Yes, man is unable because he's not spiritually capable of arriving at substantial and essential understanding of spiritual truth; for either God has blinded men's eyes and deadened their hearts (Jn 12:40), or the devil has blinded the minds of unbelievers (2Cor 4:40), or worse of all is that the spiritual dead (men w/o the Spirit) do not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him and they cannot understand them (1Cor 2:14). And Rom 1 bears this truth out because men actively suppress spiritual truth in their wickedness, not wanting to retain God in their knowledge. It's impossible for these kinds of men to please God because they have no desire to want to know him, to want to understand him, to want to draw close to him. Their darkened mind that is enslaved to the sin nature makes it impossible for them to please God (Rom 8:8), for such a mind is naturally hostile toward God (Rom 8:7)
To your second question: Because man bears the image of God, he can still understand some truth even though that image is badly marred. He can still see something through the darkness of his own soul, but not clearly. Plus Natural Revelation does not reveal the Gospel of Salvation.
To your second question: Because man bears the image of God, he can still understand some truth even though that image is badly marred. He can still see something through the darkness of his own soul, but not clearly. Plus Natural Revelation does not reveal the Gospel of Salvation.
I just redeemed some time looking at the Rom3 verses and context we've yet to go through. I'm finding the view of a general inability in unredeemed man to seek to be inconsistent with the Scripture. I'll explain why when you have the time to get into those verses.
I've also said a few things about 1Cor2 which seems to be on the Total Depravity list of proof-texts. As I've said already, I think this negates context in 1Cor2. If you'd like to go through this, I'm happy to put it on the list of things to review in context.
As part of what I will discuss re: Rom1 if and when we get back to that chapter, I'm also finding "Natural Revelation" to be a suspect term and will be going back to "General Revelation" since Rom1 is speaking of God revealing certain things about Himself to every man.
I will also suggest that there is some form of Special Revelation in Rom1 in the sense of "God revealed it to them" as the explanatory clause in Rom1:19 clearly says. IOW God personally makes His existence clear to men. Therefore this is beyond NR as God has not simply left men to observe and see from His [natural] creation that He exists. Rather, God personally makes His existence clear to all men. This is thus General (all men) and Special in the sense that God has not made or left His existence subject to men knowing by human reason. Thus, as Paul says, God holds all men liable for not rejecting Him - men have no excuse.
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