Oriental wrote:I believe that men have free will to go either way. The shining example of this is men's fall in Eden.
In Eden, Men were allowed to choose either fruits on the tree of life or those on the tree of knowledge.
In Eden, yes...but with the Fall, our wills became enslaved to sin. Hence, no more 'free' (in the real sense).
Oriental wrote:I think because of the mortal nature of our flesh - the pleasures and sins of flesh - making our free will tending to do sinfully. Wasn't Paul telling us the laws that battles in our soul?
I don't think it has to do with the 'mortal nature'. Sinful desires originate in the spirit. 'Flesh' (
sarx) is used as a metaphor for human weakness in general.
Oriental wrote:What I think arguable is: God whimscal nature which a lot of people do not agree upon, was sometimes shown in the past. I recall some passages in Old Testament God struck a guy who stretched his hand to support a falling Covenant Box...
After
many, many regulations had already been transgressed. It was just the final straw. Nothing whimsical here.
Oriental wrote:One of the Ten Commandments in Exodus stated vividly that God Himself admited that He is a God of jealousy, against idolatry and He convicts people up to a number of generations with punishment.
Three, four generations. In other words, the whole family suffers, just as a family today suffers from a drunken (grand)father.
Jealousy is 'a passionate commitment to someone, and their well-being'.
Oriental wrote:These shows His whimscal nature; I also think that it is a myth God would never be furious. God's wrath is quite punishing.
True, but it is also eternal, unchanging, steady and intense, not whimsical.
Oriental wrote:for example if God loves us no matter what we do, He might simply have allowed idolatry - what harms does it do to Him, while idols are simply a piece of wood or statue?
Worshipping them often leads to sexual perversity, sacrifice of children and other abhorrent practices.
Oriental wrote:If God loved men to such unlimited extent, He would've understood men's anxiety and feeling of helplessness, and their need for reliance.
Which only He can fill. And His not being whimsical is the one great thing that sets Him apart from the pagan gods. It means that when people worship the true God, they do not need to be afraid of the numinous anymore.
Oriental wrote:He would've let go their idolatry and personified Himself in form of the idols that they were blindly worshipping, wouldn't He? When they were worshipping a statue of snake, God simply appeared Himself in the form of snake, speaking His own revelation.
God never appeared as a snake. The devil did.
Oriental wrote:Why not? It is simply a change of images, from an invisible God to a divine snake-form creature.
An
invisible God is not an image. One should constantly be reminded that God transcends everything on earth. Besides, an 'image' in the ancient world served as 'a
focal point for the presence and power of a deity' (see
here), which means that people would get the idea they could 'control' God by carrying those images around. Conversely, they would be weak when those images would be taken away. Do you see how people would start seeing themselves as dependent of images, rather than God's eternal covenant?
(An example of the Israelites trying to 'control' God is Eli's sons bringing the Ark to the battle -- where it was captured. They trusted in the Ark rather than in God.)
Oriental wrote:The whimiscal, arbitrary lawly discipline is the very form God used to show His jealousy as stipulated in the Ten Commandments.
I hope I've been able to show you why that isn't true.
Oriental wrote:I think now a day, since Cruxificion God's grace has been more abundant than before so we hardly talk about God's wrath any longer; it doesn't mean that God is of absolute mercywhich I have heard of for thousands of times arguably doubtful to me.
He showers mercy only on those who believe in Him, that's correct -- and probably a number of people who never had the chance of hearing about the true God. But people like Richard Dawkins (if he doesn't change his ways) will not escape judgement, that's true. God still has mercy upon him, but that mercy is not absolute.