Z Man
New member
Well, I'm very glad to hear that.RightIdea said:You don't even know me, Z! I've known the man in real life for years, have been on his radio show, and had just talked to him only a few hours before that post. He is a friend of my ministry, especially our founder. And yet.... I do NOT believe everything he's said (or done for that matter), we have doctrinal differences, and I particularly disagree with certain kinds of activism he's done in the past. Bob is most certainly not my guru. I know there are some people here at this website who do see him that way, but I certainly do not.
Then I'm sorry.You would do well to know at least a little something about a person before judging them. (I'm not opposed to judging, but you oughta at least know what you're talking about before proving yourself the fool.) Heck, I've criticized Bob on a number of things regarding this debate, including the serious issue of staying on topic! And you think I'm an Enyart yes-man? I think not.
And furthermore, I DID answer your question, I did give an answer. I simply said that Enyart will have a better one because I happen to know he's about to cover this very thing in a couple days. That's all.
No, I do not believe in universalism.Ah, so you're a universalist, then? You believe that all people, both believers and unbelievers, are "in Christ" and reconciled to Him, etc.?
This is some interesting news, I must say!
I see Ephesians 1:11 in the same manner that I see Romans 8:28. All things simply means just that; all things. Whether it be tragedies, suffering, joyous times, blessings; whatever. Paul is not referring to people, or just the Body of Christ when he says 'all things'; he's referring to events in life.
I don't expect a commentary on every Scripture I present. I however, do expect some sort of response period. You totally ignored all of them. I felt it necessary to post them to show that God does work 'all things' for His will. That includes all the things listed in the verses I posted, from the killing of children, to the infliction of diseases and blindness; God works all of these for His will.If you think I'm going to write a commentary on every one of a couple dozen passages you rattle off, at your whim and beck and call, you've got another think coming to you. You can't just throw down a laundry list and expect people to analyze every verse separately, Z. That's not even remotely fair. However, I'll take a look at Amos 3:6 and Job 2:10.
Great. Then you concede with me that the Lord does bring about calamity. That's all I wanted to prove!What is God talking about here? The way things happen in all nations all the time regardless of situation? Heck no. God is warning Israel about judgment at a specific time, and saying He is going to specifically brnig calamity to her, that it is on the way. And when it happens, they will know.... that at that time, if calamatous events like that happen, they will know that this time, it was the Lord's doing.
Amos states that the Lord is responsible for calamity in a city; it seems like a rather broad statement to me. He wasn't declaring a punishment for one exact city, but wanted people to be aware that if there ever is calamity, period, then the Lord has brought it about. That's for any city, for all time.This is talking about a specific impending event! Not a universal declaration, Z. It's right there in black and white.
Satan inflicted boils upon Job, but not without God's permission. Job did not seek comfort from secondary causes, but from the primary cause. He blamed God for his adversity, and the Bible says he did not sin by doing so.Now, as for Job 2:10? This one is considerably easier.
"10 But he said to her, “You speak as one of the foolish women speaks. Shall we indeed accept good from God, and shall we not accept adversity?” In all this Job did not sin with his lips."
I really don't see your point about this passage. Where does it say that it was God that visited adversity upon Job? On the contrary, the preceding verses explicitly state that it was Satan that did this, not God. I don't even see a point to this one, frankly.
Saying God is the primary cause of our adversity in life, whether it be in sickness, or even in the death and tragedies of our loved ones, is not wrong, nor is it charging God with wrong. Job did it. Why do you have a hard time believing it?