And a very little trumpet it is, as your question has already been answered.
Muz
Someone put him out of his misery.:bang:
And a very little trumpet it is, as your question has already been answered.
Muz
What proofs have you that compatibalism denies free will?
Did Judas Iscariot choose to betray freely, even while Christ knew he would do it?
Did Judas Iscariot remain unrepentent freely, even while Christ knew he would do so?
As to your second point: You are only able to choose freely if God desires(allows) you to choose freely. In other words, God made you and gave you the ability to choose freely. Without His desire that you exist; you wouldn't. Without His desire to allow you to choose; you wouldn't be able to choose.
No one is speaking of Molinism, Calvinism, or any other denomination here other than Christianity. Arminians are compatibalists. Catholics are compatibalists. Lutherans are compatibalists. Most Calvinists are compatibalists.
Only Supralapsarians and open theists deny the compatibility between foreknowledge and free will. Your stated 'enemy' is the only group which holds your view of incompatibility.
Well, if you want to adopt Calvinism as your answer, I will of course agree with you! But I was looking for Open Theism's answer--God knows (note - knows) a remnant will be saved, and only a remnant, this is his decision, his sentence, which he will carry out with speed and finality, and then afterwards, "all Israel will be saved."And a very little trumpet it is, as your question has already been answered.
Well, if you want to adopt Calvinism as your answer, I will of course agree with you! But I was looking for Open Theism's answer--God knows (note - knows) a remnant will be saved, and only a remnant, this is his decision, his sentence, which he will carry out with speed and finality, and then afterwards, "all Israel will be saved."
I don't want to hear that this is an estimate without some reason to think this is indefinite, and no, "the whole context of the Bible refutes you" is not a proper argument.
Blessings,
Lee <- Thinking it may be the other side which is in some misery?
It is logically impossible for the openist to make this assertion.the future is partially unsettled and partially settled,
Well, if you want to adopt Calvinism as your answer, I will of course agree with you! But I was looking for Open Theism's answer--God knows (note - knows) a remnant will be saved, and only a remnant, this is his decision, his sentence, which he will carry out with speed and finality, and then afterwards, "all Israel will be saved."
I don't want to hear that this is an estimate without some reason to think this is indefinite, and no, "the whole context of the Bible refutes you" is not a proper argument.
It is logically impossible for the openist to make this assertion.
But I did not mean indefinite as to which individuals, I meant indefinite in regard to whether this will happen or not.It's indefinite because it's corporate.
And I must again repeat, that this is not certain. A definite prediction that some tools will be usable is impossible without definite knowledge of the future. You might get a bad batch of source materials.As I showed in my statistical example, if there is a 2% error in a machining operation, every tool made could theoretically be an error, but reality is that 98% will be good.
I don't require individual election, I only require that God knows a remnant will be saved, this is even his sentence on earth, which he will carry out. Clearly, this contradicts the Open View.... there is simply no necessity for individual election and Exhaustive Definite Foreknowledge for God to know that He will have a remnant from Israel.
If the other ship is a sinking ship that doesn't mean your boat floats!Calvinism is more problematic than OT.
I don't fret, because I believe salvation is by God's decree--now if his ability to influence is at work, I must again ask how he knows a remnant will be saved. And if he exercises his influence to keep most of this group from repenting now.Do you fret that no one will be saved after Billy Graham dies or do you see that God is able to influence vs cause His project to be brought to fruition based on His ability and predictable human behavior?
But all that is required is one definite prediction that hinges on free decisions--this we have in several examples. I have a spare head-scratcher if you need one...If it said that the remnant would be 1,403,252 people with their names listed, their life stories, their addresses, etc. in a book that was written before Genesis, then I would scratch my head (but it does not, so I won't).
And I must again repeat, that this is not certain. A definite prediction that some tools will be usable is impossible without definite knowledge of the future. You might get a bad batch of source materials.
I don't require individual election, I only require that God knows a remnant will be saved, this is even his sentence on earth, which he will carry out. Clearly, this contradicts the Open View.
And how is it fair if God decides only a remnant will be saved? Does he keep people from repenting?
Mark 4:11-12 He told them, "The secret of the kingdom of God has been given to you. But to those on the outside everything is said in parables so that, "'they may be ever seeing but never perceiving, and ever hearing but never understanding; otherwise they might turn and be forgiven!'"
Well, if you want to adopt Calvinism as your answer, I will of course agree with you! But I was looking for Open Theism's answer--God knows (note - knows) a remnant will be saved, and only a remnant, this is his decision, his sentence, which he will carry out with speed and finality, and then afterwards, "all Israel will be saved."
I would say Arminians are incompatibilists (depends how we define it).
I thought it related to determinism and was originally a discussion within Calvinism only.
Judas was a free, responsible moral agent. If a doctor gives you a cancer diagnosis and a possible range of life expectancy (terminal), his knowledge does not determine your choices (suicide, treatment, etc.) nor does it cause cellular changes within your body. Jesus saw the 'cancer' developing in Judas without tampering with his will.
If it said that the remnant would be 1,403,252 people with their names listed, their life stories, their addresses, etc. in a book that was written before Genesis, then I would scratch my head (but it does not, so I won't).