OldRegular
Well-Known Member
1. God makes us. That is a forceful statement. When I make someone do something do something it is by force. When I make something out of something else, it is by force.
Yes! But then you are not God; Are you?
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1. God makes us. That is a forceful statement. When I make someone do something do something it is by force. When I make something out of something else, it is by force.
No, and I don't believe that God forces people either.Yes! But then you are not God; Are you?
Simple logical states that if God chose some to be saved, then he chose the rest to be damned. That is Calvinism. You can't have one without the other.
Each coin has two sides.Believers are the body and they are the one's who here the Gospel of thier salvation having believed. They are the whosoever believed.
I don't fault God for anything.All were damned and God chose to save some, including you! And you fault God for that? Your gratefulness to God is indeed humbling!!
No, no, and 1000 times NO! What is it with you and your fascination with "robots"?No, and I don't believe that God forces people either.
Are you now admitting that God, by force, (and only according to your theology and point of view) makes robots out of men, for he simply forces them to do what he wants without any free will at all.
No. God did not create robots. Man planted himself in the miry clay and only God can pull Him out. God does not micro-manage their decisions, but He is in the soul-saving business. He is in the regeneration/rebirthing business. He is in the life-changing business. He frees people's free wills so that they are free to please Him with their own free choices.I can make a robot, program him to bow down before me and say all day long "I worship DHK; I worship DHK, etc." But God didn't do that; although it seems that you believe he did.
Yup. And when man is left to his free will without God rescuing him, he will always reject Him (Romans 8:5-9).God gave man a free will to choose or not to choose to worship him.
Nope, but if man is going to have the volitional capacity to worship God after depriving himself, he needs God's effectual helping hand.He is not forcing man to worship him.
Each coin has two sides.
The unbelievers are the ones that chose not to believe.
Take the free will out of man and he becomes nothing more than a robot.No, no, and 1000 times NO! What is it with you and your fascination with "robots"?![]()
True enoughI (at least I know that I) do not believe that God personally "micro-manages" every distinct action of people. For the non-elect, God simply leaves them to the dictates of their free will. Therefore, according to their nature, they freely choose against God's will. They do exactly what they want to do!
In other words God makes them robots.For the elect, the Holy Spirit through the Word of God changes their nature so that they are now spiritually alive, born again, and desire the will of God. He changes their nature, which frees their free will, enabling them to make free choices that please God. They do exactly what they want to do!
I don't believe that he created robots either. But most Calvinists I know--including yourself--speak as though he did.No. God did not create robots.
That is very true. And man must have the faith and believe that as he stretches out to grasp that hand that is pulling him out that it is strong enough to do so. He puts his faith, his trust in the power of the hand pulling him out. His faith and life is completely in the hand of the one pulling him out of the miry clay. It is a good illustration.Man planted himself in the miry clay and only God can pull Him out.
The choice to be freed is man's choice. God does make that choice for him. Faith in Christ and in his sacrificial work is the choice that man has--not a forced faith that God has given him. Faith always precedes regeneration/salvation.God does not micro-manage their decisions, but He is in the soul-saving business. He is in the regeneration/rebirthing business. He is in the life-changing business. He frees people's free wills so that they are free to please Him with their own free choices.
God won't rescue him unless he wants to be rescued; unless he exercises faith in the rescuer. Faith comes first; always.Yup. And when man is left to his free will without God rescuing him, he will always reject Him (Romans 8:5-9).
The help is only through the Holy Spirit; how he convicts one of sin, righteousness and judgment. God doesn't force him to believe. He believes on his own free will.Nope, but if man is going to have the volitional capacity to worship God after depriving himself, he needs God's effectual helping hand.
I was raised a Roman Catholic. I never heard the gospel until I was 20. At that point in time I had to make the decision whether to trust Christ or to reject him. I did not have that choice before that time. Thankfully I made the right choice.Ah, we ALL choose not to believe. 100% of mankind. You and Me. There are none good. There are none seeking God. Even the supposed good/righteous things we do are filth in God's eyes. We all rebel against God and break His holy Word and deserve eternal damnation.
So where does that leave all mankind? By our own free will and choice, it is HELL. God doesn't have to "elect" anyone to hell; we go there of our own volition and justly condemned.
That God should save anyone, changing/regenerating them so that they COULD repent and believer, is a humungous mystery to me.
Thankfully I made the right choice.
Is it relief? I never saw that as an attribute of God? Can you point that one out to me Rippon?WOW! God is sure relieved that Y-O-U made the right choice!
I don't agree, I think ordain or know falls more in line in that verse, particularly when the context is speaking of the remnant God has preserved.
If you claim it is "unresolved"...how can you claim it fits your theology? In my theology is is quite resolved.
...well it doesn't say Abraham was an idolaterThere are extra-biblical references throughout Scripture like Jasher that point to truth outside Scripture as well. "Fathers" is clearly speaking of lineage, and like you say in regards to not naming individuals, does not name Abraham as well. The Israelite came from a lineage of idolaters, it does not say Abraham was one of those in the lineage who was.
Simple logical states that if God chose some to be saved, then he chose the rest to be damned. That is Calvinism. You can't have one without the other.
The context determines how even present or passive participles are used. The context of the whole of chapter 6, and particularly the immediate surrounding text shows a voluntary action...
19I put this in human terms because you are weak in your natural selves. Just as you used to offer the parts of your body in slavery to impurity and to ever-increasing wickedness, so now offer them in slavery to righteousness leading to holiness. 20When you were slaves to sin, you were free from the control of righteousness. 21What benefit did you reap at that time from the things you are now ashamed of? Those things result in death! 22But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves to God, the benefit you reap leads to holiness, and the result is eternal life. 23For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.
...yet Paul had the opportunity to use "choose" and didn't.You are certainly free to think what you like. Of course Paul's usage doesn't agree with what you think. I'll take Paul over anyone.
You are overthinking. If Scripture states it is so, it has been resolved.Tension of two separate facts is nothing new in scripture. For example: the word "trinity" is never used. Yet we see three separate and distinct persons of the God-head--Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. So, while the Bible never speaks of "trinity" and while it is an impossibly difficult concept to comprehend, we know that, because scripture states it is so, it is so and the tension remains unresolved.
Abraham is listed in the next line of thought, not as part of the idolaters.Actually, it does. The Hebrew will not allow for your interpretation. It says the fathers lived beyond the river and worshiped other gods, but then it goes on to list those fathers...and that includes Abraham. The verb served is plural and, thus, is translated as they served.
I believe you are wrong and it supports the understanding Abraham was not a wicked idolater as you allege. I never claimed they were "more authoritative than Scripture", btw.I understand your presuppositions, but here is a case where they run directly against scripture. Holding extra-biblical references as more authoritative than scripture is a dangerous game. Yoda would say "once you start down [that] dark path, forever will it dominate your destiny."
And that is Biblical. I believe the same as well. When Adam fell, sin entered into the world and plunged the entire universe under a curse; a curse which cannot be fully removed until Christ comes again.This is not what most of us claim, although there are some. Most Calvinists believe that everyone is damned by the fall.
The difference here is a time element. Calvinists are so pre-occupied with the elect, the ones chosen before the foundation of the world, that it gives one the impression that they have no concern for the present. Why the great emphasis on "the elect." The Bible says that "The Lord knows them that are his." It does not say that any one of us knows them that are His.So, when God elects some, He does so actively. Those whom He does not elect are passively rejected.
No, I also believe man has a sin nature. But I don't believe that he is so depraved that he cannot choose to believe in the shed blood of Christ. "Being justified by faith we have peace with God" (Romans 5:1). It says nothing there about the elect. The stress is on faith, not faith given by God, but faith that comes from the person that has a choice to believe in Christ.Your statement, as common as it may be, suggest that you and those in agreement with you see man as basically neutral and, at some point, God chooses either to save or damn. We reject this idea--man is not neutral. Man, essentially, is condemned and dead already. God chooses to regenerate some. Why? I don't know. The patented answer is "for His own good pleasure."