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I have not swamped the OP with a lot of Scripture quotations,Sorry, I posted the wrong thread.
Here's the correct one ...
Correct, that's the condemnation we all have by nature, to love darkness rather than light, and Christ and His Gospel is the Light Jn 3:19-21Man is doubly incapable of believing in Jesus and the Gospel
These conversations never work because if you take our logic to it's conclusion you end up with an obvious falsehood. If we are incapable of coming to Christ in a functionally incapable manner, then God is the one responsible for those who don't come. But if God is putting out the information or the provision for salvation and it's up to us to respond then we have a problem. One. We can tell it doesn't work that way - there is not observed equality in the hearing of the gospel, nor is our environment and exposure to good or bad influences equal. And two. Under this system, God would be wrong and unjust to go to and help a certain group or individual, which he clearly did and does, and it would be wrong to pray that he do this (which we all do, and are told to do).
So is it all up to God then? The problem I run up against is that my favorite Calvinists don't seem to think so. Owen said that the greatest offense and sin we can commit against God is to refuse his invitations to come to Christ. Edwards preached that Christ has died, all is ready, the only thing lacking is your consent to be saved. J.C. Ryle said that in a sense, you control your own destiny by accepting or rejecting Christ. He put it into your own hands, without apology.
The other problem is that when you talk about depravity, almost everyone agrees that we are truly unable to just resolve to start following Christ and then to do so effectively. We inherently know that something is wrong with us and that our attempts to do so end up in failure and discouragement. We know this is our own fault and we know the problem is our own depravity.
But if we know this, then does that mean we are indeed able to go to Christ at least admitting that we know this? If we are capable as men of having that type of self introspection and dialog then is it not true that we have some responsibility, on our own, to at least evaluate our condition, and possibly to ask for help? Or, was it the Holy Spirit who had to awaken us in order to even have such a dialog with ourselves? If so, is what we are describing regeneration, or just conviction?
I think that we are born flesh (carnal...human beings). As such our desires are of the flesh. Another birth is of the Spirit and such desires are of the Spirit (I prefer using "flesh" vs "spirit" because it is easier to reference in the Bible as those are the Biblical categories).I have not swamped the OP with a lot of Scripture quotations,
but hopefully you will recall the NT verses which confirm the following …
Man is doubly incapable of believing in Jesus and the Gospel
1 – Because of the disobedience (sin) of Adam and Eve,
all humans are born with an inherited sin nature,
and are bent on sinning instead of following God (Romans 3:9-18).
Having a saving faith is against their very nature!
2 - All unsaved humans are captive prisoners of Satan,
and are bent on doing whatever he wants them to do (2 Timothy 2:26).
Jesus came to set the captives of Satan free (Luke 4:18).
Having a saving faith is against our enemy’s plans for them,
which, of course, is spending eternity with Satan and his demons in hell.
If the God-worshipping Lydia (Acts 16:14) needs God to give her the necessary
faith to believe in Jesus and the Gospel, surely everyone does also!
Similarly, the “anyones” who believe in Jesus in verses such as John 3:16
are the ones whom God has given saving faith!.
One of the biggest arguments for God's sovereignty in man's salvation is the fact that everyone is obviously not given some kind of equal chance. You simply cannot read scripture and come up with this equal opportunity scenario, even though it might make you feel better.But God disagrees with you Dave. God has provided the information and conviction for all men.
I agree with you here. And I have noticed that the Calvinists who I read do indeed hold man responsible upon hearing the gospel, to respond. And they actually taught that if men don't respond to God it is because of their willful rejection and not because of some type of inability that is organic. When they are saying "inability" they mean a problem with our actual will which is not the same I fear as some of the modern Calvinist development which is much more deterministic.If man has no option but to reject His offered gift then how is it just for God to hold them responsible for rejecting Him? God considers man capable of making rational choices. The bible is clear that God will respond to those that call out to Him.
If we are incapable of coming to Christ in a functionally incapable manner, then God is the one responsible for those who don't come.
One of the biggest arguments for God's sovereignty in man's salvation is the fact that everyone is obviously not given some kind of equal chance. You simply cannot read scripture and come up with this equal opportunity scenario, even though it might make you feel better.
I agree with you here. And I have noticed that the Calvinists who I read do indeed hold man responsible upon hearing the gospel, to respond. And they actually taught that if men don't respond to God it is because of their willful rejection and not because of some type of inability that is organic. When they are saying "inability" they mean a problem with our actual will which is not the same I fear as some of the modern Calvinist development which is much more deterministic.
What I am saying is that we simply do not have the ability to understand what all is going on in our salvation. Clearly, we who believe have been given great opportunities, far more than others. That is an observable fact. We can also give testimonies of being convicted and drawn in a way that other people we know have not. But it is true at the same time, that other people have chosen not to come to Christ who have had what looks to us like just as much opportunity and blessing as we have. They are the barren fig trees of scripture and their fault is truly their own. And we are clearly warned lest we be among those people. If election explained everything then warnings like that could not be real. My only point is that we cannot really resolve this with an oversimplified explanation. The explanation that God throws out the information and leaves it up to us to decide falls short of explaining how this works. But so does the Calvinist explanation that clearly states that God as a creative act and as a primary desire, created millions of people for the sole purpose of burning them in Hell.
Many years ago ...
I had 2 similar experiences during the same week:
1 – with my nephew in Ontario
2 – with a waitress in a London hotel
I gave both of them a Gospel tract, and the following morning
… they each said, “I tried hard to believe it, but I just can’t.”
I see this as falling into the Lydia (Acts 16:14) category of
God having to give the necessary faith to believe in Jesus
and the Gospel.
Have any of you had a similar experience?
I do agree that when a man hears the gospel he is truly guilty if he rejects the offer. What I am trying to say is the difficulty or "inability" we have in coming to Christ is caused by the fact that we are too selfish, sensual, and mean to want to. And while that is truly a real inability, it is of a different nature than some physical limitation for example.We are obviously going to disagree on this as I see that God made it clear that man has no excuse for not knowing Him. And we can all call out to Him for forgiveness.
??? I'm not sure what those passages have to do with what I am saying.
I do agree that when a man hears the gospel he is truly guilty if he rejects the offer. What I am trying to say is the difficulty or "inability" we have in coming to Christ is caused by the fact that we are too selfish, sensual, and mean to want to. And while that is truly a real inability, it is of a different nature than some physical limitation for example.
The problem I have with Calvinism, and not really Calvinism, but the way it is taught, is that while I believe that a supernatural enlightening or drawing or conviction is essential because of the way we are - I still think that from what I see in scripture, God is very liberal in desiring to give this light and does not tend to randomly withhold such light unless it is a response to a person's continued willful sin and rejection. In addition, I think that there is a theological principle that is not often discussed in these debates, and that is that it seems that there is some residual tendency of some men to make some type of attempt to move towards God that while it is short of saving enlightenment and while it may be somehow the result of God's previous grace - it is something that tends to move God to giving such grace. Lydia, Cornelius, and several other conversion stories seem to show this. And the Puritan preachers, mostly good Calvinists, noticed this and encouraged people to act on whatever light they had, read scripture, attend the ordinances or sacraments because of their teaching function, and pray for more grace. The fact is we are just not privy to exactly how this works and have to be careful intruding into the workings of God.
Where this gets difficult is trying to differentiate between God holding a man responsible for what the judicial truth is. And that is that men should be able to respond to God's gracious offer of salvation and can be held fully responsible if he doesn't. Man is truly unable to do so because he is unwilling to do so and by his own free will tends to choose to reject Christ. I think that God indeed gives men grace in the form of circumstances, troubles, dangers, miracles and direct conviction and enlightening of understanding and calling. I think it is indeed essential that this happens or else men won't be saved. Where I think some Calvinists make a mistake is to so camp on a rigid predestination which leads them to also emphasize the one's who do not have a sufficient outpouring of grace that they are saved.And while you can see that man has the ability to choose to reject the offer you just can not accept the reality that man can also accept the offer. I do find this odd as God seems to think man can do just that and that is why He holds them responsible for rejecting it.