• Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!

A Cute Diddy On God Violating Free Will

Rippon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Years ago I copied something down that I found on another dicussion forum. I didn't jot down the specifics --
only the moniker of the poser --Pilgrimsarbour.

"Present yourself to him, Father, in such a convincing way that his natural inclination to love You would stir him to choose the salvation that is to be found in Christ Jesus...but not so much that, you know, you're doing it against his will. Just woo him a bit, you know, how You do that thing you do.

Amen"
 

InTheLight

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Years ago I copied something down that I found on another dicussion forum. I didn't jot down the specifics --
only the moniker of the poser --Pilgrimsarbour.

"Present yourself to him, Father, in such a convincing way that his natural inclination to love You would stir him to choose the salvation that is to be found in Christ Jesus...but not so much that, you know, you're doing it against his will. Just woo him a bit, you know, how You do that thing you do.

Amen"
Strawmen are fun!

Sent from my Motorola Droid Turbo.
 

Reformed

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Humor aside, it is a conundrum for those on the free will side. Since God will not violate the free will of the creature, why pray for God to save someone. The most you can do is pray that God allows them to hear the Gospel. I’m not being cheeky here.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
 

InTheLight

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Since God will not violate the free will of the creature, why pray for God to save someone.

Of course you can prove that all, or most "free-willers" hold to the belief that God will not violate man's will?

I could say the problem for Calvinists is they believe God created evil and caused the fall of Adam, a belief they cannot reconcile with total depravity.

See how easy it is to discredit someone's beliefs when you misrepresent them?

The OP quoted someone anonymously, from another forum, then attributed their beliefs to an entire group of people here on BB, identified by the OP as free-willers, a term I've never seen anyone here embrace. That is dishonesty.




Sent from my Motorola Droid Turbo.
 

TCassidy

Late-Administator Emeritus
Administrator
What in the world is a diddy?
N. "short song," c.1300, from Old French ditie "composition, poem, treatise," from Latin dictatum "thing dictated," neuter past participle of dictare "dictate" (see dictate (v.)).
 

Jerome

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
something...that I found on another dicussion forum...the poser --Pilgrimsarbour.

Indeed. A simple Google search reveals your "diddy" within a comment by "poser" Pilgrimsarbour, a Calvinist, in a "dicussion" on a Reformed polemics blog:

www.turretinfan.blogspot.com/2011/01/louis-ruggieros-god-of-calvinism.html

Pilgrimsarbour said:
No one ever prayed that God would:

"Present yourself to him, Father, in such a convincing way that his natural inclination to love You would stir him to choose the salvation that is to be found in Christ Jesus...

...but not so much that, you know, you're doing it against his will. Just woo him a bit, you know, how You do that thing you do. Amen."
 

Reformed

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Of course you can prove that all, or most "free-willers" hold to the belief that God will not violate man's will?

I can quote you Ryrie, Chafer, and Geisler if you want, but we'll just get into an endless back and forth. Most free willers that I know personally understand the problem with their stated position vs. the theology of their position. I have a friend who holds to the free will position. He believes that God does draw the individual, but the individual has to make the choice to believe. God will not make them believe. If God does, then there really is no free will in salvation, at least in the way my friend believes. Of course, he rejects the Mongergist view of soteriology. His way of dealing with it? "It's a mystery that none of us can explain. I'm fine with God knowing how it works." His answer is what frustrates me. I think my friend is giving a royal cop-out. You can use the "mystery" defense on any theological topic. It doesn't really advance the discussion.


I could say the problem for Calvinists is they believe God created evil and caused the fall of Adam, a belief they cannot reconcile with total depravity.

Except that James 1:13 refutes that notion. We also know that God is holy (Lev. 20:26; 1 Pet. 1:16), and that God is without sin (2 Cor. 5:21). The creature is responsible for his own sin, and cannot make a charge against God that he was created thus (Rom. 9:14-24). If the charge can be made against anyone for allowing sin in the world, Adam gets the blame. Adam was the only true moral free agent ever created and ruined that status through his disobedience. Adam, as our federal head, acted as our fair and just representative and handed down the status of "sinner" to his posterity. The doctrine of Total Depravity is held intact because everyone is born in a state of sin because of what our federal head did on our behalf.

The OP quoted someone anonymously, from another forum, then attributed their beliefs to an entire group of people here on BB, identified by the OP as free-willers, a term I've never seen anyone here embrace. That is dishonesty.

I am not so much concerned about the individual quoted in the OP as I am about the theology involved. There are certain posters in here who go apoplectic when you use any term or label to describe their position. I've grown weary of their constant whining, so I tune them out. I think you know me. I speak for myself. I can care less whether anyone agrees or disagrees me. I mean every word of that. I don't type with anger, malice, or disrespect. Because I have done the research, I am confident in my beliefs. Now, you may call me dishonest, divisive, unethical...whatever pejorative you can come up with. I used to get upset about those things. Now I see the humor in them. So, I will use term free willer, Arminian, Synergist interchangeably, and if someone doesn't it like...well....they can put me on ignore. I'm no longer going to defer to crybabies.

P.S. Edited to fix typos.
 
Last edited:

InTheLight

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I have a friend who holds to the free will position. He believes that God does draw the individual, but the individual has to make the choice to believe. God will not make them believe. If God does, then there really is no free will in salvation, at least in the way my friend believes.

Maybe God is compelling him to make that choice and he only thinks he is doing it on his own?

That's kind of how I view it.

Does that make me a free-willer?



Sent from my Motorola Droid Turbo.
 

Reformed

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Maybe God is compelling him to make that choice and he only thinks he is doing it on his own?

That's kind of how I view it.

Does that make me a free-willer?



Sent from my Motorola Droid Turbo.

Listen, I don't know what you believe. Do you believe man has the free will to accept or reject the gospel call? Do you believe the call is effectual and those whom God calls He will save each and every time? You tell me what you believe. I know how I will respond based on your answer.
 

Reformed

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Maybe God is compelling him to make that choice and he only thinks he is doing it on his own?

Well, that's kind of like his mystery defense. We can only extrapolate based on what we know. My opinion? My friend is going through some theological cognitive dissonance. He claims that the individual is the one who chooses. God calls, but the individual gives a thumbs up or down. That's the free will position in a nutshell. He is the one who shared with me his conflict over two decades ago when we attended bible college together. Why pray for God to save someone when the final decision is up to them? At the time I was not a Monergist. I was right with him in his skepticism. My theology changed, his didn't. He still battles with the conflict of his question but is no closer to finding the answer he desires, so he chalks the whole thing up to a mystery.
 
Top