Does God love everyone?

Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by annsni, Oct 19, 2008.

  1. Luke2427 Active Member

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    I concur.
    _________
     
  2. righteousdude2 Well-Known Member
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    Me thinks....

    ....that the Word of God would support the fact that God hates the sin, BUT loves the sinner.

    Of course with homosexuality, we are not just talking about ongoing acts of fornication (a sin). We are talking about a UNNATURAL act; and abomination to God and a perverse act that is not in accordance with the purpose for which He created man and woman!

    Still, there remains only one sin that is unforgivable, and that is not homosexuality. A person who repents-go in a completely different direction [away from], and follows Jesus, can and will be saved.
     
  3. Luke2427 Active Member

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    The saying "God hates sin but loves the sinner" is, like all bumper sticker theology, an extraordinary oversimplification and so much so that it is patently false.

    Psalm 5:5 says, "The foolish shall not stand in thy sight: thou hatest all workers of iniquity."

    Not just "works" of iniquity but the "workers" themselves.

    And at the same time, God loves them. "I have no pleasure saith the Lord in the death of the wicked..."

    So, it is complex.

    Backward fundamentalist types who need everything to be super simple, bumper sticker worthy and solidly black and white will never get it.

    Intelligent people, who don't mind struggling with ideas and gray areas will embrace the truth of the Scripture on this matter.

    I despise child molesters. At the same time, I am sorry to see them suffer in certain circumstances.

    I know of some who have not seen the outside of 6' by 8' cell in years.

    And while part of me is greatly gratified that they suffer, another part says- "I wish they would just put them to death so that they would not have to live that way." Also, that same part of me says, "I want to share the Gospel with them."

    If my feelings towards them can be complex, how much more can God's?
     
  4. Winman Active Member

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    Well, that certainly is a nice testimony, of course, you were an Arminian back then.

    It still doesn't explain how you know that God loves you and that you are one of the elect, as according to Calvinism you must persevere to the day you die before you can know you are elect. It is possible you could fall away and prove you were never of the elect to begin with, no?
     
  5. Earth Wind and Fire Well-Known Member
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    Anyone saved is elect.:laugh:
     
  6. Luke2427 Active Member

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    John said, "These things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God that ye may KNOW that ye have eternal life..."

    Without going into all the things that John was talking about, it will suffice to say that one who has those things in his life can be assured BECAUSE those things are in his life that he has been born of God and has eternal life.
     
  7. Winman Active Member

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    Oh, I would be the first to tell you that I know I am elect and saved because God's word says so, but that is not the traditional response you get from a Calvinist.

    According to Calvinism, the unregenerate man cannot understand what saving faith is, so how could he possibly know that he has performed that which he is taught he cannot possibly understand?

    No, the Calvinist must wait on God to regenerate him and give him saving faith, but he cannot be sure of this, because he has been taught he cannot understand what saving faith is.

    That is what they call a Catch 22.

    If you truly believe Calvinism, you cannot be sure you have saving faith, you cannot be sure you believed on Jesus, therefore you cannot claim the promises of salvation given to those who believe on Jesus.

    You will disagree, but what I have just said is the truth.
     
  8. convicted1 Guest

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    :godisgood::jesus::godisgood::jesus:
     
  9. convicted1 Guest

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    I agree with this. Remember, Jesus wasn't sent to condemn the world, it already was condemned before He came here.
     
  10. convicted1 Guest

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    :thumbs::thumbs::thumbs::thumbs:
     
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    The heart is deceitful above all things, And desperately wicked; Who can know it?

    You've just taken your sinful ideas and said God is even more like you than you are? God hates some and loves others and is 100% just in doing both. He calls some vessels of wrath and some vessels of mercy after telling us He loved Jacob and hated Esau. His justice is satisfied in the wicked in eternal hell and in the redeemed it was satisfied in the wrath He poured out on His Son in our stead. It's really quite simple.
     
  12. Luke2427 Active Member

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    No, a Calvinist KNOWS he is one of the elect because the characteristics of the elect show in his life.

    What a sinner THINKS has nothing to do with what the elect KNOWS.

    Every elect person can know beyond a shadow of a doubt that he is saved because the things John identifies in I John as birthmarks of a believer manifest themselves in one's life.
     
  13. convicted1 Guest

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    :godisgood::jesus::godisgood::jesus:
     
  14. Earth Wind and Fire Well-Known Member
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    Absolutely:smilewinkgrin:
     
  15. Earth Wind and Fire Well-Known Member
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    Willis, I would agree with Brother Luke. Both the OR's & the Primitive Baptists (that we are both affiliated with) would give anyone who asks the question, this answer....

    " the man or woman who wants salvation already HAS it. The person who hungers and thirsts (desires it) after righteousness is a blessed character (Matt. 5: 2-6). The alien sinner doesn't want salvation, doesn't fear God, and doesn't love God; therefore we conclude that the person who wants salvation, fears God and loves God is a subject of grace (Rom. 3: 11, 18; I John 4: 10)"
     
  16. convicted1 Guest

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    :thumbsup::thumbsup::thumbsup::thumbsup:
     
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    NOT WILLING THAT ANY SHOULD PERISH
    by WILLIAM GADSBY - Preached in Manchester, Feb. 9th 1840
    "The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is long-suffering to us-ward; not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance." (2 Peter 3:9)

    To add to, or diminish from, the Word of God is a crime, though much employed in the frivolities of the world; and the office of a minister is a very responsible one. He is God's steward, and he must one day give up his stewardship; and if he seeks to please men, he is not a true servant of God; nay, it is insulting God. Some say God is not willing that any creature should perish, but every one should come to repentance; but in our text we are told it is this "us-ward" for whom he is long-suffering, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance. "Then," say you, "if it is only to this us-ward, why preach the gospel?" Because God has ordained the preaching of the gospel for the gathering in of his people. If it were to all men, would he not send his Word into all men? When God designs to save his people, he sends his gospel into them; as he did into the Philippian jailor. He sent ministers unto him in the prison. Zaccheus, who must climb a tree; and God brought him down and abode with him. And where were some of you when God met with you? You had no inclination to hear his Word, but he brought you forth out of nature's darkness into his marvellous light. And what is the sense of the text? God's long-suffering with, and promise to, his people, the us-ward, not willing that any of his people should perish, but that all should come to repentance. In the last days scoffers shall come, and shall say, "Where is the promise of Christ's coming, without sin in the world? One generation passeth away, and another, and there is no appearance of his coming; how is it?" It is his long-suffering to us-ward; therefore, beloved, account his long-suffering salvation. When he shall fold up the skies as in a scroll, and wind up the business, all his people shall be brought in; and I would ask if God is not willing that any man should perish, is he not able to give him repentance? For repentance is the gift of God; and is he incapacitated to do what he wished? Or will his designs be frustrated by such frail creatures as you and I." He says, "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, which killest the prophets and stonest them that are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children together, as a hen gathereth her chickens together, and ye would not." (Matt. 23:37) Here we find that Christ refers to the Scribes, and Pharisees, and heads of the people, the Sanhedrim. He worked many miracles before them, but they did not believe on him; he would have gathered thy children, "but ye would not;" not "they would not." And again: "When the righteous turneth from his righteousness, and committeth iniquity, he shall die," "but if the wicked turneth from his wickedness, and doeth that which is lawful and right, he shall live." (Ezek. 18:26,27) This is according to the Jewish nation; not the preaching of the gospel, but the law. For what saith the law? Do and live; leave undone and die. Therefore there is no salvation by the law, "that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world become guilty before God." (Rom. 3:19) That it might be by grace, not of works, lest any man should boast. (Eph. 2:8,9) Salvation is entirely of free, unmerited, discriminating grace. But this it could not be if it depended on any thing the creature does.

    What is intended by the promise, "The Lord is not slack?" etc. And why this apparent delay and long-suffering? God declared in the beginning concerning the temple, that it should be destroyed, and that one stone should not be left upon another. But the Jews laughed it to scorn; they could not believe it; but it came to pass at last. His long-suffering bore with their manners until its accomplishment, and the execution thereof was awful in the extreme. Never was known such an appalling devastation. There was a great famine; and so great was their distress that men butchered each other for food to support their dying frames, and women tore their own children from their bosoms for the same purpose. Never was known in the history of time such a day of misery. And what made the scene more appalling, the destruction happened on a festival day, wherein all that were met together in the temple perished; but all the children of God escaped, out of the way; not one of them perished.

    What an awful sight to them; that the departed spirits should in a moment's warning quit this world and enter hell, and then in agonizing torments behold the just God whom they had despised and mocked. May God enable you to confide in his promise, and trust him for his grace, that when the time comes for its accomplishment you may be found ready. We have the promise of Christ's second coming. The apostle Paul had a blessed view of this, as recorded in Heb. 9:27,28: "And as it is appointed unto men once to die; but after this the judgment; so Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many, and to them that look for him shall he appear the second time, without sin; and Heb. 7:26: "he will be holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners." At his first coming, his visage was marred, and there was neither form nor comeliness in him, that we should desire him; but he bore the sins of many; (Isa. 53:2,12) he hath appeared once to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself. (Heb. 9:26) God hath laid upon him the iniquity of his us-ward. If God had not done it, we never should; for our sins are so numerous we should have forgotten many; and there are many that we should not have thought were sins; they are so amiable and pleasant to our nature that we should not look upon them as sins; and from our first breath in infancy, to our last, though it be to old age, there is not a moment of our existence that we live without sin, except when we are bathing in the blood of the Lamb.
    "Thy garden is the place,
    Where pride cannot intrude;
    For should it dare to enter there
    'Twould soon be drown'd in blood."

    Yes, Gethsemane is the place where our sins were put away; our sins of omission and sins of commission were all gathered together and put upon Christ. He bore them, and hath nailed them to his cross.

    He finished the work which his Father gave him to do; (John 17:4) "he ascended to his God and our God;" "to his Father and our Father, (John 20:17) and ever liveth to make intercession for us." (Heb. 7:25) He is not slack concerning his promise, but will come at the appointed time. Before him shall be gathered all nations, and every man shall be judged according to the deeds done in the body. His apparent delays do not prove that he is slack concerning his promise, but rather his long-suffering; for if it were not for his long-suffering, would you not all be damned? For unless ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish; (Luke 13:3) and, therefore, is it not of his long-suffering that he brings us to repent, and cleanseth us from dead works, by washing us in the washing of regeneration, that we may have pardon through his blood? Did not God promise Abraham that he should possess the land of Canaan, and that in his seed should all the nations be blessed? (Gen. 12:3) And was not the promise apparently delayed? But it was his long-suffering. And though Abraham and Sarah his wife became old, yet did not God perform his promise at the appointed time? And though Abraham took a bond-woman to his bosom, yet it did not in any wise further the execution of God's promise, but rather was the very means of causing discord in the family. And so with us; for anything that we may do will not hasten the promise of God. "And Abraham, by faith, sojourned in the land of promise, not knowing whither he went."

    "But the Lord was not slack concerning his promise; but is long-suffering to us-ward." Did he not promise that Joseph should be above his brethren? And though he experienced many changes on his way for this purpose to bring him, yet all things work together for its accomplishment. The Lord was not slack concerning his promise; but his long suffering bore with their matters.

    He bore with the manners of the children of Israel forty years; but at length brought them to the land of promise. All things shall work together for good to them that love God and are the called according to his eternal purpose. honours crown his brow! "He is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness," but will perform his promises in his own time and in his own way.

    May the Lord bless you and me with patience to wait his time; for his mercy's sake. Amen.
     
  18. Winman Active Member

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    You can say whatever you want, Calvinists are known to lack assurance, even some of your greatest preachers like Piper and Sproul have admitted they struggle with this problem.

    Here is John Piper describing the very problem I just described;

    Piper describes perfectly the problem I described, the Calvinist cannot know what saving faith is. It is a mystery to him because he has been repeatedly taught that he cannot know or understand faith, as unregenerate men are unable to understand spiritual matters according to Total Depravity.

    So, you can run your mouth all you want, I know Calvinists struggle with assurance.
     
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    I've known John Piper personally since about 1994. I wouldn't call him a Calvinist by any stretch. I would call him more and more confused. Jesus is the object of the elects faith. When I experience sin and unbelief He draws me to Him again and I flee to Him once more. My hope is totally in Him and His faithfulness.
     
  20. Luke2427 Active Member

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    Run my mouth? Ahhh. I see. Run my mouth.

    This is how you get when you are shown that your arguments are shallow, frail and easily toppled.

    You are in over your depth on baptistboard.

    Sure Calvinist's, almost as much as Arminians, struggle with assurance. Many Christians of all theological stripes struggle with assurance. Yes, ESPECIALLY over-emotional people like Piper.

    The fact remains. A Calvinist KNOWS he is one of the elect because the characteristics of the elect show in his life.

    What a sinner THINKS has nothing to do with what the elect KNOWS.

    Every elect person can know beyond a shadow of a doubt that he is saved because the things John identifies in I John as birthmarks of a believer manifest themselves in one's life.