Do not worry about embarrassing me. I am quite fine, thank you.
I am more concerned at how Strong's, Holman's, or Young's makes Greek scholars out of individuals who never studied the language. It truly is admirable that some people show an interest in the original languages. I first became interested in koine when a read a short pamphlet on Greek cognates. My formal and informal learning of koine Greek has been a great help in exegetical studies. Having a working knowledge of Greek does not make a person more spiritual. It does allow the serious exegete to understand Greek wordplay and even the personality of the writer. @thatbrian pointed out to me that some Baptists willfully remain ignorant of language studies to avoid the error of Rome (which used Latin to keep the truth from the masses). While we certainly want to steer far from Roman Catholicism, willful ignorance is a poor excuse.
Learn Greek if you can. I recommend Bill Mounce for those who want to learn Greek outside of a seminary setting.
Total Inability in the Gospel of John
Discussion in 'Calvinism & Arminianism Debate' started by Reformed, Feb 4, 2018.
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Pastor_Bob Well-Known Member
Sorry...I started this post before I saw the post above and then was interrupted by students getting out of class. You answered my question. -
The Archangel Well-Known Member
College pace, too, is probably better than seminary pace. In our seminary we got the equivalent of 2 years of Greek in one year. It was brutal at times. It took quite a while for it to "click" with me, but, by God's grace, when it did, I was off and running.
The opportunities are there if you're (a generic plural) willing to look for and pursue them.
Blessings,
The Archangel -
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The Archangel Well-Known Member
When going to the Greek, I do a lot of work to see where I am. If I were smarter, I'd have immediate recall of all my text books, etc., but I don't. Reading and re-confirming things you know you know is a good, though tedious, way to learn and re-learn.
And, there is great joy for me in the pursuit.
Blessings,
The Archangel -
The Archangel Well-Known Member
Even so, we should be gracious to and with those who are genuinely seeking to know the Bible more deeply because we all were once hooked by our own understanding to the exclusion of all else. Just because others are there, does not mean we are smarter or better.
Blessings,
The Archangel -
he also has said that a vast majority of people will do very well by using a good English translation, and applying themselves to studies with good tools and a method of interpreting the text. -
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I think you should go to GREECE and learn GREEK, where they can laugh at you,
Cause there no such thing as a Greek Calvinist.
There just ain't no fooling the folks who speak it all the time.
They do their liturgy in Koine when they go to church. -
The Archangel Well-Known Member
You've stated two ridiculous things here:
First, you wouldn't go to Greece to learn Koine Greek, since Koine is about 2,000 years old and modern Greek is fairly different. Second, you have shown little or no facility to challenge the claims made here about the Greek text. You've only attacked Calvinists with your nonsense. You probably can't even adjudicate the difference between a lambda or a psi.
Perhaps you don't know the inanity of your statement: "I bet they are Greek-Orthodox Catholics." Of course this is impossible since the great schism of AD 1054 saw the separation of the Catholic church from the Eastern Orthodox churches. So, in your ignorance (perhaps), you've posted an oxymoron.
The Archangel -
Eastern Orthodox Church - Wikipedia
The Eastern Orthodox Church,[1] also known as the Orthodox Church,[2] or officially as the Orthodox Catholic Church,[3] is the second-largest Christian Church, with over 250 million members.
The name Greek Orthodox Church (Greek: Ἑλληνορθόδοξη Ἑκκλησία, Ellinorthódoxi Ekklisía, IPA: [elinorˈθoðoksi ekliˈsia]), or Greek Orthodoxy, is a term referring to the body of several Churches[5][6][7] within the larger communion of Eastern Orthodox Christianity, whose liturgy is or was traditionally conducted in Koine Greek,[8] the original language of the New Testament,[9][10] and whose history, traditions, and theology are rooted in the early Church Fathers and the culture of the Byzantine Empire.
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Greeks are Greek-Orthodox and are a part of the larger communion akak ORTHODOX CATHOLIC CHURCH and use Koine Greek in their liturgy.
The GREEKS know KOINE GREEK.
"you wouldn't go to Greece to learn Koine Greek"
Yeah you'd go Japan to learn English too? LOL. They got real GREEK scholars fluent users too , they would run circles around you Calvinist.
That is why there is no GREEK CALVINIST.
Apparently, God doesn't know enough Greek to elect a Greek Calvinist.
All those millions of people they hear the same gospel you do. They don't "regenerate" into Calvinist.
Where they at - Where they at- Where they at? Show me Greek Calvinist. -
The only way you get Calvinist is you if you are introduced to Christianity by a Calvinist and have a Calvinist over your shoulder as you learn.
If all it took was hearing the gospel and God flicking a switch, there would be numerous reports of spontaneous Calvinist popping up all over the place, especially among the Greeks who know the language.
You know your gut says I'm telling the truth and it should be to your joy to point at the Greek Calvinist. -
The Archangel Well-Known Member
First, to argue that language is the determining factor in theology is a red herring (among other fallacies). There are many factors to one's theology. I know many Calvinists who don't read Greek and came to their theological conclusions through an English translation. The use of Greek is not about theology, per se, it is about getting to what the scriptural author intends to convey in his writing. In the New Testament, the Pharisees were also experts in Hebrew and yet they got God hopelessly wrong. So, language is not the determining factor in one's theology. For your assertion about language and Calvinism to be correct, you would have to claim that the Greek Orthodox has the correct theology in all of Christendom, which would be a very difficult claim to support.
Second, you are begging the question. You're assuming your claims are true without proving them. You simply think that your understanding of the Greek orthodox church proves that there are no Greek Calvinists, buy you have not taken it upon yourself to prove it. What is more, you commit a third logical fallacy by saying "Where they at - Where they at- Where they at? Show me Greek Calvinist." This third fallacy is known as shifting the burden of proof (or, in Latin, Onus Probandi). Rather than prove you are right, you're putting the onus on us to prove you wrong (which, if you notice, I did by pointing out the Pharisee's bad theology when they were experts in Hebrew).
That's just three fallacies I've named here, and there are many more. But this should be sufficient to make my point: You're barking up the wrong forest. And, you're acting like a middle school student in doing so.
The Archangel -
#1 You guys brought up having to know GREEK.
My challenge was:
A Calvinist believes UNLESS you do the synergistic GOOD WORK of Listening to the Gospel.
You will be damned and you will never be regenerated. A "WORKS ALONE" belief.
"Paul is NOT saying they are making themselves unworthy; he is saying these Jews are showing themselves to be unworthy (an already-existing condition)."
Not even John Calvin's commentary agrees with you.
Such greatness of grace which God vouchsafed to bestow upon them, doth exaggerate and increase the greatness of their sin, whilst that they reject that which is so mercifully offered unto them. Therefore he addeth that they give judgment of themselves, that they are unworthy of eternal life. For seeing that the rejecting of the gospel is the denial of the righteousness of God, we need no other judge to condemn the unbelievers. --John Calvin.
^ thats part of your problem You want it to mean that God already judged them unworthy SO that is why they reject.
krinete κρίνετε
I'm going to keep looking through commentaries.......to see if anyone supports your position, I havent found a line.
I could see why there is added confusion. You are taught that you deserve hell, that you deserve to sin against God eternally.
Paul is chewing them out in the manner they must not want to be saved to reject Jesus.
Brother if you KNEW God has me condemned from the get-go you wouldn't even give me a chance to "reject' since its a done deal.
Listen to what we are saying unless you make the synergistic good work of listening to the gospel you stand no chance in being saved. -
God judged all humanity in the fall as being now found Guitly before Himself...
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The Archangel Well-Known Member
Also, when it comes to the Jews, it must be remembered that they had been "entrusted with the oracles of God" (Romans 3:2) and so when Jesus comes upon the scene, they should have responded to Him faithfully. Jesus is the fulfillment of everything the Old Testament was about. For a faithful Jew, accepting Him would have been quite natural. Instead of demonstrating faithfulness, most of the Jews demonstrated their unfaithfulness by rejecting Christ.
As for commentaries, you obviously haven't looked very far.
#1 But the Jews in Antioch had rejected the eternal life that is to be found in Jesus, and Paul had to turn to those who were “worthy” (v. 46)
John B. Polhill, Acts, vol. 26, The New American Commentary (Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 1992), 308.
#2
Paul and Barnabas gave a straightforward answer to their disparaging words. It was right and proper, they affirmed, that Jews should have the first opportunity of hearing and believing the good news. Had the Jews of Pisidian Antioch accepted the message, theirs would have been the privilege of evangelizing their Gentile neighbors, in accordance with the terms of Israel’s world mission laid down in the Isaianic servant songs and their contexts. But if they refused to receive the light themselves, they could not be allowed to pursue a dog-in-the-manger policy. The life of the age to come1 had been brought near to them here and now as God’s free gift in Christ; if they showed themselves unworthy of the gift by declining to accept it, there were others who would appreciate it: it would be offered direct to the Gentiles.
F. F. Bruce, The Book of the Acts, The New International Commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1988), 265–266. (Emphasis mine)
#3 " ‘judge yourselves unworthy of eternal life’ ” It is difficult to hold the concept of predestination, which is emphasized so often in Acts, with the concept of mandated individual personal response. No one can come to faith without the drawing of God (cf. John 6:44, 65), but we are judged by whether we respond. By their rejection of Paul’s preaching of the gospel, they revealed their true selves (cf. John 3:17–21). The blame for lack of response cannot be placed on God. He has provided a way, His Son, but He is the only way!
Robert James Utley, Luke the Historian: The Book of Acts, vol. Volume 3B, Study Guide Commentary Series (Marshall, TX: Bible Lessons International, 2003), 170.
When I was a pastor, I led our church to do door-to-door evangelism, which we did. We sought to proclaim Christ to all. We had a person in our church who was (not a member) an unbeliever and we prayed for him continually--that God would change his heart and cause him to desire Christ. We also pleaded with him to come to Christ.
The Archangel -
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