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Post by __id_2645 » Sat Apr 12, 2008 11:31 am

darin-houston wrote:
Thanks but I have to disagree I think it is a terribly unfair characterization. You don’t understand man post fall is not in his natural state, Adam was created in his “natural” in perfect harmony with God. Why would a rational being upon giving the chance to understand truth resist?
I understand that -- the way I used "natural" was intended to be the way Paul did -- post-fall man.

I don't know, but it does seem to be the case -- even among Christians and Calvinists, both groups ask the same thing -- how is it possible that Calvinists resist such plain truth? That doesn't seem to prove much other than recognize a clear reality in our humanity.
Fair enough, however this is a key component in the discussion because some suggest that man as he is now still is partially in his natural condition as Adam was pre-fall. Some suggest that man has a proclivity to sin but that his mind is in a neutral position when it comes to God in a position to fairly weigh the evidence in a similar fashion as Adam was when he was without sin.

What “plain” truth is that? Well recognizing that man is human, a created being subservient to a higher authority and not self-authenticating master of his own destiny is usually the 1st step toward repentance. What you seem to downplay are essential Christian doctrines, the who and what of God, the who and what of man, sin, the fall and God’s plan of redemption. Have you heard of the Pelgain controversy? The controversy was over these cornerstone key Christian doctrines.
darin-houston wrote:
How is your illustration different than reality? Well 1st God didn’t lock His people in the basement, the folks of their own volition because they didn’t believe Him opted to go into the basement on their own and then lost track of the truth, the lights went out. The folks living in the basement were fat dumb and happy because the basement was all that there was and all they knew until one day for no reason the door gets unlocked and they are enabled to come upstairs breath fresh air and wow, see what they have been missing. As a result of them recognizing what they have been missing they never want to go back into the basement.
Did He not form us knowing we would fall and knowing the result and our natures and decree all this? If so, how is it that He didn't put us in the basement, metaphorically?
1st do you understand how my illustration is different than yours? Yes, God decreed and indeed created man with the capacity to sin while foreknowing He would sin. Did not God tell Adam what not to do? He also decreed that those who rebelled would receive eternal damnation yet He created man with the capacity to sin. Adam of his own free choice in as much as any finite creature could have a free choice rebelled and disobeyed God. Are you suggesting by the mere fact God created man with the capacity to sin that He then necessarily coerced Adam to sin?

PaulT
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Post by __id_2632 » Sat Apr 12, 2008 6:36 pm

PaulT wrote:
Butch5 wrote: I was a 5 point Calvinist, I know the contrdictions.
Great, the fact the confessions contradict you would seem to suggest perhaps what you thought may not be accurate. Either that or men like John Gill and Charles Haddon Spurgeon were inconsistent in their theology, for me, well I would tend to think Gill and Spurgeon got it right and you didn't understand.

PaulT
Well, if Spurgeon and Gill had gotten it right, I would still be following that teaching. However since they got it wrong I am no longer following it.
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Post by __id_2645 » Sat Apr 12, 2008 6:49 pm

Butch5 wrote:
PaulT wrote:
Butch5 wrote: I was a 5 point Calvinist, I know the contrdictions.
Great, the fact the confessions contradict you would seem to suggest perhaps what you thought may not be accurate. Either that or men like John Gill and Charles Haddon Spurgeon were inconsistent in their theology, for me, well I would tend to think Gill and Spurgeon got it right and you didn't understand.

PaulT
Well, if Spurgeon and Gill had gotten it right, I would still be following that teaching. However since they got it wrong I am no longer following it.
LOL, like I said, while there is an apparent contradiction to you there are plenty of keen minds that see it otherwise. I will leave you to your apparent contradiction.

PaulT
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Post by _Homer » Sun Apr 13, 2008 12:05 am

PaulT,

You wrote:
Agreed, but for your response to be read you have to provide one. Remember you wrote, “But the Calvinist insists the One commanding repentance simultaneously will not allow most to repent.” Do you have some support for your allegation? I’ve provided the Baptist Confession of Faith, the Westminster Confession of Faith along with Calvin’s explanation of Adam’s free will from the Institutes. All of these documents indicate something other than what you wrote. Not allowing and withholding are 2 different concepts are they not?
In your system, I would say there is a mighty fine line (not discernable to me) between "not allowing" and "withholding". According to Calvinism, no one can believe the gospel unless God first regenerates them. By withholding regeneration, He does not allow them to believe. When God brought drought and famine on Israel, He did not allow them to grow crops because He withheld the rain. It seems to be a word game to enable the Calvinist to spare God from the implications of the system.
I not sure, did you happen to see my question regarding the word you suggested was in the text, “It simply says that the natural man does not persistently seek God, not that he cannot, at a point in time, seek God.” My translation doesn’t happen to have the word “persistently” in the text, which translation are you using.
Romans 3:11 (New King James Version)

11. There is none who understands;
There is none who seeks after God.


Seeks is Strong's Number: 1567 eÍkzhteÑw
Original Word Word Origin
eÍkzhteÑw from (1537) and (2212)
Transliterated Word Phonetic Spelling
Ekzeteo ek-zay-teh'-o
Parts of Speech TDNT
Verb 2:894,300
Definition
to seek out, search for
to seek out, i.e. investigate, scrutinise
to seek out for one's self, beg, crave
to demand back, require

Translated Words
KJV (7) - diligently, 1; enquire, 1; require, 2; seek after, 2; seek carefully, 1;

The word can mean seek diligently or carefully. In Romans 3:11, ekzeteo is a present participle which expresses continuous or repeated action. They do not continuously or repeatedly seek God.

I know James White, and perhaps you, will argue that the context demands that it mean they will never seek. This is because you force the text to conform to your total depravity paradigm. I see Paul affirming that all men (Jews and gentiles) are sinners and need a Savior. They can not save themselves. If Paul believed that no unregenerated person could seek God, why did he say this to the gentiles:

Acts 17:24-28 (New King James Version)

24. God, who made the world and everything in it, since He is Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in temples made with hands. 25. Nor is He worshiped with men’s hands, as though He needed anything, since He gives to all life, breath, and all things. 26. And He has made from one blood every nation of men to dwell on all the face of the earth, and has determined their preappointed times and the boundaries of their dwellings, 27. so that they should seek the Lord, in the hope that they might grope for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us; 28 for in Him we live and move and have our being, as also some of your own poets have said, ‘For we are also His offspring.’


So God created man so that man could seek God!
What does this have to do with your question for the Calvinist? Frankly I’ve never contemplated the timing, perhaps I should but I really don’t understand the reason to contemplate the concept.
What I find interesting in your system, where regeneration comes before faith, you necessarily have regenerated unbelievers. You may have never considered it, but some Calvinists believe that regeneration may precede faith by many years.
Exactly my point, depraved man will always believe in his self-authenticating bias until that bias is removed.
I’m not suggesting the removal of bias is faith, my point is simply that for them to hear the Gospel the inherent bias within man, what the Reformed view calls Total depravity must be removed or else man will always process the information through his self-authenticating bias. Without the removal of bias man will operate under the basis of false sense of truth, discount the Gospel message and continue down his path to damnation, like you said, believe what they want to believe.
And here we get to where "the rubber meets the road". I have a relative who came to Christ as a teenager and was baptized. After a relatively short time, he fell away. I had a similar experience. When I came back to Christ after many years in sin, I began to pray for this relative. I prayed that he would be saved for about 20 years, almost daily. I did not expect God to override his will, but asked God to bring about circumstances that would bring about repentance, but "not to hurt him too much". He went through some very difficult times. I talked to him some, but I live many miles away. Praise God! My prayers were answered; he is now a faithful Christian.

Now according to Calvinism, God had decreed he would be a Christian. It was foreordained. My many prayers accomplished nothing. The same result would have occured had I not prayed at all!

I believe the scripture that informs us:

James 5:16 (New King James Version)

16. Confess your trespasses to one another, and pray for one another, that you may be healed. The effective, fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much.


And I believe we may prevail upon God in prayer, as Jesus taught concerning the women who repeatedly importuned the judge who finally granted her request. The point to me is God is even more ready to hear us.


Philippians 4:6 (New King James Version)

6. Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God;


How sad to think our prayers change nothing! It has all been predetermined and is fixed. A few years ago our oldest granddaughter was critically ill with a ruptured appendix. She was "critical-unstable" for awhile and on life support for a considerable time. I can assure you I prayed fervently for her recovery and many others did also. Praise God! He answered our requests. How sad and depressing it would be to think our prayers would have no effect at all on the outcome in such desparate circumstances.
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Post by _Rick_C » Sun Apr 13, 2008 12:32 am

One issue seems to have come up: Ordo Salutis (the order of events that occur in the process of salvation).

Calvinists, in their Ordo Salutis, insist that regeneration precedes faith. As Homer pointed out, some see regeneration as preceding faith by years. Others I've talked with see faith happening "within a millisecond after regeneration."

Question for Calvinists and Non-Calvinists alike:
Did Jesus or the Apostles ever even consider whether faith comes before or after regeneration?

I've searched and searched and cannot find it was an issue to anyone in the Bible---ever!
(I've asked this question before and, so far, no one has shown where "Does faith come before or after regeneration?" was a problematic issue back then. It has been debated since Augustine (and Pelagius) to be sure; but wasn't a problem "in the Bible days," afaik)....

I personally find N.T. Wright's Ordo Salutis "captures Saint Paul's thought" (which could possibly be gone into...if anyone's interested...and I find time)....
Thanks.
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Post by _Sean » Sun Apr 13, 2008 12:51 am

bshow1 wrote:
Hi Sean,

I hold to what I think is the orthodox view, that Adam was created with the ability to sin, and that when he did so, he fell, and the fall brought the curse of sin, that is death on him and all his posterity, including us.

Although Adam was created in the image and likeness of God, that does not imply that all of God's attributes were fully present in Adam.

I stand by my original statement and think the scriptures fully support the idea that the universal condition of mankind after the fall is one of rebellion toward God.

Cheers,
Bob
Hello Bob,
While I certainly agree that men are wicked, I don't know how the fall caused this. That's why I was wondering about your thoughts on Adam's condition. I find it strange that Adam could have been part of God's very good creation and through his sin change the nature of man that God made (in His image). In other words, did God change man's nature at the fall or did man change his own nature as a result of the fall? I only read of the curse God pronounced and the casting away from the tree of life, which is why we die. Adam's actions cut us off from the tree of life and God pronounced the curses. But where do we read that man's nature changed after Adam? It seems as if Adam's rebellion shows that a "fallen nature" wasn't needed to rebel against God. So even Adam shows the rebellion in man, I just can't seem to find where it changed or why it would matter. It seems that God made Adam that way.

Now, with reference to salvation I would state that I don't believe the condition of man precludes him from receiving the message of the Gospel in all cases. Some people God actively hardens or withholds the message from so they won't believe. This was pointed out in day 5 of the debate by Steve, using Mark 4 to make the case. If man's depravity were "total" God wouldn't need to hide it from those he doesn't want to hear it and have their sins forgiven.

I've often heard that man cannot receive the gospel without being given a regenerated heart (born again) first so that he can believe and be saved. I certainly believe the order of salvation is: God speaking and working by the Holy Spirit through the Gospel, convicting the heart of man. If the man believes then God regenerates the heart and the Holy Spirit dwells in this person to lead them.

Peace, Bro
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Post by __id_2645 » Sun Apr 13, 2008 1:13 am

Homer wrote:PaulT,
You wrote:
Agreed, but for your response to be read you have to provide one. Remember you wrote, “But the Calvinist insists the One commanding repentance simultaneously will not allow most to repent.” Do you have some support for your allegation? I’ve provided the Baptist Confession of Faith, the Westminster Confession of Faith along with Calvin’s explanation of Adam’s free will from the Institutes. All of these documents indicate something other than what you wrote. Not allowing and withholding are 2 different concepts are they not?
In your system, I would say there is a mighty fine line (not discernable to me) between "not allowing" and "withholding". According to Calvinism, no one can believe the gospel unless God first regenerates them. By withholding regeneration, He does not allow them to believe. When God brought drought and famine on Israel, He did not allow them to grow crops because He withheld the rain. It seems to be a word game to enable the Calvinist to spare God from the implications of the system.
Well at least at this point we’ve gotten you to agree there is a line however fine you might think that line is which if there is a line then you agree that you’ve misrepresented the Reformed point of view, correct? True by withholding the removal of bias man is left to follow the desires of his heart which calls for him to be eternally punished. So what, are you suggesting it is God’s duty to save all those who rebel against Him? Do you somehow think God was duty bound to let the rain fall? It isn’t a word game, it is explaining what Scripture reveals, whether or not this fits into your finite view of justice or not. Therefore based on your admission do you acknowledge you have mischaracterized the view?
Homer wrote:PaulT,
I not sure, did you happen to see my question regarding the word you suggested was in the text, “It simply says that the natural man does not persistently seek God, not that he cannot, at a point in time, seek God.” My translation doesn’t happen to have the word “persistently” in the text, which translation are you using.
Romans 3:11 (New King James Version)

11. There is none who understands;
There is none who seeks after God.


Seeks is Strong's Number: 1567 eÍkzhteÑw
Original Word Word Origin
eÍkzhteÑw from (1537) and (2212)
Transliterated Word Phonetic Spelling
Ekzeteo ek-zay-teh'-o
Parts of Speech TDNT
Verb 2:894,300
Definition
to seek out, search for
to seek out, i.e. investigate, scrutinise
to seek out for one's self, beg, crave
to demand back, require

Translated Words
KJV (7) - diligently, 1; enquire, 1; require, 2; seek after, 2; seek carefully, 1;

The word can mean seek diligently or carefully. In Romans 3:11, ekzeteo is a present participle which expresses continuous or repeated action. They do not continuously or repeatedly seek God.

I know James White, and perhaps you, will argue that the context demands that it mean they will never seek. This is because you force the text to conform to your total depravity paradigm. I see Paul affirming that all men (Jews and gentiles) are sinners and need a Savior. They can not save themselves. If Paul believed that no unregenerated person could seek God, why did he say this to the gentiles:
Didn’t someone suggest we ought not have need to go to the Greek text and didn’t someone criticize White for going to the Greek text? Ok, so the word can mean diligently or carefully so based on my understanding of what you suggest, the text may mean man does not continuously diligently seek after God and therefore according to you that leaves open the possibility that they infrequently seek God in a less than diligent approach? Surely you jest, if man doesn’t continual seek God in a diligent manner how could he ever find God if he sought Him it in an inconsistent less than diligent manner. Your logic makes absolutely no sense, that is assuming your explanation of the Greek is accurate which the text in and of itself militates against because at the end of the day the Apostle says all are found wanting, whether they got there through consistent diligent efforts or what you would have us believe random chance unengaged effort. Friend, I’m not the one forcing my view on the text, I would suggest that the view that the text leaves open the possibility that those who by chance may seek God in an unengaged or haphazard manner is the one who is importing their viewpoint onto the text. Your rendition is at best case implausible. Do you have any translations that supports your viewpoint that while none continuously in a diligent manner seek after God some in a random chance unengaged manner may seek God? White isn’t the issue, the text is your obstacle that you need to overcome and this attempt is woefully inadequate.
Homer wrote:PaulT,
Acts 17:24-28 (New King James Version)

24. God, who made the world and everything in it, since He is Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in temples made with hands. 25. Nor is He worshiped with men’s hands, as though He needed anything, since He gives to all life, breath, and all things. 26. And He has made from one blood every nation of men to dwell on all the face of the earth, and has determined their preappointed times and the boundaries of their dwellings, 27. so that they should seek the Lord, in the hope that they might grope for Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us; 28 for in Him we live and move and have our being, as also some of your own poets have said, ‘For we are also His offspring.’


So God created man so that man could seek God!
In the words of Ronald Regan, God rest his soul, there you go again. Homer, your bias is showing, does the text say “could” or “should”? You do understand the difference don’t you? Nevertheless, seeing as how you brought it up, isn’t it interesting the Apostle’s approach to the unbelievers in Athens. You will note, unlike Gregg explained the Apostle doesn’t suggest God loves them and wants to have a relationship with them therefore His Son gave His life for them. He just flat out tells them to repent. Gee I wonder if the Apostle was a Calvinist because he sure didn’t act like what Gregg suggested he acted like in front of non-believers. The Apostle just simple said, “hey guy’s here is God, He made everything and enables you to live and if you don’t get right with Him, He will judge you.”
Homer wrote:PaulT,
What does this have to do with your question for the Calvinist? Frankly I’ve never contemplated the timing, perhaps I should but I really don’t understand the reason to contemplate the concept.

What I find interesting in your system, where regeneration comes before faith, you necessarily have regenerated unbelievers. You may have never considered it, but some Calvinists believe that regeneration may precede faith by many years.
Well again I don’t see the answer to my question, but whether or not some Calvinist believe something to be the case or not, so what? The point is without the bias removed man can not process the information correctly, what does your question have to do with the discussion at hand?


Homer wrote: And here we get to where "the rubber meets the road". I have a relative who came to Christ as a teenager and was baptized. After a relatively short time, he fell away. I had a similar experience. When I came back to Christ after many years in sin, I began to pray for this relative. I prayed that he would be saved for about 20 years, almost daily. I did not expect God to override his will, but asked God to bring about circumstances that would bring about repentance, but "not to hurt him too much". He went through some very difficult times. I talked to him some, but I live many miles away. Praise God! My prayers were answered; he is now a faithful Christian.

Now according to Calvinism, God had decreed he would be a Christian. It was foreordained. My many prayers accomplished nothing. The same result would have occured had I not prayed at all!

I believe the scripture that informs us:

James 5:16 (New King James Version)

16. Confess your trespasses to one another, and pray for one another, that you may be healed. The effective, fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much.


And I believe we may prevail upon God in prayer, as Jesus taught concerning the women who repeatedly importuned the judge who finally granted her request. The point to me is God is even more ready to hear us.


Philippians 4:6 (New King James Version)

6. Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God;


How sad to think our prayers change nothing! It has all been predetermined and is fixed. A few years ago our oldest granddaughter was critically ill with a ruptured appendix. She was "critical-unstable" for awhile and on life support for a considerable time. I can assure you I prayed fervently for her recovery and many others did also. Praise God! He answered our requests. How sad and depressing it would be to think our prayers would have no effect at all on the outcome in such desparate circumstances.
Homer, I’m glad for you and yours but are you suggesting your praryers willed God to do something different than what He was already going to do? I’m unaware of any Calvinist that suggests Christians cannot at some point fall into sin. Nevertheless, as Christ said, He knows His sheep and those that have gone astray He brings back into the fold. What greater assurance can a Christian have that whatever the circumstance God will always be there to ensure your safe keeping? I know leave it up to the prayers of fallible man. What makes you think the Calvinist doesn’t pray? Truly you have a misconception of the view, tis a sad thing.

PaulT
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Post by _Homer » Sun Apr 13, 2008 7:42 pm

PaulT,

You wrote:
Well at least at this point we’ve gotten you to agree there is a line however fine you might think that line is which if there is a line then you agree that you’ve misrepresented the Reformed point of view, correct?
No, not correct. I can see I will need to write very plainly, which I will attempt to do. I thought you would understand the example from Israel's history.

Let us say I have an employee I assign to do a job. He needs equipment to do the job, but has no means to get the equipment. I have the equipment but withhold it from him. I thus did not allow him to do the job. One meaning of allow is "to make a possibility". But enough quibbling over words and definitions that are not in scripture, as the Calvinist creeds are not in scripture but are the products of fallible men. They would have us believe God causes everything but is only responsible for the good things.

And you wrote:
Didn’t someone suggest we ought not have need to go to the Greek text and didn’t someone criticize White for going to the Greek text? Ok, so the word can mean diligently or carefully so based on my understanding of what you suggest, the text may mean man does not continuously diligently seek after God and therefore according to you that leaves open the possibility that they infrequently seek God in a less than diligent approach? Surely you jest, if man doesn’t continual seek God in a diligent manner how could he ever find God if he sought Him it in an inconsistent less than diligent manner. Your logic makes absolutely no sense, that is assuming your explanation of the Greek is accurate which the text in and of itself militates against because at the end of the day the Apostle says all are found wanting, whether they got there through consistent diligent efforts or what you would have us believe random chance unengaged effort. Friend, I’m not the one forcing my view on the text, I would suggest that the view that the text leaves open the possibility that those who by chance may seek God in an unengaged or haphazard manner is the one who is importing their viewpoint onto the text. Your rendition is at best case implausible. Do you have any translations that supports your viewpoint that while none continuously in a diligent manner seek after God some in a random chance unengaged manner may seek God? White isn’t the issue, the text is your obstacle that you need to overcome and this attempt is woefully inadequate.
And again I can see I must write plainly. I write slowly, perhaps you can read slowly and we will connect :wink: : What I was saying was that Paul's point was that the sinner did not diligently, persistently, continuously, etc., etc. seek God. He was not saying that, absent a prior regeneration, they could never, at any point, seek God. The Calvinist has made that idea up!

And you wrote:
In the words of Ronald Regan, God rest his soul, there you go again. Homer, your bias is showing, does the text say “could” or “should”? You do understand the difference don’t you?
Whose bias is showing? I can see why you want to avoid the Greek text. Although some translations have it "would" (NIV, NASB), some "should" (KJV, NKJV), the Greek text has neither could, would, or should, but as in Young's Literal, it is simply "to seek". So the difference between could and should is irrelevant.

According to the NIV TDNT, the Greek word zeteo, "seek", in the NT refers to "following and seeking something, to probing ideas and reflections, as well as judicial inquiry. It can mean anything from deliberate striving and desiring to asserting one's claims". In Acts 17:26 Paul informs us God's actions with the peoples He made and nations He arranged is to bring about His supreme purpose regarding men: "in the hope that they might grope for Him and find Him".


Homer, I’m glad for you and yours but are you suggesting your praryers willed God to do something different than what He was already going to do?
It is absurd to think our prayers "will" God to do anything. That is a far cry from saying our prayers would be taken into consideration by our loving Father and He might respond. What do you think James meant when he said "the prayer of a righteous man availeth (ischuo, 'prevails greatly') much"?
Truly you have a misconception of the view, tis a sad thing.
Fair enough. If all that will ever happen is foreordained, please correct my (our?) misconception regarding what, if anything, you think prayer accomplishes.
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Post by __id_2645 » Tue Apr 15, 2008 7:25 pm

Homer wrote:PaulT,

You wrote:
Well at least at this point we’ve gotten you to agree there is a line however fine you might think that line is which if there is a line then you agree that you’ve misrepresented the Reformed point of view, correct?
No, not correct. I can see I will need to write very plainly, which I will attempt to do. I thought you would understand the example from Israel's history.

Let us say I have an employee I assign to do a job. He needs equipment to do the job, but has no means to get the equipment. I have the equipment but withhold it from him. I thus did not allow him to do the job. One meaning of allow is "to make a possibility". But enough quibbling over words and definitions that are not in scripture, as the Calvinist creeds are not in scripture but are the products of fallible men. They would have us believe God causes everything but is only responsible for the good things. .
Where did the fine line go? Friend, you continue to misrepresent the issue, your illustration is a straw-man, let me show you why. Had your illustration been apples to apples with the Reformed point of view, the employee who you assigned to do the job would have evaluated the job from his perspective, (a perspective that presupposes you, the boss haven’t a clue because the employee believes he understands everything and has the freedom to evaluate the legitimacy of the job from his own paradigm) emphatically stated what you were asking was not reasonable whether or not the required equipment was available, refused the assignment and walked off the job, in which case you would be justified in firing the employee who thought he was the boss or at least knew as much as the boss. The fact that man in his unnatural state is at enmity with God is well documented in Scripture, so again you present another straw-man. Finally, how do you sleep at night believing God is not in control, btw, the definition of good is God.


Homer wrote: And you wrote:
Didn’t someone suggest we ought not have need to go to the Greek text and didn’t someone criticize White for going to the Greek text? Ok, so the word can mean diligently or carefully so based on my understanding of what you suggest, the text may mean man does not continuously diligently seek after God and therefore according to you that leaves open the possibility that they infrequently seek God in a less than diligent approach? Surely you jest, if man doesn’t continual seek God in a diligent manner how could he ever find God if he sought Him it in an inconsistent less than diligent manner. Your logic makes absolutely no sense, that is assuming your explanation of the Greek is accurate which the text in and of itself militates against because at the end of the day the Apostle says all are found wanting, whether they got there through consistent diligent efforts or what you would have us believe random chance unengaged effort. Friend, I’m not the one forcing my view on the text, I would suggest that the view that the text leaves open the possibility that those who by chance may seek God in an unengaged or haphazard manner is the one who is importing their viewpoint onto the text. Your rendition is at best case implausible. Do you have any translations that supports your viewpoint that while none continuously in a diligent manner seek after God some in a random chance unengaged manner may seek God? White isn’t the issue, the text is your obstacle that you need to overcome and this attempt is woefully inadequate.
And again I can see I must write plainly. I write slowly, perhaps you can read slowly and we will connect :wink: : What I was saying was that Paul's point was that the sinner did not diligently, persistently, continuously, etc., etc. seek God. He was not saying that, absent a prior regeneration, they could never, at any point, seek God. The Calvinist has made that idea up!
Didn’t want to deal with my argument, eh? Homer, thank your for the admonition, however, in this case I don’t think the issue is my understanding what you seem to believe the Apostle intended, the issue appears to be your not thinking through the implications your suggested reading does to the text and the Apostles argument. Why would the Apostles go to great length to inform the Jews, folks who thought they “diligently” sought God that they were just like the Gentiles folks who didn’t seek God turn right around and confirm that some seek God on a part time basis. What the Apostle is clearly informing us is that none be they Jew who has all the trappings of God and regularly goes to the Synagogue or the Greek who were considered defiled who did not seek God at all but instead worshipped themselves along with a variety of gods were on equal footing. The Apostles point is that none of them sought God part-time, full-time or anytime. Attempting to construe something out of the text other than this is implausible, your reading just flat doesn’t make sense.

Homer wrote: And you wrote:
In the words of Ronald Regan, God rest his soul, there you go again. Homer, your bias is showing, does the text say “could” or “should”? You do understand the difference don’t you?
Whose bias is showing? I can see why you want to avoid the Greek text. Although some translations have it "would" (NIV, NASB), some "should" (KJV, NKJV), the Greek text has neither could, would, or should, but as in Young's Literal, it is simply "to seek". So the difference between could and should is irrelevant.

According to the NIV TDNT, the Greek word zeteo, "seek", in the NT refers to "following and seeking something, to probing ideas and reflections, as well as judicial inquiry. It can mean anything from deliberate striving and desiring to asserting one's claims". In Acts 17:26 Paul informs us God's actions with the peoples He made and nations He arranged is to bring about His supreme purpose regarding men: "in the hope that they might grope for Him and find Him".
Remember Homer the issue is seeking God not a god or multiple gods, being religious doesn't help, the only thing that helps is a true knowing of God. Who is showing his bias, you are, by reading into the text something that the Apostle has already indicated doesn’t happen unless God intervenes, remember none seek after God, not “god”, man in the flesh is as enmity against God, although he may worship a god or god’s. The reason I didn’t want to go to the Greek is that I understand a little Greek is very dangerous, which seems to be the case with your reading of this passage. The admonition of the Apostle doesn’t mean they will seek which is obviously why the translators inserted the word “should”. Here is
John Gill’s view of the passage,

John Gill's Exposition of the Bible
Acts 17:27
That they should seek the Lord…
Or "God", as the Alexandrian copy and others, and the Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Ethiopic versions read; their Creator, and kind Benefactor, and who has appointed their time of life, and their habitations for them; and this should engage them to seek to know him, who has done all this for them, and to fear and serve him, and to glorify his name:

This is further confirmed by the Apostle pointing out to the Greek philosophers, remember the setting of his message, Paul is addressing the best and brightest minds in the Greek world. The Areopagus is the heart of Greek philosophical thought. All these guys’s did day in and day out is argue over the existence of a higher power. Unlike your presupposition of Romans 3 all these guy’s did is diligently seek after an understanding on the who and what of humanity, if there is a higher authority, etc, etc. The Apostle has already told them he is addressing who they claim is the “Unknown” God. His point in using the term “groping” is that their philosophical banter is like “groping” in the dark when the God they have the alter to, the one they say is “Unknown” is right next to them. Why is it that although all these guy’s do is speculate all day long about “a” god, they don’t know the true God? It is because as the Apostle told the Roman Christians, they, “suppress the truth in unrigheousness”, which is confirmed by Paul pointing out in the next 2 verses that while they have their being in God yet they think God is like gold or silver, they’ve turned the Divine into unrighteousness.

I guess you don’t understand that you’ve contradicted yourself, how can God have a purpose if He is not ultimately directing what is going on. Your assertion that God is dependent upon man to work out His purpose defies the context of the passage you bring to the discussion. Based on your presupposition what we would expect to read is the Apostle informing the crowd that God loves them and has a great plan for them, he wants to save them, yet what does the Apostle do? Is he pleading, ranting and raving suggesting that God wants a relationship with them?

Acts 17 is a classic example of the Reformed point of view in proclaiming the Gospel. There is no appeal that God is “love” or that He wants a “relationship” with them. Paul doesn’t offer into evidence the clear reasons for God, he simply tells them who He is, what He is and has done and that they better get right with their Maker. Total depravity of man and the enlightening work of the Spirit is borne out in the text, some scoffed at the truth of the Apostle while some believed. Are we to believe those that believed were just smarter than those that mocked the Apostle’s clear truth?

Perhaps you should put away the Greek and focus more on the English text so that you will understand the context of the message, who the Apostle is addressing and what the issues were all about. In that way, perhaps you won’t butcher the Greek hoping to prop up your warped view of God and His plan of redemption.
Homer wrote: And you wrote:
Homer, I’m glad for you and yours but are you suggesting your praryers willed God to do something different than what He was already going to do?
It is absurd to think our prayers "will" God to do anything. That is a far cry from saying our prayers would be taken into consideration by our loving Father and He might respond. What do you think James meant when he said "the prayer of a righteous man availeth (ischuo, 'prevails greatly') much"?
Truly you have a misconception of the view, tis a sad thing.
Fair enough. If all that will ever happen is foreordained, please correct my (our?) misconception regarding what, if anything, you think prayer accomplishes.
Well In my humble opinion prayer helps man because God needs no help. Prayer helps the believer to communicate with God the Creator. Personally I know that when I pray and I do pray for protection for my family, myself, understanding in how to deal with life’s issues and wisdom in dealing with difficult issues my mind clears so that I can become more clear on a given issue. I pray that my children will come to know God as I have but at the end of the day, I understand it is up to God who tells me that “all things work together”.

PaulT
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Post by _Homer » Tue Apr 22, 2008 12:30 pm

I had posted this as a new topic under "Miscellaneous" but received no response. It is in reply to Rick's comments on this thread so will move it here:

Rick wrote:


Question for Calvinists and Non-Calvinists alike:
Did Jesus or the Apostles ever even consider whether faith comes before or after regeneration?

I've searched and searched and cannot find it was an issue to anyone in the Bible---ever!
(I've asked this question before and, so far, no one has shown where "Does faith come before or after regeneration?" was a problematic issue back then. It has been debated since Augustine (and Pelagius) to be sure; but wasn't a problem "in the Bible days," afaik)....

I personally find N.T. Wright's Ordo Salutis "captures Saint Paul's thought" (which could possibly be gone into...if anyone's interested...and I find time)....


Perhaps the reason that it was not an issue was because they thought the answer was not controversial and they were all in agreement. It seems that believer's baptism was both taught and practiced, and that regeneration and/or remission of sin was associated with baptism. The following early church fathers all made statements indicating as much:

Barnabas (c 70-130)
Hermas (c 150)
Justin Martyr (c 160)
Theophilus (c 180)
Irenaeus (c 180)
Clement of Alexandria (c 195)
Tertullian (c 198)

Their belief and practice seems to be based on their understanding of:

John 3:5 (New King James Version)

5. Jesus answered, “Most assuredly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.

Acts 2:38 (New King James Version)

38. Then Peter said to them, “Repent, and let every one of you be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.

Acts 22:16 (New King James Version)

16. And now why are you waiting? Arise and be baptized, and wash away your sins, calling on the name of the Lord.’

Galatians 3:27 (New King James Version)

27. For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ.

Titus 3:5 (New King James Version)

5. not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us, through the washing (literally bath) of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Spirit,

Hebrews 10:22 (New King James Version)

22. let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water.

1 Peter 3:21 (New King James Version)

21. There is also an antitype which now saves us—baptism (not the removal of the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience toward God), through the resurrection of Jesus Christ,


There seems to have been little controversy over the matter among the earliest Christians. Many Christians today are uncomfotable with the strongly sacramentalist views they held.

Christians today are so strongly influenced by our various paradigms, such as Calvinism, that Christianity has become a very complicted religion rather than the simple faith of these earliest Christians.
_
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