GT, would it be possible for you to suggest any "side by side" comparison of Romans 9,10,11 say Schriener vs. some other respected "non-cal" scholar?
The potter and the clay.
Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by percho, Feb 11, 2014.
Page 2 of 4
-
-
Iconoclast Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
-
Glad you two are so self-congratulatory in your mutual admiration society. Same old Cals, same old nonsense. You think you checkmate a non-Calvin position because you repeat old arguments that haven't held water from the first time you used them. You wouldn't listen to reason if it hit you over the head with a hammer.
A few quick observations of Tim's response, then I'm done here, because obviously you care more about a man's doctrine than you do about God's Word.
1. The ex cathedra statement is ridiculous, given that Paul's dealing with Israel in ch. 9-11 answers questions anticipated by his lengthy treatise on grace in the first eight chapters. He must explain why Israel hasn't received the blessings of faith -- it is because they haven't believed based on faith through grace -- in order to avoid controversy over what would otherwise appear to be a dichotomy, in that Israel's "chosenness" had not delivered her from God's chastisement.
2. The supposed "reasons" Schreiner gave on page two had no support, only his opinion.
3. I don't have to deal with all of Schreiner's views, if I can knock the pegs out from under one, they being mutually self-supporting, which makes for a very weak argument.
4. Both of your last two points are your opinion, based on Schreiner's opinion, which invalidates the defense.
God bless both of you, be well in your delusions. -
While you are done with me, the fact is, you are really done with dialogue and academically fair research. And when you keep touting that "a man's doctrine than you do about God's Word" foolishness, you come off as a belligerent, conceded, and a doctrinal know-it-all. That is why I keep accusing you of basing your arguments on a RCC notion: ex cathedra. You can assert truth all you want, but that doesn't make it truth.
At least have enough huevos to admit the possibility that you might be wrong!!! All this confidence is a typical fundamentalist attitude: certainty is more important that dialogue and ascertaining truth and admitting "I might be wrong."
PS-I knew you couldn't produce an evidence to back up your assertion about the Greek pronoun εκεινος. Hint: as I said above, you can't. So don't throw your hat into the ring when you haven't even studied enough to understand the hat itself. -
Crabtownboy Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
It was the same with Michelangelo when he said, "I saw the angel in the marble and carved until I set him free." -
Shellrude, Glen. "The freedom of God in mercy and judgment: a libertarian reading of Romans 9:6-29." Evangelical Quarterly 81, no. 4 (October 1, 2009): 306-318. -
-
Crabtownboy Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Anyway, man has freewill and God is there, as the potter, to help shape us through our choices. Some choices lead to beauty, some to .... well not so beautiful. It is not God's fault when we make bad choices that results in flaws in the "pot", us he is trying to shape into beauty. -
Well, you can't argue with that! (talk about having your mind made up, 'don't bother me with the facts'...) With this sort of reasoning you can make the bible to mean anything you want it to. Incredible.
-
Can the pot say to the potter, "Why have you made me like this"? Rhetorical question assuming the answer: No the pot can't say that to the potter!
You would have it be: Yes, the pot can tell the potter how to shape him. You miss completely the point of the illustration. Can creation tell the creator how to shape him? Of course not. That is asinine. -
Don't think he cares in the least about 'the point of the illustration'; the point is going to be whatever he wants it to be. There's no arguing with that.
-
Who's vessel was Judas? -
Good grief, I get tired of this mindless adherence to nonsense!!
If Judas had no choice it means that God is a liar. For a person to be born for the purpose of a single evil act and to be condemned to eternal torment would be cruel beyond imagining and our God is opposite to cruel. That isn't the God I know, it isn't the God of the Bible, and I really wish the people who tout this nonsense would give God credit for being bigger than the box they've stuffed him in.
We are born to a life of choices, to millions of possibilities and God sees every single one of them for every single human being living today, and throughout history, both past and future. It boggles the mind to realize how many outcomes today could have depending on who makes what decisions, but what is truly amazing is that God has laid down his plans for every one of them. Nothing surprises God.
In the case of Judas we hold to the understanding that he made a choice. He entertained Satan himself.
Luke 22, NASBIs Satan sovereign? Can he force his way into an unwilling sinner? NO!!!! And neither does God create a man for a single, solitary act of evil. Your question is obscene!
3 And Satan entered into Judas who was called Iscariot, belonging to the number of the twelve.
4 And he went away and discussed with the chief priests and officers how he might betray Him to them.
It was his choice born out of whatever motivation pushed him in that direction, probably greed, for we know he stole from the till, and as a Zealot (he shows every sign of being one) was likely a nefarious type for most of his adult life. Only one thing was certain in those days and that was the cross to which Jesus was heading. The cross was certain but the path to it did not need to include Judas' betrayal. It could have been anyone or it could have been in a different manner but it did not have to be Judas.
Matthew 26The cross was a definite but Jesus also knew that Judas had made his decision, that he had already taken action. Jesus knew and He also knew what the outcome would be. This was not a curse! It is a simple statement of fact. Jesus knew the condition of Judas' heart, He knew the actions he had already taken and He knew the despair that would destroy him. Some may question why he did not make a final plea with Judas, but that is the same as asking why God doesn't prevent us from doing wrong.
24 "The Son of Man is to go, just as it is written of Him; but woe to that man by whom the Son of Man is betrayed! It would have been good for that man if he had not been born."
Judas had spent three years with Jesus, watching, listening, learning and participating. If he did not understand after three years of attending the world's first seminary, how would any plea from Jesus change things then? God has given His all to us. He speaks to us in everything around us. He speaks clearly through His Word. We are possessed by the Spirit who teaches us. While Judas was possessed of the Holy Spirit, He saw the actions, he heard the words of Christ. Other than the Holy Spirit, there is no greater instrument of conviction available than what Jesus provided His disciples, including Judas.
Judas should not be viewed as a "vessel of wrath" created to obatin God's plan. He had a choice and he made his choice. God simply did what He always does. He used what the dark powers intend as bad to bring about good. The truly sad thing about Judas, the thing for which we can have pity, is that he removed the possibility of repentance and restoration by giving into his despair and ending his life. Jesus knew the outcome for Judas because He could see the condition of Judas' hardened heart. That did not have to be his outcome, and it does not have to be our outcome. -
Crabtownboy Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
-
That is not making God a liar. That just means God cares more about his glory than he does about his creation. That is a principle I am totally fine with.
People tout about being God-centered so long as they serve a God who is man-centered. If God creates vessels to destroy them, that is the prerogative of the creator. They are his to do with what he pleases.
The potter illustration stands. God can do whatever he likes to the pottery as long as it brings him glory (glorified in his wrath or in his mercy as Rom. 9 says). That is his goal. And God does all that he pleases. What pleases him most is his glory. That or God values something more than the most valuable thing in the universe (himself) making him the first idolater.
This is the ultimate issue here, exemplified. People don't like the perception of a sovereign God in control of EVERYTHING. So they can do 2 things: throw out the Bible and walk away OR make a god in their image that doesn't ruffle their feathers so much. But if the Bible is true about God having AND USING his absolute authority at all times, then we are only left w/ the clear conclusion: He ordains it all.
Isa 45:6 That they may know from the rising of the sun, and from the west, that there is none beside me. I am the LORD, and there is none else. God's supremacy
Isa 45:7 I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things. God's sovereignty -
Crabtownboy Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
-
God is for God more than he is for you or me. FACT! -
Decision Making and the Will of God: A Biblical Alternative to the Traditional View (Gary Friesen) -
Crabtownboy Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
-
Iconoclast Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
We are to take God as he has revealed Himself,trusting he knows what he is doing.
Gt said it here:
Page 2 of 4