Pastor Larry said:
What? God extending Hezekiah’s life and stopping the sun and other things are works of grace and mercy.
Not as you seemed to describe it in talking about your MIL.
Satan’s “control” is under the control of God. Satan does nothing without God’s permission and control over him.
You got this thing about "permissive will" whereby God lets people and Satan do what they want but you never say they are sovereign over their own acts. What is that all about?? 'Cause I freely admit that God controls the outcomes and the ultimate end but He's NOT doin' the play-by-play, blow-by-blow decisions and choices, Larry.
You're basically in a "mind trap" where you can't admit human sovereignty even when you see it! Did God pick your socks out for you this morning??
Here’s an interesting contradiction that I am quite sure you will hate having pointed out. When it comes to a lack of intervention in election, you like to say that God’s lack of intervention is in fact a choosing to send people to hell.
I don't see it, Larry. I see that God tries to intervene in everyone's life to save them but He can't because they don't ask. That's how my miracles work too.
Adrian Rogers had a good sermon on binding Satan and loosing God's will through prayer. Sometimes something is God's will if we will just acknowledge Him in it and have faith. What was the thing Jesus used to say -- "thy faith has healed thee?" We can be sure that if something is in His will, we can pray confidently for it and God will grant it, 1John 5:14-15.
Salvation is His will for us and if we pray for it according to that will ("in Christ"), we will receive it.
And it is true that God doesn't always do as we ask
I don’t know how famous the quote it, but it’s not fate, and God’s will is always what happens.
Ultimately, "that's a truism," as we used to say in school. :laugh:
He says “My purpose will be accomplished” and “No one can thwart his will.” You seem to deny that as well.
No, I deny that everything is His will, Larry. Else He would be, to me, a Greek god where all I could hope for is for "the fates to be kind to me."
No, what I mean is that when my MIL died, it was the will of God for it to happen in that way at that time. When my wife miscarried, it was the will of God for it to happen in that way at that time. That was not out of the control of God.
Well, I know He foreknew it all and I don't like to be morbid or judgmental but was there anything that could have been done in either situation to avert the outcome that happened? I mean, in my heart case, God showed me that smoking was part of the blame and that, young as I was (28), exercise would help so I started jogging before it was in fashion. That is the kind of "miracles" I have experienced -- miracles of revelation, of changing myself and letting God do what He does best (answer).
No, you are not catching on. The comment by the pastor may have been the surface issue, but it was not the root issue. I had a lady once who would not come back to church because I had the audacity that preach that a woman should be a wife before a mother.
Oh, I got a topper for that. One Mother's Day (when our church awarded the oldest mother, youngest mother, etc.), the youngest was a black, unwed teen and the preacher was at first flabbergasted and then said, "Why you're too young to be a mother." I was so embarrassed for that girl. I mean, the fact that she stood up showed that she didn't expect condemnation or that she had done anything wrong, right? I sure hope that girl got saved.

raying:
Her unwed motherhood was not the reason she didn’t come back and my comments were not the reason. She didn’t come back because of rebellion against God.
I see. Or ignorance. And I surmise my MIL wasn't as mature of a Christian as she might have been when she was older. I talked to her about it and agreed that that "comfort" is well-intended but sees only God's foreordination of all events and NOT what God would have like to see happen.
I accept foreknowledge. I reject your definition of it since it does not fit the biblical usage.
Can we discuss that? Cause I don't think I misread it.
Never having prayed for a parking place near the front door (I usually don’t take the real close ones choosing to leave them for others), and never having had a heart ailment, I will say that sometimes God works through healing and sometimes through comfort (2 Cor 12:9).
Exactly! But healing is often by INTERACTION -- praying and God "changing His mind," His natural and judicial laws.
No I wouldn’t since I can never be a good pastor while preaching things that are not true. I would be erecting a false god and asking people to worship that. I refuse.
And well you shouldn't. But Larry -- look at the issues I gave to David. Are we really at the mercy of fate a Greek god? Or do we get to interact with the God of heaven? Are we so many toys like we used to play with that -- inanimate objects incapable of "moving through the sand" without God manipulating us? Is God only about His own glory and pleasure? who gets glory and pleasure out of damnation as well as our salvation? Put some Sonlight in between them for me, will you?
skypair