Philip wrote:Does God only call SOME to repentance – or ALL? Does Scripture say he desires even SOME men to perish – or NOT ANY? Does God expect those He continuously warns to repent to do so, OR NOT? Does God command things one cannot do? Does God desire that SOME men remain in rebellion to Him – does He DESIRE their continuing sin? Man’s continuing sin brings horrific devastation to both Christians and non-believers – does God desire this? Pre-fall, WHO made Adam sin or Lucifer in Heaven rebel? IF God had designed some me so as to not be able to repent - that He never desired such men to come into relationship with Him or to abandon their rebelliousness - THEN WHY IS HE ANGRY AT THEM? WHY DOES HE REPEATEDLY WARN THEM TO DO WHAT HE SUPPOSEDLY HAS NOT CREATED THEM ABLE TO DO? This makes no sense whatsoever!
Phillip,
I wonder if you know enough about Calvinism to argue against it. No Calvinist would suggest that God calls only SOME men to repentance. He calls all. I suggest that you study the difference between the general call and the effectual call. God calls all men (even Pharoah) to repent, but only enables those who he chose to do so. God is under no obligation to save anyone, and if he only chooses to save some, that is his perogative.
Let me ask you, was the crucifixion of Christ predestined, or did God simply react to man's sins and resort to plan B? Could those who did this chosen to do otherwise?
Philip wrote:The Ultimate Sports Team
If you were planning the ultimate sports team (and, like God, knew the future motivations and hearts of potential recruits), and you had a PREDETERMINED criteria for all those whom you desired to be on this (future) team? Would you not recruit ONLY those whom would be willing to submit to your leadership, whom would best respond and obey your superior coaching and directives, whom would express regret and do their best to turn from and learn from their mistakes, who would remain forever loyal to you and practice their hardest? If you had the ability to FOREKNOW HOW EACH POTENTIAL RECRUIT WOULD RESPOND, would you not recruit those you foreknew would be willing to adhere to your predetermined criteria? Would you even bother to recruit or prepare for those who you foreknew would NEVER submit, reform, remain loyal, practice, obey, etc? Absolutely NOT, what would be the point? You would ONLY recruit those you foreknew would respond to your fore-ordained, predetermined criteria. And as you know that NO recruit can achieve what your future goals for them are without 1) YOU making their future success possible to begin with or 2) without THE RECRUITS’ WILLINGNESS TO SUBMIT TO YOUR LEADERSHIP, making it possible for you to then lead and mold them into what you want them to be? You see, this analogy is much like how God calls those He foreknew!
Ouch!!! Where does this "potential to respond" come from? God, or man's virtue? What potential do dry bones or lumps of clay have (that's the analogy that the Bible uses)? Can you find any scriptural support for the idea that God predestines based on a "foreknowledge" of people's potential? God's "foreknowledge" in Scripture is equated with his Divine Favor. It always refers to people, never to their actions. (In fact, God "foreknows" the actions of the wicked as well, yet does not predestine them to salvation).
Philip wrote:You see, there is NO contradiction between God’s sovereignty and our free will, He chooses those who will FREELY, yet undeservingly, accept His totally unearned gift of salvation. YES, God IS sovereign, but in His sovereignty He has given us a totally unmerited choice to accept or reject, which is born of His mercy, love and grace. And WITHOUT our free will, our sins would ultimately be due to how God has created us to be, that GOD would be the ultimate cause of those who remain in rebellion and sin.
This is, by definition, not predestination. This is radification, a divine "stamp of approval". "Contingent Predestination" is an oxymoron. It can no more exist than "cold heat" or "dry moisture". He chose us TO BE holy and blameless, not because he "foreknew" that we had to potential to be holy and blameless.
You are correct in saying that "there is NO contradiction between God’s sovereignty and our free will". However, when we speak of free will, you and I are talking apples and oranges. Man's will is free only in the sense that he chooses what he wants to choose. He is not free to change his own nature, nor is his will free from that nature. He is, as the Bible says, a slave to sin.
"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
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