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Religion
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Title: C. I. Scofield ["Christianity" by Scofield: With Friends Like This, Who Needs Enemies - my title]
Source: Grace Online Library
URL Source: http://www.graceonlinelibrary.org/etc/printer-friendly.asp?ID=175
Published: Aug 23, 2010
Author: William E. Cox
Post Date: 2010-08-23 08:26:01 by Eric Stratton
Keywords: None
Views: 1223
Comments: 84

C. I. Scofield ["Christianity" by Scofield: With Friends Like This, Who Needs Enemies - my title]
by William E. Cox

The father of dispensationalism, Darby, as well as his teachings, probably would be unheard of today were it not for his devoted follower, Scofield. The writer became increasingly aware of this fact as he did research for this book. Darby's books are gathering dust on the shelves of the comparatively few libraries stocking them. Information concerning him is scarce indeed.

Darby was a prolific writer, and also spent much time lecturing in different countries. Scofield came to know him and became enamored by his teachings. These two men had at least two things in common - both had practiced law, and both had untiring energy in advancing their beliefs. Scofield wrote many books, founded what is now called the Philadelphia College of the Bible, and, in 1909, published his Scofield Reference Bible. All these efforts inculcated the Plymouth Brethren teachings learned from Darby.

Cyrus Ingerson Scofield lived from August 19, 1843, until July 24, 1921. He was born in Michigan, but his family soon moved to Tennessee. While serving as a private in the Confederate Army, during the Civil War, he was decorated. Upon being discharged from the Army he took up law. He also entered politics and was appointed U. S. Attorney to Kansas by President Grant. During this period of his life he became a heavy drinker.

Scofield was converted in 1879, and three years later was ordained a Congregational minister. With no formal theological training he wrote his reference Bible. Except for this work, it is doubtful whether this man's name would be remembered any more than would Darby's. Taking the King James Bible and adding his own Notes to it, he assured himself a place in the memory of all who read that version of the Bible. This was in violation of the policy of all well known Bible societies, whose rules have been: 'Without Note or Comment.' Certainly Scofield was ignoring John the Revelator's warning about adding or taking from his prophecy (Rev 22:19), for he did not hesitate to pry apart John's verses and intersperse his own ideas between the sentences of John. This he did throughout the Bible, and, in the minds of many unwary people, Scofield's ideas are equated with the Word of God itself.

Had Scofield put his Notes in separate books rather than inserting them inside the Bible itself, there seems to be little doubt that his books would have joined those of Darby's in gathering dust and not being reprinted. The best evidence of this fact lies in the great dearth of information about the man himself in our libraries today, while his reference Bible is a household word. Only his being associated with Paul and Peter, through his audacity in placing his personal ideas on the same sacred pages as theirs, has kept his name alive. And in the minds of some of Scofield's devoted followers, to differ from him is tantamount to differing from Paul or Peter! The following quotation bears mute testimony:

One young minister I know, pastor of a large church, has been driven almost frantic by constant persecution day in and day out. He is an able, orthodox preacher with a distinctly prophetic note in his teaching. Because he does not preach dispensationalism, his congregation will acknowledge no good in him. He has repeatedly been driven to the point of resigning and taking another church, but feels it his duty to save this church for the Christian faith (W. D. Chamberlain, The Church Faces the Isms, pp.106,107).

The Scofield Bible has done good at points where it has dealt with the cardinal doctrines of historic Christianity. Scofield was a conservative Bible believer, and brought his Notes into existence at a time when the Bible was being attacked on many sides by the so-called higher critics and other liberal theologians. Scofield's defense of the major doctrines of the Bible called forth a renewed interest in Bible study at a time when such a challenge was sorely needed. Followers of Scofield also manifest a respect for the authority of Scripture that is sorely lacking in many Christian circles today.

It must be stated, however, that the Scofield Bible contains many teachings which are at variance with historic teachings of the Christian church. Many have questioned whether the good done by this man is not overshadowed by these new and dangerous theories.

An advanced Bible student might read the Scofield Reference Bible critically and get some good points from it, and at the same time avoid its erroneous doctrines. However, in the hands of a novice or young convert, this can be a dangerous book. Not least among these dangers is the superior attitude it implants in the minds of its readers. No doctrine of the Bible presents the least problem to these Bible 'experts.' Nor do they need any further study - all they need is contained in the footnotes of the Scofield Reference Bible.

...These good people do not lack faith and zeal, but they sadly lack knowledge; and the tragedy of the situation lies just here, that this is the very thing they think they have obtained from the Scofield Bible! They are apt to say in their hearts, and not infrequently with their lips: 'I have more understanding than all my teachers - because I have a Scofield Bible' (Albertus Pieters, A Candid Examination of the Scofield Bible, p.5). From a position of entire ignorance of the Scriptures to a position of oracular religious certainty - especially respecting eschatological matters - for some people requires from three to six months with a Scofield Bible (T. T. Shields, The Gospel Witness for April 7, 1932).

I readily recognize that the Scofield Bible is very popular with novices, that is, those newly come to the faith, and also with many of longer Christian experience who are but superficial students of Scripture. Ready made clothes are everywhere popular with people of average size ... On the same principle, ready made religious ideas will always'be popular, especially with those indisposed to the exertion of fitting their religious conceptions to an ever increasing scriptural knowledge. That common human disposition very largely explains the popularity of the Scofield Bible (ibid.).

In the field of Systematic Theology he is good, for there he utilizes the fruits of the standard Protestant and Calvinistic thinking; but in general Bible knowledge he makes many mistakes, and in his eschatology he goes far astray from anything the church has ever believed. Undoubtedly this oracular and authoritative manner has been effective, but it is not to be excused for that reason. It seems like a harsh judgment, but in the interest of truth it must be uttered: Dr. Scofield in this was acting the part of an intellectual charlatan, a fraud who pretends to knowledge which he does not possess; like a quack doctor, who is ready with a confident diagnosis in many cases where a competent physician is unable to decide (Pieters, op. cit.).

Scofield's worst critics are men who have come out of his camp, and who remain true to the Bible as the infallible Word of God. A list of these men would include such outstanding men as Mauro, Gordon, G. Campbell Morgan, and Harry Rimmer. Paul B. Fischer, himself a graduate of Wheaton, wrote a pamphlet entitled Ultra Dispensationalism is Modernism. Fischer attacks dispensationalism as being a twin to liberalism on two points: (1) the deity of Christ, and (2) the disunity of the Bible.

In 1954 a committee of nine men headed by E. Schuyler English was formed to revise the Scofield Bible. They hope to finish their work by 1963.

A great need exists for the followers of C. I. Scofield to consider objectively the fact that so many earnest, conservative students of the Bible have left his school of theological thought. These sincere Christians need to become concerned over the divisions caused among conservative men of God by the footnotes and other personal insertions Dr. Scofield added to the King James Version of the Holy Bible. It would be well for these folk to realize that any sincere man, including Scofield, can be sincerely wrong.

It is well to keep in mind, too, that we conservatives are not divided over the Bible; we are divided, rather, over the personal explanations which a man took the liberty of inserting alongside the inspired writings of the Bible. The gist of the entire controversy at this point, it seems to me, lies in the fact that many of Scofield's most devoted disciples equate his Notes with the inspired words of the writers of the New Testament. The difficulty arises when they attempt to force this equation upon the minds and hearts of others.

We will continue to have tensions until this man is recognized as an extracanonical writer and his ideas are brought into the theological arena, where his good points may be accepted gratefully while his mistaken ideas may be discarded without fear of reprisal.

Having once been a devoted disciple of Scofield, this writer knows the difficulty of becoming objective after years of being subjective to, and captivated by, his great legal mind.

Scofield was, no doubt, an outstanding man. He was, however, only a man; and neither he nor his footnotes were infallible.

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#1. To: Eric Stratton (#0)

If Christs own followers didn't have a clue what he was talking about until they were converted after He died, then what kind of "conversion" did Scofield have when he wrote errors into a KJV that already had translational errors in it?

And why does anyone take anything they say seriously?

.


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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   8:43:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: PSUSA (#1)

The article indicates a far greater influence of the KJB and Scofield than they still have. Both have declined, largely in tandem. Scofield KJBs were a mainstay among apocalyptic fundamentalists in the mid-twentieth century. As most of these people have aged out or died, Scofield has a residual influence. The far larger current is of evangelical churches with those who attend carrying NIV bibles, often with the NIV commentary. Naturally, you can disparage the NIV commentary or any other commentary like Scofield's, as placing their own words and ideas alongside those of scripture much as the author did here with Scofield.

This is a conservative critique in many ways, relying somewhat on the views of the old Bible societies who resisted commentaries. This comes from issues like the role of the Geneva Bible and its footnotes (commentary) which was key to the thinking of American colonists and their rebellion against the monarch (despot) of Britain.

So it is difficult to deny that fundamental policy and politics in America has never been strongly swayed by contemporary commentaries being added to a translation of the Bible. It was true of America's Revolutionary War. And you can't deny the extent of evangelical and charismatic political support for Israel revolves around evangelical literature on these topics and modern apocalyptic.

The apocalyptic is itself an original doctrine of America, something not widely known. America was to be a new Israel and also to be the scene of the final battles of Revelation. This justified doctrines that evicted the heathen Indians, manifest destiny, etc. You can find references in the colonial era to this kind of thinking, often promoted by Cotton Mather and his influential father, Increase Mather.

So the topic is a worthy one as you examine the role of Israel to the thinking of modern Americans, especially the key support among evangelicals that is tangent to Israel's future role in the apocalypse. This is a key juncture of evangelical and Republican politics and, generally, for support of the two wars we are fighting in the Mideast. Many of the soldiers also are almost crusader-like in their expectations that they are somehow playing a role in shaping the Mideast for the final chapter of history.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   9:08:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: TooConservative (#2)

The far larger current is of evangelical churches with those who attend carrying NIV bibles, often with the NIV commentary. Naturally, you can disparage the NIV commentary or any other commentary like Scofield's, as placing their own words and ideas alongside those of scripture much as the author did here with Scofield.

It's been years since I've set foot inside a church, and I have no problem in taking your word for that.

One thing I do know is that there are many that consider the KJV to be "inerrant" and "perfect", and any other version is "of the devil", including the NIV. But ask them which printing of the KJ is the perfect one, and you can practically see their heads explode. They don't even know that there have already been many modifications to the KJ, and they don't care to know.

When it comes to commentaries, they can be helpful when it comes to explaining a specific point, which can then be verified. I learned the hard way that verification is not just an option.

The apocalyptic is itself an original doctrine of America, something not widely known. America was to be a new Israel and also to be the scene of the final battles of Revelation. This justified doctrines that evicted the heathen Indians, manifest destiny, etc. You can find references in the colonial era to this kind of thinking, often promoted by Cotton Mather and his influential father, Increase Mather.

Again, I have no problem in taking your word for that. That's the first I heard of this, but it fits.

This is a key juncture of evangelical and Republican politics and, generally, for support of the two wars we are fighting in the Mideast. Many of the soldiers also are almost crusader-like in their expectations that they are somehow playing a role in shaping the Mideast for the final chapter of history.

Agreed. This is precisely why they are so dangerous. It has real life consequences.


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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   9:36:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: TooConservative (#2) (Edited)

Evangelicals are not a problem; the poliitcal problem is fundamentalists.

Evangelicals are people that evangelize, spread the gospel as they intepret it.

Fundamentalists are people that believe in the veracity and accuracy of the bible, including especially the old testament.

The old testament is basically the mythology of the Pharisees, the predecessor of modern jewish people.

The bible can easily be shown to be false history, just like most any other tribal mythology.

www.rejectionof pascalswager.net/bibleanalysis.html

The larger political problem in the US and Israel, bigger trouble than right- wing fundamentalism, is the left-wing Diversity political scheme.

Diversity is an extremist professional victim cult.

In the US, Diversity is composed of all women, blacks, asians, jewish, disabled, LGBT, latinos, hispanics, and native americans.

In Israel, Diversity is composed of all sects of jewish people, including reformed, conservative, and orthodox. Israeli Diversity includes jewish people that believe Torah and jewish people that don't believe Torah. Not all jewish people believe Torah, but all jewish people in good standing believe holocaust mythology, the basis of jewish Diversity.

In both the US and Israel, Diversity is a super-majority of the voting populace by design and by immigration policy. Diversity is the dominant ideology of both the US and Israel.

Googolplex  posted on  2010-08-23   10:21:59 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: PSUSA (#3)

One thing I do know is that there are many that consider the KJV to be "inerrant" and "perfect", and any other version is "of the devil", including the NIV. But ask them which printing of the KJ is the perfect one, and you can practically see their heads explode. They don't even know that there have already been many modifications to the KJ, and they don't care to know.

The KJV-Onlyists, a tiresome lot. They compete in making grandiose claims for the KJV. Like it is of equal inspiration to the original scripture monographs, the originals. Or that is the perfect and immutable version of scripture for all time which is sheer nonsense but actually parallels rather directly the same exact claims made for Jerome's old Catholic Vulgate bible in Latin which was praised for being in an unchanging dead language where the meanings of the words were fixed. Latin became a language of scholars in part for this reason.

I prefer the KJV personally but it has a few inaccurate passages but nothing wrong doctrinally. It has archaic terms from Elizabethan English but a short pamphlet of about five pages provides a dictionary to these terms in key passages of the KJV.

The KJV remains one of the great bibles because of its extremely clever construction and pedigree.

First, the words are written in poetic cadence. The words and phrases have an internal rhythm. This is why, when you hear someone quote scripture from memory, it is nearly always the KJV version. The language is grand but, as with secular materials, it is always easier to memorize and recite poetry than it is for other written materials. The internal cadences please the ear and have a mnemonic effect that aids memorization.

Second, the KJV has an invaluable study aid in its text: italic text. Whenever you see italics in the KJV, it indicates the words inserted so that a modern reader would grasp the intent of the passage but would directly understand which words were inserted by the translators for clarification and which words were direct translations of the source Greek text from ancient sources.

Third, the source versions of the KJV were the body of ancient scriptures known as the Received Text (also Byzantine text). These were the preserved texts of the eastern churches of the Roman empire, the most conservative elements. The modern evangelical bibles rely upon the very slightly older Vaticanus and Sinaiticus documents that have many problems in terms of agreeing with each other and showing marks of corruption and editing. The Received Text had a far wider ancient readership in the early church as indicated by the fact that 99% of the 5000-6000 ancient manuscripts that we have are in the Received Text. In addition, the Vaticanus/Sinaiticus were derived from Alexandria, a very well-known hotbed of ancient Christian heresy and corrupters of text and doctrine (hence the name of this tiny but influential family as the Alexandrian family). The slightly greater age of the Alexandrian texts is offset by even older fragments that we have of the Byzantine line, something a lot of people don't know.

So the ancient pedigrees of these source bibles is important. But also who read them, which versions were the authentic versions used by the vast majority of ancient Christians, the geographical distribution, these are important. But also the literary style and the painful honesty of the translators makes a major contribution to the durability of the KJV.

I like the KJV and treasure it but I don't consider it an insuperable translation. It could certainly be improved. And I find little merit in the modernist versions like the NIV which are based on the Alexandrian (Latin Catholic) tradition.

The apocalyptic is itself an original doctrine of America, something not widely known. America was to be a new Israel and also to be the scene of the final battles of Revelation. This justified doctrines that evicted the heathen Indians, manifest destiny, etc. You can find references in the colonial era to this kind of thinking, often promoted by Cotton Mather and his influential father, Increase Mather. Again, I have no problem in taking your word for that. That's the first I heard of this, but it fits.
The best book I know of on the topic was called When Time Shall Be No More: Prophecy Belief in Modern American Culture (Studies in Cultural History).

An academic wrote this in the early Nineties and expected that about a dozen people would ever read it. A fine book in many ways and the author has a bit of fun with apocalyptic craziness over the centuries so it is fun to read as well. But he did a very good job with the colonial era. After reading it, you see how the apocalyptic is part of manifest destiny which is the precursor to this modern abomination of an idea that we are the hope of humanity, an idea our gooberment loves to foster to justify its endless meddling in foreign affairs and looting our taxpayers and starting wars to keep us distracted from their other robberies of the public and dereliction of their general duties.

So this fine book on the history of the apocalyptic in America was published and being ignored. I bought it out of curiosity and thought it was fascinating. And only a few months later, Waco happened.

The author was brought in to explain to FBI this topic. He became the instant expert, the guy with exactly the right book at the right time. I even saw him on some pundit shows but anything about religion clearly made the hosts squirm too much.

So Waco was lousy for the Branch Davidian victims but kind of a career-maker, by sheer coincidence, for this writer Boyle. I guess every cloud has a silver lining, at least for someone.

I really should get that book out and read it again. I enjoyed the photos he collected of wacky apocalyptic placemats and such.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   11:00:18 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Eric Stratton (#0)

It was because of these two frauds that we have the Rapture monkeys, the Tribulation, all the rest of that anti-Christian nonsense.

“How many Sex and the City fans have funneled all their maternal instincts into their Chinese bulldog without even noticing their ovaries have expired?”

Turtle  posted on  2010-08-23   11:03:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Googolplex (#4)

Evangelicals are not a problem; the poliitcal problem is fundamentalists.

I would consider myself to be a fundamentalist in many respects. I assure you, we are virtually extinct.

The heretic and world-pleasing Billy Graham, having begun his career making solid promises of maintaining fundamentalist purity and hiding behind his Baptist pedigree, instead led people to bastard Bibles like The Living Word, weak paraphrase bibles. He also is a deliberately deceptive preacher with scripture, omitting key passages, often quoting only half of a key verse, thereby truncating and muting the key doctrinal teachings of scripture. His organization has quite obviously run a carnival sideshow by planting their own volunteers in the audience to make it look like far more people are "going forward" (another modernism) than actually are.

You find relatively small bands of indepenent Baptists and and a handful of other churches (generally Baptist but not willing to associate with the Southern Baptist Conference because they perceive it to be too liberal) who remain. But the masses who once attended fundamentalist churches in the Fifties and Sixties are gone now, off to the happy-happy-joy-joy evangelical churches for preaching that can best be described as Christianity Lite. During the interim between the old fundamentalist era, the last vestiges of conservative fundamentalism were eradicated from churches like the Congregationalists, the Methodists, and the Presbyterians.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   11:09:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: PSUSA (#3) (Edited)

deleted

The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-08-23   11:15:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Turtle, Googolplex (#6)

It was because of these two frauds that we have the Rapture monkeys, the Tribulation, all the rest of that anti-Christian nonsense.

There has always been some appetite for the apocalyptic since the colonial era and, even before that, from the Reformation era. Go back and look at the old woodcuts of the early Reformation depicting the Pope as Satan.

I think that if Scofield hadn't come along, that the appetite for the apocalyptic would have shortly found someone to sate its hunger.

Scofield's influence was waning somewhat until Hal Lindsey wrote his books, starting with The Late Great Planet Earth. It was the single most popular non-fiction book for years, far and away. In many ways, its wild success inspired the modern religious publishing successes by Zondervan and a few others who have profited greatly from it and from Christian merchandising in general.

More recently, we have the rather awful Left Behind books and movies.

Like I said, this stuff has a long history. In the colonial era, it was eradicating Indians so the colonists (Israelites) could claim the Promised Land upon which the final battle of Armageddon with Satan (and his henchman the pope) would be fought, likely against the heathen Indians in alliance with the Catholics of Canada and their satanic master, the Pope. The writing of the era is rife with references to the dangers of invading papist hordes sweeping from the north down into the Promised Land (America). The recurring ideas about America as the shining city on a hill, a beacon of light to a troubled world, goes back to Augustine and you can readily see how this current of thinking is exploited by the neocons, plying their wares on gullible and historically ignorant evangelicals.

As you look at many of these matters in history, it becomes much easier to see how a man like Joseph Smith began his Mormon religion and employed the Masonic patterns often embraced by some of our Founders and other Enlightenment thinkers who were seeking to reject and overturn the monarchism and corrupt institutions of European tribal government. A new order of the ages was made to order along with new symbols and symbols revived from ancient and obscure sources (floating pyramids with a seeing eye, anyone?).

And, Googolplex, just because someone has exploited the ignorant in the name of religion is not a proof that the religion itself is false. And religion does itself often improve the lives of adherents even if its doctrine is severely flawed, as with the Mormons and many others.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   11:22:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Eric Stratton (#0)

SATAN"s Money freedom4um.com/cgi-bin/re...gi?ArtNum=121638&Disp=All

Itistoolate  posted on  2010-08-23   11:26:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: Eric Stratton (#8) (Edited)

As to TC's comment, whom I have on bozo, ...

I'm very hurt. Was it something I said?

You should take me off bozo for this thread because I do know a lot of interesting history about this era, stuff Beck hasn't found or is unwilling to tell Bubba about.

The Geneva bible contained antimonarchical footnotes, claiming that a king could become a tyrant which then dissolved the bonds of obedience the population would otherwise have to their king.

The American colonies were dominated religiously by Presbyterians and Puritans, the same people who later beheaded King Charles (King James' son). So these were some very hotheaded Presbyterians. They also were considered rabble-rousers in England and were restricted. At any rate, the Geneva bible was considered extremely seditious by King James (and he was right as his son soon discovered). King James commissioned the KJV with but one condition: that there should be no footnotes or any commentary of any kind.

Outside of England, the Geneva bible continued very strong against its newer competitor, the KJV. And Presbyterians continued their seditious rants against monarchy and tyrants. And they didn't use the KJV and instead kept their old Geneva family bibles for generations, nursing their grudges against tyrant kings. Finally, the disputes over minor taxation issues erupted during our pre-Revolutionary era and the Presbys perfectly willing to inflame it further, leading to the Declaration of Independence (which Jefferson plagiarized in large part from a letter circulated by an influential Presbyterian elder of the time). In England, there was a witty saying that "cousin America has eloped with a Presbyterian parson". Funny but it does tell us about how they were viewed. To the Englishmen of the era, the Presbys were those disreputable people who murdered their king Charles during the Cromwell era of Puritan dominance.

Not so surprisingly, in the Continental Army every single colonel was a Presbyterian except one. The founding of America was essentially a Presbyterian enterprise. This has led European scholars to declare that John Calvin, not George Washington, is the true father of America. Well, they at least have a pretty good argument to offer for that view. Naturally, American academics wish to entirely erase the name of Calvin from history. And as soon as our independence from Britain was won, the Calvinism of the era was quickly muted as our Founders realized that all that ranting against tyrants could be as easily applied to them as they had applied it to King George III when they rebelled against him.

So the KJV was intended to fend off the seditious threat posed by the Geneva bible in the hands of various nasty Puritan folks like Cromwell. But it did not gain influence in time to save King James I's son, Charles, from the Puritan's ax when they chopped his head off. Nor did it save Britain's colonies from the Puritan threat in America 150 years later.

The various political motives of these people and the politics are naturally irrelevant to the actual merits of the KJV as a bible. I think it is important to be aware of the textual, political and historical issues if you want to assemble an informed view of the matter.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   11:38:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Eric Stratton (#8)

As to the translations, while there may be issues with some, and there are, the thing to keep in mind is that the entire thing needs to make sense as a complete whole.

If it made sense "as a complete whole", there wouldn't be hundreds, if not thousands, of denominations. There would be no room for conflict. None.

It does make sense as a complete whole, but that is not possible to see when you depend on faulty translations for understanding. You have to look and see the word games the translators used, and imho it was intentionally done.

I'll give you an example. Where does that word "hell" come from?

Why is it in both the old and new testaments? Why didn't they translate "sheol" consistently? Or Gehenna?

The errors have been isolated and then used by the "church". They have their foundations built on these errors.

. .


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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   11:49:25 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: PSUSA (#12)

deleted

The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-08-23   12:12:05 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: TooConservative (#5)

I like the KJV and treasure it but I don't consider it an insuperable translation.

I agree. It's good as far as it goes. But people out too much faith in it. I personally think Youngs Literal is better when you try and get to the meaning of something. IMO it's more accurate, but not as easy to read as the KJ.

Here's what I did in the past, when my Big Question is how a supposedly all-loving and all-knowing God could send most of HIs creation to be tortured in real fire for endless time for not having the right beliefs, when the vast majority never had the chance to hear of those beliefs. IMO this is why many despise Christianity; they see the total insanity of this. But instead of abandoning it as the idiocy it was, I wanted to find the answer. I spent a lot of time on things that were, in hindsight, just as stupid as the doctrine of "hell", including serpent seed doctrine, new age, calvinism, and other nonsense.

I downloaded e-sword program (I really recommend that program. It's free and very good) and with a particular website on the screen and the program working in the background, I saw how the inconsistencies worked in the KJ. I verified everything that author claimed. I went searching far and wide for something that was right in front of my face.

It helps to see how one word was translated in one passage and compare that to how it is translated into a completely different word with a different meaning in another passage. Then the inconsistencies come to light. Then I understood how the churches based their entire doctrines on these errors and ignore everything that contradicts their doctrines.

An academic wrote this in the early Nineties and expected that about a dozen people would ever read it.

That's a shame. But I think it's typical.

.


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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   12:19:02 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: PSUSA (#12) (Edited)

Why is it in both the old and new testaments? Why didn't they translate "sheol" consistently? Or Gehenna?

Jewish ideas of the era were mixed regarding the afterlife. They were somewhat contaminated further by various non-Jewish religious ideas from Greek and Roman paganism then widely current.

The average Jew wasn't totally sure that there was an afterlife. Or if there was, it was only for a few of the prominent historical Jews like Abraham or Elijah. There was far more emphasis on obeying God so that He would favor you in this life, not the next.

And if ideas about heaven weren't exactly uniform, ideas about hell were even more mixed with paganism.

Judaism is fundamentally an optimistic life-affirming religion. In comparison with Christianity, it is more about how to live a good life and be happy and prosperous by not offending God. You also have the example of King David on being a person who passionately loves God for Himself, not out of fear of Him. Early Christians, as they spread beyond Jewish leadership in the ancient churches, became more morose and more involved with Roman paganism and becoming the official religion of the Roman empire. This furthered the split between Christians and Jews although all the early Christian leaders and teachers were Jewish.

Christianity, in comparison, has much more in it of eternal reward and eternal punishment. Hence, the flexibility in the way various churches and prominent preachers over the centuries have used the references to sheol as a universal covering for the idea of hell which is itself mixed up with the lake of fire which is the final destination of Satan and his fallen angels. These ideas are further mixed with notions of purgatory and by popular literature like Dante Aligheri's Divine Comedy.

I guess my point is that there were then, in every period since and now within the modern era many widely varying viewpoints on heaven and hell and the extent to which scripture describes them. And there is always a preacher, either cynical or sincere, willing to capitalize on the vagueness of the texts.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   12:19:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: Eric Stratton (#13)

I don't know what you mean by "room for," as denominations are mans' divisions, not God's or Christ's. In fact, Paul warned sternly against them;

Then Christ came not to bring a sword? Either God is omnipotent or not. Either God is responsible for everything, or it somehow got out of Gods' control and God is scrambling and trying to keep things together...

The reason for the conflict is because it can't make sense as a whole. Christs' followers didn't understand His teachings on the kingdom. He taught the outsiders only in parables (that's rather exclusive of him, right?) They didn't understand until Pentecost where they were converted.

How many times have you heard that Christ used parables to make them more understandable to simple people? I've heard it plenty of times, and it directly contradicts scripture.

When you have a church full of people that aren't converted, they won't understand much of anything, so they form sects that are to their liking.

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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   12:30:52 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: PSUSA (#16)

How many times have you heard that Christ used parables to make them more understandable to simple people? I've heard it plenty of times, and it directly contradicts scripture.

A modern explanation that doesn't fit well.

Jesus speaking in parables was generally understood by His disciples and the people he was addressing. However, the language was often couched to keep the Pharisee spies and aggressors in the crowd from denouncing Him to the authorities who would have executed Him as a religious and political troublemaker. Which some people think He was, given how history has unfolded.

So the idea that no one understood His parables at the time seems farfetched to me.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   13:27:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: Eric Stratton, All, Everyone else (#0)

The Truth Seeker - British Lords, Homeless Folks, and a Phoney Bible
Jun 25, 2006 ... The Scofield Reference Bible is the transparent bible forgery for changing
fundamental Christianity into Rothschild's Zionism. ...
www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/article.asp?ID=4705

Itistoolate  posted on  2010-08-23   13:35:32 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#19. To: PSUSA (#14) (Edited)

I agree. It's good as far as it goes. But people out too much faith in it. I personally think Youngs Literal is better when you try and get to the meaning of something. IMO it's more accurate, but not as easy to read as the KJ.

Young's is good. Not perfect but worth keeping in the reading list.

Here's what I did in the past, when my Big Question is how a supposedly all-loving and all-knowing God could send most of HIs creation to be tortured in real fire for endless time for not having the right beliefs, when the vast majority never had the chance to hear of those beliefs. IMO this is why many despise Christianity; they see the total insanity of this. But instead of abandoning it as the idiocy it was, I wanted to find the answer. I spent a lot of time on things that were, in hindsight, just as stupid as the doctrine of "hell", including serpent seed doctrine, new age, calvinism, and other nonsense.

Oh, Lordy, the Serpent Seed doctrine. LOL. Actually, that should be somewhat popular here at 4um but Shepherd's Chapel is too corny for me. Has 4um ever had any threads on Serpent Seed, the Kenites and so on? The depiction of Kenites as the "bad Jews" would seem irresistible. It is something of a theological hoot to me, almost as good as the Baptist Bride doctrine. I love it when people start squabbling over real estate in the New Jerusalem and who is going to get to live just down the street from Jesus on the choice part of Onward Christian Soldiers Boulevard.

If you are disturbed by how some ignorant/unprincipled persons have presented the eternal hellfire issue over the centuries, keep in mind how plentiful and common the teaching of eternal life in Christ is in scripture. It is the central message of the New Testament, a new life in Christ in this life leading to eternity with Him in heaven. This was the emphasis, a life-affirming doctrine and one that led directly to eternal life for believers. The doctrines surrounding hell/sheol are much more mixed and often read like parables or a kind of figurative language. [Edit: In scripture, there are references to eternal life juxtaposed against eternal life; again these are much much more common than somewhat contradictory descriptions of hellfire.] I am not a textual deconstructionist and certainly no variety of universalist but it is difficult to deny that heaven and the promises to believers of a good afterlife are much vastly more plentiful and consistent than any depiction of unbelievers suffering an eternal torment (lake of fire for the fallen angels or a smoldering garbage dump outside Jerusalem?).

The Bible is very subtle. Don't let the baggage of centuries of unscrupulous or uneducated preachers sour you on it. Don't let them make it say a word more or less than it says for itself.

You'll find that the issues, once investigated, are much more minor than they seem at first. BTW, I once held such objections. OTOH, by the time you learn that much detail of doctrine and the history of scripture, you suddenly find you're not quite as welcome at bible studies or Sunday school. LOL. Oh, well, churches do prefer those who accept whatever pap is being issued by their mini-popes at the current juncture.

I downloaded e-sword program (I really recommend that program. It's free and very good) and with a particular website on the screen and the program working in the background, I saw how the inconsistencies worked in the KJ. I verified everything that author claimed. I went searching far and wide for something that was right in front of my face.

I love e-Sword. A great free program.

I enjoy especially some of the commentaries you can download and a few of the Byzantine (Received Text/Textus Receptus) family of translations. Also, I like to compare the 1611 KJV to the later one that we use from the mid-nineteenth century (after the last few letters of English were invented). Many of the KJVists think they're actually using a 1611 KJV when they would recoil in horror from the inclusion of the Catholic Apocrypha in the original 1611 AV. Ooops, old King James missed that one!

As for e-Sword, I love the Gill commentary (having Calvinist and Baptist biases). I find Vincent's Word Studies to be valuable. I still dislike both the brief and the full versions of Matthew Henry. Wesley's commentary is always good for a laugh, both at him and the Methodists (what a weak thinker). The Lightfoot commentary on the Talmud and Hebraica of the New Testament is required reading to begin deep study, perhaps a bit beyond me personally to fully appreciate Lightfoot.

As for scripture versions, I especially like the obscure Analytical-Literal Translation for e-Sword. It produces the most literal translation possible, even beyond the other literals like Young's. It's almost painfully literal. But it isn't very readable and certainly lacks the lyrical qualities and grand language of the KJV that make its text so memorable (including the subtle poetic meter of the KJV). If you like the KJV and its text but want something much more radically literal, the ALT version in e-Sword is quite good. You can even order printed copies of it from their website.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   14:07:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: Itistoolate (#18)

The Scofield Reference Bible is the transparent bible forgery for changing fundamental Christianity into Rothschild's Zionism. ...

Oh, Moses, smell the roses!

I have provided the relatively obscure but easily found references to the apocalyptic philosophy of our early colonies, the rabid Presbyterians who provoked our revolution against the Brit monarch, how this relates to manifest destiny (and to our present mission to Save The World), to the Millerites of the mid-Nineteenth, the Seventh Day Adventists in the late Nineteenth, the Scofield bible in the early Twentieth, the Jehovah's Witnesses in the Thirties, and even the massacred Branch Davidians in the late Twentieth.

You got nothin'. Well, maybe a few brownie points here at 4um for somehow injecting the word Rothschild yet again.

Of course, my view of these matters is no more likely to make me popular here than at bible studies with the Left Behinders.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   14:13:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#21. To: PSUSA (#16)

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The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-08-23   15:21:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#22. To: TooConservative (#17) (Edited)

Jesus speaking in parables was generally understood by His disciples and the people he was addressing.

KJV ;) Mark 4:11 And he said unto them, Unto you it is given to know the mystery of the kingdom of God: but unto them that are without, all [these] things are done in parables:

Mark 4:12 That seeing they may see, and not perceive; and hearing they may hear, and not understand; lest at any time they should be converted, and [their] sins should be forgiven them.

Mark 4:13 And he said unto them, Know ye not this parable? and how then will ye know all parables?

How many times did he have to explain the parables to his followers? Every time.

THey were not generally understood. Teachings were intentionally hidden. Hmmm, you'd almost think He was intentionally dooming billions to "hell" to be tortured by pitchfork-weilding demons roasting them over billions of spits for countless trillions of centuries, all because they held the wrong beliefs...

Sometimes the Scribes & Co. perceived He was talking about them, but that doesn't mean they understood anything.

Of course, my view of these matters is no more likely to make me popular here than at bible studies with the Left Behinders.

As one heretic to another, I don't want to be popular with them.

The Bible is very subtle. Don't let the baggage of centuries of unscrupulous or uneducated preachers sour you on it.

It's not subtle, unless you consider a sword to be subtle (Heb 4:12)

It hasn't soured me on it. But I had to forget everything I thought I knew and start all over again.

I am not a textual deconstructionist and certainly no variety of universalist

I dont know about deconstructionism seeing as how I'm not really big on theological terminology, but I am a universalist.

.


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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   15:35:17 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#23. To: Eric Stratton (#21)

You're making quite a few assumptions.

No I'm not.

Then Christ came not to bring a sword?

Yes, but why? Simply to encourage dissensions amongst people? He states why.

Of course to cause dissension.

Luke 12:51 Suppose ye that I am come to give peace on earth? I tell you, Nay; but rather division:

Luke 12:52 For from henceforth there shall be five in one house divided, three against two, and two against three.

Luke 12:53 The father shall be divided against the son, and the son against the father; the mother against the daughter, and the daughter against the mother; the mother in law against her daughter in law, and the daughter in law against her mother in law.

Interesting questions

That wasn't a question but a statement.

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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   15:41:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#24. To: TooConservative, Eric Stratton (#20)

I appreciate the conversation. These things rarely go well and I appreciate it when it does happen. Even when we disagree we can do it civilly. And that is about as rare as seeing a Nessie in NYC Central Park

.


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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   15:44:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#25. To: PSUSA (#23)

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The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-08-23   15:52:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#26. To: PSUSA (#24)

deleted

The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-08-23   15:52:59 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#27. To: Eric Stratton (#25)

You site divisions, not "dissension." There's a difference.

Not really. Dissensions cause divisions. Look at what the scripture says: "divided, three against two, and two against three. ". That means there is dissension. If there was no dissension, there wouldn't be any divisions.


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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   16:02:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#28. To: PSUSA (#22)

How many times did he have to explain the parables to his followers? Every time.

I don't think so. Many of these parables seem as though he was addressing a commonly debated moral point of the Jewish law, things that these folk had heard debated many times.

As to your larger point that the unbelievers did not grasp His parables, I do agree. Scripture is written for believers and for those who will at some point become believers. God doesn't not waste His breath on the chaff. Naturally, you will grasp that I am drifting toward a position of the Limited Atonement but the TULIP is far more a theological construct than any sort of guide to daily spiritual life. The hyper-Calvinists overstate its merits somewhat.

THey were not generally understood. Teachings were intentionally hidden. Hmmm, you'd almost think He was intentionally dooming billions to "hell" to be tortured by pitchfork-weilding demons roasting them over billions of spits for countless trillions of centuries, all because they held the wrong beliefs...

Scripture affirms repeatedly that God is willing that all men should come to salvation. Women too, I suppose. And this is a place where we don't need to parse whether "all means all" the way that Xlinton would debate the meaning of 'is'.

Of course, God may be willing but He values and does not violate our free will. OTOH, He is free to make as many as He can an offer they can't refuse. As you may be aware, He is quite subtle but quick to claim His own.

I also do not believe that Jesus lacked free will, though His crucifixion was foreordained from the foundation of the world.

As a first principle, we must affirm that God is not the author of evil.

It hasn't soured me on it. But I had to forget everything I thought I knew and start all over again.

Welcome to the club. :)

We often let others dictate their ideas to us. Or we misunderstand something and create problems for ourselves. God wants us to let Him teach us the inner meaning of scripture. Without Him, we cannot understand His will and His Word. I think you probably grasp my point. The Bible is to be comprehended spiritually, not intellectually. It is a supernatural book to the believer, a curse and frustration to the unbeliever. Only God can shed real light on it through the Spirit.

I dont know about deconstructionism seeing as how I'm not really big on theological terminology, but I am a universalist.

Well, scripture does not lend itself at all to an all-dogs-go-to-heaven outlook.

Deconstructionism is using formal literary technique, higher textual criticism, textual comparisons, historical speculation to essentially try to winnow out the "true" bible which the deconstructionists imagine to be filled with myths and legends and forgeries. It's been all the rage in some liberal denominations and among the cafeteria Catholics here in America.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   16:05:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#29. To: Eric Stratton (#25)

Here's a clue, we here are also trying to cause divisions, aren't we? Aren't we attempting to pull people out of the matrix and into reality? Why? Is it not in their own best interests?

Not imo.

The divisions are already there. We didn't cause them.

Also, imo, you can't pull anyone out of the matrix. You can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink. It doesn't matter if its in their best interests or not.

I still haven't figured out why I got pulled out, or how it even happened, or why it happened to me and not to others. All I know is that it didn't happen as the result of anyones efforts. I just chalk it up to divine guidance and that it was done for a purpose, not because I'm anything special.

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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   16:08:29 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#30. To: PSUSA (#24)

I appreciate the conversation. These things rarely go well and I appreciate it when it does happen.

Well, you know these things always start well and generally end when one party screams "Die, heretic!".

Yeah, it has been a pleasant exchange. I do like reviewing the history of these movements, how they relate to America's founding, the various ways that things like the apocalyptic are interwoven with culture and with wars and with some preachers that want to build up huge followings (and income) by putting a contemporary spin on things. Or who wish to use something as vague as Revelations to add their own doctrinal ideas. Sometimes they are quite clever with their heresies and ideas but then someone starts making fun of them 10-20 years later because times change and they are exposed as religious opportunists. And yet, I have little doubt that virtually all of them started out quite sincerely. It's a warning to us all. Pride is, after all, the greatest and most common sin.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   16:10:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#31. To: PSUSA (#23)

Luke 12:51 Suppose ye that I am come to give peace on earth? I tell you, Nay; but rather division:

A catalyst. To separate the wheat from the chaff.

It is a very offensive idea to those who are not children of God.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   16:11:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#32. To: TooConservative (#28) (Edited)

Of course, God may be willing but He values and does not violate our free will.

Free will is an interesting topic. It is the only area where man claims superiority over God.

I don't believe in free will. Yes, we make choices but those choices are always limited, and that limited part takes away the "free" part. We are also limited in that we can't see where this is going and how choices are manipulated. We can only see it in hindsight.

When God hardened Pharaohs heart, didn't he violate his "free will"?

When Christ chose his disciples, what kept them from saying to Christ "You want me to drop everything and follow you? Who are you?" That would be the reasonable response. But that didn't happen, did it?

I can come up with a lot of other examples showing that there is no free will (as that term is used).

There are some other things I disagree with, but to do so would make things unmanageable and this thread would be all over the place. BTDT.

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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   16:21:37 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#33. To: PSUSA (#27)

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The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-08-23   18:26:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#34. To: PSUSA (#29)

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The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-08-23   18:30:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#35. To: Eric Stratton (#33)

19 Now the deeds of the flesh are evident, which are: immorality, impurity, sensuality,

So sensuality is a sin, sex is a sin?

WWGPD? - (What Would General Pinochet Do?)

Flintlock  posted on  2010-08-23   18:36:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#36. To: Flintlock (#35)

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The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-08-23   19:21:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#37. To: PSUSA (#32)

Free will is an interesting topic. It is the only area where man claims superiority over God.

Yes, the free will discussion usually brings out of the very best in everyone. LOL.

When God hardened Pharaohs heart, didn't he violate his "free will"?

We do always have free will. The pharaoh example is interesting. Since during that era, salvation was of the Jews only (leaving out pharaoh as well as the rest of humanity), there was no reason why the pharaoh would have cause to complain against God over unfairness. He was never eligible for eternal life because he would never become a Jew.

If God is omnipotent and knows the entire future, of all choices we might make as well as the choices we each will make, due to our own nature, it could be said that God's choices are not especially harsh when He bends us to His will in order to fulfill His eternal plan as it applies to mankind. Again, if you read scripture as positivist, as something that leads to eternal life instead of eternal death, then a pharaoh may as well earn eternal death due to his own choices and natural disposition rather than God imposing those choices on him. But if the pharaoh would make those choices anyway, then how has God treated the pharaoh unfairly if He causes the pharaoh to make those choices in a particular way which better suits God's plan? Same outcome but God has dictated the precise outcomes according to His own plan from the foundations of the world.

When Christ chose his disciples, what kept them from saying to Christ "You want me to drop everything and follow you? Who are you?" That would be the reasonable response. But that didn't happen, did it?

In matters like these, God is a little like the Godfather in the old mafia movies. I would say He has a way of making us an offer we can't refuse. If He manifests His presence to one of us, it is pretty irresistible. After all, He is our creator and the entire universe is His personal property. Including everything that we have ever seen or touched or felt or even imagined.

A Calvinist would pooh-pooh my poor comparison of this to an old gangster movie and would say this is an example of Irresistible Grace in an outworking of God's Spirit in a person's Unconditional Election. Of course, people are going to find it hard to say no to God.

And for more fun with free will, we can always turn to Romans 7-9. Always a good warmup to the endless skirmishing between Arminians (or semi-Pelagians) and Calvinist scum like me. Not that I, for obvious reasons, care that deeply. After all, it is God who is working out these matters of the salvation of mankind, not me. Now and then, He may favor me in some way or arrange matters so that I have the privilege of doing some small and meaningless thing for Him (not that He ever needs me or anyone else) but I cannot get that worked up over the eternal spiritual fate of other people. I'm not indifferent exactly, just not persuaded that any believer is so powerful as to determine the outcome of someone else's salvation. Either God is in control or He is not. That said, I know that He does make use of certain persons in the outworking of His salvation of others. But I would stress that He doesn't actually need them; it is merely His pleasure to let one of His children help Him in small ways. In the end, He is still the potter and we are only His clay.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   19:48:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#38. To: Flintlock (#35)

So sensuality is a sin, sex is a sin?

Generally speaking, only if performed properly. LOL.

TooConservative  posted on  2010-08-23   19:49:12 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#39. To: Eric Stratton (#33)

We're getting hung up on divisions and dissensions.

You first mentioned dissensions in post 21. All I said was that there was a lot of similarity between divisions and dissensions in post 27. (This is becoming tedious already ;) ).

The division(s) exist(ed) naturally, by birth due to sin. Similar in our "4um" example, many people are living in "errancy." Doesn't matter if it's willful ignorance, passive ignorance, open defiance, etc. Those are the same reasons why people do not turn to the Living God.

I disagree.

Mat 11:27 All things are delivered unto me of my Father: and no man knoweth the Son, but the Father; neither knoweth any man the Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him.

And John 6:44 is another one that is studiously ignored by the wolves.

6:44 No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him: and I will raise him up at the last day.

You can see how that word "draw" is used. www.biblestudytools.com/s...=gos&t=kjv&ps=10&s=Bibles

It's drawing water from a well. You lower the bucket, pull on the rope, the bucket comes to the top. The bucket has no say in the matter. It has no free will.

Here's another one with that infamous word "draw" plus the all-inclusive "all":

John 12:32 KJV And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto me.

All means all, except to a theologian. Either that or the scripture is a lie, in which case we are all wasting out time.

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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   21:31:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#40. To: TooConservative (#37)

After all, it is God who is working out these matters of the salvation of mankind, not me.

Your universalism is showing...

He was never eligible for eternal life because he would never become a Jew.

Show me the "racial eligibility clause" needed for aionian life.

We do always have free will.

No, we have the ability to make choices.

You claim to have free will. Free means unhindered and unrestrained. Create something out of nothing. Or run a 2 minute mile, or jump over a mountain. Use your mighty free will.

You're good at posting doctrine and using big theological terms. But you need to back it up with supporting scriptures.

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I've listened to preachers I've listened to fools I've watched all the dropouts Who make their own rules One person conditioned to rule and control The media sells it and you live the role ~Ozzy Osbourne: Crazy Train

PSUSA  posted on  2010-08-23   21:41:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#41. To: PSUSA (#39)

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The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

Eric Stratton  posted on  2010-08-23   21:47:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  



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