Jerry Shugart said:
Jeremy,
Here are your own last words from the debate:
You never responded to my questions in the commentary section after the debate.
No,the Lord here is speaking about His very nature,and He is using what He reveals to demonstrate that He will do what He said:
"God is not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath he said, and shall he not do it? or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?"(Num.23:19).
We can know that He is speaking of His nature because He is comparing His nature to the nature of a man.
In HIs grace,--Jerry
Jerry, with all due respect, the fact remains that when He says in 1 Samuel that He doesn't repent.... the specific thing that He is not repenting of... is that fact that He DID just repent a few verses earlier. That verse is not talking about His nature, but about a specific one-time event. He did repent, and He will now not repent of that repentance. That first repentance will stand, He will not reverse it.
Do you not concede this?
In regards to Numbers, this passage
must be interpreted in light of other passages in which God
explicitly states that He will do something, only for us to see that He did not then do it. There are multiple examples of this, the least of which is the story of Jonah. So, how can you claim this Numbers verse is universally applicable, when God - speaking in the first person (which I really love) - tells us numerous times that He will do X.... but then He does NOT do it?
In Numbers, He is speaking of that particular situation, as Jeremy pointed out. This
must be so, because we know for a fact that elsewhere, God says He will do X, and then He doesn't do it.
"Hath he said, and shall he not do it? or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?" Yes, indeed this occurs multiple times. Are you unfamiliar with such passages? If so, we can introduce them to you.
In Jeremiah 18, itself, God explicitly states that He said He would do X, but now He
will not do it.
Do you not concede this?