Yes, I see a choice as well. And the unregenerate (hereafter TU) made the only choice they could make given their state of spiritual death, depraved heart and evil nature. But TU do not want to understand, so this is why they suppress the truth by their wickedness (v.18). And why do they suppress the truth? Because they do not want to retain the knowledge of God in their hearts and minds. So,if they don't want to understand because of their corrupt heart, then how can they?
How do we account for Noah when God said all flesh corrupted their way upon the earth?
How do we account for Ps14 in David's time and used by Paul in Rom3:11 speaking of fools while in the background were God's people? Were His people regenerate? Were they wicked and suppressing truth - all of them? Note I said in David's time there are God's people. Just as in Noah's time, was Noah not an exception to what Paul is saying?
All Paul is really doing is establishing that both Jews and Gentiles are under sin and that Jews are not better than Gentiles. I see no way to make this into more than it is. I see no way to say that no man in history ever accepted God at GR. I do see times in history when things had gotten so bad that God looked down and stepped in. And I see that Jews were no better than Gentiles in this regard. All Paul has to do to make his case is that such times included both Jews and Gentiles.
Aren't all our choices driven by the desires of want or need?
Also, needs and desires can be for less suffering, a better life, better things for others we care for. How many have experienced the downside of living in sin and cried out for God to relieve us from it? How many cry out to God at times of intense personal desperation or the same of others we might see? Needs and desires can go both ways. And I don't see all people having rejected God at GR.
Yes, God made his existence clear to all men, especially to Adam! How did that work out for him? And Adam did not come into this world with any corrupt spiritual baggage, as all his progeny have for all these millennia.
God made certain things plain through Natural Revelation -- through his creation. But that is not the same as saying that God gives spiritual understanding to all men -- that he enlightens their minds and hearts so that they can understand. Or to borrow Creation language that Paul used with the Corinthians, Romans 1 doesn't say that God "made his light shine in men's hearts to give us the light of the knowledge of His majesty, glory, power and attributes through what he has made". I submit to you that this is why there is not even a hint in Romans 1 that any unregenerate ever responded positively to God's Natural Revelation. And we mustn't forget that God revealed things about himself through his creation from the very beginning! Adam (who by the way was a very brilliant man) saw everything all of us have seen for thousand of years, yet God did nothing to prevent him from disobeying.
And if you're wondering why I limit Romans 1 to unregenerate sinners, it's because of the concluding Indictment Paul makes of the "entire human race" in Romans 3 -- an indictment that cannot include God's chosen people, since all his elect are fully justified in Christ.
And if you're wondering why I limit Romans 1 to unregenerate sinners, it's because of the concluding Indictment Paul makes of the "entire human race" in Romans 3 -- an indictment that cannot include God's chosen people, since all his elect are fully justified in Christ.
Re: God's chosen people, Paul's indictment includes them. This is the specific case he is making. Both Jews and Gentiles are under sin and Jews are no better than Gentiles. The historical record in Scripture is what Paul uses to prove this. And in general all Paul says is correct, but the same historical record shows that not all men rejected God as some or most did.
But do the exceptions make the Rule? This is a big question.
And the larger ones even are the kinds of questions I asked toward the end of my 5673. The huge question that is begging to be answered is Why and How did the exceptions differ from the general rule? Were the Abels, Enochs, Noahs, Abrahams, Moseses, Davids, Joshuas, etc. fundamentally different spiritually from all the reprobates who perished in their sins?. Or since these exceptions did indeed respond differently to God than their counterparts, could it be that God himself is the fundamental difference that accounts for why these exceptions even exist in the first place!? As for me and my household, I say the answer is to be found in this latter question. And I'm quite confident of this for two reasons: First, because Unconditional Election occurred in the post-fall Garden; and, secondly, because Paul essentially tells us that all men (in the distributive sense) come from one lump of clay; yet, the Potter had the divine prerogative to make a second lump from the first (Rom 9:21). Lump Number 1 = Adam from whom all the human race descends naturally and spiritually. Lump Number 2 = ultimately the Last Adam who descended from Eve's godly line, as opposed to the Serpent's ungodly spiritual seed.
So..."What do you think?"
So..."What do you think?"
As I've said, there are a lot of things going on. I think God has a big case to make and prove and the adversary is not the idiot with horns that charlatans like to pretend they are casting out of people in order to fill arenas and make profits in our times.
As I said, I have no objection to the potter and the clay as it's put forth in context, but I see it as a part of the case, not the entirety. I have no issue with Him hardening who He sees fit to harden and that He makes some for honor and some for dishonor. As I said about John the Baptist, the fact that God dropped him into history when He did without asking anyone for approval is good enough for me. And all is done by Him per His perfect essence. I don't question Him in this or any regard (I do ask Him questions, a lot) and I don't get bogged down in all the arguments of men who can't fathom the God of Love in the NC being the same God who wiped out all of humanity but 8 at one point. Or the same God who dropped a fire-bomb on an entire perverted culture and made a salt statue of someone who disobeyed Him. Or the same God who in fighting for His people wiped out something like 180,000 of their enemies while his people slept. They woke, went out from their tents, and their enemies were all dead.
I see this all as a case being made that will cover every and all allegations and accusations made against Him. And this is not as cut and dry and simplistic so as to fit this or that doctrine of men.
Another example that trends into this. Have you ever looked at something that shows all the different "isms" of socio-political theories over the ages? While all the other legal matters are being proven He at the same time is proving that we were never designed to rule apart from Him. One teacher I know once said something to the effect, we can't even rule our own little piece of dirt that our spirit and soul live in.
So, just for the record, I do not have a high view of man (and I am one). But this applies to doctrines and traditions of men also. Again, I think there are layers to parts of Romans and I think we have to stay tight to the case Paul is focused on making.
At first glance I don't think I'd include Messiah in the lump of clay. But that's part of what's interesting in some of these threads. Some will make us think things we've previously not considered.