TheEvan
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Sorry for my lack of clarity. The gift of tongues, in and of itself, is not worship. It becomes an act of worship when spoken on the lips of a 'worshipping Christian" as described in Rom 12:1. The gift of tongues' primary focus is prayer, or when accompanied by an interpretation, a message from the heart of God. Honestly, I think Wierwille connected phantom dots when he concluded it is the only form of true worship for the Christian.
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Good answers. Worship is devotion and submission. A devoted and submitted Christian lives a life of worship. When your heart is filled with devotion and you are submitted, your singing, working, tithing, loving, cooking, cleaning, talking, everything...are all worship. SIT is not true worship. That's Poppycock!
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Nice post, well considered. As your post implies, there may not be a neat way to wrap up these theological questions in a neat little box. It's more like holding several seemingly competing concepts and 'letting them be'. I think shifting the discussion from freewill to will is helpful. Great men have struggled with these concepts.
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Nonsense. They consistently advocate on life issues, pornography, fatherhood, motherhood, child-raising issues, marriage issues, et al. Those are social issues, not religious. Their worldview that forms their position is informed by their Christianity, yes. Does that disqualify them from the the marketplace of public opinion? Nobody's forcing anybody to do anything. A small part of their ministry is using public forii to attempt to influence public opinion on the issues they advocate. If they are successful, the public will elect (yes, by majority) officials who share their values. If they are unsuccessful, it won't happen. Do I characterize laws enacted by pro choicers (for instance) to increase access to abortion as forcing me to live by their beliefs. No. Why? That's Not Honest. If you listened to their radio broadcast daily for a few weeks you'd quickly realize that their Focus is not political at all, but on the Family. That their Focus informs their political stance is as it should be. eharmony? I already have harmony in the home, cultivated over 26 years and involving much yielding, cooperation, mutual support, forgiveness and at times, putting up with. I feel for those who haven't had marital success and I pray those who want another go at it have good success.
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They're not trying to force people to follow their religion. They are advocating for the family, pure and simple, according to their stated principles.. You may disagree with their advocacy, fine. But it sounds like you'd like to be the arbiter of what constitutes acceptable free speech. I think muzzling them would be unconstitutional. If you'll take an honest look at their ministry from top to bottom you'll see what an enormous force for good they've been. Don't let your disagreement with their political advocacy blind you.
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I'd answer, Mosh, but you've made up your mind. Extremist? Please. Is it okay for people, regardless their beliefs, to be politcally involved? Or is it that only 'approved list' beliefs need apply? I hear ya, Geo on dating...
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Not they are NOT. They focus on the family from a Christian perspective. From that logic, that makes the NAACP a Negro dominionist group, the ACLU an athiest dominionist group, etc. Christian dominionist do exist. FOTF are not them. Back to topic...I can't even imagine dating again. :o
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Congrats to you & PD (Precocious Daughter). Don't worry about her safety in Uganda & Rwanda. She'll be well looked after. Just tell her to stay off the boda-bodas.
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A wise approach to understanding the topic is considering other scriptures. You'll find numerous verses in support of what you're implying and numerous verses proving it wrong.
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Jesus Christ believed to be raised from the Dead
TheEvan replied to Bolshevik's topic in Doctrinal: Exploring the Bible
Believing and faith are not the same word. I understand Wierwille's argument and he was very wrong. If you want to have two words that come from pistis, faith and belief are it (or faith and trust, I suppose). Making it an infinitive changes everything...into false religion. Faith implies an object of that faith, one in whom you have faith. It is, properly, an inherently religious term. It implies trust and reliance on the one in whom you have faith. Faith is a gift of God (Eph 2:9) and it pleases God. It is God-centered. Believing is an act of the mind. That is why common Way usage became "believe for". It implies action...works. It points back to the person and their own thinking. It is mechanistic and self-focused. That, my friends, is the difference between true religion and one that is utterly and irrevocably false. -
Jesus Christ believed to be raised from the Dead
TheEvan replied to Bolshevik's topic in Doctrinal: Exploring the Bible
Oldiesman, that's another straw man. In trinitarian parlance it was the Father who raised the Son. Sure, Jesus went to the cross 'believing' he's be raised (but it's more like knowing he'd be raised), but it's a non-issue in the Bible. Therefore it's more or less irrelevant. What is relevant, because it is mentioned in the Bible record, is Jesus' obedience. This whole believing thing is such a red herring...and is still causing people to miss the big (and very clear) picture. -
Jesus Christ believed to be raised from the Dead
TheEvan replied to Bolshevik's topic in Doctrinal: Exploring the Bible
And so Jonah was 'believing' to be disgorged by 'dat real big fish? Way errors are still multiplying like rabbits. -
Some "whys and wherefores", as I see them: Our freewill response to God's "request" is a shaky foundation on which to base our Christian life. If we don't feel like it that day, or fail to believe because we doubted somewhere along the line, we're hosed. Our faith becomes self-focused, becasue it's predicated on how our will is doing and how our 'believing' response to truth is doing that day. If we're in a funk, God is out of business as far as His activity in our life goes. If, on the the other hand, God is all-everything (including all-knowing), then He will act according to his own wisdom (who hath been His counselor?) and exert his sovereign will on a world in no condition to bring about His will because they happen to agree with Him that day. And feel like it. And happen to believe just right that day. That's the way I see it.
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Good, consider yourself complimented. The point above is more than peripheral to the topic because it points to God's sovereign will, in this case concerning the covenant he made with the world through Abraham. While Abraham's human will was involved in obeying God, it is not mentioned. In fact man's "freedom of will" goes pretty much without a mention in the Bible. I think it bears asking why. In the case of Abraham, we see nothing of a request. If that is not what God determined to be said of the record, then we should seek to understand what He did determine to say: God commanded Abraham to go someplace else. Abraham obeyed, knowing almost nothing except the brief command. God informed him he would have a son in his old age. Abraham was incredulous. But he did have a son. It reminds me of the Shunamite. When the prophet informed her she'd have a son in the time of life (ie, normal time of gestation) she scoffed and said "don't lie to me!". But, in the time of life she had a son. Where was her free will? Where was her 'believing'? I say it happened according to God's will alone. God can exercise His will so thoroughly because His knowledge (past-present and future) is so utterly complete. Nobody had to 'believe for it'.
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Forgive me for appearing to nitpik, but the Lord didn't ask Abraham a thing, and he certainly didn't 'ask him to believe'. He merely informed Abraham of what would be happening. When Abraham believed the promise, it was counted to him for righteousness. God did command (though I suppose Abe could have refused) Abraham to sacrifice that very son of promise, but that's a whole 'nuther lesson I guess.
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Great post. T-Bone. Thanks
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The law of believing-NO GOD NEEDED
TheEvan replied to nyunknown's topic in Doctrinal: Exploring the Bible
Even still, it's not faith (or the lack thereof) that's the dealmaker/breaker. God's will is the dealmaker and the power, every time. -
The law of believing-NO GOD NEEDED
TheEvan replied to nyunknown's topic in Doctrinal: Exploring the Bible
I'm not trying to be argumentative, but I cannot for the life of me find the evidence that Hannah would not haved an answer to her prayers had she continued fretting, etc We're dealing with neither a sound principle nor absolute law but a spiritual reality called faith. Faith is a gift of God. When God imparts faith, fear will not stop it. -
The law of believing-NO GOD NEEDED
TheEvan replied to nyunknown's topic in Doctrinal: Exploring the Bible
Fair enough, LU. But then, do you maintain along with johniam, that had they doubted they would have burned? I say that's an unwarranted conclusion. The point of the record is not their 'believing', but rather 'who is God'. It's a similar issue to Elijah & the prophets of Baal. The issue was 'who is God'. God showed Himself to be the Almighty as he also did with Nebuchadnezzar. Nowhere does Elijah's 'believing' figure into the story. But the will of God does figure, as Elijah didn't 'believe for' fire from heaven. He was simply carrying out the scenario as God revealed it to him. "...I have done all these things at thy word." johniam: I beg to differ. I was in 70-87. He taught it as an inviolable law with no exceptions in PFAL. He said nothing to contradict that in my years. -
Okay, so you don't believe in foreordination...which would obviously go hand in hand with limited knowledge. What, then, do you do with scriptures that proclaim foreordination/predestination? Are they, what, a figure of speech? 'Orientalism'?
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The law of believing-NO GOD NEEDED
TheEvan replied to nyunknown's topic in Doctrinal: Exploring the Bible
How does a proverb being generally true make Proverbs any less the Word of God? Hint: It doesn't. johnyouare: Okay, my jaw is on the floor. Do you really think their believing "quenched the violence of fire"?? They confessed their faith in God, though they made a critical 'law of believing' error by expressing doubt when they said "but if not..." I think the Fourth Man who joined them in the furnace had something to do with their deliverance. BTW, the critical isue wasn't their believing fercryinoutloud, it was their steadfast obedience and faithfulness. There really is a forest if you'll look beyond those trees. -
Laryy, you've fallen prey to a common pitfall: that of misrepresenting the Calvinist view in your argument. I suppose that would make it a straw man. It's an important point in this discussion, and I'll go ahead and assume the Bible as our common text if that's okay with you. Pursuant to which, you'll find that the use of free will in the Bible has very serious limitations, mainly in freewill offerings. Nevertheless, I think it's possible to view God as sovereign (in a cosmic & biblical sense) and leave man's limited free will intact. I say limited because that's all the Bible seems to grant him. The idea that one is saved because they have 'made a choice for Christ' and by their own free will believed in him is erroneous. Biblical salvation is not so neatly formulaic. We were indeed chosen and foreordained, or so the Bible says. When the Holy Spirit revealed to us Jesus and our need for him, we believed. We were previously incapable of believeing because the natural man is capable of receiving the things of the Spirit of God...they are foolishness to him. I see limited foreknowledge as a natural outgrowth of the man-centered, freedom-of-will religion represented by Wierwille. Hey, we are in charge, right? Not God...
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Honestly, Larry, the only way I could warrant such a conclusion is by analyzing verses or phrases, or even larger stories, without backing up and readig the Bible as the plan of redemption. I assert that if one reads the wider sweep of the story of redemption, limited foreknowledge is an impossible conclusion.
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If you take a few steps back and ask where is Jesus in the story of Abraham and Isaac things become clearer. It's when we get lost in the minutia of this or that phrase, phrase-by-phrase that we get lost in the trees. The story is a picture of Christ to come, of his sacrifice to come, and the grace that comes with yielding our all to God's will. And why would we yield our will to His if He doesn't quite know the way?