Ask Mr. Religion
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Well, he was, anyway.
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He's faking it.
Well, he was, anyway.
Ahhh... Calvinism... ya gotta love it!
Can an omnipotent God also be immutable? This is an old chesnut that newcomers to theological topics “re-discover” when they begin exploring the domain. Every new student of theology encounters this; it is a favorite of professors who like asking "extra credit" questions. At first, it appears to be a logical dilemma, and some exclaim, “Aha!”, yet when we properly define our terms no dilemma exists. Thus, Lighthouse, I have not been too motivated to answer the question here. In any event, to give you credit for persistance, and to put an end to your question, , my answer is YES, God can be omnipotent and immutable per the discussion of these terms below.
Please carefully review the items below and get back to me should you have more questions. I have provided as many Scripture references for each item as I could think of for your review, too.
God’s incommunicable attributes
First, as Christians we must realize that while God’s attributes are a sufficient source for a description of God, they are not comprehensive. After all, we are admonished, “Who has known the mind of the Lord…?” (Rom 11:34) and that God’s thoughts are much, much, higher than our thoughts (Isa. 55:9). The incommunicable attributes of God are those attributes that cannot be fully shared with man, thereby exalting God above man. God is the creator, and mankind is His creation.
Self-Existence (sometimes called Independence or Aseity)
God is self-reliant. He does not need us, or creation, or anything. On the other hand, mankind is totally God-reliant. God’s being is qualitatively different that any other being. Mankind relies on God for all His sustaining of life. For example, see Acts 17:24-25; Job 41:11; Rev. 4:11; Ps. 90:2; 2 Pe. 3:8
Eternity
God exists outside the bounds of time. God is without beginning or end. God experiences no succession of moments in His being. God sees all of time “equally vividly”. For example, God created the universe, yet there has never been a moment in God’s mind that the universe did not always exist. From God’s perspective, any extremely long period of time is as if it just happened. Moreover any very short period of time, e.g., one day, seems to God to last forever: it never ceases to be “present” in his consciousness. This is what I mean when stating that God sees the past, present, and future equally vividly.
God is not subject to any limitations of His creation. God is far greater than anything He has made. Mankind has a beginning, and each person must function within the boundaries of time. God, unlike man, does not have to learn anything, and God does not react out of surprise to events. This does not mean God is impersonal, indeed, God speaks to us, rejoices in us, and loves us. God also sees events in time and can and does act in time. God created time and rules over time, using it for his own purposes and glory. But God’s experience of time nothing like mankind experiences time. God’s does not experience a patient endurance through eons of endless duration, instead God has a qualitatively different experience of time than we do.
For example, see Ps. 90:2; Ps. 90:4; Rev. 1:8; Rev. 4:8; John 8:58; Ex. 3:14; Isa. 45:21; Isa. 46:9-10; Gal. 4:4-5; Acts 17:30-31
Unity (sometimes called Simplicity)
God is one, and His nature is indivisible, that is God is not divided into parts. Each aspect of God’s character operates in perfect harmony with all the others. There is an assumption that every attribute is completely true of God and is true of all of God’s character. For example, God’s justice is never compromised by His mercy, nor is His mercy ever compromised by His justice.
When Scripture speaks about God’s attributes it never singles out one attribute of God as more important than all the rest. All such attempts to do so misconceive of God as some combination of parts, with some of these parts being more influential or larger than other parts. For that matter, what would it mean to say this or that attribute of God is “more important” than another? Does it mean that there are some of God’s actions that are not fully consistent with some of His other attributes? Does it mean that there are attributes of God that He somehow sets aside at times so that He may act in ways that are slightly contrary to those attributes? Naturally we cannot accept either perspective. Instead we see all of God’s attributes as various aspects of the total character of God and such questions are not necessary.
God’s unity is contrary to God’s creatures, who often work in disunity. For example, mankind may function purely out of anger, or a sense of justice, or out of empathy, despite acting in a way contrary to other aspects of their nature.
For example, see 1 John 1:5; 1 John 1:48; Ex. 34:6-7
Immutability (sometimes called Unchangeability)
God’s perfections and attributes are unchangeable. They do not increase, or decrease in number, quality or power. This is in comparison to mankind who is totally depraved, and as we are in that state desperately need to be changed. God not only does not change from without or from within, He cannot change from without or from within. There is no self-development or degeneration of God. God’s perfection is all that God can be or want to be. Only God alone is altogether unchangeable. God is unchanging in his being, perfections, purposes, and promises. Having said that, God does act and feel emotions, and He acts and feels differently in response to different situations. All of God’s creatures are mutable by the power of the God, in whose power is all creatures’ existence and non-existence. For example, see Ps. 33:11; Ps. 102:25-27; Mal. 3:6; James 1:17; Isa. 46:9-11; Num. 23:19; 1 Sam. 15:29; Zech. 8:17
Infinity
See Eternity
Omnipresence
God is everywhere present in all of His being, yet God acts differently in different places and God cannot be contained by any space. Indeed, God existed before anything we can call spatiality existed. Mankind is confined to a singular location in the dimension of “time”. For example, see Gen. 1:1; Deut. 10:14; Jer. 23:23-24; Ps. 139:7-10; I Kings 8:27; Isa. 66:1-2; Acts 7:48; Col. 1:7; Heb. 1:3
God’s communicable attributes
These are attributes of God that are more shared with mankind
Omniscience
God knows Himself and all things actual (i.e., all things that exist and all things that happen) and all the particular things that could ever be actualized in one simple eternal act. There is nothing that God does not know. Man’s knowledge is learned, and apart from the Holy Spirit’s illumination of the Scriptures, man’s knowledge of any given topic is imperfect. For example, see Job 37:16; 1 John 3:20; 1 Cor. 2:10-11; Heb. 4:13; 2 Chron. 16:9; Job 28:24; Matt. 10:29-30; Isa. 46:9-10; Isa. 42:8-9; Matt. 6:8; Matt. 10:30; Ps. 139:1-2; Ps. 139:4; Ps. 139:16; Rom. 11:33
Omnipotence
God can do anything God wills to do that is consistent with His character. God can do what God in fact does not do--in the sense that the present course of events in no way is produced by God from any necessity. Other events could well have happened, had God willed them to happen, and God could have willed them to happen had God wanted to. If God wills events, then events happen, but God didn't have to will them. In other words, God is able to do all His holy will. While God’s power is infinite, God’s use of that power is qualified by His other attributes, just as all of God’s attributes qualify all of God’s actions.
God can always do better than what God does--there will always be a gap between God and any participation in the goodness of God. Thus God cannot be required to do the better, only something which is good. God can make each of His creations better. Of course, if God makes a human being, God makes a human being, not an angel; but God could have made people more virtuous and wise than the ones God has made, and God can make things better than human beings or angels or whatever God may in fact have made.
Man is totally reliant on God for any power he may have.
For example, see Jer. 32:17; Jer. 32:27; Gen. 8:14; Luke 1:37; Matt. 19:26; Ps. 115:3; Matt. 3:9;
Sovereignty
God is continually involved with all of His created things in such that God (1) keeps them existing and maintaining the properties with which He created them; (2) cooperates with created things in every action, directing their distinctive properties to cause them to act as they do; and (3) directs them to fulfill His purposes. In other words, God is totally sovereign over all of His creation. Absolutely nothing in God’s creation can act independently of God’s sovereignty. God will always do what He has said, and will fulfill what He has promised. Man may claim sovereignty over his own life, but ultimately God is in control.
For example, see Heb 1:3; Col. 1:17; Acts 17:28; Neh. 9:6; 2 Peter 3:7; Job 12:23; Job 34:14-15; Job 38:32; Matt. 5:45; Matt. 6:26; Num. 23:19; 2 Sam. 7:28; Ps. 33:14-15; Ps. 104:14; Ps. 104:29; Ps. 135:6; Ps. 139:16; Ps. 141:6; Ps. 148:8; Prov. 16:1; Prov. 16:33; Prov. 20:24; Prov. 21:1; Prov. 30:5; John 17:17; Eph. 1:11; Gal. 1:15; Jer. 1:5; 1 Cor. 4:7
[/quote]Eternity
God exists outside the bounds of time. God is without beginning or end. God experiences no succession of moments in His being. God sees all of time “equally vividly”. For example, God created the universe, yet there has never been a moment in God’s mind that the universe did not always exist. From God’s perspective, any extremely long period of time is as if it just happened. Moreover any very short period of time, e.g., one day, seems to God to last forever: it never ceases to be “present” in his consciousness. This is what I mean when stating that God sees the past, present, and future equally vividly.
Immutability (sometimes called Unchangeability)
God’s perfections and attributes are unchangeable. They do not increase, or decrease in number, quality or power. This is in comparison to mankind who is totally depraved, and as we are in that state desperately need to be changed. God not only does not change from without or from within, He cannot change from without or from within. There is no self-development or degeneration of God. God’s perfection is all that God can be or want to be. Only God alone is altogether unchangeable. God is unchanging in his being, perfections, purposes, and promises. Having said that, God does act and feel emotions, and He acts and feels differently in response to different situations. All of God’s creatures are mutable by the power of the God, in whose power is all creatures’ existence and non-existence. For example, see Ps. 33:11; Ps. 102:25-27; Mal. 3:6; James 1:17; Isa. 46:9-11; Num. 23:19; 1 Sam. 15:29; Zech. 8:17
Omnipotence
God can do anything God wills to do that is consistent with His character. God can do what God in fact does not do--in the sense that the present course of events in no way is produced by God from any necessity. Other events could well have happened, had God willed them to happen, and God could have willed them to happen had God wanted to. If God wills events, then events happen, but God didn't have to will them. In other words, God is able to do all His holy will. While God’s power is infinite, God’s use of that power is qualified by His other attributes, just as all of God’s attributes qualify all of God’s actions.
Sovereignty
God is continually involved with all of His created things in such that God (1) keeps them existing and maintaining the properties with which He created them; (2) cooperates with created things in every action, directing their distinctive properties to cause them to act as they do; and (3) directs them to fulfill His purposes. In other words, God is totally sovereign over all of His creation. Absolutely nothing in God’s creation can act independently of God’s sovereignty. God will always do what He has said, and will fulfill what He has promised. Man may claim sovereignty over his own life, but ultimately God is in control.
For example, see Heb 1:3; Col. 1:17; Acts 17:28; Neh. 9:6; 2 Peter 3:7; Job 12:23; Job 34:14-15; Job 38:32; Matt. 5:45; Matt. 6:26; Num. 23:19; 2 Sam. 7:28; Ps. 33:14-15; Ps. 104:14; Ps. 104:29; Ps. 135:6; Ps. 139:16; Ps. 141:6; Ps. 148:8; Prov. 16:1; Prov. 16:33; Prov. 20:24; Prov. 21:1; Prov. 30:5; John 17:17; Eph. 1:11; Gal. 1:15; Jer. 1:5; 1 Cor. 4:7
My hubby sent this to me, it is pretty funny!
http://tominthebox.blogspot.com/2007/01/net-finney-guards-families-against.html
The "Reader" who seems to do more yelling than reading.Who?
For humanity as a whole, yes.Do you believe that God purposed that His Son die to forgive the sins of all men?
Ask Mr. Religion said:TOTAL DEPRAVITY - The Calvinist believes, as did Martin Luther, that man has a will and his will sis in bondage to his nature. The will of man is free to choose according to the dictates of his nature, but it is not free to contradict his nature. From Adam's fall the nature of every man has been sinful. Therefore, every action of the unsaved man is sinful and rebellious; it is stained through and through by his sin nature. The unregenerate man cannot perform even one single righteous or pleasing work with respect to a holy God.
UNCONDITIONAL ELECTION - The Calvinist believes that God’s election is truly unconditional. The foreknowledge of God is based upon His decree, plan, and purpose; it is the expression of His will and good pleasure, not a response to man's free-will choices. Election is the sovereign act of God the Father choosing specific individuals out from the entire body of condemned and fallen humanity. These individuals were chosen before the foundations of the universe and not as a result of any foreseen merit or activity or decision on their part. These chosen or elect individuals are purposed to become monuments to the Father's love for all of eternity. In this regard the Calvinist understands election as an example of God’s "love before time."
LIMITED ATONEMENT - The Calvinist believes that in order to accomplish the specific will of the Father, Christ took to the Cross the sins of the elect. Christ died for the sins of men without distinction as to race or nationality (that is, Jew or Gentile). He provided a complete and effectual atonement for their sins. Those whom Christ redeemed, Christ really and truly redeemed (actual not potential). Though infinite in value, Christ's atoning work was specific in its design. Some Calvinists prefer to call this "definite atonement" or "particular redemption". The death of Christ at Calvary does not make men savable, but rather it saves men completely. The Cross is a completed, successful work that requires no assistance from man. The Calvinist believes that Christ died for all of the sins of the elect. The Arminian must avoid the idea of all the sins lest he proclaim a universal salvation. For, if Christ died for all of the sins of all men without exception, upon what basis would any man be denied heaven? Remember, unbelief is a sin and therefore a sin for which Christ died if He has truly died for all the sins of all men without exception.
IRRESISTIBLE GRACE - The Calvinist believes that the Holy Spirit, in agreement with the electing will of the Father and the atoning work of the Son, does in the fullness of time quicken the dead spirit of a man and give to him the gift of saving faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. For the Calvinist, the logical order of salvation is regeneration first, followed by faith/believing. Since dead men do not respond, God must make them alive first (Eph 2:4-5); regeneration, of necessity, precedes any action or activity on the part of man, including faith and repentance. Hence, every single individual upon whom the Spirit of God moves savingly is regenerated, born again, adopted, grafted in, and saved eternally.
PERSEVERANCE OF THE SAINTS - The Calvinist believes that since God is the Author and Finisher of our faith, man cannot fall away from eternal salvation. Once a man has been born-again he cannot be unborn-again. Furthermore, the elect of God will definitely manifest evidences of their salvation by means of good works. The elect shall, by the grace of God and without exception, ultimately persevere in righteousness. The eternal security of the believer in the Lord Jesus Christ is demonstrated by the persevering faith and righteousness wrought by the grace of God in His little begotten ones.
Because the future is unknowable, the truth about the present comes into being as time passes. In that sense, God's omniscience is dynamic, as He knows all things as "all things" exist at any one moment, but that "all things" from moment to moment increases as events come to be.
Muz
You ignored or never bothered to read my material carefully. "God created time and rules over time, using it for his own purposes and glory. But God’s experience of time nothing like mankind experiences time. God’s does not experience a patient endurance through eons of endless duration, instead God has a qualitatively different experience of time than we do." When God spoke the universe into existence God created time, saw events in time, and acted, e.g., the seven days of creation, in time.Mr. Religion gives a very nice description of how Plato might describe God. Let's look at why this is problematic:
Notice the denial of creation. Somehow, creation didn't ever really "not exist", and thus Genesis 1 and 2 cannot be literal.
And this result from atemporality. If creation was created, then there must be a "before" creation, which implies temporal existance.
Genesis 1 clearly indicates that God moves, speaks, creates, rests, and experiences night and day in some sense.
What part of "This does not mean God is impersonal, indeed, God speaks to us, rejoices in us, and loves us." don't you understand? Don't add to my words, just read them carefully.This is the Greek Pagan idea of perfection: If something is perfect, then it cannot move or do anything, otherwise, it would have either been less than perfect before, or in its new state after moving would be less than the perfect state that it was in.
The problem is that immutable beings don't move, they don't speak, they don't engage in relationships, they don't have emotions, they don't DO anything.
"God’s perfections and attributes are unchangeable. They do not increase, or decrease in number, quality or power." Again you seem to want to put words in my mouth, yet I have not written them. Which of God's pefections and attributes changes in number, quality, or power when God chooses? Do you understand immuatbility or are you just assuming it is equated with taking action? It is not. Review my words and leave your anti-Calvinism biases aside....if you can.Of course, this all violates immutability, since it implies that God chooses, which would require change.
Now you are making up terms? The verses cited are in contextual agreement with my words. Yours words and no accompanying scripture are something you pulled out of thin air.This is called "meticulous sovereignty" which has little to do with the actual meaning of the word "sovereignty." Sovereignty simply means the ability to rule over and execute judgment over a group of people. Certainly God is capable of doing that without controlling every last decision and movement that is made.
I have clearly stated that God rejoices, hates, and loves. Please read carefully. You are trying to map more humanism into your theology than the bible allows.This isn't to say that God couldn't create a world with meticulous sovereignty, but it is quite incompatible with the idea that those whom God makes do certain things are judged for having done them, and quite incompatible with the idea that God engages in loving relationships with those that He meticulously controls.
Apparently you don't even bother to review any scripture before posting a reply to a post that contained 107 verses that were carefully aligned with my words. For each section of my post, isolate each sentence I wrote in one column. In another add the verses I cited. Then tell me what you find disagreable and why. I did the heavy lifting for you, crafting the interpretations of the messages contained in these verses, so this should not take you too long to do.I don't do sword drills with Calvinists. If Mr. Religion wants to explain how each of these verses supports his view in their context, then we can go through this. I would advise everyone reading these verse to both read the context and abandon the assumptions of meticulous sovereignty and immutability when reading them. If you do so, you'll find that the Calvinist inserts these concepts into these verses, rather than finding them there.
John 1:1 In the beginning was Logic, and Logic was with God, and Logic was God.
14 And Logic became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.
You ignored or never bothered to read my material carefully. "God created time and rules over time, using it for his own purposes and glory. But God’s experience of time nothing like mankind experiences time. God’s does not experience a patient endurance through eons of endless duration, instead God has a qualitatively different experience of time than we do." When God spoke the universe into existence God created time, saw events in time, and acted, e.g., the seven days of creation, in time.
What part of "This does not mean God is impersonal, indeed, God speaks to us, rejoices in us, and loves us." don't you understand? Don't add to my words, just read them carefully.
"God’s perfections and attributes are unchangeable. They do not increase, or decrease in number, quality or power." Again you seem to want to put words in my mouth, yet I have not written them. Which of God's pefections and attributes changes in number, quality, or power when God chooses? Do you understand immuatbility or are you just assuming it is equated with taking action? It is not. Review my words and leave your anti-Calvinism biases aside....if you can.
Now you are making up terms? The verses cited are in contextual agreement with my words. Yours words and no accompanying scripture are something you pulled out of thin air.
I have clearly stated that God rejoices, hates, and loves. Please read carefully. You are trying to map more humanism into your theology than the bible allows.
Apparently you don't even bother to review any scripture before posting a reply to a post that contained 107 verses that were carefully aligned with my words. For each section of my post, isolate each sentence I wrote in one column. In another add the verses I cited. Then tell me what you find disagreable and why. I did the heavy lifting for you, crafting the interpretations of the messages contained in these verses, so this should not take you too long to do.
If this is the way you come to your doctrinal conclusions, then I now understand why you can only resort to rhetoric.
His use of the word "Logic" in that verse is quite strange. Since "Logic" is not a person, I think it actually denies that the Word is a person.
Evo
I would think that it is not accurate to say that the future is unknowable. We mere humans can make predictions about the future and know what will happen beyond the present (things like weather forecasts come to mind). We know this because we know the effects that some causes produce, we see a cloudy sky we know that it will rain, for example.
Likewise, God too knows the effects that every cause produces, so he can know the future of all things that happen either by necessity or by contingency infallibly. As every cause owns his being to him as the primary efficient cause, he knows their effects in a comprehensive manner (Ecclesiasticus 23:28-29).
Evo
His use of the word "Logic" in that verse is quite strange. Since "Logic" is not a person, I think it actually denies that the Word is a person.
Evo
I would think that it is not accurate to say that the future is unknowable. We mere humans can make predictions about the future and know what will happen beyond the present (things like weather forecasts come to mind). We know this because we know the effects that some causes produce, we see a cloudy sky we know that it will rain, for example.
Likewise, God too knows the effects that every cause produces, so he can know the future of all things that happen either by necessity or by contingency infallibly. As every cause owns his being to him as the primary efficient cause, he knows their effects in a comprehensive manner (Ecclesiasticus 23:28-29).
Evo