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Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by Iconoclast, Apr 27, 2020.

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  1. Iconoclast

    Iconoclast Well-Known Member
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    Reynolds,

    I actually do. I call them "hyper" but they dont consider themselves that. They wont say robot or puppet, but they believe EVERY action is directly and in all detail controlled by God. Most Calvinists believe in free will. They just do not believe there is any free will in the Salvation process.

    Reynolds, what do you mean by this, can you clarify this?
     
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  2. Iconoclast

    Iconoclast Well-Known Member
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    RighteousnessTemperance

    I do not think it does, could you show what you mean?

    \\

    Clarify here once again, so I do not misunderstand you.
     
  3. Iconoclast

    Iconoclast Well-Known Member
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    MM, Do you enjoy the knowledge of scripture this man has to present truth so easily there are some who cannot do anything close to this thought-provoking article.

    Free Agency by John Murray

    [​IMG]

    by John Murray



    In dealing with this topic it is helpful to begin with human action and to proceed from action to that which determines action. By this progression we may arrive at a more satisfactory analysis of what is involved in free agency or, as it has sometimes been denoted, natural liberty (cf. Westminster Confession of Faith, IX, i). In the matter of terminology it is necessary at the outset to distinguish between ‘free agency’ and ‘free will’. No necessary objection can be made to the latter term. A term denotes the concept understood by it, and a proper connotation can be given to the term ‘free will’. But frequently this designation has been used to express that concept of the will whereby the ‘will’ of man is regarded as autonomous and undetermined, and capable of volition good or bad, apart from any previous conditioning by our moral and religious character.

    1. The Reality of Human Action. The thought hereby expressed is that man is endowed with power to perform certain actions within the realm of his created and dependent existence. In other words, man’s agency is not illusory; within the all-embracive providence of God he is possessed of agency which is exercised in action.

    2. The Responsibility of Human Action. Man’s acts are worthy of blame or approval. Moral law, law of obligation, applies to him. His acts are within the sphere of ought and ought not. This obtains because he is made in the image of God and his actions must be in conformity with the likeness that defines his identity. God’s likeness is the pattern in accord with which man’s action is to be performed. The law that prescribes action or forbids it is the transcript of God’s perfection, the perfection of God coming to expression for the regulation of conduct consonant with it.

    3. The Freedom of Human Action. The responsibility referred to above rests upon the fact that the action is the result of volition. Man wills or chooses to act. If he does not will to act, or if the act is contrary to his will, then the event occurring through his instrumentality is not in reality his action. He is the victim of some other power or agent over which he is not able to exercise control, and so he is not responsible for the event. We sometimes use the expression, ‘I did it against my will’. This is not correct. We may do things reluctantly, do things we detest. But if we do them, it is because we will to do them. We will to do the distasteful rather than not to do it. Something may be done against our will and, strictly speaking, we are not the agents. But when we do something, it is always because we willed the same.

    We are responsible for our acts because they are the result of our volition, and volition is the choice thus to act.

    4. The Determinant of Volition. It is a platitude to say that we will because we have the power to will. But the power of volition does not explain why we exercise this power in a certain way. Two men have the power to earn a livelihood. One does it by honourable labour, the other resorts to theft. What explains the difference? It is not the power of volition, for both are endowed with this quality. It is apparent that we must go beyond the power of volition and the mere exercise of this power in actual volition. This that lies back of the power and its exercise is the character. And because there is a radical difference of character volition is exercised in totally different ways. The character is the habitus of the person, the whole complex of desires, of motives, propensions, principles. This may conveniently be called the dispositional complex, and the complex comprises all that goes to make up the distinguishing moral and religious bent, aim, purpose, and propension. Scripture calls this the heart. ‘Out of the heart are the issues of life’ (Prov. 4:23). Our Lord expressed it in this manner, ‘Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks. The good man out of the good treasure sends forth good things, and the evil man out of the evil treasure sends forth evil things’ (Matt. 12:34, 35). ‘For from within, out of the heart of man, procced evil thoughts, fornications, thefts, murders, adulteries’ etc.

    (Mark 7:21, 22). The Scripture throughout is replete with this emphasis upon the heart as the fountain of both good and evil. Volition then is determined by the inward disposition. Dr. Shedd calls the one, immanent volition, and the other, executive volition. But whatever terms are used, the upshot is that much more belongs to a man than his meta-physical constitution and the series of volitions registered, and this is the determinant of the moral and religious character of his actions and course of life.

    5. The Self-determination of Volition and Action. If volition is determined by the dispositional complex, in what does freedom consist? We are not free because the will or power of volition is in a state of indifference or indeterminancy. It is not an autonomous power or agent that can register any series of volitions by virtue of its unconditioned prerogative. Volition is causally determined by what the person most characteristically is. The liberty or freedom consists in the fact that the series of volitions is determined by the self; in the sense relevant to our topic, volition is self-determined. Action is self-action, volition is self-volition, determined by what the person is, and not by any compulsion or coercion extraneous to the person. ‘God hath endued the will of man with that natural liberty, that it is neither forced, nor, by any absolute necessity of nature, determined to good, or evil.’1 James 1:13, 14 enunciates this description of the process of human action. ‘Every man is tempted when he is drawn away by his own lust and enticed.’ This principle applies to all human situations in good and evil. It holds true in the fall and in regeneration. In the fall man’s disposition changed and this resulted in the overt act of transgression. In regeneration a new disposition is given and new volitions are the result. In no case is the volition contrary to the immanent exposition of heart and mind. Nothing can make a man will against the immanent disposition of heart and mind. Such a supposition would amount to a violation of the nature with which we are endowed.

    This is not to deny the influences brought to bear upon man for good or for evil, influences of suasion to good or of temptation to evil. The consideration is simply that the person must come to acquiesce in that which the solicitation involves. The disposition of the person is affected, not by compulsion, but by adoption or acceptance.

    Freedom is thus defined negatively and affirmatively, as the absence of compulsion and self-determination respectively. A man is responsible for his acts because they are due to his volitions. He is responsible for his volitions because they are self-propelled, exercised without compulsion and expressive of what he is in the innermost bent, bias, and disposition of heart and mind. Understood thus, freedom is rational spontaneity.

    6. The Inclusiveness of Freedom. This freedom is not restricted to the sphere of volition and action. It applies to the heart, the dispositional complex. The heart of man is his own. Man is depraved, but this depravity is his and he is responsible for it. In the fall the disposition of man became unholy. Though great mystery surrounds this change, yet the unholy disposition was his, and for all its movements he was responsible for this reason. In regeneration God gives a new heart. But once given, it belongs to the person regenerated and, though efficaciously imparted, it is not a disposition compulsively imposed so that the new disposition does not violate that which is most characteristically his. In other words, whatever the immanent disposition is, it is his with consent, and not by compulsion contrary to his will.

    7. The Power of Contrary Choice is not of the Essence of Free Agency. In dealing with this proposition it is necessary to distinguish between contrary choice and alternative choice. Contrary choice is the ability to choose between alternatives that are morally antithetical, between good and bad regarded not relatively but absolutely in terms of God’s judgment. Alternative choice, on the other hand, is the choice between alternatives that are ethically of the same character, alternatives that are both good or both bad. The proposition applies only to contrary choice. We may examine the proposition and define it both negatively and positively.
     
  4. Iconoclast

    Iconoclast Well-Known Member
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    pt2;
    (1) Negatively. It does not mean that there are no situations in which man had the power of contrary choice. Adam in his state of integrity had the power of contrary choice. To deny this would mean that sin was a necessity of his nature. Adam sinned. But he was able not to sin because he was created upright and holy.

    Regenerate man has the power of contrary choice, the ability to good in virtue of the holiness implanted in regeneration, and the ability to sin because of indwelling sin. Romans 7:25 is explicit to this effect.

    (i) The proposition does not mean that fallen, unregenerate man is destitute of the power of alternative choice. He is under an unholy necessity of sinning. He is totally depraved and cannot choose what is good and well-pleasing to God (Rom. 8:7; Eph. 2:1). But within the realm of bondage to sin there are numberless alternatives from which he is able to choose. Likewise regenerate man, although he cannot will certain things because of his confirmed state of holiness (cf. 1 John 3:9), yet there are many situations in which he has alternative choice in the categories of both good and evil.

    (ii) The proposition is not dealing with the determinism arising from foreordination. It is true that all our choices and acts are foreordained, and only foreordained acts come to pass. But this is not the factor or consideration contemplated in the proposition. To suppose that it is, confuses two things that must be kept distinct. If this were the consideration, then the power of both alternative and contrary choice would be eliminated from the realm of human agency and possibility. The power of contrary choice would not be predicable of Adam in the state of integrity, a position that must be maintained without any equivocation. The distinction to be borne in mind is that Preordination, though all-inclusive, does not operate so as to deprive man of his agency, nor of the voluntary decision by reason of which he is responsible for his actions. Similarly foreordination does not rule out the power of contrary choice in those cases where this obtained or obtains. Just as foreordination does not conflict with or rule out human responsibility, so it does not conflict with or rule out the power of alternative choice, nor does it conflict with or rule out the power of contrary choice where this power is necessarily posited.

    (2) Positively. The proposition is concerned solely with the truth that, in a state of confirmed holiness or unholiness, the absence of the power to choose the morally opposite does not interfere with free agency in the sense defined in the foregoing analysis. In the state of sin we are unable to love God and choose what is well-pleasing to him. This inability does not deprive us of free agency. In fact it is only in virtue of free agency that the indictment of bondage to sin could apply. Likewise, in the regenerate state, and particularly in the glorified state, the holy necessity of doing good and the impossibility of the opposite, does not interfere: with free agency. Again, it is the feet of free agency that makes the characterization possible and relevant.

    The proposition has respect to moral and religious condition exclusively, and to the necessities belonging to a condition of confirmed goodness or badness, not to the necessity arising from God’s foreordination. Every proposition has its own universe of reference and is applicable only within that universe. The anthropological importance of the proposition appears particularly in three connections:

    i) The prelapsarian power of contrary choice was not a necessary condition of Adam’s free agency. If Adam had been confirmed in his integrity he would still be a free agent. The power of contrary choice was for purposes of probation.

    ii) Total inability for good in the state of sin does not rule out free agency. Inability for good is one thing; responsible agency is another.

    iii) In grace relatively, and in glory completely, confirmation in holiness does not make us automatons. It is in such confirmation that free agency achieves its highest expression and realization.

    The essence of free agency is that we act without compulsion from without, according to our nature or character. Free agency thus construed applies to all conditions of men and angels.

    8. Free Agency is Consistent with Certainty. The principle here asserted is that an act may be certain as to its futurition, but free as to the mode of its occurrence. The proposition goes athwart every position which supposes that uncertainty and contingency are necessary to freedom, that certainty of occurrence is incompatible with the nature of a free act. This position is analogous to that which would deny fore-ordination in favour of human responsibility. The answer is that, although we are not able so to analyse the relations of God’s fore-ordination and human agency that we can discover and perceive the perfect concursus that obtains, yet we must maintain both without any infringement upon the province, reality, and integrity of each. The foreknowledge of God presupposes certainty of occurrence; his fore-ordination renders all occurrence certain; by his providence what is foreordained is unalterably put into effect. Only within the realm of all-inclusive providence is our free agency a fact, and only thus is it maintained. In God we live and move and have our being. Providence in fulfilment of foreordained purpose is not only compatible with the freedom indispensable to our being; it is indispensable to the existence of our freedom and never functions so as to interfere with it.
     
  5. Iconoclast

    Iconoclast Well-Known Member
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    JonC,

    Sin..really, let's see how you avoid belittling other Christians

    But these were also posted; by JonC
    Scripture tells us that we are slaves to sin or to righteousness, but also that we have freedom of the will to seek that which we desire. So to blame our choices on an inability of the will rather than the desires of the flesh or the spirit (where Scripture puts these matters) is wrong. But you are, of course, entitled to be wrong.

    Scripture is what I gave you (what you ignored) stating that men do have free will.

    Why do you always go to ad hominem when people disagree with you?

    I disagree and you ignorantly or maliciously claim this is being dishonest???

    I have been sincere. I have honestly disagreed with you. I gave you Scripture. You replied with insults. You are wrong.

    But do not pretend it is the Bible you are talking about here.

    You need to stop insulting other peoe, @Iconoclast. People will disagree with your opinions. That does not give you the right to insult them (or me).

    So you just insult me and engage in ad hominem when I am involved. Interesting.

    None of your smoke screens will change that fact.

    There is no need for you to engage in ad honinem or insults because I disagree with you.

    Please check your emotions and slow down your meltdown.

    [
    what I often see is Christians coming together to belittle other Christians. The latter is, I believe, a sin.[/QUOTE]
    opps!

    Deal with what I have posted (the passages and teaching I have provided) rather than insulting me simply because I have dared to disagree with your post.


    I answered here, which you never answered;
    Observations and comments on your posting does not constitute an insult.
    What did I post that was not true?
    These people all say that very thing about you.
    Not one of the fine verses you mentioned say man has a free will.
    Not one of those verses teach it either.
    Your post is another bearing false witness as you are prone to do.
    I asked you in a nice way to go your own way, until you are no longer acting as a "moderator ".
    If that day comes I will have no problem answering you in full.
    In the mean time let me clarify;
    Go away JonC.
    Go on a cruise, take a vacation, rent a winnebago and drive around.
    If we need you we will contact you by name.
    Your comments are not informative.
    Your comments are not asked for
    Your snide remarks about colorful crayons, and kindergarten theology can go somewhere else.
    If I need such insight, I will request it .
    In the meantime just go.
    Y1 looks like he enjoys your interaction. Try him.
    Have a nice life JonC....all the best to you and yours.
    Bless your heart JonC.

    Because you call everything an insult does not make it so. What it makes is a big fabrication.




     
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  6. timtofly

    timtofly Well-Known Member

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    There is sure a lot of free will to argue a case against free will.
     
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  7. RighteousnessTemperance&

    RighteousnessTemperance& Well-Known Member

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    OK. But be sure to read my final comments, as the chapter title can be very misleading.

    Chapter 9: Of Free Will
    1._____ God hath endued the will of man with that natural liberty and power of acting upon choice, that it is neither forced, nor by any necessity of nature determined to do good or evil.
    ( Matthew 17:12; James 1:14; Deuteronomy 30:19 )​

    This very first point fully embraces a God-endued free will of man—neither forced nor naturally determined toward good or evil.

    2._____ Man, in his state of innocency, had freedom and power to will and to do that which was good and well-pleasing to God, but yet was unstable, so that he might fall from it.
    ( Ecclesiastes 7:29; Genesis 3:6 )​

    This second point fully embraces a God-endowed freedom of will in man pre-fall.

    3._____ Man, by his fall into a state of sin, hath wholly lost all ability of will to any spiritual good accompanying salvation; so as a natural man, being altogether averse from that good, and dead in sin, is not able by his own strength to convert himself, or to prepare himself thereunto.
    ( Romans 5:6; Romans 8:7; Ephesians 2:1, 5; Titus 3:3-5; John 6:44 )​

    This third point is the only one that does not fully embrace a free will, particularly by limiting it from any aid in gaining salvation.

    4._____ When God converts a sinner, and translates him into the state of grace, he freeth him from his natural bondage under sin, and by his grace alone enables him freely to will and to do that which is spiritually good; yet so as that by reason of his remaining corruptions, he doth not perfectly, nor only will, that which is good, but doth also will that which is evil.
    ( Colossians 1:13; John 8:36; Philippians 2:13; Romans 7:15, 18, 19, 21, 23 )​

    This fourth point fully embraces a God-graced freedom of will in man after rebirth, but limited and imperfect in successfully choosing good due to remaining corruptions.

    5._____ This will of man is made perfectly and immutably free to good alone in the state of glory only.
    ( Ephesians 4:13 )​

    This fifth point embraces an immutably free will so that the glorified may finally limit themselves to choosing and doing only the good they have so longed for. Hallelujah!


    I must note most emphatically that this chapter does not limit its discussion to free will, which regards choice alone, but consistently adds the power to actually do, which is not a redundancy but an entirely different component involving success. This addition is bound to confuse those who do not read and parse carefully.

    This is also why the third point would likely prove problematic in any discussion regarding free will. I do not hold to "The Force" nonsense of
    Star Wars . I'm not a Jedi Knight, or disciple of Yoda, who said "Do. Or do not. There is no try."
     
  8. Martin Marprelate

    Martin Marprelate Well-Known Member
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    You can post whatever you like. But life is brief and I reserve the right not to read it. :)
    In fact sometimes I would appreciate it if you would post stuff that you mention. On another thread, you mentioned two people who supposedly support your position as if that were the end of the discussion, but you never cited what they wrote. I find that deeply frustrating.
     
  9. Dave G

    Dave G Well-Known Member

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    Believe it or not, I agree with you here.
    Dividing into "camps" is not the problem...it's when the camps go looking for a fight with other camps.

    But there is a difference with going looking for a fight, and standing up for what they believe and why in open discussion.
    Being assertive is not the problem in instances like this...
    Resorting to uncharitable behavior while discussing or declaring those differences, is the problem.

    For example, I can still maintain that "Arminianism" is error, even though I consider those who hold to it as my fellow human beings deserving of the same respect that I enjoy... and patiently seek to correct them on it from God's word.
     
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  10. Martin Marprelate

    Martin Marprelate Well-Known Member
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    Mankind as a whole did not reject Christ, though a majority did. Therefore the 'world' for whom God sent His Son cannot be that world.

    I would translate John 3:16 like this: 'This is how God loved the world; that He have His only begotten Son that whoever believes in Him should have eternal life.'

    God's love for the world is an interesting subject. [Don Carson has written a book called The Difficult Doctrine of the Love of God.] God has compassion on all that He has made. He is kind to the ungrateful and wicked; He makes the sun rise on the evil and the good. If that is love, then God loves mankind as a whole. But John 13:1 tells us that God the Son loves His own who are in the world and He has loved them to the uttermost.
     
  11. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    Friend,

    My question was simple. My bring a moderator has nothing to do with it. Just provide a quote on the open forum of me, in my own words, where I posted in my words that you said not to read Scripture, where I posted in my words that Murray said not to read Scripture, or where I posted in my words that the Puritans taught not to read Scripture.

    It is that simple. The quote feature is at the bottom of the page or you can hit "reply" and copy/ past the quote as a reply.

    Or did you just invent that? Is it just a straw-man you meant to make it appear I had actually said those things? Or do you imagine that I really did post those things?

    I do not moderate posts that involve me (I report them and assign them to the administration). You are wrong on that claim.
     
  12. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    The issue I have with accepting your conclusion in John 3:16 is that the verse itself makes a qualification of who in the world will in fact be saved.

    I do not doubt that God loves those who are called by His name differently than those who are lost. But I do not believe the verse allows us to imply "world" in this case to mean anything but mankind.
     
  13. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    I agree.

    I believe that dividing into camps is not only "not the problem" but it is a benefit. I think that these divisions help in developing doctrine and theology.

    Perhaps it is similar to how theology is done. We have people gifted in several related fields and when they come together it benefits the whole. Some are scholars of Biblical Greek. Some are scholars of textual criticism. Some are theologians (studying different types of theology). Some are teachers. Some preachers. Some evangelists. etc.

    I think that these camps bring out theological truths that may otherwise have gone unaddressed, or at least not an area of focus.

    There is a bad way that they work as well, and this is when people support others, even when they are in the wrong, simply because they hold similar positions. In a way this behavior is natural as humans tend to identify with those who are like-minded. But as Christians our focus should be on the "mind of Christ" in each one of us. I believe I even detect this in your caution about the picture I posted of the Godfather. I am not saying that you are wrong, as I can see how that may be viewed as an insult. But at the same time you overlooked over 15 insults directed at me on this thread by Iconoclast. I do not hold that against you, but I do think it is in order to support Iconoclast even though he was the one actively insulting me. I do not know that we can get past this type of thing as we are all human and struggle with the flesh. In a perfect world you would have addressed both of us, but we do not live in a perfect world and we ourselves are not yet perfected in the sense we will be in the future.

    But on this forum that "one sided-ness" does cause conflict and hostility between people that perhaps would not exist if we treated one another as Christians without regard to "camps" and reserved the "camp" association for when we are among like-minded Christians, where it is of a benefit.
     
  14. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    Again, friend, this is just a bunch of insults and personal attacks. You do not need to go down this road and I am not sure why you have such hatred towards me.

    I made a statement that started you off on this thread. I said that Scripture provides that men have free-will but are slaves to either the flesh or the spirit. And I provided you with a few verses.

    For that you have chosen to insult and slander me. This is not right, Iconoclast. It is wrong and you are wrong to engage in that type of behavior. There is a difference between attacking one's position and attacking the person who holds that position. I do not know why you have yet understood this point.

    As far as your comments about me taking time off, I have. Weekend before last I went to the mountains. Last weekend I was at the beach. I'll probably take a fishing trip Wednesday and go back to the beach this weekend to do some surf fishing. Do not worry about me or how I spend my time. You do not know me and I do not know you. When you insult me you are in fact insulting a figment of your imagination (how you imagine me to be). So that does not bother me except that this is a Christian board and your insults are anything but Christian.
     
  15. Iconoclast

    Iconoclast Well-Known Member
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    Are you saying you do not moderate any thread you participate in?
     
  16. Iconoclast

    Iconoclast Well-Known Member
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    You have not given one example of any insult.
    You have not shown it.
    Could you post several that we can look at?
    You say there were many insults, you say this, and you say that, but these claims are empty.
    When you post any alleged claim, would I have the freedom to explain and answer them on the open forum???
    That should not be a problem right?
     
  17. Iconoclast

    Iconoclast Well-Known Member
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    Lol, 15...show them. Then tell me I have the ability to address them without recrimination.
     
  18. Iconoclast

    Iconoclast Well-Known Member
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    I can make it very clear for you, but will only do so in the public forum friend.
    I will do so using your own words if I am permitted to...
    You make all manner of accusations, but have not listed where you think this all happened.
    If I say you did something, I can show it with direct quotes, with time and date attached..

    No, once again you accuse me of "a figment" of my imagination???
    No JonC, it will be direct quotes from all over the place, but it will be open and honest, in the public forum...
    I have nothing to hide.
    You like Lucy would have a lot of explaining to do.
    As far as comments being truthful, and as you say anything but Christian, an open inquiry would reveal who is being truthful
    Normally we do not post about others, however I am open to a thread called..
    THE TRUTH ABOUT ME AND YOU UNEDITED,NOT DELETED.
    IT COULD BE A BB CAGE MATCH,LET THE READERS DECIDE...WHAT DO YOU THINK?
     
    #158 Iconoclast, May 4, 2020
    Last edited: May 4, 2020
  19. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    No. I am saying that I do not moderate any posts that involve me. As a moderator I will continue to moderate posts that do not involve me. But I will moderate threads, forums, PM's when reported, etc. because that is my role on this board.

    I see it this way. As a member I have the right to argue my point within the same guidelines as anyone else. When I insult people the Administrators moderate me, just like you are moderated. But as a moderator I only deal with posts that do not involve me. That is how the two roles are not confused.
     
  20. Iconoclast

    Iconoclast Well-Known Member
    Site Supporter

    Joined:
    Mar 25, 2010
    Messages:
    21,242
    Likes Received:
    2,305
    Faith:
    Non Baptist Christian
    Crickets????
    Where did you go?
    Are you setting up that new thread?
     
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