02, 03:34 PM, I responded to more of verses Paul cited, which were Gen. 50:20; again Acts 2:23 and Job 2:10; 4:28; and finally, Ps. 115 and 136.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Larry: But your responses are clearly inadequate…<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Since it was not my intention to write a systematic theology, my responses were brief and confined to the specific point. However, allow me to make a few observations:
To my question of how would he explain, in accordance with his view of divine sovereignty (for which he agrees I have a general understanding), the rape of a child without impugning God’s character, Larry answers, “To do so would take a much greater mind than I have. God has not revealed to us the infinite perfections or the interworkings of his mind. His thoughts and ways are above ours. I think it is outside the place of man to try to ‘figure it out.’ We must simply take God at what he says and live accordingly. God's character is not impugned because our minds are too small to comprehend his plan. I would be careful asserting otherwise.”
A simple, “I don’t know,” would have sufficed.
Larry ignored my post dated January 03, 2002 12:46 PM, wherein it was logically concluded that his views render the idea that God is an active participant, as well as the first cause, of the child raped.
Could it be that Larry perceives that my posts are inadequate, not because that are really so but because they contradict his views?
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>“This man” was the one delivered over and he was delivered by the predetermined plan and foreknowledge of God. You can’t really get around that in the text.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>It can be agreed that it was God’s will for Jesus to suffer and be crucified. However, I don’t think God’s choice of Christ to suffer and die can be equated with a “predetermined plan” to have the rape of an 8-year-old child occur, especially interpreted as Larry does.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR> As for Gen 50:20, your statement – “I agree with the meaning of the word itself” - is undermined by your rejection of what it says.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>God purposed the good by allowing the evil and in that sense I agree with the text. God meant “it” (the evil acted out by Joseph’s brothers) for good (deliverance from famine). Consequently, what is “meant” was that the evil committed by Joseph’s brothers be used for good purposes but not that the evil in itself is something that God had purposed except to allow its occurrence.
I paraphrase Joseph’s words in order to express what I believe is the Scriptural intent: “As for you, you meant to cause me evil but God planned (Strong’s #2803) using your evil actions in order to bring about good.”
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Here is a fundamental problem. You misunderstood “will…what God determines to bring about. It can, in some contexts, refer to either his desires or to his decree.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>It can mean what he “determines to bring about,” that is (as I understand what Larry is trying to bring out), the event He causes to occur inevitably. However, to my mind, it can also mean what God desires though what actually occurs contradicts such desire. My definition of His primary will incorporates both aspects. What aspect is intended would be interpreted according to the Biblical context.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson:Job had not read the chapter before at the time Satan attacked him.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>By Larry: Another example of faulty reasoning.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Just joking here.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson:This is my main objection to Larry’s interpretation of Scripture because God is made the first and only cause of sin; Larry makes God to be the author of sin.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Larry:False. Read any number of writers on this topic and you will understand why this is not so. You are not distinguishing between primary and secondary causation. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Unfortunately, my objection is not with “any number of writers” but with Larry’s interpretation of Scripture as he, so far, has explained it. And in my earlier post (the portion he chose not to reply) I showed how his interpretation makes “secondary causes,” for all intents and purposes, irrelevant.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR> You do not seem to understand free will. Free will is the ability to act in accordance with the nature.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>I do not agree with Larry’s definition of “free will”. It falls short of what the Bible and experience, as far as I can tell, demonstrate.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson: What is being asked is one thing: How do his views preserve God’s holiness? Can his views be explained in a reasonable fashion that does not lead to dispute God’s holiness. He admits he cannot.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR> Where did I admit this?<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Has already been referred to above.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson: I do not believe God ordained the rape of an 8-year-old boy. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Larry:Then “all things” are not worked by God according to his will? You are plainly denying Scripture at this point. Consider Psalm 139:16: Your eyes have seen my unformed substance; And in Your book were all written The days that were ordained for me, When as yet there was not one of them.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Yet you do not answer the question…Then you ignore the text.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>As mentioned before, Larry’s position renders God as the author of sin and evil with reference to the example of the raping of an 8-year-old child. No answer has been given to extricate God from such a conclusion.
And, again, I have responded to the verses in question. Please cite any verses I have not answered.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>The deciding issue is the grammatical-historical interpretation. Your position, as has been and will be shown, cannot withstand that level of examination.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Whatever examination is proposed, the interpretation should not contradict clear Biblical truths and common sense. If it does, its legitimacy should be in doubt.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson: However, the view Larry has expressed would, I contend, logically lead to that conclusion and is tantamount to asserting that God is evil. I believe the views I hold are less tenuous than Larry’s.I am still under the impression that Larry’s view, as he has explained it, leads to the idea that God is the author of sin.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Larry: I do not believe this and I have said nothing to make you believe this.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>As quotes above demonstrate, I did not say Larry believes God is evil. I did, however, show that his position could reasonably lead to such an assertion.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>With all due respect, your logical conclusion is dead wrong and my position has been uniformly defended for centuries by people who hold my position.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>A position held for long centuries, while impressive, does not necessarily guarantee validity.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>I am willing to leave God in control and believe that he does not contradict himself or impugn himself. I am willing to let the texts of Scripture stand as they do.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>That Larry is willing to “leave God in control” (exhaustive and minute control would not be erroneous to add), I agree. That Larry believes God does not contradict himself or impugn His own character, I agree. That Larry is willing to let the “texts of scripture stand as they do” – apart from the Reformed/Calvinistic tradition – is questionable.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Then you contend that I misunderstood my own questions. That does not even make sense.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>I agree. It didn’t make sense to me either that Larry didn’t understand his own questions.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson: On post of 1/6/02, 03:34 PM, I responded to more of verses Paul cited, which were Gen. 50:20; again Acts 2:23 and Job 2:10; 4:28; and finally, Ps. 115 and 136.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Larry: But your responses are clearly inadequate…<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Since it was not my intention to write a systematic theology, my responses were brief and confined to the specific point. However, allow me to make a few observations:
To my question of how would he explain, in accordance with his view of divine sovereignty (for which he agrees I have a general understanding), the rape of a child without impugning God’s character, Larry answers, “To do so would take a much greater mind than I have. God has not revealed to us the infinite perfections or the interworkings of his mind. His thoughts and ways are above ours. I think it is outside the place of man to try to ‘figure it out.’ We must simply take God at what he says and live accordingly. God's character is not impugned because our minds are too small to comprehend his plan. I would be careful asserting otherwise.”
A simple, “I don’t know,” would have sufficed.
Larry ignored my post dated January 03, 2002 12:46 PM, wherein it was logically concluded that his views render the idea that God is an active participant, as well as the first cause, of the child raped.
Could it be that Larry perceives that my posts are inadequate, not because that are really so but because they contradict his views?
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>“This man” was the one delivered over and he was delivered by the predetermined plan and foreknowledge of God. You can’t really get around that in the text.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>It can be agreed that it was God’s will for Jesus to suffer and be crucified. However, I don’t think God’s choice of Christ to suffer and die can be equated with a “predetermined plan” to have the rape of an 8-year-old child occur, especially interpreted as Larry does.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR> As for Gen 50:20, your statement – “I agree with the meaning of the word itself” - is undermined by your rejection of what it says.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>God purposed the good by allowing the evil and in that sense I agree with the text. God meant “it” (the evil acted out by Joseph’s brothers) for good (deliverance from famine). Consequently, what is “meant” was that the evil committed by Joseph’s brothers be used for good purposes but not that the evil in itself is something that God had purposed except to allow its occurrence.
I paraphrase Joseph’s words in order to express what I believe is the Scriptural intent: “As for you, you meant to cause me evil but God planned (Strong’s #2803) using your evil actions in order to bring about good.”
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Here is a fundamental problem. You misunderstood “will…what God determines to bring about. It can, in some contexts, refer to either his desires or to his decree.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>It can mean what he “determines to bring about,” that is (as I understand what Larry is trying to bring out), the event He causes to occur inevitably. However, to my mind, it can also mean what God desires though what actually occurs contradicts such desire. My definition of His primary will incorporates both aspects. What aspect is intended would be interpreted according to the Biblical context.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson:Job had not read the chapter before at the time Satan attacked him.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>By Larry: Another example of faulty reasoning.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Just joking here.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson:This is my main objection to Larry’s interpretation of Scripture because God is made the first and only cause of sin; Larry makes God to be the author of sin.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Larry:False. Read any number of writers on this topic and you will understand why this is not so. You are not distinguishing between primary and secondary causation. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Unfortunately, my objection is not with “any number of writers” but with Larry’s interpretation of Scripture as he, so far, has explained it. And in my earlier post (the portion he chose not to reply) I showed how his interpretation makes “secondary causes,” for all intents and purposes, irrelevant.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR> You do not seem to understand free will. Free will is the ability to act in accordance with the nature.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>I do not agree with Larry’s definition of “free will”. It falls short of what the Bible and experience, as far as I can tell, demonstrate.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson: What is being asked is one thing: How do his views preserve God’s holiness? Can his views be explained in a reasonable fashion that does not lead to dispute God’s holiness. He admits he cannot.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR> Where did I admit this?<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Has already been referred to above.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson: I do not believe God ordained the rape of an 8-year-old boy. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Larry:Then “all things” are not worked by God according to his will? You are plainly denying Scripture at this point. Consider Psalm 139:16: Your eyes have seen my unformed substance; And in Your book were all written The days that were ordained for me, When as yet there was not one of them.
Raping a child is not the same thing as creating one.
Please note another viable translation: “Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being unperfect; and in thy book all my members were written, which in continuance (Strong’s #03117) were fashioned (Strong’s #3335), when as yet there was none of them” (KJV). The stress laid in this translation is creation and not any preordination. Such a translation and interpretation is supported by the immediate context.
I paraphrase the Scriptural intent as: “And in Your mind were written all the days I was to be fashioned in my mother’s womb and the time I was to be born, all before it actually came to pass.”
by Nelson:According to Larry’s interpretation of the Biblical text, we are justified in declaring that “God is in the heavens; he rapes whomever he pleases.”<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Larry:Totally and completely false and you know it. You are engaging in intentional misrepresentation and lies. God does not rape anyone. <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>It is an honest conclusion, at least implied, based upon what Larry has stated thus far (as I explained in post dated January 03, 2002 at 12:46 PM). For all intents and purposes, according to Larry’s view, it can be concluded that God rapes children through the instrumentality of men (some may take it further to state that it is committed in a vicarious manner).
Admittedly, it seems, this degrading thought is not what Larry espouses but the manner in which he has explained his position may logically lead to such a conclusion.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>One problem: Everything we know about God’s holiness comes from exegetical accuracy.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>It is only through the presence and power of the Holy Spirit that one can really know what God’s holiness really is. Though it is not disparaged, all the “exegetical accuracy” (and that includes common sense) in the world won’t lead one to the knowledge and power of true holiness without the Holy Spirit opening up the Scriptures to him.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Nelson: As a footnote, if one can't explain God in simple matters, no need to take his advice on more complicated subjects.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>by Larry: Tell me anyone who can explain God in simple matters.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Children. Luke 10:21.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>You have an equally disturbing problem with even greater implications. If God could have prevented the rape of a boy and yet did not, is not his goodness equally called into question? <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>My views are not disturbing, at least to me, when man's free will (with the ability to choose for or against God included in the definition) is taken into consideration.
<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Furthermore, it becomes hopeless because a God who chose not to prevent such a horrible evil can certainly not be trusted with anything else. Furthermore, there is no guarantee of victory in the final great conflict of the ages because God is not willing (according to you) to compromise man’s free will. In other words, you have simply changed the context of the problem You have not answered it.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Allow me to clarify some misunderstandings on Larry’s part:
1. Because God preserves man’s free will it does not mean He does not or cannot intervene in man’s affairs.
2. The mystery I see is not the existence of sin and evil itself, but why God would allow one evil to occur here but prevent another there? Or, why would God allow this child to be sinned against and not that child?
3. There will certainly come the day when God will overrule man’s free will. I cannot imagine any sinner skipping happily to hell. However, it is not a violation of free will to exercise justice.
[ February 08, 2002: Message edited by: Nelson ]