S
sandusky
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That they must be drawn by grace is not an issue.Hi Sandusky -
Im not sure what you meant to imply here, but it seems that you are saying that someone cannot convert from believing the cross “to be foolishness” to believing it to be God’s means for salvation. That contention, I think we all recognize to be flatly false. In fact, the writer of the letter, Paul, once considered the cross to be foolishness - or worse. The cross is foolishness and remains foolishness when viewed exclusively through reason. It only becomes wisdom by the grace of God. So the answer to your question, “how could someone be drawn to something they consider foolish?” is that they can only be drawn by grace.
The issue is, does God call some men to Christ because He intends to save them; or, does He call all men to Christ because He intends to give them the choice of saving themselves, or not saving themselves.
My study concludes the latter is true, and the former is false.
1 Cor 1:18 raises the question: why does the general call of the gospel—the message of the cross—result in some finding it foolish, and some finding it the power of God to glorification?
Only two types of people are mentioned—the perishing, and the ones being saved. The Greek word translated “perishing” literally means “to destroy,” and the syntax inserts the emphatic particle, “men" between the definite article and the verb so that the literal rendering is, “to the indeed ones being destroyed.” To them the cross is foolish; but to the “ones being saved,” it is not. I’ll leave you to consider that in light of Rom 9:13-24.
But, the very simple answer to the question raised in v18 is found in v30: it is God’s doing that results in belief; therefore, it is God’s not doing that results in continued unbelief, or viewing the Cross as foolishness; that disproves the idea of an intent on the part of God, by the use of a “prevenient, or antecedant” grace, to allow the sinner to choose this way, or that way: If it is by God’s doing that one is in Christ; it is by God’s not doing that one is not in Christ.
This is seen in other verses as well, for instance:Matthew 22:14
“For many are called, but few are chosen.”Notice, "out of the many, few are chosen."
Not, "out of the many, few, by the use of their own free will, choose", which is your position; but, "few are chosen". By whom?
John 17:9
“I ask on their behalf; I do not ask on behalf of the world, but of those whom You have given Me; for they are Yours;Those foreknown by the Father are chosen by Him for glorification (Rom 8:29-30), they are the elect of the Father (v33), and they belong to Him. He gives them to Jesus, and they are the only ones with whom Jesus is concerned; Jesus is not concerned with the world (cf v9 above). They include not only the apostles, but those in the future who by God’s will, will believe in Him through the apostles’ word—the scripture.John 17:20
“I do not ask on behalf of these [the apostles] alone, but for those also who [in the future] believe in Me through their word;
So those who will come to Jesus are limited to the Father’s choice, and their coming is further dependent upon the Father’s drawing them to Jesus. The rest do not come, because they do not have the ability to do so. (IOW, they “don’t want to,” [cf Rom 3:10ff]; fallen mans inability is a “moral” inability; he is morally corrupted.)John 6:44
“No one can come to Me unless the Father who sent Me draws him; and I will raise him up on the last day.Jesus further states that those given to Him by the Father (cf Jn 17:9, 20) will certainly
come to Him:John 6:37
“All that the Father gives Me will come to Me, and the one who comes to Me I will certainly not cast out.And so there is no doubt as to their final disposition, Jesus assumes full, and final responsibility for losing none of those given Him by the Father, and for raising up in the last day, all of those given to Him by the Father.
Jesus says He will do that because it is the Father’s will that He lose none, but
raise them up:John 6:39
“This is the will of Him who sent Me, that of all that He has given Me I lose nothing, but raise it up on the last day.
Jesus does the will of the Father perfectly.
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