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You weren't part of the band called "Twisted Sister," were you??
Cause that explanation is about as twisted as it gets!
So you'd be saying that man can make a decision that doesn't affect God's sovereignty to sin which -- what, he does every day and God wants him to do??
So you'd be saying that man...
Even God chooses when to intervene for control purposes and when not to, right?
"warp and woof"
johnp. said:I believe God is the Author of sin. He bound all men over to disobedience and that includes Adam. Any other way and the Sovereignty of God falls.
Yes, and that is for salvation.No, it means in Christ we are chosen.
But the text we are dealing with says that we are chosen; another text says that Christ was slain from the foundation of the world. That is only tangential here.The Bible says both.
Yes, and it means it could not happen any other way, or God’s knowledge would be wrong, and he would not be omniscient, and would not be God.[It means God is omniscient.
Reveals what? The fact that you do not accept what Scripture says hardly makes me blind. The Scripture says God chose us in him before the foundation of the world. The Scripture says God chose us from the beginning. You deny that. How am I the blind one?Then you are blind to it. I pray God reveals it to you...
And this text says we are chosen for salvation. The means by which salvation comes is the setting apart of the Spirit and belief in the truth.2 Thess. 2:13
But the fact remains that we are the ones chosen, not Christ. That is the point here: We are chosen.It is. I'm showing the reason why one is chosen "before the foundation of the world". We are "in" the Lamb slain before the foundation of the world.
Yes, but you said 2 Tim 2:10 was talking of Jews. It isn’t. It is talking about the elect, both Jews and Gentiles.Because he was the apostle to the gentiles means he cannot have a special place in his heart for his people? Were churches not made up of jewish and gentile believers?
When I say the soul is the only thing that dies, I mean that the body dies when the soul leaves it. Sorry for the confusion there. I was writing quickly. The body has no independent life.I don't think so, Larry. Where'd you get that?? We know that the soul is spiritual -- we know that man dies immediately upon sinning (you confess this or so you suggest by your question). Even cults say the soul only sleeps. And I am sure you believe that the soul goes to heaven upon death. Again -- where are you getting that information??
It’s a logical order.OK, you're agreeing that it happens BEFORE but that is not "chronological?" I can't imagine what you are saying.
No, quite the opposite, Calvinism affirms God’s omniscience. But your use of “foreknow” as “knowing ahead of time” is not the biblical meaning of the word translated as foreknow. You are using your meaning rather than the Bible.First -- it is EVERYTHING that is foreknown by God. Do you see by your response how Calvinism limits God's omniscience??
But it doesn’t happen before creation. God knows it will happen.To US belief takes place in time -- just like the "called" in Rom 8:30. But GOD can know it before it happens -- before creation.
No it’s not, not in the Bible.No to that last. "Setting apart to salvation" is called JUSTIFICATION, Larry.
No. In some context, the setting apart of the Spirit happens before belief (2 Thess 2:13). How is one at “phase 2” of salvation when he has not even believed yet?Remember I cited Col 1:13 where once we are justified, God translates us into the kingdom of Christ? Traslates us for what? To be sanctified by the Holy Spirit. Sanctification is "phase 2" of salvation, "phase 3" being glorification, right?
Well, that’s a different issue. Remember, we don’t believe something because Calvin did, but because we believe it is in the Bible.Oh, indeed it is! But don't think Calvin let is go. Nope, in his and Reform's hurry to create the "sacralist" kingdom of God on earth, they (like the Catholics), dispensed with the formalities of justification and made everyone who would be baptized and join the church the "elect."
He also has the support of 1 Corinthians. What you say here is not the same as what you said earlier.The pastor I heard, BTW, put it this way -- that the elect are those who are "continuing to be saved." No. They are continuing to be sanctified. And this man had a radio show on Christian radio!
But in those texts, it is God who does the choosing.As long as the "choosing" part is the believer's choosing, I could agree.
2 thess 2:13 says otherwise. There, the “setting apart” comes before faith.But the Spirit doesn't "sanctify" anyone who is not already saved by faith. And He doesn't "set apart" anyone for salvation. He draws them.
We agree on that. But it is hardly relevant.But He doesn't indwell the unjustified.
Then show us how. So far, you have not.Larry, your "model" is incorrect.
That’s not true. I don’t believe that and nothing in my words suggests that belief.You would have the totally depraved indwelt/regenerated by the Spirit of sanctification BEFORE they are even justified -- committed to God.
2 Thess 2:13 explicitly disagree with you. I think the setting apart is logically prior, and possibly chronologically prior to faith. This is where it differs from regeneration.The statement you thus made is "muddled." "people were chosen for salvation, which comes through the setting apart of the Spirit for salvation and the belief in the truth for salvation." You make belief and set apart as simultaneous. It's not. Belief comes first along with repentance unto justification. From belief we CAN obey God and repent. THEN we are set apart by and to the Spirit.
Except for 2 Thess 2:13 and 1 Peter 1:2.You have a sanctification pattern for salvation which pattern does not exist in the gospel.
And neither did I.God never said we are to work our way to salvation.
Your confusion is that you deny the use of sanctification in the verses under discussion, preferring a definition used elsewhere. Sanctification is used in different ways in Scripture. Get out your Greek concordance and look it up.Maybe it would help if you described your understanding of sanctification
I already did. You didn't like what I put forth, so we will have to agree to disagree again.Pastor Larry said:Look at Eph 1:4 and tell us who was chosen and when.
Look at 2 Thes 2:13 and tell us who was chosen, what they were chosen for, and when they were chosen.
Look at 2 Tim 2:10 and tell us the time relationship between being chosen and salvation.
Again, just answer the questions from the text, not your presuppositions about what the text must say.
As I pointed out, you didn't answer from the text. You answered from your theology, and that was my objection. In the desire to protect a theology, you gave answers about the texts that are inconsistent with the texts themselves. And that is why I left the position you hold, and it is why I object to it now. I think if God had wanted to say what you say, he could have done so very clearly. But he didn't. And to me, that is significant.I already did. You didn't like what I put forth, so we will have to agree to disagree again.
UnchartedSpirit said:why why why? Why are Calvinists this important? If its anyone we should continually argue against and perpetually shame, its the Cathloics. They've messed up the world the most!
Larry, I grant you that there are texts that define "foreknow" the way you would have it. They lend credence to ALL denominations is why they include every definition. But if they were "chosen" way back when they were "forknown," then there's your answer as to when they were regenerated. It was in eternity past (since you find no other event worthy of a person receiving regeneration). But that means they were never totally depraved -- that they DID have some merit worthy of salvation.Pastor Larry said:No, quite the opposite, Calvinism affirms God’s omniscience. But your use of “foreknow” as “knowing ahead of time” is not the biblical meaning of the word translated as foreknow. You are using your meaning rather than the Bible.
Right.Consider your own definition of foreknow in roma 8:29. If God’s foreknowledge is simply knowing ahead of time, and God is omniscient, then he “foreknows” who will not believe as well as who will.
Oh, contrare'! That's putting "spin" on the text. We know the context is about believers only -- them who "love God and are called according to His purpose." (8:28) Sure, God foreknew the lost as well -- but this is a discourse about the saved.And romans 8:29 says all the foreknown go through the called, justified, glorified cycle. Your position therefore has those who God foreknows will not believe being called, justified, and glorified …
Sorry Larry. I think I confused you. What are the steps of salvation? JUSTIFICATION (of the soul), SANCTIFICATION (of the spirit), GLORIFICATION (of the body), right? Jusification is believing God unto repentance. It is the gospel that John the Baptist preached -- repent and be baptized for the forgiveness of sins, Mt 3:1, 11. That is believe and obey. Yet when Paul encountered them (Acts 19:1-5), they were not saved as we are today indwelt by the Holy Ghost. Larry -- justification comes BEFORE regeneration (which is sanctification)! You would have us believe that John's disciples were indwelt despite they never heard of the Holy Ghost.Me: "No to that last. "Setting apart to salvation" is called JUSTIFICATION, Larry.
You: No it’s not, not in the Bible.
My question precisely! You must be misinterpretting 2Thes 2:13 and 1Pet 1:2, right? Specifically (2Thes), set apart and belief are connected by "and" but are not simultaneous (as you confess they aren't). So belief has something to do with the "chosing" and Paul is not delineating the 2 roles separately like he does elsewhere.No. In some context, the setting apart of the Spirit happens before belief (2 Thess 2:13). How is one at “phase 2” of salvation when he has not even believed yet?
But you let Calvin put it there for you. You accuse us of the same thing, right? Someone is wrong though.Well, that’s a different issue. Remember, we don’t believe something because Calvin did, but because we believe it is in the Bible.
My bad. I've tried, though.Then show us how. So far, you have not [shown us how your model is flawed].
Denying that, do you then say that the "elect" when the "general call" goes out have some merit (indwelling) that God should save them and not others? How was their "depravity" taken away before they had faith?That’s not true [that you believe the totally depraved are indwelt by the Spirit]. I don’t believe that and nothing in my words suggests that belief.
I believe I have included them in my expositions. But they are not the main focus of the issue we have which is that justification comes before sanctification/election yet in the Calvin model, there is no place of justification. It is assumed without any preceding act or "work" on the part of the believer. Now that just does NOT jibe with any scripture that I can find. In every case, a mere man heard God, believed and responded to God, and received faith in God. That's the basic pattern of justification that precedes sanctification/regeneration/translation into the kingdom of Christ! It works the same at my job, Larry. I had to be hired before I could walk into the workplace and start being rewarded for it.Your confusion is that you deny the use of sanctification in the verses under discussion, preferring a definition used elsewhere. Sanctification is used in different ways in Scripture. Get out your Greek concordance and look it up.
Well, I hope to disabuse of this accusation. As my pastor said, "When you're pointing at me, there are 3 more fingers on that hand pointing at you." :laugh:There are some serious flaws in your thinking that go right to the heart of the verses under discussion.
Good!johnp. said:If God, in His Sovereignty decided that man could make a decision then that does not affect His Sovereignty. God's Sovereignty is not affected by giving man free will.
Yet if man can't make a choice on his own, he has no "free will." I maintain that we bring God's sovereignty into our lives by freely choosing Him. But by not freely choosing Him, God is still sovereign, just not in your life.What would affect His Sovereignty is if the person makes a choice of his own. If God is not Sovereign over your choices then He is not Sovereign, you are. God's Sovereignty will not exist if a man makes a free will choice because a free will choice is sovereignty. Control.
God will tell him in the end, right? In Psa David said and in Mt Jesus confirmed "ye are gods." What did that mean? It meant that we were sovereigns of our own lives.Sovereignty resides in the choice. If man is free to believe or do what he likes then he is king. Who will tell him no? To be like God?
Yeah. Isn't that what we see except among Christians? Isn't, indeed, Satan the ruler of this age? But He's not powerless to intervene, is He? He sent the flood, right?Man cannot make a decision without being free from God's Authority and if he is free from God's Authority then God is sovereign in name only...
God is not the author of sin. His "binding all men over to disobedience" is just another way of saying that by free will men make themselves servants of another master -- Satan. And that is true. And if they do, then God is not sovereign in their lives but only over their lives. They remain in God's plan -- they just don't help it come to fruitition.I believe God is the Author of sin. He bound all men over to disobedience and that includes Adam. Any other way and the Sovereignty of God falls.
This is the cop out of all who can't discern what God's plan really is. You ought to run from such declarations. The Bible is very explicit and we KNOW that whoever BELIEVES is foreknown and predestined of God. Ignorance, according to Rom 1, is not an excuse.I hold that all events whatsoever are governed by the secret counsel of God.
johnp. said:Hello Blammo that's one I ain't met before, cool man.
It's late, I shall work on it and try a reply tomorrow. One thing, might be worth noting is that I never said the Father is the Author of sin I said God was.
He bound all men over to disobedience didn't He? Rom 11:32. I would like an answer to this please.
john.
skypair said:Larry, I grant you that there are texts that define "foreknow" the way you would have it. They lend credence to ALL denominations is why they include every definition. But if they were "chosen" way back when they were "forknown," then there's your answer as to when they were regenerated. It was in eternity past (since you find no other event worthy of a person receiving regeneration). But that means they were never totally depraved -- that they DID have some merit worthy of salvation.
As Npetreley pointed out, this is a non sequitur. First, the fact that they were chosen and foreknown in eternity past says nothing about when they were regenerated, since these are distinct things. Second it does not mean they were not totally depraved. That is unconnected to this point.But if they were "chosen" way back when they were "forknown," then there's your answer as to when they were regenerated. It was in eternity past (since you find no other event worthy of a person receiving regeneration). But that means they were never totally depraved -- that they DID have some merit worthy of salvation.
But the text says “those whom he foreknew, he called, justified, and glorified.” The “those” that he foreknew is not limited to believers at all. That is you adding to the text. It does not say “Part of those whom he foreknew.”That's putting "spin" on the text. We know the context is about believers only -- them who "love God and are called according to His purpose." (8:28) Sure, God foreknew the lost as well -- but this is a discourse about the saved.
In part, yes. There is also election, calling, faith, repentance, adoption, sealing, etc.Sorry Larry. I think I confused you. What are the steps of salvation? JUSTIFICATION (of the soul), SANCTIFICATION (of the spirit), GLORIFICATION (of the body), right?
No, justification is the declaration by God that we are just, free from sin, imputed with righteousness. It comes from faith and repentance.Jusification is believing God unto repentance.
You have not shown that.justification comes BEFORE regeneration (which is sanctification)!
The book of Acts is transitional and so the work of the Spirit from the OT to the NT is in transition. I would not base a doctrine off of this. Too much of a discussion here to get into, but look at the occurrences of the work of the Spirit in Acts. There are only 4: Acts 2 (Pentecost); Acts 8 (Samaritans); Acts 10-11 (Cornelius, Gentiles); Acts 19 (Ephesus).You would have us believe that John's disciples were indwelt despite they never heard of the Holy Ghost.
No, you contend I misinterpret it because I disagree with you. The question is “What does the text say?” That is what I am trying to get at.You must be misinterpretting 2Thes 2:13 and 1Pet 1:2, right?
But notice which one comes first.Specifically (2Thes), set apart and belief are connected by "and" but are not simultaneous (as you confess they aren't).
What? I think belief has something to do with the choosing, namely that the believing follows the choosing, and that is the order we see in the text.So belief has something to do with the "chosing" and Paul is not delineating the 2 roles separately like he does elsewhere.
Not at all. To make your calling and election sure is to take heed that you are developing the disciplines of Christian living. It is how we know we are of the elect.And then 1Pet -- we know how Peter treats the word "elect" from "make your calling and election sure," right? If "calling" is to justification, then "election" is to sanctification which latter the Lord has predestined IAW Rom 8:29.
Not at all.But you let Calvin put it there for you.
I don’t think Calvinists are loathe to do that. We are careful not to promise salvation because someone says a prayer or gets rebaptized. But we do call people to a decision.Because Calvinists are loathe to call people to a personal decision -- i.e. a sinner's prayer, a walk down the aisle, a "rebaptism" -- anything that smacks of "works." So first there's the "sovereignty" contradiction and then there's the "works" issue, BOTH of which Calvin framed wrongly.
They had no merit; it is totally of grace. Their depravity is not taken away. All of us are still totally depraved. (Make sure you understand total depravity before you disagree.) Through the work fo the Spirit and grace in our lives, our depravity is being mitigated through sanctification.Denying that, do you then say that the "elect" when the "general call" goes out have some merit (indwelling) that God should save them and not others? How was their "depravity" taken away before they had faith?
But it doesn’t. Justification is never said to follow election, and sanctification has at least two meanings in this regard. You are not recognizing those distinctions.But they are not the main focus of the issue we have which is that justification comes before sanctification/election
On this topic, he was wrong.As my pastor said, "When you're pointing at me, there are 3 more fingers on that hand pointing at you."
npetreley said:Non-sequitur. I don't get your reasoning here at all. Because they were foreknown, they had some merit? And how does being foreknown have any connection to when they were regenerated? Then you seem to think it follows that they were never totally depraved. These are all major league non-sequiturs.
npeterey doesn't understand his own scriptural perspective. He would gladly agree that only those who "do truth" can come to Christ, John 3:21 -- that they actually do truth before they are "come". Why do the "do truth?" Cause they're "elect" or "regenerated," naturally!Pastor Larry said:As Npetreley pointed out, this is a non sequitur. First, the fact that they were chosen and foreknown in eternity past says nothing about when they were regenerated, since these are distinct things. Second it does not mean they were not totally depraved. That is unconnected to this point.
We both agree that Paul is talking about believers here. You are trying to extend this passage to unbelievers who are not "justified, glorified,..." So, yes, in this context, the foreknown are limited to believers. It's like in Rom 1 where Paul never tells us about those who DID believe the revelation God gave them and didn't reject the truth.But the text says “those whom he foreknew, he called, justified, and glorified.” The “those” that he foreknew is not limited to believers at all. That is you adding to the text. It does not say “Part of those whom he foreknew.”
Well, it comes from BELIEF and repentance. The rest seems to be in order, though.No, justification is the declaration by God that we are just, free from sin, imputed with righteousness. It comes from faith and repentance.
Indeed, it was. So you are conceding that salvation was different in the OT? And aren't each of those HS incidents teaching us truths?? I don't say get into all of them -- just Acts 19.The book of Acts is transitional and so the work of the Spirit from the OT to the NT is in transition.
I'm glad you said you "think" they aren't loathe to do that because it is obedient belief that justifies us in God's eyes whereupon He translates us into the SANCTIFYING kingdom of His Son with gifts -- faith, indwelling Spirit/regeneration, ability to know the mind of Christ, etc.I don’t think Calvinists are loathe to do that. We are careful not to promise salvation because someone says a prayer or gets rebaptized. But we do call people to a decision.
I agree justification is never said to follow election. Good. OK, what are the "two meanings" of sanctification?But it doesn’t. Justification is never said to follow election, and sanctification has at least two meanings in this regard. You are not recognizing those distinctions.
If you're not growing, you're backsliding, Larry. I'll slow down to one-a-days with you but you need to be disabused of your weak sotierology. What do you think of Presby D. James Kennedy's Evangelism Explosion?I am not sure how much more there is to accomplish here, so I am going to try to curtail my participation. Thanks for the conversation.