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https://christianforums.net/threads/charismatic-bible-studies-1-peter-2-11-17.109823/
https://christianforums.net/threads/psalm-70-1-save-me-o-god-lord-help-me-now.108509/
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https://christianforums.net/threads/without-the-holy-spirit-we-can-do-nothing.109419/
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https://christianforums.net/threads/anointed-preaching-teaching.109331/#post-1912042
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An interesting observation, John. In your opinion, is it possible for a person, in a certain stage in their life, to not be responsive to the gospel message and therefore be "nonelect", and then in a different stage of life, after certain experiences, have a change of heart and become receptive to the gospel and therefore, become elect?God's elect will respond positively to the gospel; the non-elect will not respond positively to it.
This will demonstrate to all: there is a difference between God's elect and the non-elect.
Jesus' bloody death on the cross will demonstrate God's incredible love for His precious elect.
John, another question. The obvious observation that would come from a non-Christian about this is, the vast majority of mankind in the history of this world never had the opportunity to hear the good news of the gospel. How do they fit into this plan you have outlined? That would be my question also. Is there a Biblical answer?The free-will verses encourage evangelists to take the gospel to the 4 corners of the earth.
The gospel must be presented to the elect before they can respond to it.
Giving it to the non-elect ensures they cannot claim at the Judgment that they never heard it.
Romans 8:
28 And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God,
to those who are the called according to His purpose.
29 For whom He foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son,
that He might be the firstborn among many brethren.
30 Moreover whom He predestined, these He also called;
whom He called, these He also justified;
and whom He justified, these He also glorified.
Dear FC, I don't follow how you come to this conclusion? God does have an elect according to scripture. The whole creation groans for the unveling of the sons of light. That does not necessarily mean they won't be used as the salt of the Earth. Wherein whoever blesses them are blessed and whoever curses them are cursed. That's why mature Christians watch their tongues not wanting to provoke anyone to curse them. For to such a Christian that is salt, he or she does not see people who are free in their wills, but people blind and lame and in need of healing.John Zain
Why did you start another thread that has the same content and ideas as your previous thread “Who I believe God’s elect are”?
You started out that thread with this:
For some reason your underlining won't copy over. And the underlining is crucial in understanding your interpretation of these verses. You underlined:
28 love God, called according to his purpose
29 foreknew, predestined to be conformed
30 predestined, called, Justified, and glorified
Thereby proving satisfactorily to yourself that, according to your interpretation of these verses, free will not only doesn’t exist, but that there is an elect chosen by God who are the only ones for whom Christ died and the only ones who even have the remotest possibility of believing the Gospel. And of course it only stands to reason by corollary, that God has chosen to leave the rest of humanity to be condemned as a natural course. Because those who don’t believe into Christ are condemned already. Thereby proving by your interpretation that when God says that he would have all humanity to be saved, he was actually only referring to the elect. And thereby proving by your interpretation that when John said that Jesus was the propitiation for the sins of the whole world, he was only referring to the elect. Which in itself limits the meaning of world to only the elect, and must be understood in that light in every other use of the word world in the NT.
And by your interpretation of these verses, among others, you have shown that the NT can’t possibly be the continuation of the OT because it doesn’t agree with it. Since the OT clearly teaches the free will of man to choose who and what to follow. And that when the NT writers claimed to follow the same thing as taught by God in the OT by their constant quotations, they were actually changing the meaning of the OT in order to give credence to their apparent claim. A lot like most Christians do today through their practice of biblical interpretation.
And thereby you have proven, according to your interpretation, that not only is the NT not Scripture, but also that Jesus of Nazareth can’t possibly be the Messiah on that account.
FC
Sorry, but I can't quite understand what you're getting at.... the freewill verses you are indicating, are not freewill verses at all since
whosoever, anyone who believes in the Gospel is denying they have a freewill through believing.
Yes, most definitely, there is a perfect timing when a person is receptive to the gospel.... is it possible for a person, in a certain stage in their life, to not be responsive
to the gospel message and therefore be "nonelect", and then in a different stage of life,
after certain experiences, have a change of heart and become receptive to the gospel
and therefore, become elect?
I'm not sure if there is a good Biblical answer.The vast majority of mankind in the history of this world never had the opportunity
to hear the good news of the gospel. How do they fit into this plan you have outlined?
That would be my question also. Is there a Biblical answer?
Sorry, but I can't quite understand what you're getting at.
I don't follow you come to this conclusion? God does have an elect according to scripture.
For to such a Christian that is salt, he or she does not see people who are free in their wills, but people blind and lame in need of healing.
I am saying there are two different so called freewills in scripture. The Old Testament based on choosing life or death through the works of the law and choosing Christ as a savior because the Old Testament brought death. One denies the other, for to claim one has the ability to choose life through the Old Testament is disclaimed by The New Testament which teaches all men are sinners and cannot not sin.
What we see as men choosing their destiny, is therefore in reality God sifting the individuals.
How would you like to explain WHY these verses are in Scripture?
Dear FC, without rushing to count me as merely another interpreter of Truth please allow me to point out that the Old and New Testament are not in the truest sense scripture, but more accurately they are Covenants. As this is the case, they can't be saying the same thing as far as setting the conditions for achieving an amicable relationship with God.=Former Christian;615017]
The OT and the NT must teach the same thing in order for the NT to be Scripture in the same sense as the OT.
As I said the covenants are not scripture. Moreover they are regarding an amicable relationship with God. I'm not sure how to address this issue you have pointed out. I am of the conviction that the trust invoved in the New Testament is about knowing the person of God through beholding the son of God, not by reading scripture. That is somewhat lost in the fact that the main way I may know him is by what he says, and this is found in what men presently call scripture, since I wasn't alive when Jesus walked the earth. So of course the Christ is a revelation of God which only each man can evaluate in person for themselves.Providing the OT itself is Scripture. If Scripture truth involves some kind of progressive revelation theory, then the view I present should be something like Baha’i, or related to a more recent revelation. What reason would there be to stop at the NT? On the say so of who? Of what man-made religion? More than half of Christianity doesn’t actually stop at the NT?
Yes Roman Catholics do see the Christ through a recognized authority. They believe what they are told to believe only because they aren't sure what to believe. The personal relationship with God is sometimes lost in the worship of the institution.Roman Catholicism believes that its understandings of the bible are just as authoritative as the bible itself.
Not necessarily. I broke from the Catholic church because I wanted to know what a Christ is and why all the hubbub. Upon discovering, I yet in humility and craving reassurance, sought others that had come to the same conclusions, and this assurance was most easily found in scripture and writings of others speaking about Christ accurately. Just because I might find agreement does not make me a follower of them anymore than they are a follower of me. Ironically we all are left to follow someone since God proposed the Truth and Satan the lie. We ultimately are always followers.Protestant denominations are no different. The writings of Martin Luther and his followers are a continuation of the bible to Lutherans. The writings of John Calvin and his followers are a continuation of the bible to Calvinistic Churches.
Whatever, if it's wrong it's not revelation. I would point out that it's all about one simple thing, an amicable relation with God, and all he asks is we trust Him. It's that simple. Now there are differences that ensue over interpretation of His commands, but what He means by trust Him is really more simply about believing He is of good character. This is what heals the relationship. We must receive the Kingdom as a little child.The interpretations have become the Traditions of men according to their authority. And these understandings are in all practicality considered a part of the progressive revelation of the bible.
You have lost me in semantics with this statement. What you say can be applied several ways all implying different and contradictory outcomes depending on what the term free is relative to. For instance if the Old Testament through placing a choice before us in the context that men are free in their wills to choose their moral path, proved we could not accomplish that which we would choose, it affectively proved men are not free in their wills to control their own destinies. So to say to deny there is freewill is to deny Truth of the Old Testament is a contradiction, since the Truth of the Old Testament proved men were not free in their wills.To deny there is free will, is to deny the truth revealed in the OT as being relevant for today.
FC, I don't want to end up arguing your opinion that it's my opinion that it's your interpretation that it's my interpretation. The Truth is either we are in control of ourselves morally or we are not. The Truth is self evident that we can only be morally in control if our image of God is not corrupt. Hence the Christ is bread for those who hunger for righteousness.The idea of no free will comes from interpretations of the NT.
The New Testament doesn't teach anything different. To me they are approaching the same Truth from opposite directions just like the two cheribum on the seat of mercy.If the NT actually is teaching something different from the OT, it can’t be Scripture in the sense that the OT is Scripture. In fact, it can’t be Scripture at all. Which makes the NT just the writings of men.
I agree completely.In the view I present, in order to believe in what the NT teaches in regard to the Gospel of Jesus Christ, it must also be teaching what the OT teaches.
This topic is laced with pitfalls due to the semantics of words, but I will look past that and agree with what you're trying to say. I only hope you also see the pitfalls by acknowledging that those who say the law is not for Christians are only trying to say that there is no law against the works of Love.Wherein Christians say the Law is not for Christians. As if Jesus destroyed the Law rather than fulfilled it. In the view I present, there is one bible unified in its revelation, divided only in the eyes of men. Otherwise there is either only the OT, or no bible at all in the sense of a bible revealed by a supernatural source. And why should I, a Gentile, believe in Jehovah, the God of the Jews? That makes about as much sense as believing in the Law of Moses that was the Law to the Jews only. And as much sense as believing in a Saviour that fulfilled a Law only intended for the Jews.
Okay, so I guess you don't understand and have fallen into one of the pitfalls.No wonder so many Christians don’t believe the Law applies to them. They’re just puppets. There is no Law that applies to puppets, if someone is doing everything for them.
OH my, FC. I can only laugh at the lengths you go to prove your conclusions valid against those whom you errantly think have disagreed with you.Or to androids. They’re pre programmed. And destiny? There is no good news for puppets and androids. They have no choice but to be what they are and to do what they do.
As I said a Christian believes God is good in character, evidenced by ones proclaiming Jesus who returned good for evil as the son of God. The term freewill is only applicable to one who has believed this. Moreover, since self righteousness is the vanity of Satan it is a good thing that God reveals unto belief rather than men choose. Otherwise some men are better than others by their will rather than by God's. Hence there can be no pride.If that’s the gist of being a Christian, guess it was always my destiny to not be one.
And who can blame Satan for what he has done to humanity?
I would reserve judgment of this matter till after we come to fully understand how God is a consuming fire. Only in pride would we deem correction as punishment.What has he done to deserve his punishment? He only did what he was supposed to do.
Here I will take issue with the differences between the term responsibility and culpability and more precisely to what we and Satan are culpable and responsible for. After all, what right did Satan and also ourselves have as a created being to evaluate God the Creator as less than ourselves? That is what we are culpable for. It is a misnomer to equate it with a freewill, for it is in Truth vanity. Such vanity can only lead to death and if you count being free from the God of life as freedom it is indeed a freewill albeit so is death.Apart from free will, responsibility doesn’t exist.
I had based my freedom on my ability to disobey God, counting it as doing what I wanted, and this was pride. For in doing so I had assumed I knew better than He and doubted the integrity of His intentions towards me and I was blind to my own corruption. But my God in His wisdom that was beyond me had foreseen this, and created a temporary world wherein pride could be seen for what it was so that such blindness could be remedied and eternal life be made possible. And here is where He suffered and died for my sin so that I may live even as He proved His trustworthiness unto my shame. How can I help but love Him?Gives a whole new meaning to the idea that God is love. A God who loves because of his own decisions, not in spite of the decisions of others.
The bible is about a simple Truth that God is good and how we disbelieved that and followed Satan under the delusion we were improving our station. I see the deception and I prefer to believe that God is good rather than the option that God is evil. I don't see it as a choice but an imperative. For since if I am made in His image and I count my maker as corrupt, what does that make me?I realize that Christians don’t all understand the bible alike. But sometimes I think the bible I’m reading is not a Christian bible. Sure would like to get one of them Christian bibles. So I know what it is I’m not believin. It certainly doesn’t say the same things my bible says. Maybe I can piece together what is written in the Christian bible by what Christians say about it. Like no longer extant ancient writings are pieced together by what is said about them. One thing I know for sure is that it certainly is a confused bible.
Congrats, CE, just maybe you'll be perceivin' a brilliant light shortly ...Dear FC ...
FC, as always I loved your post.
For whatever my opinion is worth, I think you are a brilliant individual.
Mr. Zain, for the record I acknowledge what you say is true and for whatever my opinion is worth, I love your posts and perceive you also are a brilliant individual.Congrats, CE, just maybe you'll be perceivin' a brilliant light shortly ...
Jesus made it abundantly clear ... He came to preach the gospel to the poor.
The poor He was referring to were poor in a multitude of ways:
financial, health, intellect, education, popularity, social standing, self-esteem, and many etc.
Almost always, great intellect & education are a hindrance to receiving the things of God.
So, in my humble opinion, this is why FC is not a believer.
If I have a free week, I'll read though ALL of what you guys're talkin' about.
without rushing to count me as merely another interpreter of Truth please allow me to point out that the Old and New Testament are not in the truest sense scripture, but more accurately they are Covenants. As this is the case, they can't be saying the same thing as far as setting the conditions for achieving an amicable relationship with God
FC said
Roman Catholicism believes that its understandings of the bible are just as authoritative as the bible itself.
Yes Roman Catholics do see the Christ through a recognized authority. They believe what they are told to believe only because they aren't sure what to believe. The personal relationship with God is sometimes lost in the worship of the institution.
I broke from the Catholic church because I wanted to know what a Christ is and why all the hubbub.
Ironically we all are left to follow someone since God proposed the Truth and Satan the lie. We ultimately are always followers.
FC said
To deny there is free will, is to deny the truth revealed in the OT as being relevant for today.
You have lost me in semantics with this statement.
The Truth is either we are in control of ourselves morally or we are not.
The New Testament doesn't teach anything different. To me they are approaching the same Truth from opposite directions just like the two cheribum on the seat of mercy.
I only hope you also see the pitfalls by acknowledging that those who say the law is not for Christians are only trying to say that there is no law against the works of Love.
Only in pride would we deem correction as punishment.
Here I will take issue with the differences between the term responsibility and culpability and more precisely to what we and Satan are culpable and responsible
FC said
Gives a whole new meaning to the idea that God is love. A God who loves because of his own decisions, not in spite of the decisions of others.
The bible is about a simple Truth that God is good and how we disbelieved that and followed Satan under the delusion we were improving our station. I see the deception and I prefer to believe that God is good rather than the option that God is evil. I don't see it as a choice but an imperative. For since if I am made in His image and I count my maker as corrupt, what does that make me?