I don’t know about Bob, but I don’t think all have heard the gospel. I never said that. Perhaps part of the problem is that you read Scripture like you read my posts … not very carefully and with preconceived notions.I am going to start a thread on the issue you and Bobby Ryan raise concerning the notion that all have heard the gospel.
The Scripture declares that all men know about God and all men have rejected him. They are without excuse. That is different than all men hearing the gospel.
Not much to say here except that you are incorrect. The Bible clearly teaches imputation in many passages. And to deny original sin is heresy. The whole of salvation is based on the doctrine of original sin. If not for original sin and Adamic guilt, then salvation could come by another means (perfection) and Christ died needlessly. That would be in direct contradiction to Gal 2.I will say now that the imputation of Christ’s righteous or the imputation of Adam’s sins ‘as you suggest they are to be understood’ is not taught in Scripture. Those are assumed doctrines founded upon the false Augustinian/Calvinistic system of thought that believes in constitutional depravity known as the doctrine of original sin.
No, they don’t. As is well known even in our imperfect jurisprudence system, “Ignorance of the law is no excuse.” Your distinction between civil law and moral law is weak, at best. Moral law has a higher claim than civil law, and the standards are higher. In civil law, a judge may accept ignorance or mitigating circumstances. God’s law knows no such exceptions.For instance, Ignorance or inability is no excuse necessarily under civil law (outside of criminal law) but ignorance and inability do in fact affect moral law.
Assume that is true (it isn’t, but let’s assume it anyway). Judas still had no chance to change his mind to do anything differently. His life was set in stone before he ever came into existence.In order to arrive at your conclusion, you have to have a presupposition in place, that if God foreknows it will come to pass that proves that necessity as opposed to freedom was at stake. That I do not believe is a trustworthy presupposition. We have had many discussion on this list in the past on foreknowledge, but I will just say this. Our foreknowledge is limited to things of necessity, but God’s is not. He has the ability we ourselves as humans do nor possess, in that He can foreknow matters of perfect choice as well as matters of necessity, thereby knowing what is to come to pass without necessitating it.
Which is why you should not be trying to force your own intellect on God’s revelation. You are insisting that God fit into a box of foreknowledge that you can understand and agree with. You should simply take his word for it.When you say that Judas had no choice because God foreknew his actions, you are limiting an Infinite God to a foreknowledge like as we possess as humans. Remember? God’s ways are higher than our ways, and possesses abilities far beyond those we possess.
If Judas had a legitimate choice in your terminology, then God’s knowledge may have been wrong. That is completely heretical. God’s knowledge is perfect, even if not causative. This is so simple that you are overlooking the implications of it for your position.