How many times do I have to tell you that you don't understand what that verse means?
Well, how many times do you want me to... well, dismiss your saying that for what it is (rubbish)? <
smile> I just don't... "understand" it in the way you want me to, because... it's wrong. <
smile>
And, you noticeably don't even bother to address what I show you about how the word faith is used in scripture.
Right, because you change the definition into something entirely different that what it is, verbatim, in Scripture. See below...
You are blinded by your false Calvinist doctrine. Your eyes are glazed over so that you can't see that God holds all people responsible to put their faith and trust in Him and in Jesus Christ as their personal Lord and Savior. God does not do that for anyone.
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Faith is our confidence and trust in God.
No, it's not. That's the direct result of God's assurance ~ which Hebrews one directly says faith is... the very definition given to us by God through the writer of Hebrews... being given to us. Hebrews cannot be misunderstood:
- "Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen." (ESV, NASB, LSB, RSV)
- "Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." (KJV, NKJV, WEB)
- "Now faith is the reality of what is hoped for, the proof of what is not seen." (CDB)
One version, the AMP, says assurance, but then parenthetically calls it a title deed, and confirmation, which is really good... We cannot give ourselves this assurance, or this substance, this reality, this title deed, or this confirmation. Only God can. But, once God gives it, we can most certainly rest in it. Kind of like you can rest assured, you know, because I'm assuring you now, that your... barbs... don't bother me... <
smile> Because what you're doing is on the order of denying the nose on your face. <
smile>
God does not force us to have assurance.
LOL! I agree. But he does give it to you, just like, well, only I can assure you of things that only I can grant anyone. Only God can assure you that you are His, that your sins have been forgiven, that you have eternal life, that He has given you His Spirit... yeah, all those things.
Your attempts to turn people into robots are nothing more than a complete joke.
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Your attempts to turn people into robots are nothing more than a complete joke.
Well, it
would be a complete joke to suggest that, yes. <
smile> But yeah, I've... attempted... no such thing...
As you have wrongly said. Nothing you say makes any sense whatsoever. Not a single thing. You have no clue whatsoever about how salvation works. None.
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smile> I just got you all riled up. <
chuckles> Not that I've meant to, but yeah...
God offers salvation to all people.
He does, I agree, but He does not call all people to His salvation. Yet again, God, desiring to show His wrath and to make known His power, has endured with much patience vessels of wrath prepared for destruction, in order to make known the riches of his glory for vessels of mercy, which He has prepared beforehand for glory ~ even us whom He has called, not from the Jews only but also from the Gentiles. This call is irrefutably limited in scope, limited to those vessels of His mercy.
That is what is portrayed in the parable in Matthew 22:1-13. You have no understanding of that at all.
No, I agree. But if God gets what He wants... if, as Job says, God's purposes cannot be thwarted, then what does that tell you about His offer?
Hey, good on you for citing Matthew 22 in particular. Let's couple that with Romans 9. Jesus says, "many are called, but few are chosen" (Matthew 22:14). And Paul says, ""<
smile> there,
You think Jesus bashes down the doors of people's hearts and lets Himself in.
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You think God forces Himself upon people...
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This thread is about free will...
Right, and the will is not the issue at all, it's the heart, as I have repeatedly ~ to you and others ~ said. To make it about the will is missing the point entirely. The will always follows the heart, the spirit, the person's inner self. And unless he or she is born again, he or she will not ~ will not, not "cannot" ~ accept God's very free, to all, offer of salvation.
You give people an excuse...
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God wants to have mercy on all people...
Right, but why doesn't He? Why then is not everyone saved? What first does it
depend on? Remember (yet again), God says,
"I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I have compassion" (Exodus 33, Romans 9). And so, for any one person, being one of God's elect
"depends not on human will or exertion, but on God, Who has mercy" (Romans 9:16). What you (and other like-minded folks... in the footsteps of Pelagius and Arminius) are doing is ~ in effect ~ placing an
obligation on God's part for extending His grace, which ~ again, in effect ~ makes His grace, which is unmerited favor, out to be something other than grace entirely. And really robbing Him of His own free will, actually, you know, as if that could
possibly be done, anyway...
You take almost every verse of the Bible you come across out of context.
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eye roll>
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sigh> Same old, same old... Over and over and over again...
Grace and peace to you, SI.