F
fhansen
Guest
Exactly, but it’s not wasted, God knowing the beginning from the end, including foreknowledge of our choices.
I think the fall damaged everything.Do you think the reason is not fallen? Or that the will is not fallen? Or both unfallen?
So it makes sense that a fallen reason informing a fallen will is the mechanism by which one is saved? “The airplane crashed and burned. That’s ok - if it doesn’t take off again, junk it.”SojournerOnEarth:![]()
I think the fall damaged everything.Do you think the reason is not fallen? Or that the will is not fallen? Or both unfallen?
But we need to be very careful before we start trying to decide what, exactly, that means as it pertains to any one human quality.
I don’t think the fall was akin to an airplane crashing.Vonsalza:![]()
So it makes sense that a fallen reason informing a fallen will is the mechanism by which one is saved? “The airplane crashed and burned. That’s ok - if it doesn’t take off again, junk it.”SojournerOnEarth:![]()
I think the fall damaged everything.Do you think the reason is not fallen? Or that the will is not fallen? Or both unfallen?
But we need to be very careful before we start trying to decide what, exactly, that means as it pertains to any one human quality.
I don’t know. But God does and that is the precise basis on which they’re justly judged.You make the choice for God with the same grace that someone else has, but they reject God. Why is that?
On the first, lots of things. A particularly charismatic presenter of the gospel, maybe? On the second, sure!What sways the will? Is one person’s reason better than the other’s?
No, just that they’re not completely and utterly non-plane-like. The damage wasn’t total.A crashed airplane still looks like an airplane. Are you saying fallen man can get to heaven without grace?
Metaphor crashed and burned…SojournerOnEarth:![]()
No, just that they’re not completely and utterly non-plane-like. The damage wasn’t total.A crashed airplane still looks like an airplane. Are you saying fallen man can get to heaven without grace?
The airplane still requires a divine mechanic to become shiny and glorified again.
It also illustrates the inherent weakness of using metaphors…
It’s just easier to say “God capriciously decides” even though that’s wrong.Sounds like your back to random things, or personal superiority, being the deciding factor.
The sovereign election of God is much better.
Lost, wounded, unable to save himself.Fallen, dimmed, not totally depraved. There’s something there to be awakened. Man’s main problem is his lost and wounded condition, not a changed nature.
Man cannot save himself, but God also requires man’s free cooperation. Salvation isn’t unilateral.fhansen:![]()
Lost, wounded, unable to save himself.Fallen, dimmed, not totally depraved. There’s something there to be awakened. Man’s main problem is his lost and wounded condition, not a changed nature.
Total depravity = the fall has touched all parts of us, not that we are as bad as we could be. And we are still human, yes. But on our own we have all turned away from God. Romans 3 and all that.
And the WCF does not leave it out.The critical, thing is that man’s will, even a vestige of it, cannot be left out of the “salvation equation” without doing severe damage to the gospel message.