Troll alert!What is the Soul's Presence but the Altar and the Lord's Supper?
Troll alert!What is the Soul's Presence but the Altar and the Lord's Supper?
how sorrowfulSome souls choose to ignore GW/the Lord's call to commune/love but instead worship Satan (1Tim. 2:3-4, Matt. 23:37, John 8:42-44).
It seems we see things a little differently. That’s ok. God’s omniscience is really beyond anyone’s ability to grasp truly. I enjoyed discussing the issue with you, but we have reached an impasse. You have reasoned well in your responses, but the degree of arrogance in your summation is a sad commentary on where we Christians are as a collective today. I apologize if any of my remarks may have offended you. Rest assured, your ability to alleviate any grief is not warranted.That bit of information could save you a lot of grief then, if you can understand 1 Cor. 1 and 11.
I'm called that a lot by people who do not understand what the Bible means by heresy.
a question to explore the nature of the soul and it's connection to the devine if I understand your question correctlyWhat is the Soul's Presence but the Altar and the Lord's Supper?
It seems we see things a little differently. That’s ok. God’s omniscience is really beyond anyone’s ability to grasp truly. I enjoyed discussing the issue with you, but we have reached an impasse. You have reasoned well in your responses, but the degree of arrogance in your summation is a sad commentary on where we Christians are as a collective today. I apologize if any of my remarks may have offended you. Rest assured, your ability to alleviate any grief is not warranted.
The Hebrew scriptures as given did not have vowels , and by religious convention, the Jews did not pronounce the name of YHWH , thinking it disrespectful and insulting to God to speak His name with impure lips. So there is no way you could possibly know what vowels were between the letters of the tetragrammaton. YHWH. So, you might as well stop pretending to know that and correcting others.Yo there what do you mean yaw-whey again? Do you know that is not appropriate language for saying the Lord's Name?
FYI "yeh-VAH" as in "the Lord"
God foreknew only those He predestinated. Is this true or false?
If this were true it would mean that God created beings he did want saved.
So, after seemingly criticising me for not submitting to the "classical" so-called "orthodoxy" espoused by Origen, Irenaeus and Augustine concerning the attributes of God, you are now saying that God's omniscience is really beyond anyone's (which would include yours and those three men's) ability to grasp. And in the discussion, you have not provided any scripture that actually unequivocally proves their view.
I don't think I claimed any ability to alleviate your grief. I accredited understanding 1 Cor. 1 and 11, in other words, God's word, with the ability to save you grief.
Augustine's theology cannot be classified as either purely "classical" or orthodox." In fact, many of his premises were CONTRARY to the orthodox positions of such men as Irenaeus who spoke and wrote in the Koine Greek. Augustine, by contrast, wrote only in Latin. He also used the allegorical/typological method of interpretation which leaves one vulnerable to eisegesis and doctrinal confabulation.
His ignorance of Greek also cut him off from referring to what earlier Christians had been writing ever since the days of the Apostles. This is obvious when we compare Augustine's writings with that of the Greek fathers before him. Augustine was a talented popular writer and polemicist but his tendency to read into what he did not comprehend caused him to introduce many novel doctrines into the Church.
Where?much of the NT is laced with warnings about those that creep in with unorthodox views
God communicating His actions in terms humans can understand—while His eternal knowledge and purpose remain unchanged. The Bible affirms without ambiguity that ... His nature and ultimate will do not fluctuate (Numbers 23:19; 1 Samuel 15:29; Malachi 3:6; James 1:17). When God “relents” in narratives such as Jonah 3:10 or Exodus 32:14, the text itself frames this as a change in human conditions, not a revision of divine knowledge—God responding consistently to repentance in accordance with His unchanging character (Jeremiah 18:7–10).
14 Yet ye say, Wherefore? Because the LORD hath been witness between thee and the wife of thy youth, against whom thou hast dealt treacherously: yet is she thy companion, and the wife of thy covenant. (To be continued....)
@PaulThomson, can you give me an example or analogy of God knowing all possibilities?
1 Samuel 23:7-13 sheds much light on this topic.No. Can you?
Or maybe this. If I contemplate tossing a six-sided dice once, I know all the possibilities. 1/6 chance of each number.@PaulThomson, can you give me an example or analogy of God knowing all possibilities?
God did not create evil.; God knowinly let evil happen.Or maybe this. If I contemplate tossing a six-sided dice once, I know all the possibilities. 1/6 chance of each number.
If I contemplate tossing a six-sided dice twice, I know all the possibilities. The more throws of a dice that I try to accurately predic, the less likely it is that I will guess correctly.
One could propose that God knows all future possibilities of all the dice throws in history, but the probability of predicting every dice throw one after the other into infinity approaches zero. And that is just dice throws. The probability of calculating every event of every entity in the universe for every day of its existence ad infinitum is infinitely less likely than calculating and guessing just the univers's dice throws.
God knowing all the probabilities is not enough for Him to predict every event accurately. God would need to either know all outcomes objectively through have already seen them happen. But they have not all already happened, so that would be logically nonsensical suggestion. Or He would need to know them all subjectively, by having already planned and decided to make them happen. using His omnipotence. But that would make God the author , planner and intender of all the universe's evil.
However, it does not prove that God knew all Saul's and the Keilahites' options from eternity past. Nor does it specify how God knew what was happening re Saul, and what was likely re Keilah at the time David asked, whether by observing the behaviour and conversations of Saul and the Keilahites at the time, or by knowing the all possible futures from eternity past.1 Samuel 23:7-13 sheds much light on this topic.
David lays a two-part speculative question before the Lord: if he does this, will that happen? God gives clear, specific answers to both parts of the question. David chooses to do something else.
This shows that God knows possible futures that never actually happened.