Rolf Ernst
New member
1Way--in your last post--of this thread the the 78th, you are continuing to understand "all" in 2 Pet. 3:9 as meaning "all" without exclusion, "all" as if each and everyone of mankind is meant by it. That is contradictory to Peter's meaning when he speaks of "us," the elect to whom he addresses his letter. By loading Peter's words "...not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance" with every (each and everyone of mankind), you are saying that God's longsuffering so that "all" should come to repentance is self-defeating, because if that is the aim of His longsuffering, it is not at all accomplished, because the stubborn fact is that of the WHOLE of mankind, most DO perish and His longsuffering, if toward the WHOLE, fails to accomplish what Paul says God meant to accomplish by it.
BUT if by "not willing that any should perish," and "all should come to repentance" Paul was referring not to the WHOLE of humanity, but to a certain select (elect) group, then God is NOT engaging in a self-defeating and futile exercise, but will accomplish exactly that which He intended by His longsuffering-- as Paul says in v. 15, "the longsuffering of our Lord is salvation."
The longsuffering is not a failed attempt to accomplish His will, but is salvation.
This view MUST be true because the whole of humanity is NEVER included in God's redemptive purpose.
Some are those spoken of in Proverbs 16:4--"God has made all things for Himself--even the wicked for the day of evil." Some are "appointed" to disobedience. (1 Pet. 2:8,9) while others are appointed to obtain salvation (1 Th.5:9); Some are "like natural brute beasts, made to be caught and destroyed." 2 Pet. 2:12; to some it is given to know the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven but to others it is not given (Mt.13:11; Lk. 8:10;
Mk. 4: 11,12, 34) and Jesus therefore reveals secrets to His disciples in private so those who are not appointed to life will not hear. Since by greater knowledge greater punishment comes upon the disobedient, Christ's hiding knowledge from them is a mercy toward them, even though it is a sad mercy.
BUT if by "not willing that any should perish," and "all should come to repentance" Paul was referring not to the WHOLE of humanity, but to a certain select (elect) group, then God is NOT engaging in a self-defeating and futile exercise, but will accomplish exactly that which He intended by His longsuffering-- as Paul says in v. 15, "the longsuffering of our Lord is salvation."
The longsuffering is not a failed attempt to accomplish His will, but is salvation.
This view MUST be true because the whole of humanity is NEVER included in God's redemptive purpose.
Some are those spoken of in Proverbs 16:4--"God has made all things for Himself--even the wicked for the day of evil." Some are "appointed" to disobedience. (1 Pet. 2:8,9) while others are appointed to obtain salvation (1 Th.5:9); Some are "like natural brute beasts, made to be caught and destroyed." 2 Pet. 2:12; to some it is given to know the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven but to others it is not given (Mt.13:11; Lk. 8:10;
Mk. 4: 11,12, 34) and Jesus therefore reveals secrets to His disciples in private so those who are not appointed to life will not hear. Since by greater knowledge greater punishment comes upon the disobedient, Christ's hiding knowledge from them is a mercy toward them, even though it is a sad mercy.
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