QUOTE=Lighthouse:
No it doesn't. Omniscience means to know all that is knowable. Right?
Wrong. Look it up.
oly: I gave you the Mirriam-Webster definition of
omniscient. I gave you the correct definition of the word.
My believing that the future is not knowable changes nothing of the definition of omniscience. Just like my belief that God cannot exist in Wonderland does not fly in the face of the definition of omnipresence.
Oh well then, you must just be
special. Do you have your own language too?
Questioning God's motives? All I'm saying is from all I've learned of God I do not believe He would have done that. God strikes me as one who, if He did know, then He wouldn't have done it. He would have done something else
Yes, Brandon, questioning God's motives. So what if God knew in advance of the fall of Adam in the garden? God has the full picture of the good that will be brought about in the face of such pain and devastation. "For we know that
all things work together for the good of those who love God and are called according to
His purpose." Romans 8:28 This is not only true for that time, but for
all time.
Yes, and yes. Even moreso the latter, because God told Satan that exact thing.
He said that Job was a blameless and upright man who feared God and shunned evil. The second time Satan asked God to test Job, God said that Job held fast to his integrity inspite of the first test. So then, why allow Satan a second go at him? Simply put, trials are God's faith in our faithfulness. But like I said before, they are not to
enlighten God, but
to strengthen our faith.
God did not know if Abraham trusted Him enough to sacrafice Isaac, in hopes of another heir. Abraham did.
Issac was the
result of the promise of God. There were no stipulations attached to this promise, therefore there would be no hope of
another heir.
To say that God does not know such things is blasphemous, and shows a serious lack of faith.
Read Job 40. In verse 2 God says, "Shall the one who contends with the Almighty correct Him? He who rebukes God, let him answer it."
In verses 3-5, Job speaks.....but what will
you say?
In verses 6-14, God spoke through the whirlwind and said, "Now prepare yourself like a man; I will question you and you will answer Me. 'Would you indeed annul My judgement? Would you condemn Me that you may be justified? Have you an arrm like God? Or can you thunder with a voice like His?
Then adorn yourself with majesty and splendor, and array yourself with glory and beauty. Disperse the rage of your wrath; Look on everyone who is proud and humble him. Look on everyone who is proud and bring him low; Tread down the wicked in their place. Hide them in the dust together, bind their faces in hidden darkness.
Then I will confess to you that your own right hand can save you."
God showed me this. I am to quote it to you. Pray and ask God for wisdom. Pray that He might give you understanding.
:doh:
God caused the ram to go that way, when He knew Abraham was going to the altar.
That is what I said.
Are you calling God a liar?
How am
I calling God a liar?
Then you serve a false god.
You should be
very careful when you say things like that. Maybe you could get away with it when confronting beanieboy, wickwoman, Justin (Wiccan), Gnostic and the like, but you cannot level that accusation at me. I may not have perfect understanding of God, but I love Him and He knows me. I have the blood of Christ that bears witness to the God I serve.
The God I serve is in control too. And He also created free will beings, who could make choices. Choices that He does not have to specifically know in order to be in control.
So, humans are the only beings He created with free will?
If God knew who and who would not go to hell then the idea that He died for all people is a lie.
So, because Jesus shed His blood for
all men,
all men are going to inherit the Kingdom of Heaven? Or did He do that so that all men
may choose to accept or reject Him? Thus allowing us to
excercise our free will.
You didn't answer the question. Can you have something other than filet mignon?
I did answer the question. Sorry it didn't fit your "eisegesis".
Balderdash! Nineveh was not destroyed forty days after Jonah spoke the prophecy against them. It went unfulfilled, period.
Prove it.
I don't disagree that God's character doesn't change. But the decision to create teh Earth was a change.
A change from what?
He changed His mind on how He would bring people into His kingdom. I trust Him completely. Because if He does change His mind, it is for the better. Even David thought God might change His mind when Nathan spoke the prophecy that David's first child wiht Bathsheba would die. David prayed, weeping, begging God to change His mind.
David
hoped that God would change His mind. And yet God didn't change His mind. After the child died, David stopped crying, erased all signs of grief and went to worship the Lord. Why? Because God's grace was present. God knew the child would die, but even David's fasting and prayer did not change the heart or mind of God.
God's grace is the key, Brandon.(Partially quoted from study notes in my bible) Even through our suffering. Suffering that God
allows for our
ultimate good. God did not cause the child's death to punish the child but to exact justice for the sin of adultery that was committed. Death was required by the Law for both murder and adultery, even for a king. However, because of David's deep repentance without making excuse and, more significantly because of the promise of 2Samuel 5:12, God gave His grace even though David's family would experience the tragic effects of sin. Do you expect that God
had to know this in order that He would make good on His promise in 2Samuel 5:12? I do.
Do you know that the first person to speak of an immutable god was? It was Plato. Plato was not a follower of the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.:nono: Plato was a pagan. He believed in the Greek gods. The ones that even the Greeks now say are mythological. No one ever presented the idea of an immutable god until then. And as far as I know, the first person to say that the God we serve is immutable was Augustine.
And your point is....... :yawn:
He knew Pharoah wouldn't let them go, because He knew Pharoah's heart. That doesn't mean He knew exactly what Pharoah would say, verbatim. Or even that Pharoah's magicians would mimic what Moses did under God's power.
:LoJo: So, he knew Pharoah's heart, but not what was in it? Does the bible say that, "Out of the abundance of the
heart, the
mouth speaks."?
I don't see the logic of your statement. Either He does or He doesn't.......which is it?
He didn't cause it? Are you serious? He gave Joseph the dreams for a reason. Because He planned to put Joseph over his brothers. And that was one way it coudl be done. God did it. He caused it.
Really? Where does it say that God sold Joseph into slavery? Because I don't have that in my bible. In my bible, it says that his brothers did it. Hhhmmmm........ :think:
I will say it again......
God allowed it.
I'm not limiting God. I perceive time as having limits. And to say God cannot impose limits upon Himself, if He so chooses is limiting God. Which is exactly what you're doing.
Time has limits. God created the concept of time. Therefore, He is not constrained by it.
Was Jesus limited by His creation? Only yes, because He allowed it. But in His demonstration of His power (as God), did He not walk on the water? Did He not command the winds and the waves to cease? Did He not transfigure Himself on the mountain and talk with Elijah and Moses?
His ways are above our ways, not lower than our ways.
:duh:
You still never answered the question.
Yes I did. Apparently it doesn't conform to your "eisegisis".