P
Peter_Plato
Guest
I would say something about great minds thinking alike, but I struggle a lot with mine so I wouldn’t want that to reflect badly on yours.This is basically how I would respond as well, just much more succinct.![]()
I would say something about great minds thinking alike, but I struggle a lot with mine so I wouldn’t want that to reflect badly on yours.This is basically how I would respond as well, just much more succinct.![]()
XDI would say something about great minds thinking alike, but I struggle a lot with mine so I wouldn’t want that to reflect badly on yours.
A mark of the Reformed tradition is that it rejects the metaphysics of the scholastics(1). This is pronounced even in Luther’s own ideology, and more recent orthodox Reformed theologians such as Karl Barth(2). Now, the relevancy of this idea is that you are asking a metaphysical question, while defending it from a theological perspective. No doubt there are multiple passages that can be interpreted to support your premise, but even a properly and entirely antithetical statement would still be entirely irrelevant to the question you’re asking.The Sovereignty of God
I believe God is completely sovereign over all things including natural disasters, salvation of individuals, appointing President Obama for a 2nd term, changing and directing the hearts of men and women, where and when we are to be born and die, etc. I would be very interested in a discussion on the sovereignty of God. I’m sure we would all be challenged on this topic which should help us grow in our trust in God in all cirumbstances in our lives.
Lamentations 3:37-38
Who has spoken and it came to pass,
unless the Lord has commanded it?
Is it not from the mouth of the Most High
that good and bad come?
Our true nature is God created. The fall was a distortion of that and a corruption of our free will. The 7.056 billion wills that are impacting the world are not necessarily “free” wills, they are wills with some semblance of freedom, but much more likely are choosing and acting because of constraints and because of a warped and degenerated faculty of will which is not free. There is nothing in the sovereignty of God’s will that is necessarily in opposition to the true freedom of will for 7.056 billion. There is a difference between freedom of choice and freedom of will.Do we choose according to our nature? Let’s consider this: If we put a bowl of steak next to a bowl of lettuce and carrots in front of a dog, which bowl would the dog choose? Now, let’s replace that dog with a rabbit and let it choose between the same bowl of steak and bowl of lettuce and carrots. What will the rabbit choose? We choose according to our nature (regenerate or unregenerate – Rom 8).
Our choices in life are always within certain parameters in which God’s sovereign hand determines for each one of us. Some are born with greater intelligence than others, some are born better looking, and some were born in a household of faith. There are 7.056 billion people in this world; therefore, we cannot have 7.056 billion free will entities that make choices which control the outcome of this world. God governs according to His wisdom and mankind does not determine his own fate or the outcome of this world. We as Christians do not believe in luck or fate, do we? We have to have faith and trust in God that He will keep His promises as revealed in the Scriptures because He has the power and ability to accomplish His sovereign will for His own glory and our good.
To restore the free will in which Adam enjoyed prior to his one act of disobedience which corrupted the human race, what must the 7.056 billion people do as individuals? How does the need of being born again (born from above) according Jesus fit in with the recovery of our damaged will?Our true nature is God created. The fall was a distortion of that and a corruption of our free will. The 7.056 billion wills that are impacting the world are not necessarily “free” wills, they are wills with some semblance of freedom, but much more likely are choosing and acting because of constraints and because of a warped and degenerated faculty of will which is not free. There is nothing in the sovereignty of God’s will that is necessarily in opposition to the true freedom of will for 7.056 billion. There is a difference between freedom of choice and freedom of will.
Again, my position would be that true freedom of will is only possible when our wills are freely aligned with the sovereign will of God, otherwise we do not truly possess free will, not matter how convinced we are otherwise.
Being born again is recovery of a completely free will.To restore the free will in which Adam enjoyed prior to his one act of disobedience which corrupted the human race, what must the 7.056 billion people do as individuals? How does the need of being born again (born from above) according Jesus fit in with the recovery of our damaged will?
That’d be the equivalent of saying that God’s a rapist, torturer, etc.The Sovereignty of God
I believe God is completely sovereign over all things including natural disasters, salvation of individuals, appointing President Obama for a 2nd term, changing and directing the hearts of men and women, where and when we are to be born and die, etc. I would be very interested in a discussion on the sovereignty of God. I’m sure we would all be challenged on this topic which should help us grow in our trust in God in all cirumbstances in our lives.
Lamentations 3:37-38
Who has spoken and it came to pass,
unless the Lord has commanded it?
Is it not from the mouth of the Most High
that good and bad come?
“To suppose that whatever God requireth of us that we have power of ourselves to do, is to make the cross and grace of Jesus Christ of none effect.” John OwenBeing born again is recovery of a completely free will.
“For whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother.” (Matt 12:50)
Yet, how can anyone actually do the will of God unless one also has the capacity or power to carry it out? Which is to say being born again is the sharing in solidarity, in common, the sovereign will of God, freely willing what God wills, being united in will and purpose but also being provided by God with the power (grace) to do his will. That is the only possibility because God has the sovereign power to force the compliance of all 7.056 billion humans, but doesn’t. Why not? He wants to empower us to do his will.
How could he command that we do his will if it is not in our power to do so?
Lamentations 3:37-38That’d be the equivalent of saying that God’s a rapist, torturer, etc.
He empowers all to do his will by grace. The power to make choices is ours as a necessary condition for free will, and that power comes from God but it is placed in our hands. We can only be held accountable for what we have been endowed with the power to carry out. It is that we choose not to make proper use of that power to fully carry out his will which would be the perfect option in all cases. The power is from God but must be made use of by us. That is why free will is key. It is our choice how we use that power. That is also why we bear responsibility, because we have all we need from God to carry out his will, but ultimately choose not to. The truth is that we have absolutely no power of our own, so Mr. Owen is correct, but we do have the will that can make proper use of the power given to us or not.“To suppose that whatever God requireth of us that we have power of ourselves to do, is to make the cross and grace of Jesus Christ of none effect.” John Owen
Does God empowers all 7.056 billions humans to chose Christ for life, or does He empowers those whom He has chosen before the foundations of the world to obey the gospel of God as a requirement to be an adopted child of God?
The inheritance is precisely the restoration of perfect free will (the will of God) in us by full cooperation with the Holy Spirit to remake us in his image, our perfect freedom in God, that was lost by slavery to sin. At the fall, we became less free and less complete because our wills were, as a result, blunted and scoured by sin. The sin of Adam was to make an imperfect choice to abdicate freedom for a lesser good.In him we have obtained an inheritance, having been predestined according to the purpose of him who works all things according to the counsel of his will, so that we who were the first to hope in Christ might be to the praise of his glory. In him you also, when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation, and believed in him, were sealed with the promised Holy Spirit, who is the guarantee of our inheritance until we acquire possession of it, to the praise of his glory.
Ephesians 1
I was responding to your commentary. A verse or two out of 30000 or so shouldn’t impress many of us.Lamentations 3:37-38
Who has spoken and it came to pass,
unless the Lord has commanded it?
Is it not from the mouth of the Most High
that good and bad come?
Please explain your posts because it appears you are responding to Sacred Scripture.
Check out my new signatureI was responding to your commentary. A verse or two out of 30000 or so shouldn’t impress many of us.
Yes, it’s not difficult. A God who would not want His creation to be free to choose or reject love, to choose or reject Him, would be a smaller, shallower, weaker god-not particularly inspiring. And a god who’s the direct cause of evil, rather than one who simply permits it for His purposes, wouldn’t be capable of making heaven any better than hell.OP moved here as he was spinning circles trying to make us Calvinists, so he tries again
by making it seem as if by arguing against his twisted ideas of double predestination we are in fact arguing against the sovereignty of God.
Shall we start with what we know of God from Scripture.
God is Infinite and Eternal
All knowing
Holy
Righteous and Just
Love
True, Truth
All powerful
Immutable
Omnipresent
Sovereign
So yes God is Sovereign, now what does that mean? Well it means just as he is sovereign his is also his other qualities as well, in his sovereignty he could not be unjust, unholy, hateful, false or changing.
How is this a difficult discussion?
Oh I disagree with your assertion! Just the first part, though. I think that BECAUSE God is sovereign over all His creation, he created man in His own image and likeness, which includes the ability to choose. He then set before His creation, made in His image, the alternatives, and He, in His sovereignty, allows the consequences of each choice.God is not sovereign over our free will to choose, otherwise He would not have said,
And to this people you shall say: ‘Thus says the LORD: Behold, I set before you the way of life and the way of death. (Jeremiah 21:8).
God’s mercy is extended to anyone who will humbe themselves, other wise He would not have said,
God resists the proud, but gives grace to the humble
(1 Peter 5:5)
Everyone has the freedom to choose life or death, good or evil. Everyone is offered the grace to carry out their choice for life and good, if they would but humble themselves before God.
**Say to them, As I live, declares the Lord GOD, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and live; turn back, turn back from your evil ways, for why will you die, O house of Israel?
** (Ezekiel 33:11)
May God’s peace be with you
micah
You are creating a false equivalency here. The fact that God created man with free will does NOT equate to “sovereignty of man”. Just as He created us with the ability to choose, so also He created boundaries among which we can choose, and consequences for our choices. We do not have the sovereignty to transcend these boundaries and consequences.Code:Okay, do you think man can have free will, yet God is still sovereign? I personally don't believe we can have the sovereignity of man and also have the sovereignity of God at the same time.
No, this is a false dichotomy. God does rule and reign, and His way of doing so is in a creation that functions according to the parameters He has created. If functions according to the laws of physics that He established. He permits activity within His creation that is contrary from his desire for it.Code:Either God rules and reigns by governing His entire creation, or God is passive in His creation, and is just sitting back watching mankind do it's thing
This is some kind of artificial construction that you seem to be using to promote your assertion to the contrary. You have already stated that you do not believe in free will at all, and now you have created some red herring you are calling “absolute free will”. I deny that any such thing exists.Code:Okay... I believe Catholics and Protestants prayed to God prior to the election in regards to our next President of the United States. If you believe in the **absolute free will of man**, then why did we as Christians pray to God about the election? Through prayer, did God changed the hearts of men and women to vote whom God wanted to serve as our President?
And if the Jews had known the time of their visitation?It was the absolute authority of God that Jesus was to die on the cross.
Again you are creating a false dichotomy. God, in his absolute sovereignty, created nature so that it functions according to the patterns He has deigned. Man has demonstrated that he is able, by his own will and sin, to interfere with some of these patterns, to bring destruction to God’s creation and the patterns through which it functions.Code:Let’s do a simpler one. Is God sovereign over the weather and natural disasters, or does Mother nature have a will of her own?
Again you are creating a false dichotomy. God “sending” hurricanes is not opposed by “just fate”, if indeed there is such a thing.I believe the two hurricanes just prior to the election had an impact of the election (Sandy and the one at the Republican convention). Did those hurricanes happen by fate, or did God send them to secure the election results according to His sovereign will?