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Re: Lesson #10 - The Meaning of His DEATH
[Re: Tom]
#100429
07/02/08 02:20 PM
07/02/08 02:20 PM
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Brazil
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That the number of arms we have, and all the other physical characteristics we have, is arbitrary means that God used His individual discretion in determining these things, which, of course, implies that He carefully planned every detail about Adam's physical characteristics. I've been arguing that the fact that doing evil leads to bad results is not arbitrary, not that God didn't plan every detail about Adam's body and mind. Of course He did. He created Adam. How could God have created Adam without planning every detail? That’s the point. What you are saying is that the fact that God carefully planned every detail about how Adam's body should work means He used His individual discretion in determining our physical characteristics, but the fact that He carefully planned how Adam’s mind should work doesn’t mean that He used His individual discretion in determining the characteristics of our mind. Don’t you think this is a contradiction? “The will of God establishes the connection between cause and its effects. Fearful consequences are attached to the least violation of God's law. All will seek to avoid the result, but will not labor to avoid the cause which produced the effect. The cause is wrong, the effect right, to restrain the transgressor.” {ApM 26.1} T: Well, the will of God establishes everything, right? I don't know what you wish to say by this. I guess you are saying, in an indirect way, that you think the fact that a cause has an effect is arbitrary. Yes. God used His individual discretion to establish a “connection between cause and its effects.” Do you really believe that nobody created the law of cause and effects? Whatever you sow, you will also reap. God created this law; it did not come to existence by itself. R: It's true he sinned, but the truth had to reach his understanding before he could be held accountable for these sins. T: If he couldn't have been held accountable for these sins, he wouldn't have been offered pardon. Everyone who admits he is wrong needs pardon. But light must first reach you before you admit you are wrong. R: Anyway, it’s useless to continue discussing this, for we have done so many times in the past but haven’t been able to reach an agreement. T: That's fine, but when the SOP is used to state that God can only legally pardon because Christ died, I'll bring Lucifer back up, because how God dealt with Lucifer completely disproves this idea. The fact is that God offered Lucifer pardon again and again, without any necessity for Christ's death. This establishes conclusively that God can offer pardon without death. No, it doesn’t, because death is the penalty for willful disobedience. “Said the angel: ‘If light come, and that light is set aside or rejected, then comes condemnation and the frown of God; but before the light comes, there is no sin, for there is no light for them to reject.’” {1T 116.1} R: He never taught explicitly that there is a sanctuary in heaven and that He is the high priest of that sanctuary. He never taught explicitly that our body is the temple of the Holy Spirit. He never taught explicitly that He had to die in order for God to be able to pardon us. But He did speak about these things, and what He said is further explained in other parts of the Bible. T: Ok, here you're giving examples of other things which you don't believe Jesus explicitly taught. This implies you agree with my assertion, which is that Jesus did not explicitly teach that He had to die in order for God to legally pardon us. I agree! If He had taught this explicitly, we wouldn’t be discussing it. But obviously the fact that He did not teach this explicitly doesn't mean He didn't teach it implicitly. He used the word "ransom" because a ransom is a price which is necessary to be paid in order for one to be freed. It was necessary for Christ to die in order for us to be freed from sin. This interpretation has the advantage of both being in harmony with what Christ often taught elsewhere, and being easily understood by His hearers. The idea that Christ was teaching that He had to die in order for God to legally pardon us has the following shortcomings: 1)It's not in harmony with the context. 2)No follower of His would have understood Him to be teaching Calvin's idea. 3)It doesn't agree with anything He taught elsewhere. Our salvation has a price, which means that our pardon has a price, for no sinner can be saved without being pardoned. I don't believe He's literally doing this. What would be the purpose? To remind God, because God had forgotten? To convince God to do something He would not otherwise be inclined to do? There's no reason for Christ to literally appear before God pleading His blood, is there? The reason He is presented as speaking to God is for our benefit, not God's. It's a metaphor, or symbol, to let us know that our forgiveness is possible because of Christ's righteousness, not our own. It’s a metaphor, or symbol, to let us know that our forgiveness is possible because of Christ’s death in our place. “Through him [Christ] mercy was enabled to deal justly in punishing the transgressor of the law, and justice was enabled to forgive without losing its dignity or purity.” {ST, June 18, 1896 par. 2}
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Re: Lesson #10 - The Meaning of His DEATH
[Re: Rosangela]
#100433
07/02/08 03:04 PM
07/02/08 03:04 PM
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That’s the point. What you are saying is that the fact that God carefully planned every detail about how Adam's body should work means He used His individual discretion in determining our physical characteristics, but the fact that He carefully planned how Adam’s mind should work doesn’t mean that He used His individual discretion in determining the characteristics of our mind. Don’t you think this is a contradiction? I haven't said God didn't use His individual discretion in determining the characteristics of our mind. I haven't said anything like that. Of course He did. He planned every detail of every part of us. What I've been saying is that the fact that doing something evil results in bad results is not a result of God's making us in some special way. Simply creating a being in His image, with free will and a conscience, necessitates that one cannot act contrary to the principles of life, which are the principles of love, without experience bad results from doing evil. This isn't something that God made happen, as if He could have made something else happen. God could no more create a sentient being that could love and be loved that could experience good results by doing evil than He could create a square circle. When I presented the challenge of your being God for a day and creating such a being, I actually thought the solution you came up with was a good try. You suggested that God could have created beings that would love one another, but have no knowledge of Him. However, eternal live is knowing God, so I found fault with that try, but I think it was a good effort. I don't believe that it is possible for God to create sentient beings other than how He did. Although there are millions of worlds, I am sure every sentient being in every world will have the same characteristics of conscience and free will, and that the same effects of experiencing bad results for doing evil would be universal (of course, they never did evil, so that didn't happen). Yes. God used His individual discretion to establish a “connection between cause and its effects.” Do you really believe that nobody created the law of cause and effects? Yes. I believe it's like circles are round. Cause and effect is not something that had to be created, as if it could not exist. Whatever you sow, you will also reap. God created this law; it did not come to existence by itself. I disagree. If what you assert were true, then everything there is would be arbitrary, which is to say, they would be a certain way only because that's the way God wanted it. Therefore we should choose to do things the way God wants, because He is #1 in the universe; He outranks everybody. He could have made things some other way, but chose not to. We need to learn how God actually did make things, and conform ourselves to that. The why doesn't matter, only the what; that is, we need not learn to do certain things because of some reason, all we need to know is what God wants. I don't believe this is what God wants. I believe He made things a certain way because that's the only way they could be. I believe He wants us to learn the truth about the way things are. For example, it's more blessed to give than to receive. This is truth. Not because God made things this way, but because it really is more blessed to give than to receive. So Jesus Christ did not create truth, but revealed it. The Plan of Salvation is not one possible solution, but the only solution, because only by revealing the truth could wrongs be made right. R: It's true he sinned, but the truth had to reach his understanding before he could be held accountable for these sins. T: If he couldn't have been held accountable for these sins, he wouldn't have been offered pardon.
R:Everyone who admits he is wrong needs pardon. But light must first reach you before you admit you are wrong. Every who does wrong and knows it is wrong needs pardon. Admitting the wrong is irrelevant to the need. That Lucifer had light is self-evident from the fact that God offered him pardon. No, it doesn’t, because death is the penalty for willful disobedience. Not in an arbitrary sense, but as a consequence. God was trying to save Lucifer from his sin, because He knew it would kill him. Had Satan and his host then been left to reap the full result of their sin, they would have perished; but it would not have been apparent to heavenly beings that this was the inevitable result of sin. (DA 764) The inevitable result of sin is death, which Satan would have experienced, had God *left* him to reap the full result of his sin. “Said the angel: ‘If light come, and that light is set aside or rejected, then comes condemnation and the frown of God; but before the light comes, there is no sin, for there is no light for them to reject.’” {1T 116.1} Right, and the fact that God offered Lucifer pardon showed that Lucifer had light. He wouldn't have needed pardon otherwise, as needing pardon means he was condemned, which means he had light. R: He never taught explicitly that there is a sanctuary in heaven and that He is the high priest of that sanctuary. He never taught explicitly that our body is the temple of the Holy Spirit. He never taught explicitly that He had to die in order for God to be able to pardon us. But He did speak about these things, and what He said is further explained in other parts of the Bible. T: Ok, here you're giving examples of other things which you don't believe Jesus explicitly taught. This implies you agree with my assertion, which is that Jesus did not explicitly teach that He had to die in order for God to legally pardon us. I agree!
R:If He had taught this explicitly, we wouldn’t be discussing it. But obviously the fact that He did not teach this explicitly doesn't mean He didn't teach it implicitly. People disagree all the time regarding things Christ explicitly taught. At any rate, regarding your assertion that Christ did not explicitly teach that the purpose of His death was so that God could legally pardon us, I agree! Our salvation has a price, which means that our pardon has a price, for no sinner can be saved without being pardoned. I agree. The life of Christ was not the price paid to the Father for our pardon; but that life was the price which the Father paid to so manifest his loving power as to bring us to that repentant attitude of mind where he could pardon us freely. (Fifield, God is Love) I see it the way Fifield explained it. I don't believe He's literally doing this. What would be the purpose? To remind God, because God had forgotten? To convince God to do something He would not otherwise be inclined to do? There's no reason for Christ to literally appear before God pleading His blood, is there? The reason He is presented as speaking to God is for our benefit, not God's. It's a metaphor, or symbol, to let us know that our forgiveness is possible because of Christ's righteousness, not our own.
R:It’s a metaphor, or symbol, to let us know that our forgiveness is possible because of Christ’s death in our place. I agree completely! More than that, I think you put this particularly well.
Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
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Re: Lesson #10 - The Meaning of His DEATH
[Re: Mountain Man]
#100439
07/02/08 03:48 PM
07/02/08 03:48 PM
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I meant the passage in the original Greek. Here's how Young's Literal Translation has it: 6For in our being still ailing, Christ in due time did die for the impious;
7for scarcely for a righteous man will any one die, for for the good man perhaps some one also doth dare to die;
8and God doth commend His own love to us, that, in our being still sinners, Christ did die for us;
9much more, then, having been declared righteous now in his blood, we shall be saved through him from the wrath;
10for if, being enemies, we have been reconciled to God through the death of His Son, much more, having been reconciled, we shall be saved in his life. (Romans 5) You can confirm that the original only has the word "wrath," not "God's wrath." Regarding the other passages, those look to be dealing with God's wrath, except for maybe 1 Thes. 5:9; that might be saying the same thing as Paul says in Romans 5. For God hath not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ What is "the wrath"?
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Re: Lesson #10 - The Meaning of His DEATH
[Re: scott]
#100440
07/02/08 03:51 PM
07/02/08 03:51 PM
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quote=Mountain Man]Scott, I feel the same way about my God that you do about your God. You and Tom may find it difficult to believe I can love my God since He has punished and destroyed impenitent sinners, and will resurrect them at the end of time to punish and destroy them again. Nevertheless, my God is just and merciful, gracious and loving. The wrath of God is love. If we are tempted to think and feel otherwise it is because the enemy is seeking to deceive and ensnare us. If I showed you a quote that God was responsible for the destruction of sinners which would have been sinful for one us to do - would you agree with it?
Exodus 20:5 Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor serve them: for I the LORD thy God [am] a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth [generation] of them that hate me; 20:6 And showing mercy unto thousands of them that love me, and keep my commandments. [ I really believe this is exactly what the Great Controversy is all about. Some worship the image of the Beast and others worship God. Satan has used false doctrine and fundamentalist Bible exegesis to give His church a false picture of God. Satan has placed his character in the Christ’s living temple and the people are willing to worship a god that is exacting, demanding, petty, arbitrary, murders at will, and demands the blood of the innocent as appeasement. Satan uses these men, willing to worship his image as God, to do the very things that they believe God has done in order to further God’s kingdom. By beholding we become changed. A violent God can only produce violent children. Satan well knows this! If God has the same attributes as Hitler and we are willing to give our allegiance to Him then we are scary indeed! And if you think there are not Adventist willing to worship Satan’s image of God you might want to think again! scott I do not believe that God has ever murdered anyone and I don’t believe that He ever wanted any of His children to murder anyone for Him. Scott, how do you explain all the OT stories that attribute to God judgments that resulted in people dying?
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Re: Lesson #10 - The Meaning of His DEATH
[Re: Mountain Man]
#100455
07/02/08 05:33 PM
07/02/08 05:33 PM
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By MM: Scott, how do you explain all the OT stories that attribute to God judgments that resulted in people dying? 1) Most Jews to this day don’t believe there is a literal devil. 2) They also believe that everything in Nature is controlled by God. 3) They also believe that sickness and disease are directs acts of God punishing either the person or the persons children. 4) They also believe that all evil is sent to mankind and is directed and controlled by God as tests to humankind. With that cultural paradigm how else could they have interpreted the events they saw? Remember that the very first act of Jesus, after His baptism, was to be driven into the wilderness to be tempted of the devil. Jesus’ very first statement was that there really is a devil and he really does tempt us and there really is a battle going on between good and evil. Jesus established most of the principles that we use to explain the Great Controversy. Jesus is the very first theologian known who said that God is only good. Every other religion taught that God did both good and evil, including the Jewish religion! scott
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Re: Lesson #10 - The Meaning of His DEATH
[Re: Tom]
#100460
07/02/08 06:29 PM
07/02/08 06:29 PM
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Brazil
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I haven't said God didn't use His individual discretion in determining the characteristics of our mind. I haven't said anything like that. Of course He did. He planned every detail of every part of us. What I've been saying is that the fact that doing something evil results in bad results is not a result of God's making us in some special way. And what I have been saying is that the bad results we experience when we do something evil are basically a consequence of the way in which God created our minds to function, of the characteristics He implanted in our minds, and of the laws of cause and effect He established. When I presented the challenge of your being God for a day and creating such a being, I actually thought the solution you came up with was a good try. You suggested that God could have created beings that would love one another, but have no knowledge of Him. However, eternal live is knowing God, so I found fault with that try, but I think it was a good effort. Maybe they couldn’t have eternal life, but sure they could have eternal existence. R: Do you really believe that nobody created the law of cause and effects? T: Yes. I believe it's like circles are round. Cause and effect is not something that had to be created, as if it could not exist. So you believe God didn’t create one of the main laws of the universe. Then He must have submitted to it, for He certainly could have created trees capable of yielding several kinds of fruits but created, instead, every tree yielding fruit according to its kind. R: Whatever you sow, you will also reap. God created this law; it did not come to existence by itself. T: I disagree. If what you assert were true, then everything there is would be arbitrary, which is to say, they would be a certain way only because that's the way God wanted it. ... So Jesus Christ did not create truth, but revealed it. He indeed didn’t create truth – He is the truth. He defines, in His own person, what is right and what is wrong, what is good and what is evil. Things are the way God wants them to be, and His way is the best way – this now is clear to the whole universe. R:Everyone who admits he is wrong needs pardon. But light must first reach you before you admit you are wrong. T: Every who does wrong and knows it is wrong needs pardon. Admitting the wrong is irrelevant to the need. That Lucifer had light is self-evident from the fact that God offered him pardon. Everyone who does wrong needs pardon, whether they know it or not. Now, if you know that what you are doing is wrong, you have already admitted you are wrong. I’m not saying you admit it to others, but that you have already admitted it to yourself. However, this is only possible if you had light showing you that what you are doing is wrong. There were indeed several occasions on which Lucifer was almost convinced that he was wrong, but there was a moment when he was unequivocally convinced of this and had to make a choice. “The Lord saw the use Satan was making of his powers, and he set before him truth in contrast with falsehood. Time and time again during the controversy, Satan was ready to be convinced, ready to admit that he was wrong. But those he had deceived were also ready to accuse him of leaving them. What should he do?--submit to God, or continue in a course of deception? He chose to deny truth, to take refuge in misstatements and fraud.” {RH, September 7, 1897 par. 11} “But such efforts as infinite love and wisdom only could devise, were made to convince him of his error. His disaffection was proved to be without cause, and he was made to see what would be the result of persisting in revolt. Lucifer was convinced that he was in the wrong. He saw that 'the Lord is righteous in all His ways, and holy in all His works' (Psalm 145:17); that the divine statutes are just, and that he ought to acknowledge them as such before all heaven. Had he done this, he might have saved himself and many angels. He had not at that time fully cast off his allegiance to God.” {PP 39.1} Perhaps, but the words on which we are apparently in agreement have a different meaning for you and for me.
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Re: Lesson #10 - The Meaning of His DEATH
[Re: Rosangela]
#100469
07/02/08 08:52 PM
07/02/08 08:52 PM
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R:What I have been saying is that the bad results we experience when we do something evil are basically a consequence of the way in which God created our minds to function, of the characteristics He implanted in our minds, and of the laws of cause and effect He established. The point I've been trying to make is that I don't believe that the fact that we experience bad results because we do something evil is because of something God arbitrarily does, but is instead due to the nature of things. By nature of things, I mean, the nature of evil, and the nature of sentient beings. Iow, I don't believe God could create sentient beings capable of giving and experiencing love who could do evil things and not experience bad results. When I presented the challenge of your being God for a day and creating such a being, I actually thought the solution you came up with was a good try. You suggested that God could have created beings that would love one another, but have no knowledge of Him. However, eternal live is knowing God, so I found fault with that try, but I think it was a good effort.
Maybe they couldn’t have eternal life, but sure they could have eternal existence. A cow can have eternal existence. This is getting a bit off point, I think. My point is the same as I made above, that our experiencing bad results from doing evil has to do with the nature of being loving sentient beings, as opposed to something God imposes upon our existence. R: Do you really believe that nobody created the law of cause and effects? T: Yes. I believe it's like circles are round. Cause and effect is not something that had to be created, as if it could not exist.
So you believe God didn’t create one of the main laws of the universe. Then He must have submitted to it, for He certainly could have created trees capable of yielding several kinds of fruits but created, instead, every tree yielding fruit according to its kind. ??? What does this have to do with anything? My point is that causes have effects like circles have roundness. Iow, you can't have a cause without an effect. Not because God created a law which said "causes shall have effects" but because that's what causes are. They are things which effect something (not affect, but effect). Your point about trees lost me. He indeed didn’t create truth – He is the truth. He defines, in His own person, what is right and what is wrong, what is good and what is evil. Right! Things are the way God wants them to be, and His way is the best way – this now is clear to the whole universe. Things aren't the way God wants them to be. R:Everyone who admits he is wrong needs pardon. But light must first reach you before you admit you are wrong. T: Every who does wrong and knows it is wrong needs pardon. Admitting the wrong is irrelevant to the need. That Lucifer had light is self-evident from the fact that God offered him pardon.
Everyone who does wrong needs pardon, whether they know it or not.
Everyone who does wrong needs pardon, whether they know it or not.
Now, if you know that what you are doing is wrong, you have already admitted you are wrong. I’m not saying you admit it to others, but that you have already admitted it to yourself. However, this is only possible if you had light showing you that what you are doing is wrong.
There were indeed several occasions on which Lucifer was almost convinced that he was wrong, but there was a moment when he was unequivocally convinced of this and had to make a choice. Over and over again, God offered Lucifer pardon. Each time was for some sin that Lucifer had done, of which he had light, otherwise there would have been no occasion for pardon to be offered. When God offers pardon, it is because we under condemnation. When does condemnation come? When light has been rejected. You are right that there came a time when Lucifer had to make a choice. He couldn't keep on sinning forever without there being any consequences to his own soul. At some point continued sinning would cause him to complete case off his allegiance to God. He would so harden his heart that he would lose the capacity and the willingness to respond to the Holy Spirit. The fact that there was some point on which Lucifer was not convinced, does not mean there was no point on which Lucifer was convinced. Iow, Lucifer could not have been convinced that his course in rebelling against God was totally without merit. However, he could have been convinced that Jesus Christ really was the Son of God, and he was wrong to be envious of Him for that reason. Another example is that EGW writes that Lucifer allowed envy and resentment to prevail over him (I can't remember the exact things involved, "envy" and "resentment," but something like that). The language she used depicts that a struggle took place within Lucifer, which Lucifer was conscious of. Anyway, we know that God was offering Lucifer pardon again and again, so Lucifer must have been doing things for which it made sense for God to offer him pardon (which would be things he knew were wrong). T: I agree completely!
R:Perhaps, but the words on which we are apparently in agreement have a different meaning for you and for me. That's the whole point of this thread. You believe Christ had to die because of an imposed requirement, a requirement you would say God imposes because of attributes of His character (e.g. His holiness requires that sin be punished, or else He cannot forgive it). I believe He had to die to solve a problem that couldn't be solved in any other way, a problem which had to do with truth being misunderstood.
Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
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Re: Lesson #10 - The Meaning of His DEATH
[Re: Tom]
#100481
07/03/08 03:50 PM
07/03/08 03:50 PM
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Regarding #100439, what is "the wrath"? In English, we would just say "wrath." Paul is saying that Jesus Christ will save us from wrath. Or, it could be specifying a certain source of wrath: ours or God's. I am inclined to believe it refers to God's wrath. The following passages speak of the wrath of God. John 3:36 He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him. Romans 1:18 For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who hold the truth in unrighteousness; Ephesians 5:6 Let no man deceive you with vain words: for because of these things cometh the wrath of God upon the children of disobedience. Revelation 14:10 The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured out without mixture into the cup of his indignation; and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the presence of the holy angels, and in the presence of the Lamb: 14:11 And the smoke of their torment ascendeth up for ever and ever: and they have no rest day nor night, who worship the beast and his image, and whosoever receiveth the mark of his name.
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