That really isn't true FFF. And by the way, I like you to.Originally posted by Fact, Faith & Feeling:
Hey Wes. Although I like Scott and I do not want to offend him, he has wrongly associated merit, in the sense of earning something, with choice. He has done this because he is trying to fully reconcile the issue of faith and belief, and one choosing to love God, with Calvinism.
What I am trying to reconcile is exactly what I am arguing with you all over. Why biblically speaking does one person say "yes" while the other says "no". I am trying to reconcile why the Bible teaches salvation through faith but also says that an omniscient God who knows the future elected us before the foundation of the world. I am trying to reconcile the facts that within the context of a single thought John would declare that as many as believe are given the power to become the sons of God and also that these same people were not born (spiritually) of their own will but by the will of God.
I tried to reconcile the Bible to the implicit arminianism we were taught growing up but it simply doesn't answer the fundamental question biblically.
That isn't true either. The blind man that Jesus healed was bound by his affliction. It would be the height of non-sense to say that his will was violated much less done away with because he could by his own nature and will see after Christ healed him.To do this all of man’s will, including that provided him by God for the express purpose of choosing to love Him or not, must be done away with theologically.
Likewise, it would be ridiculous to say that Lazarus' will was violated when Christ raised him from the dead or that living wasn't perfectly natural for him afterwards.
Both of death and blindness are used in the Bible to illustrate the unregenerate state. It is no more a violation of a person's will when the Holy Spirit quickens them spiritually than it was when Jesus quickened Lazarus physically. When someone is resurrected physically or spiritually they of their own free will do that which comes "natural". A spiritually regenerate person repents and believes. One who remains dead in trespasses and sins does not... like the great number of physically dead people Jesus walked past the graves of to get to Lazarus.
Man does have the capacity to choose... and left to his own "dead in sin", unregenerate will, he will always reject the gospel in favor of his own way.Of course for God to really be not willing that any should perish, He must, as an express part of His divine will, provide man with the capacity to choose.
Our ability to choose is of our spiritual nature. I Corinthians tells us clearly that the natural man cannot receive the things of the Spirit.Notice that even our ability to choose is of the will of God, so all things are according to His will, just as scripture soundly proclaims.
So in other words, if one brother chose to love a saint resulting in a long productive marriage while the other chose to love and marry the town tramp resulting in him dying of an STD at 25, there would be no sense of merit in those choices?Choosing Jesus is a heart matter, it depends solely on who you choose to love. There will be no sense of merit among believers in heaven on this matter, just sadness regarding those who chose not to love our Lord.