Jac3510 wrote:Kurieuo wrote:You're forgiven of everything that affects your relationship with God.
You're adding to the text. It doesn't say that we are forgiven of everything that affects our relationship with God. It says that we are forgiven of ALL unrighteousness. ALL, K. You don't have to believe, that, of course, but that's what the text
says.
I embrace that God is all-forgiving in Christ, just like God is all-powerful. I'm not adding any more to the text, than someone who says God can do everything and then denies God being able to create a square circle.
Just like it may not be an actual possibility for God to create a world wherein everyone
freely chooses Him, it isn't possible for God to actually remove ALL our sin by forcing someone else to forgive us of our sin against them.
God is all-forgiving as much as He can logically be, just like God is all-powerful as much as He can logically be. This is a logical restraint.
Let me try use an example...
- If I steal from my neighbour, and as a consequence my neighbour gets into a fight with my wife who was unaware that I stole. I confess to my wife privately that I stole, and apologise. She says, "don't worry you're forgiven." I respond to her, "thanks, now I don't need to apologise to my neighbour."
What's wrong with this picture. Is my wife forgiving me of my sin against my neighbour, or only the trouble I caused her? Is it my wife's place to forgive my wrong to my neighbour?
Jac3510 wrote:K wrote:But it's not God's place to make an exchange of forgiveness on behalf of another person other than Himself. If I've wronged another person, than God may forgive me for breaking His moral law, but my wrong also stands between me and that person. That's all. It seems so obvious to me that its mute. I"m surprised this is such an issue really.
Not God's place? Really?
Why do you think it is a sin to harm someone else? Because it violates GOD'S law, not anyone else's? Or think about David and Uriah. What did David say after he had the man murdered?
I've gone into this already. God can forgive us for violating His law, but it's up to our neighbour wronged to forgive our sin between us and them.
I am becoming more and more shocked that what I'm saying here isn't plainly and logically obvious.
We may as well just discount from the Lord's prayer: "Forgive us
as we forgive those who trespass against us". For if ALL unrighteousness has been forgiven, then what can we forgive if Christ has already forgiven it?
Jac wrote:This is where you've really got me wrong. I reasoned that it doesn't affect our relationship with God -- see my last (well 2nd last post)...
I'd certainly hate to read you wrong. I have done it before. I got that from when you said:
Let me cut you off there, because now you're moving the discussion. Which is fine, but let's deal with what I was responding to.
You said: "Also, even if I granted your distinction (and I don't),
why should the fact that other humans haven't forgiven me keep me out of heaven?"
I never argued the underlined portion. In fact, I reasoned that whether or not someone else forgives us for our wrong against them
doesn't matter to our being saved. It only soteriologically matters that God forgives us.
Jac wrote:K wrote:Beautiful, I'm not so sure... especially if you're right on Hitler. Since all those millions of Jews who were killed, God is making Himself an enemy by withdrawing justice. So there is a moral dilemma God faces, even within His grace. Does He love Hitler inspite of the millions who deserve justice, or does God love the millions and give justice its due?
...
Hitler could have desired to believe and gave the nod to Christ's promise -- but Hitler's heart was hardened against God -- such that the conditions for an authentic "trust" (pisteuo) could not have arisen. And it's not like Hitler would have been scammed. He would have known his own heart, just like those torturers who are said to have thanked God who doesn't exists that they lived to be able to inflict according to their heart's content lots torturous pain upon the Jews. Such torturers may have believed in Jesus intellectually, or passively trusted in a proposition, yet they could not passively trust in Christ anymore than you or I can trust Satan -- for certain conditions had not been met.
It sounds here like you are arguing that Hitler can't be in heaven because he "deserves" justice. If he were in heaven, then He would effectively be not loving "the millions." Moreover, you seemed to go on to argue that Hitler couldn't have trusted Christ, because that would mean that he wouldn't have or couldn't have committed the atrocities he did.
Anyway, the entire context of this idea of God forgiving others came about, it seems to me, because of the Hitler issue. It bothers you that God's grace would extend to someone who has harmed so many people.
Cutting you off here again. If you re-read me, I don't just leave it at Hitler.
It bothers me that God forgives any of us -- that God would extend such grace.
I have a low perspective of humanity. We destroy the world, we kill and hurt each other, we're selfish, humans always play games, try to step other people into the ground... it doesn't surprise me that so many Atheists in the world become so focused on the negativity in the world so as to have a venomous hate for God.
It bothers me that God would forgive us rather than just wipe us all out. He should have gone that one step further with Noah.
But what bothers me doesn't matter, because God didn't. God loves us all including Hitler.
Yet, the moral dilemma God is faced with still stands...
Jac wrote:Suppose, though, that Hitler had a chance to go and apologize to all six million people plus their families plus all the others who suffered for his actions. Suppose he felt true remorse. Would that make God's grace to him even one bit more or less beautiful? It's a silly question, because it would mean that one can be more or less deserving of God's grace--the hate filled Hitler doesn't deserve grace, but the remorseful Hitler does--or, at least, he deserves it more than the hate filled version. What? Grace by definition can't be deserved!
Then Hitler's saved. And I still find God's grace less beautiful than God's wrath.
As you say, who can fathom God's grace? Seriously, think about it. You think about it. Many don't. Many can't. I can't. You need to live an experience to really fathom it. For example...
Say some evil person raped, sexually tortured, and ripped about your little girl piece by piece -- as often happens in a world away from our own comfortable ones in the US or Australia... you then look at that evil person in the eye preaching how beautiful God's grace is that he is forgiven. If this was my little girl, quite frankly, I find it much more beautiful and glorious that God's wrath should be upon such an evil person. I just don't care for them.
Likewise, I know I'm not perfect. Nor is Teresa. So be it to myself and her. Such is more glorious to me, more honourable, that we reap what we sow. Yet, for some reason, God sees things different. And I think I'm simply being more honest, perhaps less deluded than yourself and others who call God's grace beautiful... I won't mix my words, perhaps you're all off in an airy-fairy land of religious language that sounds nice but isn't grasped. You claim to fathom what is apparently unfathomable.
I
really can't fathom it, but whether I can or not doesn't take away from the reality of God's grace or that God considers it more beautiful.
Jac wrote:That's why when you suggest that Mother Teresa somehow deserved grace more than Hitler did, I balk. NO ONE deserves grace. When you say that grace to Teresa is more beautiful than grace to Hitler, I balk, because grace to ANY ungodly, wicked sinner is the same: you either rejoice in its beauty or mourn in its injustice. You can't have it both ways.
You're equivocating what I think with what God thinks. What I think doesn't matter to what God thinks.
I think Mother Teresa
deserves God's grace more than Hitler, because I see her as a much better person. Yet, "deserve" has no bearing on "grace" so what's it matter what I think?
To me, and I think most can morally see Teresa was better than Hitler, even if she would be dead in her sin without God's grace.
Since the Bible considers grace beautiful, I think I'll opt for that route. Anything less just sounds . . . well . . . I'm sure you can imagine.
Obviously, God thinks grace the better option. But He is God and can fathom it a heckova lot more than me.
So I accept it is beautiful because God thinks it is, even if I believe God's wrath would have been more beautiful.
Jac wrote:And I take it even one step further.
I believe in universal atonement, I go one step further to believe in universal forgiveness
-- if you recall our previous discussions.
While I can see minor differences, forgiveness is really not that dissimilar from atonement in function. I'll read your link -- I'm sure I'll agree with much and it'll help highlight the differences a bit more.
Yet, I obviously do not universal salvation. God's forgiveness is only efficient at saving those who receive it -- those who return to God -- trust in Christ. This completes the transaction of forgiveness. But God's forgiven all of us none the less, like the father did the prodigal son before he returned. Yet, the son didn't receive it until he returned.
I obviously don't believe in universal salvation either. I'll have to refresh myself on your views of universal forgiveness. I only vaguely remember it. I'm somewhat confused as to how you can say that you believe in universal
salvation and then limit it to those who return to God.
The word underlined in bold should be "forgiveness". I believe in universal forgiveness, not universal salvation.
If the two for you are the same, then I make a distinction.
Jac wrote:It would seem that it is not universal after all. When I say universal atonement, I mean that EVERYONE receives the benefits of the atonement, no questions asked. They don't have to return to God to receive it. They can do whatever they want or not do whatever they want. Whatever they have done has been atoned for. Period. It's completely unconditioned. No, it sounds like you believe in forgiveness that is universally sufficient, but only efficient for those who receive it. I am saying that atonement is universally EFFICIENT. It is unconditioned. Everyone's sins, even Hitler's, are atoned for.
Wondering, what are "the benefits of the atonement"? If asked this, I would have responded forgiveness.
I don't claim to entirely understand the terminologies as many who discuss these things would. I understand them in my own way, so I suppose I need some clarity to ensure we're talking about the same things.
It seems when you say Hitler's sins are atoned for, I'd say Hitler's sins are forgiven. This for me is the substance of Christ's atoning sacrifice. So where you have one, you have the other.
So what do you define the substance of atonement--what is it that Hitler has from the atonement? Isn't it forgiveness, or is it just some potentiality?