Some of us laugh
Some of us cry
Some of us smoke
Some of us lie
But it's all just the way
that we cope with our lives...
God said "they are like us now" in that Adam and Eve ate from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil (God uses the royal "we" to refer to Himself all through the creation narrative, though it can also be used as proof of the Trinity), not to mean that humanity was like God and Satan. If you believe what you say about foolishness/ignorance being the only cause for disapproval, read Romans. God has written His law on our hearts, that even those who never hear the Gospel are without excuse.
I would counter by referring to the countless instances of God "hardening" a man's heart, as well as numerous references to the opposite effect... Even Paul's conversion. I would specifically point to Exodus, with the hardening of Pharaoh.
Grace and peace to you from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ.--Romans 1:7
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True. But scripture cannot contradict scripture. Pharaoh had been given a chance to allow the slaves to go free without punishment. He refused. So God took full punishment on Egypt for the entire 400 years of slavery and all the children slain by that Pharaoh who tried to kill Moses. Thus to exact punishment, he hardened Pharaoh’s heart.
Paul's conversion is an example of a man being given a choice. He asked what he was supposed to do. He could have refused, and added Aninias to his list of people to arrest. He chose to go God's way.
This is a closed book with me. I believe in man's free will. That said, if another does not, who am I to judge and say that they are wrong? If we both are sincere in our service to God, we do God a disservice by allowing that point to be our dividing line. United we stand, but a house divided against itself will surely fall.
God Bless.
Pen.
Some of us laugh
Some of us cry
Some of us smoke
Some of us lie
But it's all just the way
that we cope with our lives...
Right you are. No reason to fight. However, for the sake of the pure intellectual argument, I would like to make one last comment. True, on the surface Pharaoh was offered the choice of allowing Israel to go free. However, as I understand it (just clarifying my point--don't want to get into a bigger mess, here), internally his heart was continually hardened, in order that God might accomplish His will in punishing Egypt. Last post, I promise.
Grace and peace to you from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ.--Romans 1:7
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Some theologians argue that the action of God's conviction on the human heart will either soften it or harden it - that the statement "God hardened Pharoh's heart" does not necessarily mean that the "hardening" was consciously done by God's action, but that the condition of Pharoh's heart caused it to "harden" in response to the conviction of God upon it. Since God knows us intimately, it may be assumed that God was certain that Pharoh would choose thusly, but there was a chance (however small) that Pharoh might have chosen otherwise.
"I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen, not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else." - C.S. Lewis
Grace and peace to you from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ.--Romans 1:7
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We are condensed experience. Our 'choices' are influenced by personal history and present environment. In order to continue operating in the world, we are fooled by the brain into thinking that we have freewill. It makes sense out of our conditioned responses.
It seems to me that true free choice, if there is such a thing, would have to be spontaneous and random, free from premeditation and bias. It would have to break the linear nature of the cause and effect process that rules the Universe. There is no freewill. For an intellectually demanding argument against freewill read Derek Parfit's Reasons and Persons. For a more relaxing and leisurely argument, read John Gray's Straw Dogs.
Faith is believing what you know ain't so - Mark Twain
The preachers deal with men of straw, as they are men of straw themselves - Henry David Thoreau
The way to see faith is to shut the eye of reason - Benjamin Franklin
The teaching of the church, theoretically astute, is a lie in practice and a compound of vulgar superstitions and sorcery - Leo Tolstoy
"I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen, not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else." - C.S. Lewis
I think that "gave" is a verb, is it not? Verbs imply action, and give is a relatively active verb. I would also refer you to the episode in which God confuses (I believe that is the term used, though I may be wrong) the Egyptians, and causes them to give over their wealth to the Israelites before they left. Plus, the term hardening is used so repetitiously that it seems to indicate God's direct action. Additionally the term "elect" and "those He chose" would imply that God does in fact elect His people, and if He does that, why should He not have the power to force action or deny the will of people being exercised?
Grace and peace to you from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ.--Romans 1:7
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Webster's Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary lists 53 definitions for the word "give" - so it's not quite as cut-and-dried as you're trying to make it. I'm trying to make a linguistic point here about what the word "gave" implies in terms of God's action. "Give over" is defined as such: "to put into the care of; transfer." So, I would reply that God's "giving over" of those listed in Romans to their "unnatural passions" was less God doing something in the way of choosing what these people would serve and more of allowing them to be put into the care of the Devil due to their choices (cf. Paul's recommendation in I Corinthians about the man living in sexual immorality). Such behavior is passive action - He withdraws His care and allows them to be "given" completely to their passions without mitigating conviction from the Holy Spirit. I can't say for certain that that is what it means, but the point I'm making about "give" is that it doesn't imply necessarily here that God did anything that impeded the free choice of these individuals.
The frequency of the usage of "hardens" does not change what it means; C.S. Lewis said that Christ generally recieved one of three responses here on earth: 1) you worshipped him; 2) you were terrified of him; 3) you hated him. I believe that that's true, and I don't wonder if the conviction of the Holy Spirit on the human heart doesn't create the same responses in humans. The sun alternately hardens and softens different materials here on earth - perhaps the contents of our hearts create a similar interaction with the warmth of the Holy Spirit is applied.
"I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen, not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else." - C.S. Lewis
A.) You precisely made my point with regards to the "give over" thing: God, through the withdrawal of His gracious assistance allows the men to exercise their own will (I will not say free, for a different reason). But until that point, God had been restraining them. That is the eternal way it works: God restrains the sinful nature of man, and when He does not, man sins.
B.) God knows the effect of His own Spirit beforehand-- therefore, in His infinite wisdom and according to His plan, He uses the effect of the Spirit to accomplish His means. As John Calvin says, God does not sit idly in a tower hoping that fortune will accomplish His means.
Grace and Peace.
Grace and peace to you from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ.--Romans 1:7
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The "restraint" is not active - He stops them from nothing - but He may be convicting them and dropping consequences into their lives to try and steer them away from the cliff they're heading pell-mell towards - but I do not believe He actively impedes our free will.
Knowing how we will react to a certain situation does not mean He made us choose as we did. We still freely chose, and there is always the chance that we could choose otherwise.
"I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen, not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else." - C.S. Lewis
Ah, now we reach the fundamental break. Calvinism for me, and I think you would feel comfortable describing yourself as Wesleyan or Arminian? I believe that man's will is always (in the present life, of course) disposed toward evil, and cannot overcome it. I believe that only God's active restraint prevents totality of sin. However, I do not argue that we freely choose to do evil, only that God at times chooses to restrain us. Calvin says we sin "of necessity, but not under compulsion." We will sin, this is inevitable. But God does not compel us to do so.
Grace and peace to you from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ.--Romans 1:7
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There once was a scotsman named Drew
Who put too much wine in his stew
He felt a bit drunk
And fell off his bunk
And landed smack into his shoe ~(C) Ms Niamh Anne King