Did Jesus Die on The Cross for The Just/Elect/Saved Whose Names Are Written in The Book of Life OR

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Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
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No, I am making a case that we all hear.

This removes the predestined issue that only saved people hear.
But Jesus shows us we all hear and we allow ourselves to be saved or we place other things in the way and ultimately reject God.
I have not said only saved people hear. I don't recall anyone else saying it either.

Now if you wanna discuss ear circumcision, that would be a different issue...
 

FollowerofShiloh

Well-known member
Jan 24, 2024
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I have not said only saved people hear. I don't recall anyone else saying it either.

Now if you wanna discuss ear circumcision, that would be a different issue...
Never said you did. But many people are reading. You are doing wonderfully (y)
 

Rufus

Well-known member
Feb 17, 2024
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If grace cannot be refused and Christ cannot be freely accepted.....

the logical implication becomes that God could have foreordained the salvation of all, just as easily, just as righteously, as He foreordained the salvation of only some.

Even if we accept the out of context, proof texts of "inability" the moral dilemma remains and there is no covering up this morally ambivalent god, some apologists even say evil god.

I cannot even believe this is even something that needs to be debated, but since people seem to be indoctrinated we have no choice but to defend the Gospel of Christ Jesus.

Any doctrine that denies the power and sufficiency of the message of the Gospel and requires a grace that cannot be refused is non-biblical.[/QUOTE]

Only by worldly, fleshly, carnal, ungodly logic. Do you really think that God thinks like we do, and that his ways are ours? Might wanna ponder Isa 55:8-9 someday.
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
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I cannot even believe this is even something that needs to be debated, but since people
seem to be indoctrinated we have no choice but to defend the Gospel of Christ Jesus.
Ah. So you are being forced against your will? Interesting in that peculiar and contradictory way you are so good at displaying!
 

studier

Well-known member
Apr 18, 2024
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I normally don't read extensive posts, but I've found myself combing through yours. Given that perhaps this is only to find fault, I've yet to find many with maybe a few exceptions *providing notice that I'll address if I encounter said fault.

God grants (the possibility of) repentance that otherwise the law only foreshadowed in the temple's sacrificial system. In that system, which is a figure of the reality, no one was 'chosen' in being granted repentance. Surely, that fact would be of relevance in reality. Or so I would think.


I agree with what you say here about the possibility of repentance. In this case [the possibility of repentance] was given by the giving of the Gospel so men could hear and believe or reject. So, it's just the typical "repent and believe" command from the Gospels based upon a proclamation being given to men to hear and to accept with changed thinking from what they heard or to reject and remain with unchanged thinking.

I'm noticing once again these usual concepts normally advocated by those who express them casually as part of the theory that God makes the dead alive so they can hear and there is no will of man involved. This is another of those concepts that they seem to fit into that mold.

But, IOW, it's not 'I grant you repentance because I elected you' and made you alive so you could repent and believe.'

I did like the confirmation of the Rom1 power of the Gospel to save. I don't think some grasp the power of the Gospel to save the spiritually dead.
 

FollowerofShiloh

Well-known member
Jan 24, 2024
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Thank you. I think you have some sense of there being middle ground which
allows for the complexity of what is involved in the process of being saved.
Thank You!

I understand many things are involved that we really are unaware of. The Bible is like reading an outline at times and we're left guessing but what is point A and B here? And still at the same time, we just cannot throw things into the mix because none of it was ever written to be included. So it leaves us to be very generic in our answers. One day we will know for certain. But today, we only can really go by what the Bible claims.
 

Rufus

Well-known member
Feb 17, 2024
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I also cannot understand how those who follow this system cannot see this! :unsure:

How does one feel okay making Jesus a liar. "Believe" but you can't believe.....oops!!
I suppose you believe that sinless perfection, practically speaking, is attainable in this age (Jn 5:14; 8:11)? Or is "Jesus a liar" to borrow your phrase?
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
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Thank You!

I understand many things are involved that we really are unaware of. The Bible is like reading an outline at times and we're left guessing but what is point A and B here? And still at the same time, we just cannot throw things into the mix because none of it was ever written to be included. So it leaves us to be very generic in our answers. One day we will know for certain. But today, we only can really go by what the Bible claims.
I do not think I am alone to have blended into the mix my own life experience. We hear so many things that are wrong, even from popular big-time widely broadcast and heard preachers who more generally speaking otherwise have fairly solid Biblical teachings. I cannot tell you how many I have heard it said, God does not speak to people any more. Eh. I would not be a believer had He not spoken to me in a way I could not deny no matter how much I very much did not want to believe it really was Him... as I was very much invested and inclined to deny that the voice I heard came from the One, the only, the almighty God, the One I had rebelled against in my youth and run from in defiance and disobedience the majority of my adult life. How well acquainted I became then in my inability to believe, how terrified to experience in real world events the spiritual circumcision of my flesh. I wonder how many experience such things. I don't expect many have.
 

Rufus

Well-known member
Feb 17, 2024
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Thanks, but I have no idea of what you're talking about.
It's really simple. All of us are prisoners of our Essence (nature); for we cannot not sin. Even God is a prisoner of his; for he cannot lie, cannot deny himself, cannot be tempted. So God and we his have this inability thingy in common, don't we? But...since God cannot do some things, does this mean that he is not a free moral agent?
 

2ndTimothyGroup

Well-known member
Feb 20, 2021
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I have commented on it a number of times from the angle of, how did Jesus fulfill all righteousness
in being baptized by John? This seems to get skipped over a lot, but it is my contention that Jesus
fulfilled all righteousness in having John baptize him because John, of the house of Levi, his father
being a Levitical priest, was an instrument in the transference of the priesthood to Jesus, which then
signaled and necessitated a change in the law. It was also part of the Torah law that priests undergo
ritual cleansing before taking up their priestly duties (limited in age between twenty-five and fifty).
Very, very interesting. I haven't had the time to look at this angle, but I'm sure that you are aware of it. Perhaps we will communicate in the future regarding this matter! I love hearing new things from others with eyes that see, and ears that hear!
 

2ndTimothyGroup

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Feb 20, 2021
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It's really simple. All of us are prisoners of our Essence (nature); for we cannot not sin. Even God is a prisoner of his; for he cannot lie, cannot deny himself, cannot be tempted. So God and we his have this inability thingy in common, don't we? But...since God cannot do some things, does this mean that he is not a free moral agent?
I hear what you're saying, however, as a "reporter" of the Bible, I see a completely different Element to God, and it is this:

Our Powerful, Almighty God has always had an Eternal Plan which He causes all events recorded in His Heavenly Scroll . . . to take place. This is a most unpopular view, but that's fine with me. I merely report what I have found in His Holy Word, which He desires that we Understand and Know. Therefore, I do not see a God who randomly changes his mind about things, but rather, the Bible reports that all that He has done is part of His Eternal Plan, right down to the number of days we shall live.

Isaiah 34:15-17 NIV - "The owl will nest there and lay eggs, she will hatch them, and care for her young under the shadow of her wings; there also the falcons will gather, each with its mate. 16 Look in the scroll of the LORD and read: None of these will be missing, not one will lack her mate. For it is his mouth that has given the order, and his Spirit will gather them together. 17 He allots their portions; his hand distributes them by measure. They will possess it forever and dwell there from generation to generation."

Whether we view the owls and falcons as symbols as something greater than themselves, this would not change the reality of the Heavenly Scroll, that God's Holy Mouth has called all orders, and that the Holy Spirit performs the Work.

I am sorry if I didn't answer your question adequately, but this is the best answer I have.
 

Rufus

Well-known member
Feb 17, 2024
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1 John 1:10 If we claim we have not sinned, we make him out to be a liar and his word is not in us.

The Bible uses that turn of phrase. Is the Bible slandering those who disagree with it? There is a difference between inadvertently making someone a liar, and deliberately doing so. Maybe Calvinists are doing so inadvertently. But the consequence of dismissing Jesus' words because they don't fit one's own theories, or reinterpreting His words with novel definitions that are not recognised common parlance, in order to make Him appear to be saying what we would prefer Him to say, could be fairly fit the idiom: "making Him a liar." That doesn't mean the person using the expression is correct. And I don't see any point in getting all bitter about someone accusing me of something I know isn't true. I can just try yo give a coherent argument that explains why I think they are wrong.

Reason can triumph over figure of speech slinging.
But not the "reason" of the Natural Man. And...there are definitions of this world ("common parlance") and there are biblical definitions.
 

Rufus

Well-known member
Feb 17, 2024
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I hear what you're saying, however, as a "reporter" of the Bible, I see a completely different Element to God, and it is this:

Our Powerful, Almighty God has always had an Eternal Plan which He causes all events recorded in His Heavenly Scroll . . . to take place. This is a most unpopular view, but that's fine with me. I merely report what I have found in His Holy Word, which He desires that we Understand and Know. Therefore, I do not see a God who randomly changes his mind about things, but rather, the Bible reports that all that He has done is part of His Eternal Plan, right down to the number of days we shall live.

Isaiah 34:15-17 NIV - "The owl will nest there and lay eggs, she will hatch them, and care for her young under the shadow of her wings; there also the falcons will gather, each with its mate. 16 Look in the scroll of the LORD and read: None of these will be missing, not one will lack her mate. For it is his mouth that has given the order, and his Spirit will gather them together. 17 He allots their portions; his hand distributes them by measure. They will possess it forever and dwell there from generation to generation."

Whether we view the owls and falcons as symbols as something greater than themselves, this would not change the reality of the Heavenly Scroll, that God's Holy Mouth has called all orders, and that the Holy Spirit performs the Work.

I am sorry if I didn't answer your question adequately, but this is the best answer I have.
Actually...you didn't address the subject it all. But what you wrote I agree with totally. So, it's good. (y)

Now...I wrote what I did earlier to try to make the point that the issue of "free" will or free moral agency is not as simple and cut 'n' dry as most would like to make it out to be. Many people, if not indeed most, define free will as this autonomous, powerful faculty that can rise above the host's nature -- so far above it -- and even in defiance of the other faculties that reside in the host's heart -- that it can empower the host to become something he is not, which is anti-scripture and anti-law of logic -- the Law of Identity. And, again, even God Almighty cannot do what I just said in the sentence above.

But in addition to the problem stated above, there is perhaps even a greater one because it's more fundamental to the biblical definition. Very few people (I think) understand what the bible means by "free". What does it truly mean for a man's will to be "free"!? And how should we think of this freedom: Freedom from something or freedom to do something? Or both?

I'm contemplating tackling this issue mostly for the like-minded or undecided folks here; for the openly hostile detractors of the Doctrines of Grace will still refuse to see the truth -- apart from divine intervention, of course.
 

BillyBob

Active member
Dec 20, 2023
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Thank you. I think you have some sense of there being middle ground which
allows for the complexity of what is involved in the process of being saved.
It seems to me that hearing the word of God is a two edged sword! It enters the heart of those who have been enabled to hear and believe. At the same time it hardens the heart of those who have not been enabled.
The reason that the Gospel must be taken to everyone is because the preacher cannot determine the difference. That understanding is far above our pay grade!
 

2ndTimothyGroup

Well-known member
Feb 20, 2021
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Actually...you didn't address the subject it all. But what you wrote I agree with totally. So, it's good. (y)

Now...I wrote what I did earlier to try to make the point that the issue of "free" will or free moral agency is not as simple and cut 'n' dry as most would like to make it out to be. Many people, if not indeed most, define free will as this autonomous, powerful faculty that can rise above the host's nature -- so far above it -- and even in defiance of the other faculties that reside in the host's heart -- that it can empower the host to become something he is not, which is anti-scripture and anti-law of logic -- the Law of Identity. And, again, even God Almighty cannot do what I just said in the sentence above.

But in addition to the problem stated above, there is perhaps even a greater one because it's more fundamental to the biblical definition. Very few people (I think) understand what the bible means by "free". What does it truly mean for a man's will to be "free"!? And how should we think of this freedom: Freedom from something or freedom to do something? Or both?

I'm contemplating tackling this issue mostly for the like-minded or undecided folks here; for the openly hostile detractors of the Doctrines of Grace will still refuse to see the truth -- apart from divine intervention, of course.
Gotchya. I thought that I answered the question with clarity, but then I'm just a human.

When you create a thread to discuss "free will," send me a message pointing to the thread. I'd love to see what you have to say. To date, and I have asked so, so many, to give me an example of what it would look like to have their "free will" violated. Typically, I receive ridicule and belittling in return. Pretty crazy, if you ask me. But . . .

Anyway, "free will" is a most interesting topic, particularly if a person believes in the Circumcision of Christ. That said, because virtually all "christians" reject this teaching, the topic of "free will" is about as exciting as pulling teeth with spoons.
 

Rufus

Well-known member
Feb 17, 2024
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Understanding the Gospel message is NOT out of reach of the natural man and his natural abilities.


You're right! But it's totally out of his spiritual hearing range -- like how people have varying degrees of ability to hear high notes?
 

Rufus

Well-known member
Feb 17, 2024
2,282
247
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Gotchya. I thought that I answered the question with clarity, but then I'm just a human.

When you create a thread to discuss "free will," send me a message pointing to the thread. I'd love to see what you have to say. To date, and I have asked so, so many, to give me an example of what it would look like to have their "free will" violated. Typically, I receive ridicule and belittling in return. Pretty crazy, if you ask me. But . . .

Anyway, "free will" is a most interesting topic, particularly if a person believes in the Circumcision of Christ. That said, because virtually all "christians" reject this teaching, the topic of "free will" is about as exciting as pulling teeth with spoons.
I'll stick to this thread. Don't have time to go jumping to various threads.

What would be so laughable, if it weren't so sad, is that the folks who whine and complain about having "their free will violated"? How can God who rescues the helpless, hopeless, powerless dead from their grave violate anyone's will? In their world it would be better to let the spiritually dead alone so that they can physically die in that state, rather than to be delivered from that state prior to physical death. But this is the way of the Natural Man, isn't it? The mind set on the flesh is truly hostile to God, isn't it?
 

selahsays

Well-known member
May 31, 2023
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Actually...you didn't address the subject it all. But what you wrote I agree with totally. So, it's good. (y)

Now...I wrote what I did earlier to try to make the point that the issue of "free" will or free moral agency is not as simple and cut 'n' dry as most would like to make it out to be. Many people, if not indeed most, define free will as this autonomous, powerful faculty that can rise above the host's nature -- so far above it -- and even in defiance of the other faculties that reside in the host's heart -- that it can empower the host to become something he is not, which is anti-scripture and anti-law of logic -- the Law of Identity. And, again, even God Almighty cannot do what I just said in the sentence above.

But in addition to the problem stated above, there is perhaps even a greater one because it's more fundamental to the biblical definition. Very few people (I think) understand what the bible means by "free". What does it truly mean for a man's will to be "free"!? And how should we think of this freedom: Freedom from something or freedom to do something? Or both?

I'm contemplating tackling this issue mostly for the like-minded or undecided folks here; for the openly hostile detractors of the Doctrines of Grace will still refuse to see the truth -- apart from divine intervention, of course.
…but what about this biblical truth? Everyone must make a choice …
"I call heaven and earth as witnesses today against you, that I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing; therefore choose life, that both you and your descendants may live; "that you may love the LORD your God, that you may obey His voice, and that you may cling to Him, for He is your life and the length of your days; and that you may dwell in the land which the LORD swore to your fathers, to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to give them."

- Deuteronomy 30:19-20