Say what now? What did I say that isn't true about what you believe?
Hm. Well you do it in this very post. Your whole post is saturated with it:
You think that salvation is entirely up to God's choice and not up to man's choice at all, right?
No. <
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...you believe that people are created with "total depravity" in the sense that they have no ability to ever do anything that God commands them to do, such as to believe and repent, without Him giving them faith and repentance that is then guaranteed to result in them believing and repenting. Right?
No. <
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So, you think that God, who is love (1 John 4:8), decided to save some and not even offer any opportunity at all for the rest to be saved...
No. <
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So, that means you believe it was God's will and His choice that a majority of people would end up suffering eternal torment.
No. <
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...like you believe He hates Esau, for no real reason?
No. <
smile> But He did hate Esau, as He Himself stated. And Esau is representative there of a whole lot of people. So we have to come to grips with that somehow... <
smile> Yes, God is love, as you say, but He is also capable of hate. So what does that say about love and hate and their... supposed... opposition to each other? <
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Which would then mean, in your view, God is partially love and partially hate.
No. <
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Or partially love and partially indifferent and uncaring...
No. <
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I don't mean this in a bad way or to be insulting at all, but I don't care what you think...
Ah, so that's why you've spent so much time here arguing... I see... <
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Is it not possible that both belief systems contain some truth even though they disagree on the TULIP doctrines and such?
The only reason there is a "five points of Calvinism" is that each one of Jacobus Arminius's five "objections," as they were called, were refuted from Calvin's far greater exposition of systematic theology. John Calvin's full body of work goes far, far beyond just those five points. But in answer to your question, the point is that Arminius's chief aim was to refute what Calvin said about those five things. So no, it's not possible that both belief systems contain some truth because they are diametrically opposed on those matters; this was Arminius's intent. To state it logically, 'A' and 'Not A' cannot both be true at the same time. And to you question about your self-contradictive statements, it's generally
because you hold to at least a little of both.
For example, I put a major emphasis on God's sovereignty, as do Calvinists. Yet, I'm not a Calvinist.
I think, from some of the things you've said, Spiritual Israelite, that if you did not have such an aversion to Calvinism, you would realize you're more ~ maybe far more ~ Calvinist than you even now know. <
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Does that fact alone make my view contradictory?
No. <smile>
Of course not. I just understand His sovereignty differently than Calvinists do in some ways (and agree in other ways). To me, man is required to choose whether or not to repent and believe because God sovereignly chose to make man responsible to do that.
Hmmm... I might state that slightly differently, but yes, man is required to do these things, sure. The way I would say it is, God's grace comes to us initially free, but certainly demands that we respond accordingly. But, I would then quickly say that because of the Holy Spirit's continuing work in us, we will respond accordingly. Philippians 2:13 again...
... unlike Calvinists, I do not see faith, which is something we are responsible to do, as scripture teaches (Acts 16:30-31, John 6:27-29), as being of the type of works that do not save us.
Uh... what? Faith is something we are responsible to do? Let's substitute in the Biblical definition of faith from Hebrews 11:1 and see if that makes any sense... <smile>:
"The assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen, is something we are responsible to do."
When put that way, isn't the implication of that that we assure and convict ourselves? Which is to say that we work this in ourselves, which is to make faith out to be a work of man? No,
God gives us this assurance, and the
Spirit convicts us of these things, which I think ~ I think ~ you agree with. We are required to
act on the faith we've been
given, for sure ~ which, again, I think... I think... you agree with. So, maybe that's what you're trying to say...?
So I'm going to cut out a couple of phrases set off by commas in what you said above: So you said here, "I do not see faith as being the type of works that do not save us." I have a hard time making any sense of that comment. Are you saying that Calvinists
do see faith as a work that saves us? If so, that's absolutely not true; any Calvinist worth his salt would say ~ as I have many times ~ that faith is not a work at all but the gift of God (Ephesians 2:8)... a gift of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 12:9).
By definition (Hebrews 11:1) it
has to be; the assurance and conviction can
only be given by God by His Spirit.
Calvinists think faith would be of that type of work that doesn't save if it was possible for someone to choose to repent and believe rather than being something that God has to give someone in order for them to believe.
Ugh. Sorry. No. I mean here's the thing, Spiritual Israelite. And I have said this many, many times, not only to you but also to others, in this and other threads: No one ~ denies that we choose, and choose freely, one way or the other. No Calvinist, not John Calvin himself... no one. But it's not really about our choosing or our will. At any given time, our will always depends on our
heart... who we are at our core, the
spirit in us. This is what always
drives the will.
Now, that should be enough; if you can accept that, then it might still be hard, but that should start the dominoes falling, so to speak... but I'll continue... <smile>
The incontrovertible fact is that someone... anyone... will choose to repent and believe only if... taking this language from the prophet Ezekiel (11:19-20; 36:26-27) again... only if God first gives him or her a new heart, puts within him or her a new spirit, removes the heart of stone from his or her flesh and gives him or her a heart of flesh, puts His Spirit within him or her. This is what happens when one is born again of the Spirit. And faith, which, again, is God's assurance and conviction by the Spirit, is the
vehicle through which this happens (Ephesians 2:8). In this way, we are God's workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them, as Paul says in Ephesians 2:10. As a result of that, we are then a new creation, and yes, we choose to repent and believe, because of this newness of life.
Now, back to Acts 16 and John 6, which you cited above. In both cases, do you not see a desire in the... question askers... to be saved (Acts 16:30) and to do the works of God, to have the bread that saves (John 6)? They don't quite get it, obviously, kind of like Nicodemus didn't quite get what Jesus was saying about being born again in John 3). But I way they want to do these things
because they have been given this new spirit by God; this is
why they know they need these things,
why they want to do these things... otherwise they would think it all foolishness,
Grace and peace to you.