I hold a view similar to the Open View of God.
- By SuperCow
- Controversial Christian Theology
- 97 Replies
Mark Quayle said:
Even YOU believe God is the creator of all that is. If he is that Creator, and if there is sin, then he caused that there be sin.
Finally admit it?? I've been claiming it outright for years. I'll say it again, and happily —God caused that there be sin. Do you think God did not have Redemption in mind when he created the universe?
Notice how you relate this to the question of omnipotence. You are right to do so. Omnipotent means that ALL things descended logically from his causation, whether directly, or through means. There is no such thing as 'accident', with God.
If you are correct, then there is no other causation than first cause, but the Bible does not say this. The creation account alone specifies at least 6 distinct interventions by God, or 6 different causes. These causes are probably broken down in reality into multiple smaller interventions by God. Humans at this point don't exist until the 7th cause. God didn't just create a big bang (the true first cause in our universe), he caused the energy and shaped it as he went. That is clear by a reading of Genesis 1.
Man is given many choices in the Bible. None of them imply that he wanted man to choose the wrong thing. Here's what your ideology means.
Genesis 2:16,17 - God warns Adam that he must not eat from the tree, or he will die.
(God intended Adam and Eve to die.)
Genesis 4:6, 7 - God warns Cain not to be angry and submit to sin.
(God intended Cain to murder Abel)
Genesis 6:5, 7 - Humans were wicked and violent. They must be destroyed.
(God intended man to be violent but destroys them for being so. At least God feels regret in the meantime in verse 6, anthropomorphic language or not.)
Genesis 11 - Humans rebel again against God and build a tower.
(God intends them to rebel, but punishes them anyway, and they scatter abroad as he originally intended.)
Genesis 19 - Sodom and Gomorrah are wicked and are going to be destroyed. Lot's family is warned to leave.
(God intends for Sodom and Gomorrah to be wicked so that he can destroy them dramatically along with Lot's wife who was also destined to become a pillar of salt, maybe to provide an opening for Lot's daughters to have Lot's children.)
Note that if any of the above humans had chosen righteous paths, it would not have broken any prophecies to this point. (Adam and Even sinned before the first prophecy.)
I will admit at this point that there is a 430-year period where the story is predestined, which follows the prophecies to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; however, it also follows that God is actively intervening throughout. (Joseph's dreams resulting in his brother's jealousy, Potiphar, Pharaoh's dreams, Moses, and the text explicitly saying that Pharaoh's heart was hardened during the 10 plagues.)
Now, in this period, we have your scriptural quote:
Like I've shown before, Joseph told his brothers, and I quote (my emphasis), "As for you, what you intended against me for evil, God intended for good..." Genesis 50:20
Now I asked for a quote that suggested that God caused or wants sin and/or evil in the world. This scripture is not it. What it says specifically is that man (Joseph's brothers) intended evil, and God intended good.
"The first causer" of a chain of causation is not the immediate causer. God caused that there BE sin. He did not sin. He did it for his own sake, for his glory and for our sake,
This is again illogical. God caused that there be sin, but he did not sin. The chain of causality suggests that if God did not sin by causing evil, then man does not sin either by being evil. If I give a gun to a small child who doesn't know any better or even know what it is and he points it at someone and pulls the trigger, then who is more guilty? Me or the child?
—But, do you want a big one? Acts 2:23 (and, again, my emphasis) : "This man was handed over to you by God’s deliberate plan and foreknowledge; and you, with the help of wicked men, put him to death by nailing him to the cross."
This says that God planned the redemption, not sin. This says nothing about God wanting evil or sin. Furthermore, he calls those who killed Jesus wicked.
Whether I sin or not in the end has no impact on God's promises. Even Jesus said this about his disciples:
Luke 19:40 - "if they keep quiet, the stones will cry out."
God does not need us. He wants us to come to him willingly which we cannot do without free will on our part.
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