B
biblicalanser4u
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thats cool. we can pick this up when your ready
Arbitary of what may I ask? Just want to make sure we are on the same wavelenghth.
The Covenants are related to Dispensations.
In some cases Evan, covenants are what that particular dispensation is about.
Think on this if you will.
Now I am assuming your of the view that the Mosiac Covenant given to Moses is the Old Covenant?
Or is it the Covenant of Works, made with Adam before the fall, promising Adam eternal life in exchange for his obedience, which when he fell, thereby ushering in the New Covenant, the Covenant of Grace, providing salvation for fallen man?
The example I will give is the Noahic Covenant. This covenant is the basis for the Dispensation of Human Government.
The Dispensation of Law is simply the Mosiac Covenant. I hope that helps in your understanding.
True! And what exactly is wrong with hunting scripture? Are we not to study to show thyself approved? To find truth? Or are we just going to take someones word for it?
Where is this in the scriptures? I find scriptures point in the other direction.
How so again? Paul in Romans even states ungodliness will be turned away from Jacob and all Isreal will be saved by the coming of the deliverer, not before His coming. Reference Romans 11:26.
Heresies Huh? I will respond to those in due time. But You can debate with me about babtism now in The Heretics Message to the World:Be Baptized to be Saved! If your up to it.
I mean that you can have as many "dispensations" as you want, since none of them are defined by Scripture itself. So how do you know that you're getting it right?
What is a dispensation? The Greek word for dispensation, oijkonomiva - oikonomia, is defined in two ways. The first definition emphasizes the plan of management: The management of a household or of household affairs; specifically, the management, oversight, administration, of other's property. The second emphasizes the position entrusted to the administrator: The office of a manager or overseer, stewardship. We refer to the term of office of an American president as an administration. We could refer to it as a dispensation.
Dispensationalism leads to the unhealthy idea that the message of the early Christian community necessarily changed with the conversion of the apostle Paul. This stands in contrast to the Biblical data.
Both Peter and Paul claimed to preach that which was "written in the Law and the prophets." If they've got two entirely different messages, they can't both be preaching "from the Law and the prophets", can they? Both preached to the Jews (though Peter more than Paul), and both preached to the Gentiles. They went first to the Jews, and then to the Gentiles, after some of the Jews had rejected their message.
But guess what? Jesus himself had already done the same thing! Yep! Jesus preached to both Jews and Gentiles during his ministry. Not only this, but he had instructed the disciples to go first to the Jews (Matthew 10:5-6), in accordance with his parable of the wedding feast.
Dispensationalism asserts that God will not deal with His people until the Second Advent
Let's see, the argument here seems to be that dispensations are not defined. Well, let's look at the word shall we. I will even quote Mr. Hill because his definition is accurate.
quote:
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What is a dispensation? The Greek word for dispensation, oijkonomiva - oikonomia, is defined in two ways. The first definition emphasizes the plan of management: The management of a household or of household affairs; specifically, the management, oversight, administration, of other's property. The second emphasizes the position entrusted to the administrator: The office of a manager or overseer, stewardship. We refer to the term of office of an American president as an administration. We could refer to it as a dispensation.
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That seems pretty clear there.
So to say that looking thru scripture one cannot find any differences is not exactly right.
God has dealt differently with the men at different times during our history.
Dispensationalists do not teach that God had different ways of saving people in different dispensations
and they surely do not teach that God has been experimenting in the various dispensations to see whether man might be able to save himself by one means or another.
Dispensationalists do teach that man has been called upon to manifest his faith in different ways. God did not tell Able, or Noah, or Abram, or Moses, or David to beleive the same message that Paul told the Phillippian jailer:"Beleive on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved." But all these men believed the message that God gave them and they were all saved on the basis of faith.
Not two messages, different house rules.
Newsflash for you. Jesus was sent only to ISREAL.
Do you need a reference here. Your in luck, I will provide you one.
Matthew 15:24 [Jesus] said, " I was not sent except to the lost sheep of the house of Isreal. "
Christ did not limit His earthly ministry to Isreal because He had no love for or plan for reaching the Gentiles. His plan was to reach Isreal first and then through them to reach all of the other nations.
As far as the record is concerned Jesus ministered to only two Gentiles, a Roman centurion who had built a synagogue for the Jews and the woman above. Thats it. To say that He preached to both Jews and Gentiles is arbritary and to make a doctrine out of that is not sound.
The boundary line between ours and the former dispensation is marked off in Scripture by Isreal's fall.
Paul makes it very plain in Romans 11:12-15 that it was through the fall of Isreal the Gentiles had been blessed under his ministry.
If we can locate Isreal's fall we can locate the dispensational boundary line.
Romans 11, written at least three or four years before Acts 28 definitely announces that Isreal has already fallen.
Likewise, in his very first epistle he announces concerning the Jews: " for the wrath is come upon them to the uttermost" 1Thess. 2:16. To me, in Paul's mind God's wrath was upon the Jew to the uttermost, which does not at all sound as though they were still in the good graces of God and still having the kingdom blessings offered to them.
And saying God still doesn't deal with Isreal is not quite accurate.
I agree with you that God played a major role in Isreal becoming a nation again.
Noone said God does not deal with Isreal on this thread as of yet.
So before you start critizing dispensationalism, get the facts of what dispensationalists teach.
Much better, thank you!Originally posted by Evangelion
Sorry, my mistake.
I'll re-post it as a two-part mini-series.
That's what I'm talking about when I refer to "defining your dispensations." I'm not talking about the meaning of the word itself, but the scope of each "dispensation" as defined by the dispensationalist.
We find the greatest change in God's method of salvation in the Hebrew Scriptures from the fourth, The Dispensation of Promise, to the fifth dispensation, The Dispensation of Circumcision. This dispensation of circumcision was associated with the second covenant God made with Abraham.
So you believe in a different message for a different age. Fine. Since I had already agreed that is precisely what dispensationalists teach, I am at a loss to know why you're going over old ground now.
Well now, it appears that there is some measure of confusion in the Dispensationalist camp.
For example, while you have argued that there was only one message, another Dispensationalist tells me:
The simple fact is that while Fundamentalism/Evangelicalism generally, along with Modernism and Roman Catholicism, have considered Paul merely as one of the Apostles, entrusted with the same message the Twelve were sent to proclaim, the Scriptures clearly teach that this is not so. Paul's message and ministry were distinct and separate from theirs; to him was committed the doctrine and the program for a new dispensation, a new creation, the Church, never before even contemplated, except in the mind and heart of God.
Dispensationalists do not teach that God had different ways of saving people in different dispensations, and they surely do not teach that God has been experimenting in the various dispensations to see whether man might be able to save himself by one means or another. Dispensationalists do teach that man has been called upon to manifest his faith in different ways. God did not tell Able, or Noah, or Abram, or Moses, or David to beleive the same message that Paul told the Phillippian jailer:"Beleive on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved." But all these men believed the message that God gave them and they were all saved on the basis of faith.
Just as with any doctrine which man tries to formulate from the revelation of the Word, it is to be expected that there would be differences of opinion on the subject of dispensations. Dispensationalists are no more agreed on the number and the divisions of the dispensations than christians are on the doctrines of election, baptism and the second coming of Christ.
Some men call themselves either non- or - anti- dispensationalists,(you perhaps) arguing that lack of agreement is proof of the falseity of the doctrine.
What did Mr. Hill say that was so wrong?
His quote you gave me is pretty accurate. The burden is on you to disprove it. So quit duckin it.
Mr. Hill's quote.
quote:
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We find the greatest change in God's method of salvation in the Hebrew Scriptures from the fourth, The Dispensation of Promise, to the fifth dispensation, The Dispensation of Circumcision. This dispensation of circumcision was associated with the second covenant God made with Abraham.
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So please don't imply that we teach that we teach different ways of being saved. That would not be accurate.
In your folly. you try to use this as some sort of division.
Very bad and sad on your part.
Again trying to make a play of words.
About Samaria on the next post.
Yeah, come on Bob, what are yoou doing man, youv'e just made a big statement and Evangelions taken it to pieces, come on man stand up for your self and what you believe.
Dispensationalists do not teach that God had different ways of saving people in different dispensations, and they surely do not teach that God has been experimenting in the various dispensations to see whether man might be able to save himself by one means or another. Man has been called upon to manifest his faith in different ways. Dispensationalists do teach that God did not tell Able, or Noah, or Abram, or Moses, or David to beleive the same message that Paul told the Phillippian jailer:"Beleive on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved." But all these men believed the message that God gave them and they were all saved on the basis of faith.
Bob Hill quotes: Abraham was justified by his faith-work of offering up his son. That was God's method of salvation just as circumcision was necessary. The faith-work did not provide the righteousness. Only Jesus Christ's faithfulness could do that. That is shown in Romans, Galatians, and Philippians.