Spiritual Israelite
Well-Known Member
This is not true. This is something that Calvinism has made up and is not taught anywhere in scripture.And here we go again with the able versus unable thing. You're missing the point, SI. The natural condition, the condition from birth, of the human heart, because of the consequences of Adam's sin, is to be wholly inclined against God.
Instead, Jesus said "Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these. Truly I tell you, anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it." (Luke 18:16-17).
If people were "wholly inclined against God" from birth, then what Jesus said would not make any sense. It would mean He was saying "The kingdom of God belongs to such as these little rebels who are wholly inclined against God". Which obviously He would not say because He obviously knew that little children are not "wholly inclined against God" and that no one is "wholly inclined against God" from birth, as Calvinists like yourself falsely claim.
In Romans 1 Paul taught that people who know God but who do not thank Him or worship Him as God "become vain in their imaginations" and "become fools". They are not born that way. They become that way by choice. And they have no excuse for making that choice (Romans 1:20). If the only way they could repent and have faith is if God gave them repentance and faith, then they would have an excuse for not doing so (they couldn't possibly repent and believe without God giving them repentance and faith in that case). But, scripture says they do not have any excuse. Calvinism gives them one.
The implication of them having no excuse for their unbelief is that they are expected to believe and should believe instead. This implies that they chose not to believe even though they could have chosen to believe instead. So, the reason they don't believe is entirely their own fault. But, Calvinism says that they don't believe and can't believe because God hasn't given them faith. So, in Calvinism, the reason for their unbelief is because God chose not to give them faith.For unbelievers, the reason they have no excuse is that they, even having clearly seen all that can be known about God, still suppressing the truth ~ which itself is a decision ~ in unrighteousness.
And what is that purpose? Do you not think it would be revealed in scripture? I see no reason why not. So, what do you think is His purpose of election, keeping in mind that you believe He only chose to elect some people (I think we could safely say a minority of people) while choosing to leave the rest of the people He created in a lost state destined for hell and eventually the lake of fire for eternity? So, in your answer please address His purpose for those that He created while purposely making it so that they would be guaranteed to spend eternity in the lake of fire.To us, maybe so, but to Him, no; this is His purpose of election, as Paul says.
I think you misunderstood me. I wasn't just talking about the time during which Pharoah hardened his own heart and then God hardened his heart and so on. as is written about in scripture. What I'm talking about is how to Pharaoh come to have a hardened heart in the first place which led him to become an evil dictator? So, I'm talking about what made him be that kind of person even before he became the Pharaoh of Egypt? He was born that way or he chose to be that way? I believe it's the latter.I disagree with this statement as a whole, not "in its entirety," but, specifically, that God hardened Pharoah's heart because Pharoah had already hardened his own heart. I do agree, though, that Pharoah hardened his own heart. Now, this may seem contradictory to you, but not so; if you say that, then you might as well say God contradicted Himself:
"...the LORD said to Moses, “When you go back to Egypt, see that you do before Pharaoh all the miracles that I have put in your power. But I will harden his heart, so that he will not let the people go..." (Exodus 4:21), and "...the LORD said to Moses, “...you shall speak all that I command you, and your brother Aaron shall tell Pharaoh to let the people of Israel go out of his land. But I will harden Pharaoh’s heart, and though I multiply my signs and wonders in the land of Egypt, Pharaoh will not listen to you..." (Exodus 7:1-4). And before Moses and Aaron even approach Pharoah... "the LORD said to Moses, “Pharaoh’s heart is hardened; he refuses to let the people go..."
And then, here is the "because" part: "...Pharaoh’s heart remained hardened, and he would not listen to them, as the LORD had said."
Pharoah did make a conscious choice not to listen to Moses and Aaron, and in this way, Pharoah did indeed harden his heart. We agree on that. But it is also true that God hardened Pharoah's heart, just as He told Moses He would. Both are true, so therefore, they have to be resolved in some way, and there is no way to do it than this: Pharoah hardened his own heart, of his own free will and accord, but only because God had ordained it to be so.
Again, I'm going back earlier in his life than that. I understand that at that point God decided to use Pharoah as an example and use him for His purposes. I'm not arguing against God doing that kind of thing. Do you understand what I'm saying? I'm questioning how Pharaoh became that kind of person in the first place before he became the leader of Egypt.So your statement above is inverted to opposite what it should be; Pharoah hardened his own heart, of his own free will and accord, but only because God had ordained it to be so.
I'm not saying that. It's clear to me at this point that you do not understand what I was trying to get at. I hope you didn't spend too much time on this because I'm afraid you wasted some time arguing with a straw man.Pharoah did not somehow "cause God to do what He did."
Yep. I'm not saying otherwise. Okay, I'm going to skip the rest of this about Pharaoh and move on from there.God always does what He does for His own glory, even using the will and actions of men and women to do so.
Nope. I'm not doing that at all. I have reconciled them. You just missed it somehow.Right, but you can't then discount Romans 9:14-18. You have to hold all of these things together, recognize the tension, and reconcile them in some way, I realize you don't mean to be, but you're basically holding that the latter passages you cited nullify the former. That just cannot be done.
Again, while it's true that God has mercy on who He will have mercy and hardens who He will harden without anyone being able to tell Him who He should have mercy on or who He can harden, He decided to give everyone the opportunity to receive His mercy. How else can you interpret Him wanting to have mercy on all people (Romans 11:30-32)?
You assume that a statement saying He will have mercy on whoever He wills means that He will have mercy on some for reasons only He knows while the rest not only don't receive His mercy but don't even get an opportunity to receive His mercy. That's a very bad assumption which can't be reconciled with Him wanting to have mercy on all people.
My view, on the other hand, reconciles both passages together because it doesn't deny that the decision of who to have mercy on is God's alone, but at the same time it acknowledges that His decision was to give the opportunity for all to receive His mercy, which He didn't have to do but did so because He is love (1 John 4:8,16). But, He made receiving mercy conditional upon people repenting of their sins and believing in His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. He didn't have to do that, but that's what He chose to do.