Jerry Shugart
Well-known member
godrulz,godrulz said:In reality, there are 4 views on the nature of time/eternity that have merit as possible explanations of the biblical data. e.g. exhaustive foreknowledge of future free will contingencies is a logical contradiction or absurdity like God creating a rock so heavy He cannot lift it. It is not that God's ways are beyond reason.
Using out finite reasoning how can we reconcile the teaching that the Lord Jesus is completely and totally Man but at the same time He is completely and totally God?
We accept that teaching by "faith",and while some things are above our reasoning that does not mean that the same things contradict reason.
In regard to the topic of "predestination" we do not have to rely on "speculation" in order to answer the false teaching of the Calvinists on this subject.Instead,if we turn to the Scriptures we can see that every single time this word is used it is used in regard to the believer receiving his new,glorified body when we meet the Lord in the air:Books on Open Theism usually present the biblical, historical, theological, philosophical basis for the view. Some issues relating to time, eternity, foreknowledge, free will, predestination, etc. require godly, philosophical speculation if they are not explicitly addressed in a systematic way in the Bible...
"For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren"(Ro.8:29).
The Lord predetermined that all those who believe during the present dispensation would be conformed to the image of His Son.
All of the terms that the Calvinits mis-use can be explained by using the Scriptures.Therefore,our faith does not rest on "speculation".
The Lord expresses a part of His very nature in the following verse:It is that we reason away His revelation. If it says God changes His mind, we should accept this. Proof texts that say God does not change His mind in specific cases do not mean that He cannot change His mind (Platonic), but that He will not at times.
"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).
He will not change His mind.But open-theists will go to other verses that they say proves that He does just that.But the verses they refer to are verses that are not revealing His very nature,but instead they are verses that are used in a narrative.And unless we are to believe that these verses contradict Numbers 23:19 we know that the verses used in a narrative are used in a figurative sense,and that figure of speech is anthropomorphic.
This figure of speech is defined as "ascribing to God what belongs to human and rational beings,irrational creatures,or inanimate things"("The Campanion Bible",Appendix 6,"Figures of Speech").
So when the Scriptures are revealing the "nature" of God we should take that as final.If any other verses from a narative contradict what the Scriptures say about His nature then we can very easily understand that a figure of speech is being employed.
Again,our faith does not rest on speculation but instead on the sure Word of God.And if there are verses which seem to contradict verses which reveal the nature of the Lord we can understand that those verses are to be taken in a figurative sense.
In His grace,--Jerry
”Dispensationalism Made Easy”
http://midacts.net/studies/shugart-dispensationalism_made_easy.html