I know I said I was bowing out, but like Pastor Larry, I changed my mind
skypair said:
OK (1) and you didn't make that same comeback? It's important to keep in mind but I also assumed in the OP and since that you were saved.
Where have I "made the same comeback?" (I'm assuming that American English phrase means "replied in the same way"). Certainly in one message I wrote:
"The very same arguments that you bring against the Reformed doctrines could apply just as well to those doctrines you espouse, (such as freedom of the will, inate ability to choose Christ, and so on. Such doctrines have been formulated at different times in history, particularly by the followers of Arminius."
and in a later one I wrote:
"But both "sides" on this issue have works written by their proponents. Just because people have written books about the doctrines of grace/ reformed doctrines, that doesn't automatically mean that those doctrines must be unbiblical. There have been plenty of books written from your standpoint, too, remember."
But I did
not write:
"Skypair's beliefs are based on human writings,"
in the way that you have repeatedly said on this thread that I base
my beliefs on the writings of Calvin.
skypair said:
(2) Apparently that is not what comes first for you. What's first in Calvinism is regeneration or, alternatively, "election," is it not? Belief (= faith) comes afterward. Do you not see that personal "fate" has more to do with salvation than personal belief under that paradigm?? (3) The "mustard tree" a paradigm which I doubt you were aware of and is worth considering by way of warning. Get a grip -- it's applicable to every branch.[/b]
Yes, belief did come first as far as
I was aware. In other words, I wasn't sitting around as an unsaved sinner thinking to myself, "Well, I am not going to take any notice of what my bible-bashing friends say. What is the point of believing on the Lord Jesus Christ if I am not one of the elect?" But having been saved, I noticed that the bible said things like: "Those who are in the flesh cannot please God," (Romans 8.8) and "The natural man does not receive the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him." (1 Corinthians 2.14). Does it please God when a sinner believes on His Son? Of course. So how was it possible for "in-the-flesh me" to please God by believing? Amongst other passages, I came across Ephesians 2.4-6, where Paul wrote the the Ephesian Christians:
4 But God, who is rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us,
5 even when we were dead in trespasses, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved),
6 and raised us up together, and made us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus.
Not "ill in trespasses and sins" but "
dead". How could I have believed in Christ if I was spiritually dead? Only if Christ had first given me new life.
I must admit to not having heard of the "paradigm of the mustard tree", though I do know of the para
ble. Jesus said He told it to explain what the kingdom of heaven is like. I am not sure how you are applying it to the current thread, though.
skypair said:
I have not been shown how your God is not a god of fate, that's true. And for your part, all you can show me is a God that predestined everything before He foreknew it. That is what "fate" is. A God who takes no mind of what His creation does or doesn't do -- whose "plan" is unchangable at some point along its preparation -- is so sovereign that it is at least as if His creation had no life. Now compare that to the "foreknowledge" (of free will) AND "predestination" (of His plan) model I have been endorsing and see that God interacts with His creation just like the Bible says.
I have never once tried to show you "a God that predestined everything before He foreknew it." I don't even understand what you mean, for if He predestined something, He would foreknow it too. Neither have I said that I believe in a God "who takes no mind of what His creation does or doesn't do". The Flood is an example. God saw the evil of mankind, and destroyed all but eight people. Why save any? Genesis 6.8 says that Noah found
grace in the eyes of the Lord.
skypair said:
Free will and predestination are BOTH scriptural tenets. You apparently only see one. And I'm sure you won't worship a God that you can't see and don't know. skypair
If I apparently only see one, it is probably because I have not explained myself very clearly. Our wills are free, but they are bound to serve our master. Before we are saved, that master is Satan. Charles Wesley (definitely not a "Calvinist"), wrote of this in his hymn, "And can it be?" One verse says:
Long my imprisoned spirit lay
Fast bound in sin and nature's night;
Thine eye diffused a quickening ray,
I woke, the dungeon flamed with light;
My chains fell off, my heart was free;
I rose, went forth, and followed Thee.
Jesus talked about setting people free, in John 8.34-36:
34 Jesus answered them, "Most assuredly, I say to you, whoever commits sin is a slave of sin.
35 And a slave does not abide in the house forever, but a son abides forever.
36 Therefore if the Son makes you free, you shall be free indeed."
And in John 10.26, He does not say to some unbelievers who questioned Him: "You are not of my sheep because you do not believe." Rather, He says:
"But you do not believe, because you are not of My sheep, as I said to you.
skypair said:
Apparently the "motive" of not wanting to make this a learning, edifying, brotherly experience outweighs the excuse of not having time for us.
I assure you that I would never be so rude as to say, "I have no time for you." All I wrote was:
"I am "bowing out" of this thread because I don't have the time to continue with it."
All I meant by that was that other responsibilties I have mean that I do not have the time to join, or continue on, all the threads on the Baptist Board. I am sorry you mistakenly understood me to mean something more personal.