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What's the distinction between a good book and scripture?
Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by Skandelon, Mar 18, 2010.
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Archangel,
I'll wade past the demeaning and snide comments to address the otherwise well thought out response. I don't know why these discussions must always be brought into the mud, but anyway...
And I quoted from the last part of this saying, "God ordained whatsoever comes to pass," yet you argue I'm not saying the same thing. I agree with Ben's points regarding this on the other thread so I'll leave it at that for now...
If they are good, true or right then isn't their origin from God? If so, then how do they differ from that which is in scripture?
Same question with things that are wrong. If their origin is not from God then was God informed at some point of them? This is important because it addresses the origin of truth and lies...the origin of good and evil.
According to Calvinists he is sovereign over both writings, right? He did bring both of them to pass through means that could not have been otherwise, right? Bunyan's work was just as 'ordain to come to pass' as scripture was, right? Both express God's truth, right?
From what I can tell the only difference in God's 'control' over the two is that He deems one of them as 'authoritative/inspired' and not the other one. There is nothing really 'unique' about the way in which scripture is 'brought to pass,' is there?
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Your red herring is cute, but only avoids the issue. If God sovereignly 'ordains whatsoever comes to pass' then he sovereignly ordained the Pilgrims Progress and the book of Romans to come to pass. You have yet to demonstrate how God is in anyway more or less sovereignly in control over the writing of either of these works. The only uniqueness of scripture's origin in a compatibilistic system is that God labels one with authority.
I think scripture is authoritative because it is uniquely under His direct control, whereas in your system everything is 'under his control,' thus the line is blurred as to what is 'of God' and what is not. -
God is the source of all things, and God has determined all things, but He hasn't made all things of the same nature and authority. Scripture is scripture because of its nature. I can write, "Jesus is Lord." But my writing is not authoritive, because God has ordained it unauthoritive. When Paul writes "Jesus is Lord," it is authoritive because of his ordination and the the witness of the Spirit.*
Your carnal sense of justice is tripping you up. You sure you're not into JEDP?
*Note: I'm simply drawing a distinction. This is not a comprehensive essay on the tests of canonicity.
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Jesus, God's only begotten, conceived by supernatural means, just like scripture, God's inspired words, conceived by supernatural means.
I was conceived by mom and dad just like everyone else. It's the uniqueness of the conception that sets Christ apart as being supernatural, just as the uniqueness of scriptures inspiration sets it apart. You have made my point. Its not JUST the product but the supernatural and unique means of its conception that sets it apart as being "of God." In a "deterministic" world view everything is equally 'of God' in that God is sovereignly bringing it to pass. He may use second causes (etc) to bring it about but it is still HIM doing it in such a way that it could not have been otherwise, so the outcome is the exact same.
I'm not attempting to argue that you don't acknowledge scripture as authoritative. I understand that you do. My argument is that you undermine that claim of authority by suggesting that God is as 'in control' over 'this' as He is 'that.' You leave no room for anything being independent or separate from God in any real sense. -
You are ignoring the wording of the Decree, reading only the first provision:
I. God from all eternity, did, by the most wise and holy counsel of His own will, freely, and unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass; yet so, as thereby neither is God the author of sin, nor is violence offered to the will of the creatures; nor is the liberty or contingency of second causes taken away, but rather established.
That makes as much sense as reading John 3:16 and stopping with: For God so loved the world,. Certainly a minister of the Gospel would not engage in obfuscation! If you are obfuscating, and I am not saying you are, is it by your own free will or are you a puppet in control of the puppet master? -
OldReg, Ben covered this issue in the other thread and that hasn't been sufficiently rebutted so as to give me cause to readdress it here, so I'll defer you to that post... Post 111
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God is in just as much control over the Origin of Species as He is in Genesis. It's just that one came supernaturally and the other did not. (And one is true and the other is not, but that's a different issue.) -
Aaron,
In your system God is in as much control over the authoring of Pilgrim's progress as He is the book of Romans because you believe in a deterministic world where God has ultimately brought all things to pass according to his foreordained or predetermined plan. Whether he does that through natural/secondary means matters little because the end result is the same...God determined it to be in such a manner that it could not be otherwise. He originated it, he ordained it, he brought it to pass through various means, period.
If you think putting a couple secondary dominos ('natural means') between God and the inevitable consequence somehow explains away this problem then that is probably more of a reflection of the bias you carry into this discussion, because I know if you were sitting on a jury you wouldn't be okay with a defendant making a similar case. Now, I know you think that is 'carnal' justice, but only if you can show Paul's intent in Romans 9 is actually meaning to say that God is just to harden a man from birth due to the Fall unto certain condemnation. Since Paul clearly believed in the potential salvation of those hardened there is no basis on which to draw such conclusions. The judicial hardening was unique to a specific group at a specific time for a specific redemptive purpose, yet Cals want to apply it to a universal concept of God's justice in dealing with the nature of all men from birth. It is simply unfounded. -
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Plus, in regard to this verse, even some 'reformed' scholars teach in agreement with non-Cals such as Adam Clarke, who wrote: "He hath permitted or suffered a lying spirit to influence thy prophets. Is it requisite again to remind the reader that the Scriptures repeatedly represent God as doing what, in the course of his providence, he only permits or suffers to be done? Nothing can be done in heaven, in earth, or hell, but either by his immediate energy or permission. This is the reason why the Scripture speaks as above."
"...we are not to imagine that God is ever put upon new counsels; or that he needs to consult with angels, or any creature, about the methods he should take; or that he is the author of sin, or the cause of any man's telling or believing a lie." - Matthew Henry
"That is, suffered the lying spirit to suggest a lie to them..." -Gill
So, you can see there is a clear distinction in what God ACTIVELY does (bringing scripture) and what he 'suffers' or 'permits' to occur. I don't believe determinists, such as yourself, really allow for that distinction for the reasons already mentioned.
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The Scriptures are unique in a great many ways, and in ways more glorious than your beliefs allow.
But that's the beside the point. God knew this child would be raped, is observing the rape and not intervening. You have God in a more culpable situation than that of which you accuse the Calvinist. -
It's like debating if domino #2 or domino #3 triggered the gun to fire, instead of asking who set up the dominos and pushed the first one over. It's just a distraction from the real issue at hand.
Again, is it necessary to remind you that the Scriptures repeatedly represent God as doing what, in the course of his providence, he only permits or suffers to be done?
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You can only be faithful to your soteriology and exonernate God by denying His omniscience. You have no other escape. -
And in regard to divine foreknowledge there most certainly is an appeal to mystery. Any time one speculates as to how an infinite timeless being knows something BEFORE (a human linear concept) it happens and how that relates to causality, they are walking into mystery indeed. But I'm not the one speculating that prior knowledge of an action dictates determination of said action, you are. I'm simply saying its mysterious WITHOUT drawing such speculations. -
Keep up the good work Aaron.
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evangelist6589 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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The strongest points of one's argument are not typically reflected in the portion that his opponents address, but in the portions ignored, but nevertheless...
2. If "foreknowledge" = "predetermination" why to both terms even exist, and why does scripture choose one and not the other in a given context? Is it your contention that they are meant to be synonymous? -
He super intened over them, to make sure ALl were exactly as he saw fit them to include...
Every word/fact true as was written down...
they ARE revelations to God in written form, just as jesus was/is in physical form!
IF we follow your logic here....
Why not additional revelations from God, as people would have same HS in them as paul/peter/John
canon would be open...
More importantly, why couldn't there be other Christs/messiahs for us today?
If the Bible not unique and alone, why would jesus be seen as such also?
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