So what He took from Mary was evil? Nothing good there, so what did He take from her?
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Actually what is fascinating here is that in spite of me explicity denying this point over and over - probably ten times in this thread alone - you keep bringing it up. Please quote me, or drop it. The point being - on our own. What man is on his own? What man exists apart from God?
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Because He gives grace to men. We have the good within us given to us by God. We have free will given to us by God.
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There's that "on our own" phrase again... Either everyone has grace, or God only gives grace to some. I think you reject limited atonement, but I'm not sure. So who is on their own?
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You say that all are created to be good, but only some are good, and those are good only because of God.
What is the difference between the good and the bad? Does God choose to not make some good? How do you explain this, if you affirm the lack of free will, without suggesting that some are made for condemnation?
Zobel said:
So what He took from Mary was evil? Nothing good there, so what did He take from her?
*Everything* is possible only because of God, so I'm not sure we get much information from that chain of thought. God really made men free, in His image and likeness. This is a gift, and it originates in God - as does our very existence. Is what you said as true as saying that God interacting with humans is Him interacting with Himself? In a way...I suppose. But not in a way that gains us insight.Quote:
So then cooperation is only possible because of God? So "synergism" really boils down to God cooperating with Himself?
I mean, you said people don't have any choice. Again, you said a tree (meaning a person, by way of metaphor) has no choice, and does as it was created to do. I'm sorry if I misunderstood your response, but this does not sound like free will to me. I've asked you to clarify a couple of times, and you haven't that I can see.Quote:
Where did I affirm a lack of free will outside of our salvation?
Interesting! So this is a variant on the Roman Catholic doctrine of the immaculate conception then? Some kind of special case, that in order to have a body free of sin Mary herself was made sinless?Quote:
He took her sins away.
Zobel said:Interesting! So this is a variant on the Roman Catholic doctrine of the immaculate conception then? Some kind of special case, that in order to have a body free of sin Mary herself was made sinless?Quote:
He took her sins away.
I think this makes more trouble than it solves, personally.
Mainly, I mean - if God can do that, why didn't He just do that for everyone? Was dying and resurrection not strictly necessary?
Great point and I had never thought of it that way.Zobel said:
I'm confused. At the cross was after He was incarnate. When He took flesh from her, she was in her sins you say. So nothing good in her, wholly corrupt. Back to the original question, then - if there was noting good from where did He take His humanity?
So forgive me, but I am confused. As a Calvinist, I assume by "us" you mean the elect? Thanks.Pierow said:Zobel said:Interesting! So this is a variant on the Roman Catholic doctrine of the immaculate conception then? Some kind of special case, that in order to have a body free of sin Mary herself was made sinless?Quote:
He took her sins away.
I think this makes more trouble than it solves, personally.
Mainly, I mean - if God can do that, why didn't He just do that for everyone? Was dying and resurrection not strictly necessary?
No, it doesn't. She was born in to sin like the rest of us. Her sins were forgiven at the cross, like the rest of us.
I agree with you on some of this? We all have an understanding of universal moral laws. It is certainly shaded by culture, and nowhere is it as explicit as in The Law, but it's definitely there. So where does this universal understanding come from? If God is the source of all goodness and the one who instructs us on morality, then on some level all people must be aware of God.AgLiving06 said:ramblin_ag02 said:Christ is the Word of God, and everyone has experienced him. The world was made with him and through him, so every part of existence knows and is known by him. All people, even people who haven't heard the Gospel, have some sense (if incomplete) of love, goodness, mercy, justice, and self-sacrifice. As Paul says, some without the Law act as though they are under the Law despite never having known the Law (the Law being Hebrew shorthand for right/wrong and good/evil), and therefore no one has any excuse on the day of judgement.Quote:
So do we have free will to choose God on our own? No. If we've not heard the Word of God, we can't know what is good or evil.
I don't think this works.
Sure, even non-christians can use philosophy to deduce that there was a creator. I believe that Aristotle did this (or maybe it was Plato). You might even claim in some capacity that this creator must have been good given all that we have. You might also claim he's evil because of all the death and problems in this world.
Which then leads to your second part. As Paul says, we all have some sense of the Law. We can come to an understanding that there are universal moral laws.
However, the question is, from those point can we come to the realization that we need the Gospel on our own? By Gospel I mean the free gift of Salvation from God that comes through the death and resurrection of Jesus so that all who believe will not die, but live in Christ?
I don't think you'll be able to build a bridge from the first two points to the third without someone introducing the Word of God to them.
I also want to point out the same thing I pointed out to Zobel. When I say good, I don't mean good in the sense of driving the speed limit is simply good, but I mean to say that our motivation for why we drive the speed limit is correct. People can and do good things in a moral sense for all the wrong reasons.
For example, if I turn in a coworker for stealing from the company, it certainly looks like I'm doing good right? What if I did that because I wanted that persons job and wanted that person out of the way? What if I'm stealing too and was mad that person took all the good stuff. Simply having something look good externally doesn't mean internally a person isn't corrupt.
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I diverge a bit on the rest of your thought. Every man knows he is not perfect. You could maybe argue narcissists and psychopaths, but narcissists act that way to cover deep insecurities and psychopaths know they are bad and just don't care. You don't need anyone to come along and teach you that.
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Now what does it mean to "need" the Gospel? The point of the Gospel is not to save people. Christ, his crucifixion and his resurrection is what saves people. The Gospel is the message to people that they can be saved and have eternal life. That message gives hope. You only need to read Ecclesiastes or Nietzsche to see what happens without the hope of eternity. Everything becomes meaningless like dust in the wind. So the Gospel is a blessing to mankind as the Good News that there is a supreme God, He does love us, and He gives us the chance for eternal life.
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Can you imagine trying to be good your entire life with nothing to show for it, thinking you are going to die, your effort and sacrifice was pointless, and no one will remember you in a decade? Now someone brings you the Gospel and you learn that you have wanted to be good your whole life because you are trying to draw close to God? And learning that God loves you, wants you to sacrifice for goodness, and wants you to have eternal life? It's a complete 180 to take a good person, or at least a person who wants to be good, and give them hope and purpose.
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I really don't understand the vitriol. I haven't accused anyone of anything. I haven't been disrespectful. I've asked questions, in as far as I can tell what is a normal, polite way. If I'm misunderstanding, feel free to say what you disagree with and why. If my questions bother you, tell me and I will stop asking them. If it's that onerous to have a discussion, no one is obligating you to continue. This isn't a fight - at least not on my end.
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*Everything* is possible only because of God, so I'm not sure we get much information from that chain of thought. God really made men free, in His image and likeness. This is a gift, and it originates in God - as does our very existence. Is what you said as true as saying that God interacting with humans is Him interacting with Himself? In a way...I suppose. But not in a way that gains us insight.
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I mean, you said people don't have any choice. Again, you said a tree (meaning a person, by way of metaphor) has no choice, and does as it was created to do. I'm sorry if I misunderstood your response, but this does not sound like free will to me. I've asked you to clarify a couple of times, and you haven't that I can see.
What was the question? Is synergism God cooperating with Himself because free will comes from God? Yes, in the sense that all of creation comes from Him, is sourced in Him. But, the difference is that He created beings in His image and likeness, which means they are in some way like Him - to work with Him in His creation. This is man.Quote:
You didn't answer the question.
Now come on. It's your metaphor, I'm trying to use it. The question isn't whether a fruit tree will create fruit or cars, it is whether it will yield fruit or not, or yield good fruit or bad fruit. The bad branches or trees aren't thrown into the fire because they make vegetables, they're thrown into the fire because they don't yield anything or they don't yield good fruit (Matthew 3:10, 7:18-19, Luke 13:7, John 15:2-6).Quote:
Yes...a fruit tree will create fruit...Do you disagree?
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What was the question? Is synergism God cooperating with Himself because free will comes from God? Yes, in the sense that all of creation comes from Him, is sourced in Him. But, the difference is that He created beings in His image and likeness, which means they are in some way like Him - to work with Him in His creation. This is man.
If we're going to talk about God cooperating with Himself, I think monergism suffers more greatly because there is no free will to cooperate with. There's just... things happening, with no variability or change or even personhood (is a deterministic creation a person?). It's akin to a kid playing with action figures in a sandbox.
You were talking about intentional irony, I believe? (And to be really clear - this is being facetious, kidding around, joking).Quote:
You're still avoiding the question.
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Now come on. It's your metaphor, I'm trying to use it. The question isn't whether a fruit tree will create fruit or cars, it is whether it will yield fruit or not, or yield good fruit or bad fruit. The bad branches or trees aren't thrown into the fire because they make vegetables, they're thrown into the fire because they don't yield anything or they don't yield good fruit (Matthew 3:10, 7:18-19, Luke 13:7, John 15:2-6).
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What is the difference between good and bad human beings (the trees in your analogy)? If it is God, and God alone, that makes a good tree Good, does God choose to not make some good? How do you explain this, if you affirm the lack of choice, without suggesting that some are made for condemnation?
Catag94 said:
Perhaps already posted, but I recommend one start here:
Romans 10:9 NASB
[9] that if you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved;
God bless you OP.
Zobel said:
I'm confused. At the cross was after He was incarnate. When He took flesh from her, she was in her sins you say. So nothing good in her, wholly corrupt. Back to the original question, then - if there was noting good from where did He take His humanity?
dermdoc said:So forgive me, but I am confused. As a Calvinist, I assume by "us" you mean the elect? Thanks.Pierow said:Zobel said:Interesting! So this is a variant on the Roman Catholic doctrine of the immaculate conception then? Some kind of special case, that in order to have a body free of sin Mary herself was made sinless?Quote:
He took her sins away.
I think this makes more trouble than it solves, personally.
Mainly, I mean - if God can do that, why didn't He just do that for everyone? Was dying and resurrection not strictly necessary?
No, it doesn't. She was born in to sin like the rest of us. Her sins were forgiven at the cross, like the rest of us.
With all due respect, the tone of "Do you not understand any of this" is imho, a little over the line. The entire Orthodox Church theology on Original Sin does not agree with yours.Pierow said:Zobel said:
I'm confused. At the cross was after He was incarnate. When He took flesh from her, she was in her sins you say. So nothing good in her, wholly corrupt. Back to the original question, then - if there was noting good from where did He take His humanity?
No, there was nothing good in her. There was nothing good in all of humanity at that time. That's WHY Christ came. Do you not understand any of this?
dermdoc said:With all due respect, the tone of "Do you not understand any of this" is imho, a little over the line. The entire Orthodox Church theology on Original Sin does not agree with yours.Pierow said:Zobel said:
I'm confused. At the cross was after He was incarnate. When He took flesh from her, she was in her sins you say. So nothing good in her, wholly corrupt. Back to the original question, then - if there was noting good from where did He take His humanity?
No, there was nothing good in her. There was nothing good in all of humanity at that time. That's WHY Christ came. Do you not understand any of this?
And that is okay. Just please be respectful
And Zobel understands and knows a lot more than I could ever hope to know.
God bless.
Again, with all due respect disagree. The Orthodox Church does not believe in total depravity. And they can base their views on Scripture also. And Zobel is Orthodox.Pierow said:dermdoc said:With all due respect, the tone of "Do you not understand any of this" is imho, a little over the line. The entire Orthodox Church theology on Original Sin does not agree with yours.Pierow said:Zobel said:
I'm confused. At the cross was after He was incarnate. When He took flesh from her, she was in her sins you say. So nothing good in her, wholly corrupt. Back to the original question, then - if there was noting good from where did He take His humanity?
No, there was nothing good in her. There was nothing good in all of humanity at that time. That's WHY Christ came. Do you not understand any of this?
And that is okay. Just please be respectful
And Zobel understands and knows a lot more than I could ever hope to know.
God bless.
He keeps asking the same question over and over, hence my question back to him. He's asked and it's been answered. I apologize for my frustration. This is not a difficult concept. Some people just want to make things difficult. Complex. But it's not.
dermdoc said:Again, with all due respect disagree. The Orthodox Church does not believe in total depravity. And they can base their views on Scripture also. And Zobel is Orthodox.Pierow said:dermdoc said:With all due respect, the tone of "Do you not understand any of this" is imho, a little over the line. The entire Orthodox Church theology on Original Sin does not agree with yours.Pierow said:Zobel said:
I'm confused. At the cross was after He was incarnate. When He took flesh from her, she was in her sins you say. So nothing good in her, wholly corrupt. Back to the original question, then - if there was noting good from where did He take His humanity?
No, there was nothing good in her. There was nothing good in all of humanity at that time. That's WHY Christ came. Do you not understand any of this?
And that is okay. Just please be respectful
And Zobel understands and knows a lot more than I could ever hope to know.
God bless.
He keeps asking the same question over and over, hence my question back to him. He's asked and it's been answered. I apologize for my frustration. This is not a difficult concept. Some people just want to make things difficult. Complex. But it's not.
Sorry, but sometimes the irony of a Calvinist trying to correct people so they will change their views is just too much for meQuote:
Men have fought and died over these issues. To be a little bit disrespectful in making a point, is no vice. Especially when it is a salvation issue. A core belief. A necessity for sound doctrine.
Pierow said:dermdoc said:Again, with all due respect disagree. The Orthodox Church does not believe in total depravity. And they can base their views on Scripture also. And Zobel is Orthodox.Pierow said:dermdoc said:With all due respect, the tone of "Do you not understand any of this" is imho, a little over the line. The entire Orthodox Church theology on Original Sin does not agree with yours.Pierow said:Zobel said:
I'm confused. At the cross was after He was incarnate. When He took flesh from her, she was in her sins you say. So nothing good in her, wholly corrupt. Back to the original question, then - if there was noting good from where did He take His humanity?
No, there was nothing good in her. There was nothing good in all of humanity at that time. That's WHY Christ came. Do you not understand any of this?
And that is okay. Just please be respectful
And Zobel understands and knows a lot more than I could ever hope to know.
God bless.
He keeps asking the same question over and over, hence my question back to him. He's asked and it's been answered. I apologize for my frustration. This is not a difficult concept. Some people just want to make things difficult. Complex. But it's not.
Total depravity of man is a tenant that I believe in. Mankind proves that point daily. Scripture does too.
Jeremiah 17:9 ESV
The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick; who can understand it?
Psalm 51:5 ESV
Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.
Ephesians 2:1-3 ESV
And you were dead in the trespasses and sins in which you once walked, following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience among whom we all once lived in the passions of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankind.
DEAD. Not sick, dead.
1 Corinthians 2:14 ESV
The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned.
Genesis 6:5 ESV
The Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.
Romans 3:10-11 ESV
As it is written: "None is righteous, no, not one; no one understands; no one seeks for God.
Men have fought and died over these issues. To be a little bit disrespectful in making a point, is no vice. Especially when it is a salvation issue. A core belief. A necessity for sound doctrine.
This isn't some random comment about how men are wholly depraved *at all*.Quote:
Cursed is the man who trusts in mankind, who makes the flesh his strength and turns his heart from the Lord. He will be like a shrub in the desert; he will not see when prosperity comes. He will dwell in the parched places of the desert, in a salt land where no one lives.
But blessed is the man who trusts in the Lord, whose confidence is in Him. He is like a tree planted by the waters that sends out its roots toward the stream. It does not fear when the heat comes, and its leaves are always green. It does not worry in a year of drought, nor does it cease to produce fruit.
The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it? I, the Lord, search the heart; I examine the mind to reward a man according to his way, by what his deeds deserve.
Pierow said:dermdoc said:Again, with all due respect disagree. The Orthodox Church does not believe in total depravity. And they can base their views on Scripture also. And Zobel is Orthodox.Pierow said:dermdoc said:With all due respect, the tone of "Do you not understand any of this" is imho, a little over the line. The entire Orthodox Church theology on Original Sin does not agree with yours.Pierow said:Zobel said:
I'm confused. At the cross was after He was incarnate. When He took flesh from her, she was in her sins you say. So nothing good in her, wholly corrupt. Back to the original question, then - if there was noting good from where did He take His humanity?
No, there was nothing good in her. There was nothing good in all of humanity at that time. That's WHY Christ came. Do you not understand any of this?
And that is okay. Just please be respectful
And Zobel understands and knows a lot more than I could ever hope to know.
God bless.
He keeps asking the same question over and over, hence my question back to him. He's asked and it's been answered. I apologize for my frustration. This is not a difficult concept. Some people just want to make things difficult. Complex. But it's not.
Total depravity of man is a tenant that I believe in. Mankind proves that point daily. Scripture does too.
Jeremiah 17:9 ESV
The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick; who can understand it?
Psalm 51:5 ESV
Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.
Ephesians 2:1-3 ESV
And you were dead in the trespasses and sins in which you once walked, following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience among whom we all once lived in the passions of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankind.
DEAD. Not sick, dead.
1 Corinthians 2:14 ESV
The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned.
Genesis 6:5 ESV
The Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.
Romans 3:10-11 ESV
As it is written: "None is righteous, no, not one; no one understands; no one seeks for God.
Men have fought and died over these issues. To be a little bit disrespectful in making a point, is no vice. Especially when it is a salvation issue. A core belief. A necessity for sound doctrine.
ramblin_ag02 said:Sorry, but sometimes the irony of a Calvinist trying to correct people so they will change their views is just too much for meQuote:
Men have fought and died over these issues. To be a little bit disrespectful in making a point, is no vice. Especially when it is a salvation issue. A core belief. A necessity for sound doctrine.
Zobel said:
I keep asking the same question because you haven't answered it. You say there was nothing good - so where did His humanity come from? Or was His humanity corrupted? -- I imagine you won't say that.
If there was nothing good in humanity, the human nature Christ took from Mary was wholly corrupted - therefore what does He have in common with us? He was not human, or if He was human, she was not human. If what you're saying is true, He has nothing in common with us. But that isn't what the scriptures say - "He had to be made like His brothers in every way". In every way, excepting only sin.
If it is 100% sin, this is meaningless. He was made like us in no way, because there is nothing left. Your statement - aside from its scriptural inaccuracy, is fraught with a Christological impossibility.
///
The basic assertion is that because none are righteous, everyone is completely and utterly sinful. That doesn't follow. It also isn't scriptural. Plenty of people are described as righteous - starting with Noah who was both righteous and blameless (Gen 6:9). The Lord several times says David walked before Him with a heart of integrity and uprightness and kept all His statutes and laws. Job is described as perfect and upright. The King Asa's heart was fully devoted to the Lord all his days. Several kings "did what was right in the eyes of the Lord."
St Joseph the betrothed is called righteous, as is St John the Baptist, his father Zacharias and his mother Elizabeth, St Simeon, and St Joseph Of Arimathea. Christ Jesus calls Abel and (a different) Zechariah righteous, as does St Paul in Hebrews, and St John says that Abel's works were righteous. St Peter describes Lot as righteous (2 Pet 2:8).
That none are righteous and blameless before the Lord with regard to sin does not mean that humanity is completely, wholly, entirely corrupted.
dermdoc said:Pierow said:dermdoc said:Again, with all due respect disagree. The Orthodox Church does not believe in total depravity. And they can base their views on Scripture also. And Zobel is Orthodox.Pierow said:dermdoc said:With all due respect, the tone of "Do you not understand any of this" is imho, a little over the line. The entire Orthodox Church theology on Original Sin does not agree with yours.Pierow said:Zobel said:
I'm confused. At the cross was after He was incarnate. When He took flesh from her, she was in her sins you say. So nothing good in her, wholly corrupt. Back to the original question, then - if there was noting good from where did He take His humanity?
No, there was nothing good in her. There was nothing good in all of humanity at that time. That's WHY Christ came. Do you not understand any of this?
And that is okay. Just please be respectful
And Zobel understands and knows a lot more than I could ever hope to know.
God bless.
He keeps asking the same question over and over, hence my question back to him. He's asked and it's been answered. I apologize for my frustration. This is not a difficult concept. Some people just want to make things difficult. Complex. But it's not.
Total depravity of man is a tenant that I believe in. Mankind proves that point daily. Scripture does too.
Jeremiah 17:9 ESV
The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick; who can understand it?
Psalm 51:5 ESV
Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.
Ephesians 2:1-3 ESV
And you were dead in the trespasses and sins in which you once walked, following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience among whom we all once lived in the passions of our flesh, carrying out the desires of the body and the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankind.
DEAD. Not sick, dead.
1 Corinthians 2:14 ESV
The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned.
Genesis 6:5 ESV
The Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intention of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.
Romans 3:10-11 ESV
As it is written: "None is righteous, no, not one; no one understands; no one seeks for God.
Men have fought and died over these issues. To be a little bit disrespectful in making a point, is no vice. Especially when it is a salvation issue. A core belief. A necessity for sound doctrine.
How is total depravity a salvation issue? Where in the Bible does anyone say you must believe in total depravity to be saved?
And where did Christ ever excuse being a little disrespectful?
Zobel said:
Man, enough with the proof texting.
I mean, you start with Jeremiah 17:9. Just read the passage.This isn't some random comment about how men are wholly depraved *at all*.Quote:
Cursed is the man who trusts in mankind, who makes the flesh his strength and turns his heart from the Lord. He will be like a shrub in the desert; he will not see when prosperity comes. He will dwell in the parched places of the desert, in a salt land where no one lives.
But blessed is the man who trusts in the Lord, whose confidence is in Him. He is like a tree planted by the waters that sends out its roots toward the stream. It does not fear when the heat comes, and its leaves are always green. It does not worry in a year of drought, nor does it cease to produce fruit.
The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it? I, the Lord, search the heart; I examine the mind to reward a man according to his way, by what his deeds deserve.