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So you are telling me I can't trust God's word? I can't trust the work of the Spirit? I have to depend on you to know what it really means?Oh, God knows what He is talking about...you don't know what he is talking about.
You tell me. Can God know something false? If God knows all things at all times since he has existed, can God know something as a true happening that won't actually happen. In other words, if God knows all things, and knows that you will eat lunch at McDonald's today, can you eat lunch anywhere else?HP: Tell us Pastor, did this knowledge God possessed necessitate the outcome? If so, what man told you that?
I can't speak for all, but I believe this. I don't ignore it.Several verses you have to ignore the meaning of:
2Pe 3:9 The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
I believe this one too.1Ti 2:4 Who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth.
I believe this one too.Jhn 3:16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. 17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved.
This one too.Rom 9:33 As it is written, Behold, I lay in Sion a stumblingstone and rock of offence: and whosoever believeth on him shall not be ashamed.
This one too.Rom 10:11 For the scripture saith, Whosoever believeth on him shall not be ashamed.
This one too.Rom 5:18 Therefore as by the offence of one [judgment came] upon all men to condemnation; even so by the righteousness of one [the free gift came] upon all men unto justification of life.
This one too.2Cr 5:14 For the love of Christ constraineth us; because we thus judge, that if one died for all, then were all dead: 15 And [that] he died for all, that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto him which died for them, and rose again.
Pastor Larry: You tell me. Can God know something false?
HP: No.Pastor Larry: If God knows all things at all times since he has existed, can God know something as a true happening that won't actually happen.
HP: More than likely I could but God obviously knows I will not. Foreknowledge, in the case of free moral agents, held eternally responsible for their actions, does not nor can it justly, necessitate the outcome. God simply foreknows matters of perfect choice as well as those our finite foreknowledge is limited to, i.e. matters of necessity. Why do you limit an Omnipotent God to the foreknowledge of mere men? What man have you been listening to? Sure sounds like Augustine and Calvin to me.Pastor Larry: In other words, if God knows all things, and knows that you will eat lunch at McDonald's today, can you eat lunch anywhere else?
ExcellentHP: No.
Excellent, again.HP: No.
Now you have contradicted what you just said above, and on top of that are playing games with words. If God knows something and his knowledge is always true, then it has to happen the way God knows it. It cannot happen any other way. So to say "I can but God knows I won't" creates a wordplay that I don't think can stand up.HP: More than likely I could but God obviously knows I will not.
I don't. I didn't even bring the foreknowledge of mere men up. I don't know what you are talking about with respect to that.Why do you limit an Omnipotent God to the foreknowledge of mere men?
Just Jesus, Paul, Peter. Ezekiel of late, reading this morning about the certain judgment of Egypt. Jeremiah I just finished.What man have you been listening to?
Never read anything other than select quotes from either. Never listened to them either. No recordings have been perserved.Sure sounds like Augustine and Calvin to me.
Since every believer is indwelt by the Spirit, and I also claim the exact same thing, I would suggest not "depending" on any man.So you are telling me I can't trust God's word? I can't trust the work of the Spirit? I have to depend on you to know what it really means?
I can't speak for all, but I believe this. I don't ignore it.
I believe this one too.
I believe this one too.
This one too.
This one too.
This one too.
This one too.
Wow, looks like you were wrong. I don't ignore these verses. I fully and without qualification affirm them all. I completely and absolutely believe them. Do you have any others that you think we ignore? because you clearly are wrong on this list.
This is the true debate - knowing VS causing. Does God's foreknowledge mean he caused? No it doesn't. For the very simple reason that God is outside of time and not bound to the limitations of time. God IS... equally now and in the past and in the future simultaneously. So it would be logical to say that God has already experienced you and me and every choice we will ever make. He experienced this at the foundation of the universe. I use the word "experience" because it indicates a past-tense, presently aware event. God doesn't choose for us, he knows what our choices will be because he is present - even now - when we make those future choices.You tell me. Can God know something false? If God knows all things at all times since he has existed, can God know something as a true happening that won't actually happen. In other words, if God knows all things, and knows that you will eat lunch at McDonald's today, can you eat lunch anywhere else?
I am not aware of any damage these do to Calvinism. Every Calvinist I know fully affirms these verses without compromise.I commend your belief of scripture, and unwillingness to compromise it, even though these scriptures do great damage to the doctrine of Calvinism.
No, not really. The “L” means that Christ intended to save only the elect, only those who believe. He did not die to save unbelievers. But many Calvinists disagree with this point. Most however make a distinction between sufficiency and efficiency.One tenet of Calvinism is that Jesus did not die for all mankind, but that he only died for the 'elect'. This is the L in TULIP and it stands for Limited Atonement. This is the idea that Christ did not die for all, but only for the chosen.
Of course not. God didn’t tell “US” to choose anything. He said that to Israel living under the Law of Moses getting ready to enter the promised land. We can certainly draw some applications from that, but he didn’t say it to us. The better verse is Acts 17:30 where “Acts 17:30 God is now declaring to men that all people everywhere should repent,”Do you ignore Deuteronomy 30 where God commands US to choose life or death?
Your answer is correct but your logic is wrong. It has nothing to do with being outside of time. So far as I know, you can’t show anywhere in Scripture that that argument is appealed to as a reason. If you know a place where Scripture (not you or Webdog) uses that argument, please put it forth for consideration.This is the true debate - knowing VS causing. Does God's foreknowledge mean he caused? No it doesn't. For the very simple reason that God is outside of time and not bound to the limitations of time.
I think this is part of the problem. Where my commitment is to Scripture and what Scripture says regardless of where human logic might lead me, you are more committed to logic. I think logic plays a role, but only when it is submitted to Scripture.So it would be logical to say that God…
No, it’s not really say that at all. It is saying, “Obey the Law, and live long in the land.” Read all of the Palestinian covenant in Deut 28-30 to get the background. Don’t just lift this verse out of context.Therefore when Deuteronomy 30:19 says "I have set before you life, death, blessing and cursing... so choose life", it's really saying I created an entire universe - everything you see around you - the fabric of time and space itself - to allow you to make one decision, therefore make the decision. And by the way, it is in your best interest to choose life.
Wrong, Calvinism is directly from Scripture and arminism lead me to the RCC so don't presume to tell me something you don't know.
This is how I became a Calvinist. I was something else, and tried to be, but the Word would not let me go that way. I had to set aside what I had been taught my whole life. And I didn't do it intentionally. The teaching of Scripture overwhelmed my objections. If others in good conscience differ, that's fine with me. But I cannot, in good conscience, be anything else.take this opportunity to reconsider this and every other doctrine that you hold close to your heart by setting aside all that you have been taught by others as well as those things that you believe yourself to understand and come to the Word of God with an empty vessel and no predisposition and allow God to teach you his Word and he will, just as he promised.
I believe that this is incorrect despite the powerful intuitive appeal.If God knows something and his knowledge is always true, then it has to happen the way God knows it. It cannot happen any other way. So to say "I can but God knows I won't" creates a wordplay that I don't think can stand up.
No, I am not saying this.So God can know something and be wrong about it?
I am not aware of any damage these do to Calvinism. Every Calvinist I know fully affirms these verses without compromise.
No, not really. The “L” means that Christ intended to save only the elect, only those who believe. He did not die to save unbelievers. But many Calvinists disagree with this point. Most however make a distinction between sufficiency and efficiency.
Of course not. God didn’t tell “US” to choose anything. He said that to Israel living under the Law of Moses getting ready to enter the promised land. We can certainly draw some applications from that, but he didn’t say it to us. The better verse is Acts 17:30 where “Acts 17:30 God is now declaring to men that all people everywhere should repent,”
Your answer is correct but your logic is wrong. It has nothing to do with being outside of time. So far as I know, you can’t show anywhere in Scripture that that argument is appealed to as a reason. If you know a place where Scripture (not you or Webdog) uses that argument, please put it forth for consideration.
I think this is part of the problem. Where my commitment is to Scripture and what Scripture says regardless of where human logic might lead me, you are more committed to logic. I think logic plays a role, but only when it is submitted to Scripture.
No, it’s not really say that at all. It is saying, “Obey the Law, and live long in the land.” Read all of the Palestinian covenant in Deut 28-30 to get the background. Don’t just lift this verse out of context.
This is how I became a Calvinist. I was something else, and tried to be, but the Word would not let me go that way. I had to set aside what I had been taught my whole life. And I didn't do it intentionally. The teaching of Scripture overwhelmed my objections. If others in good conscience differ, that's fine with me. But I cannot, in good conscience, be anything else.
BTW, I have seen very few Calvinists use OT passages, because the OT is harder to deal with because it is about God's working with the nation of Israel. In my experience, most of the OT passages (such as above with Deut 30) are brought up by Arminians (or non-Calvinists if you prefer).
There is not doctrinal leadership, and what I stated is full-blown five point Calvinism. But some Calvinists are actually what are called Amyraldians, or four point Calvinists.Perhaps you "semi-Calvinists" should join forces with the semi-palegians and overthrow your respective doctrinal leadership in a Coup-de-doc(trine).
In some places this is true. If I tell my son, "You can't play in the yard next door," that does not meant that you (Gup20) can't play in the yard next door. You see, we easily recognize that all words do not equally apply to us. But for some reason, some jettison common sense when it comes to Scripture.Well that's a slippery slope. I know many who say that Jesus' words were not meant for Gentiles because he was speaking exclusively the the Jews.
Perhaps, but we are not made sinners by the Law. We are made sinners by the disobedience of one man (Rom 5). And the Law was for Israel as a nation. It was a "schoolmaster" to bring us to the time of faith.[ It seems to me if we can be made sinners by the law, then the law applies to us equally as it does the Jews.
V. 8 won't help you here. The argument against you is that Peter is writing to "us" ... believers (as in the opening verses). He is not writing about unbelievers. Now, I think God is not willing that any should perish universally. HE is not actively seeking their perishing. But as we all know, God's moral will is distinguished in the Scripture from his decreed will. Some Calvinists take this as God's decreed will (meaning that the "us" is the elect) and some take it as God's moral will (meaning that the "us" is humanity). Either way, it doesn't prove a problem for Calvinism.It is perhaps the most commonly used argument we use - 2 Peter 3:9. The context of this is verse 8:
Exactly.I don't think logic trumps scripture, but I do think that scripture is always logical. If we can't make sense of scripture, or if it doesn't seem logical, then our logic is wrong, or our interpretation is wrong. The scripture is never wrong. I think we are both saying that.
The Palestinian covenant is not universally recognized as a distinct covenant. Many think it is part of the Mosaic covenant. I think it is distinct. In Deut 28-30 you see the promise: If you obey me you will live in the land of Palestine with freedom, blessing, etc.'; if you disobey me you will be evicted from the land of Palestine with slavery, disease, destruction, famine, etc.The "palestinian covenant"? What is that? I've never heard that term before, and I don't find it in Deu 28-30. Perhaps you can explain this concept to me and how it applies to scripture.
I think I do.I suggest you take the same approach to the Old Testament and "Israel" that the Apostle Paul takes.
In a nutshell, no. I don't have time to get into this, but I think your understanding here is definitely wanting.Here, the Apostle Paul equates "spiritual Israel" to Christians, and "Spiritual Ishmael" to Jews. Paul realizes the physical heir of Abraham is Ishmeal, like the physical seed of Abraham is the Jews. Paul also realizes that the spiritual seed of Abraham is Isaac - the child of promise - just as Christians are the spiritual seed of Abraham -- or more specifically Christ is the spiritual seed of Abraham. Paul applies the Old Testament as though it were a legal document proving that Salvation is by Faith in Jesus Christ to any who believe.
All of this is said in love and I would suggest that you and every other Christian who reads this, take this opportunity to reconsider this and every other doctrine that you hold close to your heart by setting aside all that you have been taught by others as well as those things that you believe yourself to understand and come to the Word of God with an empty vessel and no predisposition and allow God to teach you his Word and he will, just as he promised.
Other than perseverance (and not the way it is used in TULIP), the other words that make up the acrostic are not found in Scripture.Than you have not read very well than, because if you had you would have read where I said I learned TULIP from Scriptures before I knew what is was
God used an ass to speak to Israel in the old testament. I don't think my number of posts speaks to God's ability to use me to speak truth, nor the authority I have in Christ. But rather to the amount of free time one has. Your appeal to your larger number of posts as a source of authority is a purely humanistic source of authority.
And one more thing. I've never read the works of Pelegius... or Calvin... or Arminius... or Augustine - not in book form or on websites. I have read scripture, though, and all of the things I say here come from scripture alone.
My knowledge of the Calvinism vs Arminianism debate comes from a 4.5 hour DVD (made by Calvinists)
So I am guessing they have an even greater claim to authority than you do, Rippon.
Yet, their arguments were transparent and full of holes and problems, and disagreed with what I can plainly read in scripture.