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Why did Thomas demand to see in order to believe?

Skandelon

<b>Moderator</b>
25 So the other disciples told him, "We have seen the Lord!" But he said to them, "Unless I see the nail marks in his hands and put my finger where the nails were, and put my hand into his side, I will not believe it." 26 A week later his disciples were in the house again, and Thomas was with them. Though the doors were locked, Jesus came and stood among them and said, "Peace be with you!" 27 Then he said to Thomas, "Put your finger here; see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it into my side. Stop doubting and believe." 28 Thomas said to him, "My Lord and my God!" 29 Then Jesus told him, "Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed." 30 Jesus did many other miraculous signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not recorded in this book. 31 But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.

We all know the story of "Doubting Thomas." So, here is my question:

Some claim that it is NOT possible for someone to choose to believe or not believe in Christ, but didn't Thomas choose to NOT BELIEVE until he saw Christ with his own eyes?




NOTE: If you have a comment about how you feel about me, my motives, my evil intentions, my backdoor subversive debate tactics, my tone, my demeanor, the font I choose, or anything else related to me, about me, for me or around me please PM me and don't clutter or derail this thread. Please, stay on topic and stay cordial with each other. Ok? Thanks.
 

preacher4truth

Active Member
Oh, I would most certainly like to debate this topic if you would do likewise [snip - please nothing personal in this thread, PM me if you want to talk about personal matters. Thank you.]
 
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canadyjd

Well-Known Member
We all know the story of "Doubting Thomas." So, here is my question:

Some claim that it is NOT possible for someone to choose to believe or not believe in Christ, but didn't Thomas choose to NOT BELIEVE until he saw Christ with his own eyes?
I really don't follow your question very well. First, who says it is not possible for someone to choose to believe or not believe in Christ? Second, the entire world is already in the "not believe in Christ" camp unless they choose to believe.

I know of none in Reformed Theology who says it is "impossible for someone to choose to believe or not believe in Christ?" That would mean that everyone is lost and no one can be saved (or that no one is lost and everyone is saved if it is impossible for someone to choose to not believe in Christ...double negative:godisgood:).

Now, I do believe it is not possible for someone to choose to believe in Christ unless God first works in them. I believe you have stated that very thing on several occasions.

So, let's look at Thomas. Thomas refused to believe that Jesus was resurrected until he saw Him alive. After he saw Him, he proclaimed Jesus to be his Lord and God. What does that prove? It proves...

1. Thomas rejected Jesus until Jesus directly revealed Himself to Thomas.
2. After Jesus revealed Himself to Thomas, Thomas was saved and worshipped Him as God.

What's your point?

peace to you:praying:
 

preacher4truth

Active Member
We all know the story of "Doubting Thomas." So, here is my question:

Some claim that it is NOT possible for someone to choose to believe or not believe in Christ, but didn't Thomas choose to NOT BELIEVE until he saw Christ with his own eyes?




NOTE: If you have a comment about how you feel about me, my motives, my evil intentions, my backdoor subversive debate tactics, my tone, my demeanor, the font I choose, or anything else related to me, about me, for me or around me please PM me and don't clutter or derail this thread. Please, stay on topic and stay cordial with each other. Ok? Thanks.

Please provide proof that some say it is not possible for someone to choose to believe or not in Christ. I think this is a misnomer, so provide solid exacting poof this has been stated this way.

You then rush to a text to prove this alleged belief that somewhere "some" have said what you've claimed. I believe your statements to be phantom statements. Why no proof, why just allegations with no documentation to back it up?

Again, please provide proof beyond reasonable doubt where anyone has stated this emphatically.

The entire premise of your OP is based upon alleged statements. Thus your conclusions of Thomas in the end don't prove a thing, and are not worthy to be addressed until your premise is proven with facts about what you accuse others as having said. Otherwise we are contending with hypothesis on your part, which would be nearly impossible to disprove without some real proof anyone has ever said what you claim they have said.

- Peace
 

jbh28

Active Member
We all know the story of "Doubting Thomas." So, here is my question:

Some claim that it is NOT possible for someone to choose to believe or not believe in Christ, but didn't Thomas choose to NOT BELIEVE until he saw Christ with his own eyes?
Every Calvinist would agree that people choose not to believe. All the non elect choose to not believe. Calvinists do not teach that God forced people to not believe. They choose to not believe because they don't want Christ.

The question with Calvinist is not why some choose to reject Christ but why anyone chooses to come to Christ.
 

Benjamin

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I thought the Calvinist declare that God sovereignly determined who would be the elect or not, and predestined them to believe or not? God is in complete control of choice/creaturely volition or He is not sovereign and all that jive…?

...but why anyone chooses to come to Christ.

Easy, for love of the truth.
 

Skandelon

<b>Moderator</b>
These are a few of the quotes, from Aaron, to which I was referring.

"The only ones who would find this astonishing would be those who believed that a man must make his own decision to believe."

"...your supposed power to believe what you choose."

"faith is not their response, it is their state of being"

"belief is a state of being—not a choice."

"to become a believer is not a choice. One finds that he either believes or he doesn't, and he will act accordingly."

P4T, in reply to one of these quotes you replied saying, "Nail on head." But, now am I understanding that you all disagree with Aaron and you do believe that it is possible for someone to choose to believe or not believe in Christ?

I'm sorry, I thought you were in agreement on this point. Maybe it is just a discussion I need to have with Aaron? :confused:
 

jbh28

Active Member
I thought the Calvinist declare that God sovereignly determined who would be the elect or not, and predestined them to believe or not? God is in complete control of choice/creaturely volition or He is not sovereign and all that jive…?



Easy, for love of the truth.

The natural status for man is rejection. God chooses to save.
 

Iconoclast

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I thought the Calvinist declare that God sovereignly determined who would be the elect or not, and predestined them to believe or not? God is in complete control of choice/creaturely volition or He is not sovereign and all that jive…?



Easy, for love of the truth.

only the elect love the truth..the others are described here...
John 3:19
And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil.
John 3:18-20
 

Benjamin

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Originally Posted by Benjamin
I thought the Calvinist declare that God sovereignly determined who would be the elect or not, and predestined them to believe or not? God is in complete control of choice/creaturely volition or He is not sovereign and all that jive…?

Yes or no, Iconoclast.

Edit...And jbh28.
 
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Winman

Active Member
I really don't follow your question very well. First, who says it is not possible for someone to choose to believe or not believe in Christ? Second, the entire world is already in the "not believe in Christ" camp unless they choose to believe.

I know of none in Reformed Theology who says it is "impossible for someone to choose to believe or not believe in Christ?" That would mean that everyone is lost and no one can be saved (or that no one is lost and everyone is saved if it is impossible for someone to choose to not believe in Christ...double negative:godisgood:).

Now, I do believe it is not possible for someone to choose to believe in Christ unless God first works in them. I believe you have stated that very thing on several occasions.

So, let's look at Thomas. Thomas refused to believe that Jesus was resurrected until he saw Him alive. After he saw Him, he proclaimed Jesus to be his Lord and God. What does that prove? It proves...

1. Thomas rejected Jesus until Jesus directly revealed Himself to Thomas.
2. After Jesus revealed Himself to Thomas, Thomas was saved and worshipped Him as God.

What's your point?

peace to you:praying:

Calvinists say that man cannot believe unless he is regenerated, there is no evidence of that here, is there? If so, show where the scriptures say that. Jesus himself said Thomas believed BECAUSE he had SEEN, something very ordinary and natural. Show where Jesus said a supernatural inward working in Thomas was performed.

Jesus presented outward evidence to Thomas he had risen. Thomas, in his God-given faculties to process evidence and reason upon it made a conscious choice to believe.
 

canadyjd

Well-Known Member
Calvinists say that man cannot believe unless he is regenerated, there is no evidence of that here, is there?...Show where Jesus said a supernatural inward working in Thomas was performed.
OK, scripture doesn't explicitly say that here. Must scripture explicitly say, every time there is an account of someone coming to salvation by faith, that "regeneration" or a supernatural inward working has occurred for such doctrine to be true?
Jesus himself said Thomas believed BECAUSE he had SEEN, something very ordinary and natural.....Jesus presented outward evidence to Thomas he had risen. Thomas, in his God-given faculties to process evidence and reason upon it made a conscious choice to believe.
OK. I've never said people do not engage their God-given faculties when coming to faith.

peace to you:praying:
 

quantumfaith

Active Member
OK, scripture doesn't explicitly say that here. Must scripture explicitly say, every time there is an account of someone coming to salvation by faith, that "regeneration" or a supernatural inward working has occurred for such doctrine to be true?OK. I've never said people do not engage their God-given faculties when coming to faith.

peace to you:praying:

Thank YOU for such an agreeable way of disagreeing. Blessings.
 

preacher4truth

Active Member
These are a few of the quotes, from Aaron, to which I was referring.



P4T, in reply to one of these quotes you replied saying, "Nail on head." But, now am I understanding that you all disagree with Aaron and you do believe that it is possible for someone to choose to believe or not believe in Christ?

I'm sorry, I thought you were in agreement on this point. Maybe it is just a discussion I need to have with Aaron? :confused:

Well, you're admitting confusion so I empathize with your last statement above. I think that often times there is variance on your part concerning subjects and meanings, versus what persons actually are conveying.

Looks to me that you're misconstruing Aarons intent with your OP? I'm certain what Aaron means is that the ability to believe comes from God, that is, saving faith, a gift from God, in other words not something man is capable of doing on his own since it is the gift from God. So in that sense I would say that Aaron and I would agree, and "nail on head" would be appropriate.

Does that make sense? I can't then say that what you've provided is "proof," simply a misunderstanding on your part, hence your misconception.

Yes. perhaps you and Aaron should hash this out as it sounds like a personal misunderstanding.

***as a side note, I see the subject of irresistible grace is coming into play here, and will seek understanding on this subject as to what it means, whether I believe the Calvinist perception and teaching of this, &c. I will begin a thread about this and see what happens.

- Peace
 
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Aaron

Member
Site Supporter
We all know the story of "Doubting Thomas." So, here is my question:

Some claim that it is NOT possible for someone to choose to believe or not believe in Christ, but didn't Thomas choose to NOT BELIEVE until he saw Christ with his own eyes?
It isn't just Thomas. When the women returned from the empty tomb, their words seemed to the apostles as idle tales, and they believed them not.

Again, it doesn't say Thomas wouldn't believe in Christ. He wouldn't believe their report. Either way, faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things unseen. Whatever is of sight is not faith. Seeing the risen Christ no more generates faith than reading Moses and the Prophets, and according to Christ if one will not hear Moses and Prophets, neither will they believe if one returns from the dead to tell them these things.
 
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