I believe that is a rather naïve statement. Many people experience good in their lives and still reject it. I have done it myself at times. People aren’t always overwhelmed by good. People generally can acknowledge good, and still reject it.
Really? I can't imagine that a person would do such a thing. And scripture claims that never happens.
Eph 5:29
For no man ever yet hated his own flesh; but nourisheth and cherisheth it,
A person would have to be inconceivably wicked (or insane) to reject what only benefits them.
Power-wise? Of course! God could prevent all acts good or evil, but there would be consequences if He did.
I agree. Were God to prevent the thing that He planned to use for Good, then we can assume that the Good God planned would not come to pass, because of the evil that He prevented.
For example, the crucifixion was either good or it wasn't. Was the crucifixion of our Lord good?
I believe that the murder of an innocent man is not intrinsically a good thing. Yet had Jesus not been murdered, then he would not have paid the penalty for our sins. And since paying the penalty for our sins is good for us, then how can we consider that His death is not good?
Heb 9:22 without shedding of blood is no remission.
Had God prevented the crucifixion that He planned to use for Good, then we can assume that the remission of sins God planned would not come to pass, because of the evil that He prevented.
And so, generally, we can assume that all evils that God does not prevent are allowed because of the Good God plans to come to pass as a result.
Rom 8:28 And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.
This is why I preach that all things, even those things that are evil, actually facilitate Good. Which implies that Unnecessary Evil never actually occurs. Do you agree?
Jobeth’s viewpoint seems close to compatibilism.
Correct me if I am wrong, but I understand Compatibilism to mean the view that finds God's Exhaustive Definite Foreknowledge to be somehow logically compatible with Human Free Will.
Since I deny that they are logically compatible, I would fall in the camp of Incompatibilism, not Compatibilism. Isn't that right, Geoff?
Geoff:
Jobeth, we cant do anything to grieve God according to you, because He has planned everything and there is no Sin...
I believe that God is not grieved by what people do, but rather by their Unbelief and their rejection in their heart of what God has told them about Himself.
He tells them the truth about Himself "I am the LORD" and they believe Him not. How sad!
But I don't think that God makes people and then makes some of them not believe. (God does not Reprobate anyone) Rather, God made everyone
able to believe. Even Satan
could believe the truth if he wanted to. But some, like Satan, will not believe, because they are inherently not willing to give God all the glory, but would rather merit at least some glory for themselves. God, Himself, made them with the ambition to seek to dethrone God and garnish from God what glory belongs exclusively to Him. Why? Because God was willing to reveal the severity of His wrath and to demonstrate the full extent of His power so that we could know Him as He truly is. And to correct any one-sided or lopsided notions we may have about Him. (It's another way of declaring "I am what I am. Not what you want me to be").
Apolo:
Now why would the Holy spirit grieve if I was doing exactly as God planned? Does God grieve himself?
God grieves whenever what He says is doubted. But even though
God may grieve now, He knows it is only momentary grief. I believe even those who now reject the Lord's witness about Himself, will see Him as He truly is, eventually. For it is written, As I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God. And then His sorrow (and ours) over those who would not believe Him will be turned into joy. For there will no longer be any doubt that God is the LORD of ALL.
As I've said before God does not will everyone to be saved without exception, else everyone would be saved.
Rather, God wills to save all those (and only those) who repent and believe the truth about Him. All those who will not repent and believe the truth, God wills to Hell, without their consent and against their will.
But that is not to say that God takes pleasure in the death of the wicked. Rather, He takes pleasure in those who believe what He says.
So I wish Geoff would please stop misrepresenting my view as though I advocated that God delights in sending people to hell. The TULIP Calvinists he loves to hate may think that way. But I don't.