Yes.....as that is exactly what is being taught;
It is good to see what is taught in the scripture Robert.....you should try it!:thumbsup:
What's the difference between Fred and Frank?
Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by Skandelon, Feb 24, 2011.
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Iconoclast Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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One thing you should understand, I part company on this side who use phrases like "preach a different gospel" or think the Lord makes us robots to the extent we do not need missions or evangelism, because faith comes by hearing........... etc. I have no doubt that those who disagree with me on election are saved, walking close to the Lord, and serve him well as pastors, and other leadership positions.
To answer one of your points yesterday, the revelation the Lord gives in Romans 1, is enough only to realize there is a Creator. The Gospel message and the Lord is what takes the revelation to salvation. -
As you can see, this is not just about what happened in the past, it is about what is happing at that point in time. Israel was being hardened, but the Gentiles "WILL" listen. Can you explain that please. (I'm trying to be more loving so I don't offend anyone :) )
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I said I find it ironic that you accuse people of being stubborn and prideful as a matter of course, without any awareness that you do the same thing in the very next sentence you post.
However, I do apologize to you. I haven't contributed to the conversation and have only interjected myself to criticize you. Shame on me.
Please pardon the interuption.
peace to you:praying: -
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And, even that I would say is Calvinist. We do not suggest that man cannot resist God! The Scriptures say so. But God can, and does, "DRAW" us unto Himself (not force, not coerce -- DRAW). I was one of the one's drawn to God. I was not looking, not seeking, not searching, and in fact, I was an evil person who would do almost anything to keep people away from God in any form or fashion because I hated the concept of God (note that I could not hate God, for in my mind there was no God!). Yet, God was so gracious and merciful to me that He drew me lovingly to Himself, convinced me that He was real, and then, through the power of the Holy Spirit, saved me in Christ.
Had I "resisted God" for the first 27 years of my life? You bet I did. Did God coerce me? Nope. When I came to God, I came because I WANTED TO. It is at that stage right there -- the WANTED TO stage -- that many who hold a very human-centered theology think that THEY had something to do with the entire process -- not realizing that God had already been at work in them for quite some time -- sometimes decades! -
Iconoclast Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Skandelon,
I would like to see the level of interaction ...upgrade a bit, now
The Covenant curses from the song of Moses DEUT28-33 have come upon the physical nation of Israel...In MT 20-25
particularly MT 21:43
Does this help answer it, or do you mean something else?
Notice in this section, psalm 2 and psalm 16 are said to be fulfilled....it is all happening at the cross.
look at the 15 verses I posted earlier, Isa 1:9,etc
Would like to elaborate more, but I still have to drive more tonight, later on. -
Iconoclast Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
[QUOTE
With regard to my responses to iconoclast, how would you respond if I quoted a dozen verses or so without any explanations or interpretation and just expected you to believe that they mean what I think they must mean to support my views? Does that seem reasonable to you? I was merely calling him out on that point and I think I did so quite respectfully.
][/QUOTE]
Skandelon, let me just explain something...I drive x country for a living.I am in Nebraska now, I will Get to Iowa tonight before I sleep.
the verses I offered are good verses if you look at the context in the OT.Then see how the Holy Spirit had Paul use them after the cross. I only had time to point you to what I think are the answer to both of your questions.I did not have time to elaborate.
The three links are good,[on psa110]even though i might not agree with all those men believe.
I was not using the verses just to fill space. I recalled them from a class i taught several years ago....If you take time with them you will rejoice in the truths....set aside the cal-arm debate for awhile....and just see what God has done in redemptive History....I really have to get back on the road now, more, later. -
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I was walking by a church in Houston, Texas on Saturday February 22, 1969, when I was seventeen years old, and had a desire to go to the church services. Me and a friend went the next day to the morning services. One week later, I returned and was under conviction by the Holy Spirit. I accepted Jesus as my Savior that morning. Later, in talking to my friend, he rejected the Gospel. You will probably say I was drawn by God and had no choice but to respond to the Gospel. I say I was drawn by God and chose to obey. BTW, my friend died a within two years of a rare liver condition. -
Earth Wind and Fire Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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Of course I'll say that God drew you. You walked past LOTS of churches before that point. God at work in precisely the way explained by Calvinist doctrine.
Do you think that it was something of yourself that led to to that church and convicted you? The Holy Spirit was already at work! Just think... If He hadn't you would have said, "nah..." and walked on past.
God evidently did not draw your friend... Sad. -
I heard about a man in hell one time who had the opportunity to come to Houston and he declined. At least in hell he didn't have to worry about the traffic! :laugh: -
Martin Marprelate Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Hello Skandelon,
At last I have a little time to reply as promised to your post on the 'Total Depravity=Hardening' thread. I tried to post it there, but the thread is closed.
You wrote:-
And I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all peoples to Myself." This He said, signifying by what death He would die
I presume that your position is that our Lord draws every single person to Himself, but clearly that cannot be the case because, alas, not every single person is drawn to Christ. If He had said, “I will try to draw all peoples to Myself,” you might have a point, but of course He didn’t say that. What the text means is that He will draw people of all nations, Jew and Gentile alike to Himself (cf. John 10:16). It is very clear that the Father gave to the Son a people, drawn from every nation and language, and He has redeemed them through the cross. This is evidenced by John 6:39 (cf. also John 17:2, 6). Our Lord has not lost one single person of those that the Father gave Him. Therefore your position is erroneous.
John 12:39-41 does not help you either.
Therefore they could not believe, because Isaiah said again: "He has blinded their eyes and hardened their hearts, lest they should see with their eyes, lest they should understand with their hearts and turn, So that I should heal them."
Satan has blinded unbelievers and hardened their hearts, so that they cannot believe. All the preaching and all the persuading in the world cannot help them. “No one can enter a strong man’s house and plunder his goods unless he first binds the strong man” (Mark 3:27). We are all under the domination of Satan, blind and dead in our sins, until Christ, the stronger man comes and rescues us.
Yet it must be understood that men and women are willing captives of Satan. They find the world much more attractive than Christ and will not turn to Him because they will not give up their sinful lifestyles (John 3:19). And everyone of us on this board was once in the same condition (Rom 3:9ff; Titus 3:3-6). People who hear Gospel preaching will sometimes be briefly affected (Mark 4:16-17; John 6:66; Acts 24:25; 26:28), but unless God opens their hearts, the effect will be only temporary.
I suppose that your reference to Acts 28 centres around v27 and the word ‘Grown.’ Your argument is presumably that people’s hearts are not dull by nature, but they grow that way. This interpretation is in direct conflict with a host of texts, including Rom 3:11. ‘There is none who understands; there is none who seeks after God.’ Therefore there must be another interpretation that will harmonize the texts. When people hear the Gospel, they hear it but they do not understand it (v26) and their hearts grow dull and they reject it. When they do that consistently, God, in His justice, hardens them so that they no longer hear at all (v27).
I wrote:-
How did Paul come to believe? ‘But when it pleased God, who separated me from my mother’s womb and called me by His grace, to reveal His Son in me….’ (Gal 1:15-16).
How did Lydia come to believe. Did she open her own heart to receive the word preached by Paul? Did Paul open her heart to receive the word? No and no. ‘The Lord opened her heart to receive the things spoken by Paul’ (Acts 16:14).
How does anyone come to believe? ‘You must be born again’ (John 3:7). Nowour Lord could have used a number of expressions here: ‘You must start again,’ ‘you must take a new turning,’ ‘make a new beginning,’ but all these are things I can do for myself. The one thing over which I had no control, in which I was totally dependent upon another, was my birth. It was irresistible; there was no option for me to stay in the womb! And as if that was not enough, the word translated ‘again’ (Gk. anothen) could also be translated ‘from above.’ We need a birth that only God can give. ‘Every good and perfect gift is from above (Gk. anothen[/I])……Of His own will He brought us forth by the word of truth.' Whose will? Yours or mine, deciding to be born again? I don’t think so.
The real problem that I have with you is that when the Bible says, ‘dead,’ you think. ‘wounded.’
Dead is dead, not wounded. Blind is not short-sighted; deaf is not hard of hearing and leprosy is not acne. They were all utterly incurable conditions in ancient Israel.
Listen, Lazarus is dead, right? He’s been in the tomb for four days. How shall we bring Lazarus back to life? Well, we can tell him how much better it is to be alive and how much fun it will be when he is. We can tell him of all the disadvantages of being dead. We can tell him how much we miss him and are looking forward to him being alive again. We can tell him anything we want for as long as we want as eloquently as we can, but it won’t help. He’s dead, you see, and he can’t hear us.
It’s actually even worse than that, because between you and me, Lazarus is a real stinker (John 11:39). He’s not just dead, but dead in trespasses and sin; he’s in a bad odour with God. He has no right to come back to life. So who will bring Lazarus back to life? Not me, and not you, no matter how wonderful and eloquent your preaching. It is when the Son of God says, “Lazarus, come forth!” that Lazarus will obey the irresistible summons of the Lord Jesus, saying,
Lord, I was blind! I could not see
In Thy marred visage any grace;
But now the beauty of Thy face
In radiant vision dawns on me.
Lord, I was deaf! I could not hear
The thrilling music of Thy voice;
But now I hear Thee and rejoice,
And all Thine uttered words are dear.
Lord, I was dumb! I could not speak
The grace and glory of Thy Name;
But now, as touched by living flame,
My lips Thine eager praises wake.
Lord, I was dead! I could not stir
My lifeless soul to come to Thee;
But now, since Thou hast quickened me,
I rise from sin’s dark sepulcher.
Lord, Thou hast made the blind to see,
The deaf to hear, the dumb to speak,
The dead to live; and lo! I break
The chains of my captivity. William Tidd Matson
Well, this post has grown exceedingly long, and I’ve run out of time. I’m aware that I haven’t answered your question about hardening. I will try to do that at a later stage, but it probably won’t be this weekend, I’m afraid, because I’m too busy.
Steve -
Plus, I'm actually fine with the understanding that he intends to indicate that "both Jews and Gentiles" will be drawn, because that is part of the mystery Paul speaks of later. This mystery is that the Gentiles will be "grafted in." It's not until Paul is called and Peter has his dream that the gospel is sent to the Gentiles thus "grafting them in" and permitting them to enter covenant with the one known up to that point as the God of Israel.
So, you have Israel being hardened/blinded in their rebellion so as to ensure the crucifixion of Christ and the leaving room for the ingrafting of the Gentiles into the church while Christ is on earth, but after he is "lifted up" he send the Holy Spirit and the gospel to "every creature" through the ministry of the church (his means to draw all men to himself). Understand? I'm not asking if you agree, I'm just wanting you to confirm you understand our view.
AND it goes on to contrast the Jews who were hardened with the Gentiles who "will listen." (vs. 28) Now, you appear to jump off this text on those texts you feel are in "direct conflict" but you do so without first handling this passage. You can't simply ignore this verse. Its fine to bring in other verses to help provide an explanation for this one, but please don't just ignore it and move on. Thanks
The fact that God chose Jonah to send to Nineveh and even used effectual means (a big fish) to convince him to obey, doesn't prove that he individually chose who would or would not accept his divine appeal to be reconciled to God.
I have to stop there for now, got to go to dinner... -
Why Harden Hearts
If, because of the Fall, all men have Total Spiritual Inability (the T in Tulip) why does scripture over and over refer to the hardening of hearts due to the deceitfulness of sin, Heb 3:13.
And the answer is simple, because before their hearts were hardened, they possessed limited but sufficient spiritual ability to respond and be healed. -
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