Just finished my lesson on Jonah and it went well despite only getting through half my outline. Anyways this is one book that has me confused as if God only granted faith and repentance to the elect why did God have compassion on Nineveh, on the 120,000 children and everyone else? It seems as if Gods love flows to all elect and non elect indeed but his special love for the elect. Perhaps I got confused because I did not read any Calvinist commentaries on Jonah other than the ESV SB.
I mean God chooses to relent from his judgment because of the FREE WILL of the people. Would this not flow from the outline of the book Chosen but Free? Hmm.....
Calvinists help me understand
Discussion in 'Calvinism & Arminianism Debate' started by evangelist6589, Aug 3, 2014.
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evangelist6589 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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Why don't you move this to the Cavinist section of the board?
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Well, what do you know? Someone is beginning to see that the scriptures do not agree with Calvinism. Who'd have thought such a thing?
Amazing how when you stop reading Reformed works only and start reading the Bible your perspective changes.
I can't wait to hear how the Calvinists answer your question John. -
God must ordain slow folks who cannot understand that such threads on "Theology" are not allowed? How can that be?
WE HAVE A CALVINISM DEBATE FORUM for those who want to beat their heads against a wall, make man sovereign or God a puppet-master. Your call but NOT HERE.
MOVED by a sovereign intelligent jack-booted thug of an Administrator.
:BangHead::BangHead::BangHead: -
'Slow folks' words were uncalled for. You're an admin, please act accordingly....
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Among other unnecessary and uncalled for "digs". -
I'm still wondering where are all the Calvinists to comfort John in his dilemma.
I would think that they should be beating down the door for the opportunity to highlight how their philosophy gives an answer.
hello?hello?hello?hello? -
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Jordan Kurecki Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Mat 23:37 O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not!
Act_7:51 Ye stiffnecked and uncircumcised in heart and ears, ye do always resist the Holy Ghost: as your fathers did, so do ye. -
Jordan Kurecki Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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Now, I'm going to refrain from anything inflammatory, and ask from John's Calvinist perspective.....
considering that repentance and faith are the result of God's effectual calling and regenerating grace,
why does it appear that God's grace toward Nineva came AFTER they repented? -
The Archangel Well-Known Member
The Book of Jonah is primarily about God and His grace.
Ironically, Jonah--the Prophet of God--refuses to do God's will. He doesn't acknowledge God as he should, but the sailors and the Ninevites wind up doing so.
Secondly, what Jonah preaches to Nineveh can hardly be called a "gospel." He preaches "forty days and Nineveh shall be overthrown," which is the ancient-day equivalent of "God hates F@gs..." There is no good news in Jonah's message, there is no revealing of God to them--His grace and His mercy, and Jonah's message is intended to leave Nineveh in darkness... (if you doubt this then answer why he went up onto the plan to watch the destruction he thought was coming...).
Up until the very end of the book, Jonah is defiant. In the beginning of the book he's actively defiant, and in the end of the book he's passive-aggressively defiant. But, he is defiant nonetheless.
The book, ultimately, leaves us to answer why the Ninevites repented. They were preached a deficient, Yahweh-absent "gospel," why or how did they repent? In the end, their repentance is not viewed as salvific; it is only a temporary stay of God's judgment (read the history of Assyria).
Does God have mercy on the People of Nineveh? Yes. Why? They repent. How do they repent having been given a deficient Gospel? It's only because God can and does use deficient Gospels to change people. But, it isn't the Gospel that is the thing here (for there was no "good news"), it's God's grace in bringing repentance to Nineveh. Why did God desire to show compassion on a city (and a nation, really) that is known to be gruesomely horrible? To demonstrate to Jonah that salvation isn't ultimately limited to Israel, that God can and does save people outside of Israel. Also, we see that God has compassion on sinners.
The entire episode reminds us that God will have mercy on those whom He chooses to have mercy on and that He will have compassion on those whom He will have compassion on. And, at times, He will do so through our efforts and, at other times, He will do so in spite of our efforts.
The Archangel -
Alright John, has it been properly explained to you how a whole city of unregenerate people repented?
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The Archangel Well-Known Member
And, reading the text in its context (both internal and historical) is by no means explaining anything away....
The Archangel -
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Iconoclast Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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