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Blackhawk
11th April 2002, 12:26 PM
*** Okay this is the 4th of 5 posts about Calvinism vs. Arminism that I promised in the Round Table. I want to offer a few reminders though before we get started.

1. This is an in house debate. Non Christ-like behavior and name calling like "You are not a Christian" or "All Arminians or Calvinist are not Christians" will not be tolerated. Both sides are Christians. We can disagree and tell each other that the other is wrong but in a Christ like way and always rembering that both sides are Christian brothers and sisters. So do not be surpised if your post is deleted if it contains any of the above or anything in that same vein.

2. In my titles I might overemphasizes what each one teaches. For example both Arminism and Calvinsim teach Total depravity but Arminsism also teaches that God gives you only enough grace so that you can make a choice. so there is a human element although God does the saving. so I chose to overempahize that side in my titles to make it easy to distiguish between the 2 different sides.

3. There is a lot of misinformation about Calvinsim and especially Arminism. Web pagees are a bad source many times for information. So just watch out.

4. I will try to be as objective as possible but I will fail to some extent. So know that I come from a particular point of view. But again I will try to be as objective as possible.

5. I hope these threads will be a encouragement and a learning experience for everyone. If not then I will delete them myself. So if these turn into name calling matches like they can I will delete them. So no one ruin it for everyone else. okay?

BH6

Dave Ulchers
11th April 2002, 12:32 PM
For starters, what is Arminism? Who thought it up?

Blackhawk
11th April 2002, 12:36 PM
CAlvinism

Irresistible grace- Also called efficacious (effective) grace. Basically if God comes and reveals Himself to us and His plan for salvation we have no choice but to accept God's plan. He is Irresistable. So this kind of grace is always effective. It always results in salvation. There is a genral call to salvation to everyone but the call to the elect is nonresistable. Man's will is still there but will always freely choose God and His grace. Basically we can't say no to God's offer of salvation because we will never want to say no.

Arminainism

Resistalbe grace-
The Holy Spirit calls everyone to be saved. We can though resist that call. So if the person believes only then does the Spirit actually save them. Basically we can say no to God's offer of salvation.

Christi
11th April 2002, 01:05 PM
Yep. Arminainism for me here, too.

StogusMaximus
11th April 2002, 01:10 PM
I agree with Arminian on this point.

Blackhawk
11th April 2002, 01:31 PM
Dave,

"For starters, what is Arminism? Who thought it up?"

It is based on the theological positions of Jacob Arminius. It is how some look at the Bible so in they would say God thought it up. Major Arminian thinkers are the Wesleys and a major Arminian type church would be the Methodist church. Arminianism is just a theological view. It is not meant to be believed over scripure it is a way of synthesizing what some believe scripture says.

Does that help?

BH6

Dave Ulchers
11th April 2002, 01:39 PM
OK, thanks.

ZiSunka
11th April 2002, 01:39 PM
I don't understand the concept of irresistable grace.

Does that mean that God forces us to accept Him? And that He doesn't allow others to have His grace, even though they might want it?

It doesn't make any sense, if that is what it means! Why would God create people that He wouldn't want to be with in eternity?

Wouldn't that make Him cruel, not loving?

Mandy
11th April 2002, 03:14 PM
That is what i have wondered about too. Would it be just for God to allow people to go to hell who had no choice because they were not chosen? I know God is sovereign, but I believe man has to decide whom he will serve. I firmly believe that God is willing that none should perish.

Blackhawk
11th April 2002, 03:27 PM
"Does that mean that God forces us to accept Him? And that He doesn't allow others to have His grace, even though they might want it?"

It matters how you look at it. A Calvinist would say no. God just changes your desires so that you will accept God. See it goes back to the totally depraved thing. WE will not want to accept God by ourselves becasue we are totally depraved. So God has to change our desires or regenerate us so that we will accept Him. I guess in a way you can say that God forces us to accept Him but no one would want to if He did not force us. But saying that God forces us is a little misleading. It is more like God giving us grace s othat we can choose Him and that because we see Him we want to accept Him because God is so great.

"It doesn't make any sense, if that is what it means! Why would God create people that He wouldn't want to be with in eternity?"

Good question. Would God be good if creates people with a 0% chance to get to Heaven? Luther would say that God's ways are higher than ours. you know the whole Job thing. All of us have get to that point at some point. We can't know everything about God because He has not revealed it to us. But does this satisfactorily answer the question?

"Wouldn't that make Him cruel, not loving?"

Good question again. Any takers?

BH6

BH6

ZiSunka
11th April 2002, 04:16 PM
Sounds like hogwash to me.

I don't believe in that at all, because it makes us puppets and God the puppetmaster.

Reformationist
11th April 2002, 05:37 PM
Originally posted by lambslove
Does that mean that God forces us to accept Him? And that He doesn't allow others to have His grace, even though they might want it?

You must understand that the fallen man, that's every single person after the fall of man except Jesus, prior to their regeneration, doesn't want God's grace. He not keeping back from them something their fallen nature desires. Their fallen nature is at enmity with God. The fallen nature is everything God is not, i.e. unrighteous.

Romans 3:10-18 says it clearly.

There is no one righteous, not even one;
there is no one who understands,
no one who seeks God.
All have turned away,
they have together become worthless;
there is no one who does good,
not even one."
"Their throats are open graves;
their tongues practice deceit."
"The poison of vipers is on their lips."
"Their mouths are full of cursing and bitterness."
"Their feet are swift to shed blood;
ruin and misery mark their ways,
and the way of peace they do not know."
"There is no fear of God before their eyes.

That is the fallen man you're referring to. Does it sound like they want God's grace?


It doesn't make any sense, if that is what it means! Why would God create people that He wouldn't want to be with in eternity?

It's not about them. It's about the love and mercy He shows those He chooses. Think about it. If you were going to die along with everyone else and then God said, "Not lambslove. He's/She's mine." Wouldn't you recognize His mercy more because it wasn't just a blanket that covered everyone. You know you didn't deserve His mercy, just like the others didn't deserve it. But, now you understand that it wasn't because He hated the others but rather because He decided you would be spared and become His child.

God is not cruel. God is love. We know no love. The love we feel is not from us but rather it's the love He put in us.

1 John 4:19
We love Him because He first loved us.

We were unable to love Him before He sent the Holy Spirit to dwell in us.

God bless.

LouisBooth
11th April 2002, 10:26 PM
"
#11



Sounds like hogwash to me.

I don't believe in that at all, because it makes us puppets and God the puppetmaster.

"

Just wondering..If I create something and say, it will end up here, am I controling it? I don't think so....God predestines those who will be saved based on their nature.

chuck
11th April 2002, 10:38 PM
Blackhawg how are you my friend longtime since we discussed this topic LOL.
I did come upon scripture that at least for me sheds light on this, and it is in Genesis chapter 6:

-- New King James
Genesis 6:5-8 Then the Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. And the Lord was sorry that He had made man on the earth, and He was grieved in His heart. So the Lord said, "I will destroy man whom I have created from the face of the earth, both man and beast, creeping thing and birds of the air, for I am sorry that I have made them.''But Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord.

Now the long and I guess drawn out question I have is this.
If God indeed chooses who He will change and who He will not (those He will save and those He will not), and we of our own will could never accept or reject this then why was God "sorry" He created man and He was so sorry and "grieved" in His heart about it that He was going destroy man, and not just man but "beast, creeping thing and birds of the air". You see by saying we do not have any choice in the matter to make a decision then God is sorry He created people to do exactly what He knew they were going to do. We also see in 2 Peter 3:9:
-- New King James
2 Peter 3:9 The Lord is not slack concerning His promise, as some count slackness, but is longsuffering toward us, not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance.
This really made me think. I have heard people say that this is not refering to all men but to the "elect" but if that is the case then we know non of them would ever perish because God would have "regenerated them" if indeed this verse is refering to the "elect". If God wants all to come to repentance then why doesn't He regenerate all? More overly why would God be "sorry" that He created a person that He knew He would never choose to save?

I hope that some of this makes sence to others and will enjoy seeing how others feel about this view also.

God Bless

StogusMaximus
12th April 2002, 08:38 AM
Reformationist,

What do you think the criteria is for God's "choosen" few?

Blackhawk
12th April 2002, 09:45 AM
"Blackhawg how are you my friend longtime since we discussed this topic LOL."

BLACKHAWG! Well I did not know that is what you thought of me or we would not have been friends. LOL. I am doing fine. I think the best thing that happened to me was leaving that other forum. Soon after I joined the one that merged with this one and that was a good move. How is it going with you?

About your views I think that they make sense. I am still pretty much as you left me as far as beliefs but I am finding out that I am more of an Arminian than A moderate Calvinist that I thought I was. ARmininianism was always the ugly word but now I see that he was pretty cool. Calvin was too I jsut can't get into the idea that God died for a certain few when all over the Bible He said He died for the world. But I will state what exactly I believe on each of these soon. I am hoping a debate will come up in these so we can discuss them. I just do not want it t oget out of hand like at the other site.

BH6

StogusMaximus
12th April 2002, 10:03 AM
My take on Calvinism.

God knows the past, present and future. Since God knows the future, He knows everyone that will accept Him and be saved. If He knew everyone who will be saved when time began, then it can be assumed that God will focus His efforts on those who He knows will choose Him.

So....Because God knows how it will end, He changes His actions in the Present! Still with me?

Example. Two people exist in the world John and Jane. God sees the future and He knows that Jane will be saved and John will not. With this knoweldge God favors Jane from the time she is born till her death, while He ignores John. Jane is God's selection, because He knows what her outcome will be.

Am I correct in my thinking?

ZiSunka
12th April 2002, 10:33 AM
Maybe. But I don't agree with the part about God focusing his love and favors only on those he knows will someday accept him. That would tip things unfairly. It would give the unsaved a valid gripe on judgement day. "Well, You gave Jane more than me, that's why she trusted You. If You had given me enough, I would have loved You, too. I got gypped!" the unsaved could say in their defense.

I think God sends rain on the just and the unjust alike, like the Bible says. All are blessed by God, and some recognize those blessings as being from God, and others think they came from their own hard work. Some love the rain (blessings) because they see it comes from God, and others wither curse the rain or think that they somehow made it rain (blessings).

It's after you become saved that you begin to see that God has always been there blessing you, that's all.

tericl2
12th April 2002, 10:37 AM
Salvation is by grace. Grace is a gift to us. In order to receive a gift it must be accepted.

Example....if I give you $100, say, by leaving it in your mailbox or on your porch where you can pick it up and use it any time you like, but you choose to leave that gift lying there, it does no good. I am still out the 100 dollars, and it is still there for you to take until the day you die, but you have to CHOOSE to pick it up and use it.

This is the same as Christ's gift to us. The gift of salvation is sitting there on the porch of your heart. All you have to do is CHOOSE to pick it up and make use of it.

BTW, if we are predestined, no matter what, to accept or not accept Jesus, why did He command us to take the Message to all corners of the earth? Why did (and do) Christians suffer and die to spread the Word if it is all predestined? Seems pointless, and my God, as far as i can tell doesn't do anything pointless.

We are the elect in the body of Christ once we choose to become members of His body.

Blackhawk
12th April 2002, 10:41 AM
Stogus,

that is an Arminian view point. Let me go through all 5 points of Calvinism in one post and then i will go through the 5 points of Arminism in my next one here. i thought it would be best to make 5 points so that we were not speaking of so mnay different things in one thread but maybe that is just making things confusing. Maybe i should of Listed both in one thread before doing these 5. oh well you live and learn.

Calvinism-

The 5 points are represented by the acronym TULIP.

T- Total Depravity- We are dead and we can't get up. God has to totally regenerate us or fully make us alive before we can choose Him.
U- Unconditional election- God does not choose us based upon anything. He chose us before time just because that is what His will is.
L- Limited atonement- God choose a limited # of us before time to be in His elect and thus save us.
I-Irresistable grace- God's grace is effective and if God chooses to show Himself to us then we can't choose not to be saved.
P-Perserverance of the saints- OSAS

Arminianism
T w/P- Man is totally depraved but God regenerates man to a point in which man can choose to be saved.
C- Conditional election- God chose us based on the foreknowledge that we will choose Him later. So we are part of the elect based upon God's knowledge of what we will do later on.
L- Unlimted atonement- God died for all but we must choose to accept His gift in order to be saved.
R- resistable grace- We can resist God grace as it comes to salvation. Basically God puts out the offer and we can say yes or no.
F-Fall from grace- You can lose your salvation. As some have said in the threads one can walk out of God's hand.

Does that make it more clear?

BH6

Mandy
12th April 2002, 10:42 AM
I agree. God's grace is available to all men, yet not all will receive it. We are the elect according to the foreknowledge of God. God knows who will receive Him.

ZiSunka
12th April 2002, 10:44 AM
And to foresee something is not to make it happen.

I can foresee that my nephew will fall off his wobbly bike, but I do NOT make it happen.

Foreknowledge and fatalism are two different things.

tericl2
12th April 2002, 10:45 AM
F-Fall from grace- You can lose your salvation. As some have said in the threads one can walk out of God's hand.

This is where i would disagree with Armenianism, although this is not a universally agreed upon armenian philsophy.

Blackhawk
12th April 2002, 11:16 AM
tericl2,

True. Jacob Arminius was undecided abotu it. Later Arminians were the ones who said that for sure we can but not even all of them believe that. (like me)

Bh6

Blackhawk
12th April 2002, 12:22 PM
Okay here i definitely agree with the Arminians again. I see all throughout the bible that we have a choice whether to be saved or not and that one is damned for not choosing God. BH6

Reformationist
12th April 2002, 02:16 PM
Originally posted by chuck
If God indeed chooses who He will change and who He will not (those He will save and those He will not), and we of our own will could never accept or reject this then why was God "sorry" He created man and He was so sorry and "grieved" in His heart about it that He was going destroy man, and not just man but "beast, creeping thing and birds of the air".

There is no contradiction between these verses and passages teaching the changelessness (immutability) of God (Malachi 3:6; James 1:17) and that God does not change His mind (Numbers 23:19; 1 Sam. 15:29; Ps. 33:11; Is. 46:10). This description is anthropopathic. Additionally, the immutable and sovereign God deals appropriately with changes in human behavior. When we sin or repent of sin, there is a change in the blessing or punishment appropriate to the situation (Ex. 32:12, 14; 1 Sam. 15:11; 2 Sam. 24:16; Jer. 18:11; Amos 7:3, 6). Remember, God is changeless in His being:

Hebrews 13:8
Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever.


This really made me think. I have heard people say that this is not refering to all men but to the "elect" but if that is the case then we know non of them would ever perish because God would have "regenerated them" if indeed this verse is refering to the "elect".

Once again, it's important to note that Simon Peter was talking to the CHRISTIANS in Asia Minor where he was. The "us" refers to Peter and his fellow Christians.

If God wants all to come to repentance then why doesn't He regenerate all?

Two points. First, God does not want all to come to repentance, or all would. Either you have to agree or you have to say God has not the power to make it happen. He either wants it to happen but doesn't have the power to make it happen, or, He doesn't really want all to come to repentance.

God bless.

Reformationist
12th April 2002, 02:23 PM
Originally posted by blackhaw6
Okay here i definitely agree with the Arminians again. I see all throughout the bible that we have a choice whether to be saved or not and that one is damned for not choosing God. BH6

In light of your earlier statements as to the depravity of man and God's foreknowledge it seemed as if you were implying that the reason God could know someone's final disposition towards Him would be because they were created that way. I'm curious as to the scriptural evidence (verses) you came upon that now so clearly reveal man's ability, prior to God's intervention, to choose to live for God, though they have a nature that is at enmity with Him.

Please elaborate.

God bless.

StogusMaximus
12th April 2002, 02:24 PM
Originally posted by Reformationist
Two points. First, God does not want all to come to repentance, or all would. Either you have to agree or you have to say God has not the power to make it happen. He either wants it to happen but doesn't have the power to make it happen, or, He doesn't really want all to come to repentance.

God doesn't want all to come to repentance? So God wants some people to be damned? If God wants some people to be damned, how can God love them? If God does not love these people then the Bible is filled with lies. If the Bible is filled with lies Christianity is lost.

DANGEROUS!!!

Blackhawk
12th April 2002, 02:39 PM
"Two points. First, God does not want all to come to repentance, or all would. Either you have to agree or you have to say God has not the power to make it happen. He either wants it to happen but doesn't have the power to make it happen, or, He doesn't really want all to come to repentance. "

I would agree to a point. i believe God does not want all to come repentence so much that He is willing to make us robots and make us repent. Note of clarification I do not think Calvinism makes a robots though.

But this is kind of like the problem of evil huh? Why is there evil if God is all good and all powerful? Well i would say that He has the power to stop evil and the powere to save everyone. But He chooses in both instances to give us a choice. And what I mean by a choice is a true choice.

i do not really have a problem with someone saying that god would come into someone's life and change His desires so He accepts salvation but what about the nonelect? My old pastor used to say in seminary it is easy to be a Calvinist but once you start a pastorate you can't be one. I just can't see the god that is revealed in scriptures creating a being with Original sin inherited from Adam and then not give this person any chance to be saved. Why would He want to create someone with 0% chance to be saved? I do believe that the sinner's deserve death but God just lets them go to hell without any kind of reaching out to them? That is not the gracious God i know. That is not the Jesus who was the friend of the sinner. The tax collecter, the harlot, the working guy, the roman centurion and the samaritan. He was the friend of all the people that the jews thought were trash. Those are not the chosen people or those are the dogs of the world. that is what they thought of those types of people. But jesus loved them. He cared for all that He met. So as I look at Jesus' life i can't imagine a God who would only show grace to a select few that He chose. it seems very out of character for him to do.

BH6

i will get more in depth with scripture when I get home or later this weekend wheere I can quote scripture more easily.

Reformationist
12th April 2002, 02:39 PM
Originally posted by StogusMaximus
God doesn't want all to come to repentance? So God wants some people to be damned? If God wants some people to be damned, how can God love them? If God does not love these people then the Bible is filled with lies. If the Bible is filled with lies Christianity is lost.

DANGEROUS!!!

I'll tell you what's dangerous, that you think God powerless over His own creation. You sound like Job. All he did was sit there and say, "What did I ever do to deserve this" just as you are saying the damned don't deserve it. He said he didn't want to answer God. Did he answer God? God said (I'm paraphrasing), "You'll stand up like a man and answer my questions because I am God. You can't do what I can do. I did things so magnificant you can't even begin to comprehend them. I have power over the largest and most dangerous creatures ever created, because I created them. Can you do that? I am God."

In light of that you can honestly sit there and say God needs you to accept him for His majestic plan to have effect in your life. I think you have a dangerous idea of the sovereignty of God. God is God of all, whether they accept Him or not. Right? All will be judged. The hangup is that you don't think the created being with the fallen nature got a fair chance at accepting God. The bible has something to say about that:

Romans 9:19-21
You will say to me then, "Why does He still find fault? For who has resisted His will?" But indeed, O man, who are you to reply against God? Will the thing formed say to him who formed it, "Why have you made me like this?" Does not the potter have power over the clay, from the same lump to make one vessel for honor and another for dishonor?

Sounds a lot like what you have a problem with.

If there's truth to this and it makes you think the Bible is filled with lies who's understanding are you really relying on?

Proverbs 3:5-7
Trust in the LORD with all your heart,
And lean not on your own understanding;
In all your ways acknowledge Him,
And He shall direct your paths.

Do not be wise in your own eyes;
Fear the LORD and depart from evil.

Don't discount something just because it's not what you might have always heard. I had always thought like the majority of people on this board. Then I realized that I had a very limited view of God's sovereignty, like the majority of people on this board.

God bless.

Blackhawk
12th April 2002, 02:47 PM
Hey guys I think we should all watch out with our tones and posts here. i know we have definite views and stuff but let's be careful. We are Christians. This is just a reminder before something erupts.

BH6

Mandy
12th April 2002, 02:54 PM
I believe that God would rather us choose to love Him and serve Him of our own freewill and not because He caused it to happen.

Reformationist
12th April 2002, 03:15 PM
Originally posted by blackhaw6
But this is kind of like the problem of evil huh? Why is there evil if God is all good and all powerful? Well i would say that He has the power to stop evil and the powere to save everyone. But He chooses in both instances to give us a choice. And what I mean by a choice is a true choice.

God created everything for a purpose. The creation of something we think is bad or evil was good because it was meant for a righteous purpose. For example, most, including myself, would say murder is bad. Or the death of a young child is bad. The reason we say those things are bad is because we can only see the immediacy of that single situation. We don't look at the death of a child by saying God is really moving in someones life. As bad as we might think that is, what makes it a good thing is because God is using that to conform and sanctify someone. The parents, if Christian, will eventually, hopefully, be able to look at that as an experience that helped them grow closer in their faith in the Lord's promise that He works all things to the good of those who love Him and are called according to His purpose (Rom 8:28). Also, it will help them give comfort and guidance to others who experience that trauma. If the parents aren't Christian then it was intended to work for the good of someone else. Romans 8:28 doesn't say "He works all things to the good of everyone." That verse is qualified by the limitor, "those who love Him and are called according to His purpose." It amazes me that so many Christians expect to go through their Christian life without suffering. Name one Christian who God has not made suffer. Job was the most righteous person on earth during his life. What did God do to him? He took everything from Job. Everything! I wonder how people expect to be changed from the old man (self-centered, unrighteous) to this new creation (selfless, godly) without suffering and conflict. God uses the evil in this world to help us recognize and rejoice in His neverending grace.

Why would He want to create someone with 0% chance to be saved?

To help those who He does save be conformed. To help them recognize the gift they have unmeritoriously been given.

I do believe that the sinner's deserve death but God just lets them go to hell without any kind of reaching out to them? That is not the gracious God i know. That is not the Jesus who was the friend of the sinner.

Do you know anyone who isn't a sinner? If sinners deserve death and we are all sinners then what do we deserve? Find your joy in the fact that God will, as Peter said, "deliver us from this body of death." If making the right choice rescues you then who do you think really rescues you. Your own works?

He was the friend of all the people that the jews thought were trash. Those are not the chosen people or those are the dogs of the world. that is what they thought of those types of people. But jesus loved them. He cared for all that He met.

The people, the Pharisees, that thought they were holy and righteous looked down on others. God does not measure us the way man does. That's the point. He said He would use the lowly things to bring down the strong things of this world. Their station in life isn't what made someone righteous. This is a perfect example of man's nature to try and exalt himself over the Lord. You, yourself, in your example, are showing how God was selecting the lowly, the wretched sinner.

My pastor pointed something very simple out that most don't want to realize. People always talk about how they humble themselves to the Lord. Most don't know what it means to be humbled. To be truly humbled you must be humiliated; only then can we know humility and how we are no better than others. That's not even what Christians do to other Christians. They put people on pedastals. "Oh my pastor is so righteous." Reality: My pastor is a sinner who needs God's continual grace just like I do. "Oh Paul was so righteous. He was truly in God's favor." Reality: Paul was regularly beaten to within an inch of his life and then finally persecuted unto death. Does that sound like the average Christian's idea of being in God's favor. We say stuff like, "What?!! 4 bucks for a happy meal?!!" Yeah, we really know about suffering. Job was the most righteous. Lost everything, kids, money, servants, cattle. Oh yeah, we know about suffering.

God bless.

StogusMaximus
12th April 2002, 03:26 PM
Originally posted by Reformationist
I'll tell you what's dangerous, that you think God powerless over His own creation. You sound like Job. All he did was sit there and say, "What did I ever do to deserve this" just as you are saying the damned don't deserve it. He said he didn't want to answer God. Did he answer God? God said (I'm paraphrasing), "You'll stand up like a man and answer my questions because I am God. You can't do what I can do. I did things so magnificant you can't even begin to comprehend them. I have power over the largest and most dangerous creatures ever created, because I created them. Can you do that? I am God."

I never said God was powerless over His own creation.
I don't think God is powerless over His own creation. If God wants me to live 1000 years I will, If God wants me to die this second I will. If God wants the day to be night and the night to be day then it will. I do however believe that God can not do something that is against His nature. God is Love. " Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love." 1 John 4:8.

Now I may have overstepped my bounds by asking how God could love people He would intentionally damn. In my beliefs man has fallen and deserves damnation, even though God loves us all.

God's love offers us salvation. "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life." John 3:16 The point I don't agree on is to say that God loves all men, but loves a select few more. The ones he loves more he will offer salvation, to the rest there is no option.

Originally posted by Reformationist
In light of that you can honestly sit there and say God needs you to accept him for His majestic plan to have effect in your life. I think you have a dangerous idea of the sovereignty of God. God is God of all, whether they accept Him or not. Right? All will be judged. The hangup is that you don't think the created being with the fallen nature got a fair chance at accepting God. The bible has something to say about that:

Romans 9:19-21
You will say to me then, "Why does He still find fault? For who has resisted His will?" But indeed, O man, who are you to reply against God? Will the thing formed say to him who formed it, "Why have you made me like this?" Does not the potter have power over the clay, from the same lump to make one vessel for honor and another for dishonor?

Sounds a lot like what you have a problem with.


I never said God needs anything from me to have his majestic plan work.

God does have a majestic plan, and it has a stipulation.
We must believe - "Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved, but whoever does not believe will be condemned." Mark 16:16

He doesn't need us to do anything, He requires us to believe. If we don't we are surely damned.

What I have a problem with is God sending His Son to die for the sins of a few of mankind. Why just a few. Is the Blood of Jesus not strong enough to save all of mankind? Did God only pick his favorites to save?

I don't think so. I believe that God loves every single one of us. I think God loves us so much that he gave the ultimate sacrifice in order that we may be saved. To think the blood of Jesus can wash the sins away of every single person, if we only believe.

Originally posted by Reformationist

If there's truth to this and it makes you think the Bible is filled with lies who's understanding are you really relying on?

Proverbs 3:5-7
Trust in the LORD with all your heart,
And lean not on your own understanding;
In all your ways acknowledge Him,
And He shall direct your paths.

Do not be wise in your own eyes;
Fear the LORD and depart from evil.

Don't discount something just because it's not what you might have always heard. I had always thought like the majority of people on this board. Then I realized that I had a very limited view of God's sovereignty, like the majority of people on this board.

God bless.

Who's understanding are you relying on? I base my beliefs on what I read in the Bible just as you have based yours. You follow your interpretation, and I will follow mine.

You think God only will save a few. I think God offers salvation to all, but only a few will believe and be saved.

LouisBooth
13th April 2002, 01:15 AM
"But I don't agree with the part about God focusing his love and favors only on those he knows will someday accept him. "

Lambs, if not, what is so speical about calling God our father? Who do you think the promices of God are made to, its only to those who call on his name...those God has chosen.