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Re: Does God Punish? (Part 3)
[Re: APL]
#160604
01/19/14 10:35 PM
01/19/14 10:35 PM
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SDA Active Member 2023
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1)You refuse to understand that God's withdrawal is not arbitrary imposition of punishment. God cannot protect those that refuse Him. Then why is Satan still alive? He irrevocably refused God long ago. Who is protecting him from the wages of sin now?
By God's grace, Arnold
1 John 5:11-13 And this is the testimony, that God gave us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life. I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life.
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Re: Does God Punish? (Part 3)
[Re: APL]
#160605
01/19/14 10:39 PM
01/19/14 10:39 PM
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2)You refuse to understand that the people of Israel very soon after leaving Egypt rejected God as their leader and took to using their own works to gain the promised land. God did not abandon them but gave the people laws where would minimize the damage of their choices. The people took up the sword, something they NEVER were required to do. When God told Saul to kill all the Amalekites, did He want Saul to kill all the Amalekites? And was God happy with Saul for sparing Agag? To say that God never required them to use the sword would make God untrustworthy. And when we consider the consequences of Saul's failure to kill Agag, it just keeps going downhill.
By God's grace, Arnold
1 John 5:11-13 And this is the testimony, that God gave us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life. I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life.
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Re: Does God Punish? (Part 3)
[Re: APL]
#160607
01/20/14 12:19 AM
01/20/14 12:19 AM
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SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
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The withdraw and permit principle of punishment requires Jesus doing something that results in sinners suffering and dying. Jesus is responsible. Otherwise it wouldn't happen. Breaking the Sabbath, for example, does not naturally result in the long list of terrible things enumerated in the passage above. There is nothing about doing unnecessary work on the Sabbath that causes nature to freak out.
Sabbath breaking does not cause earthquakes, tornadoes, or flooding. Jesus either causes it Himself, or He commands holy angels to do it, or He permits evil angels to do it. It is punishment - not cause and effect. Your favorite way is not cause and effect. Jesus must consciously choose to withdraw His restraining hand and deliberately permit suffering, affliction, and death. He is responsible - not sin.
You have refused to publicly agree that people who willfully withdraw and deliberately permit suffering, affliction, and death are guilty of first degree murder. And yet you believe Jesus does so with impunity. For example:
1. You believe Jesus withdrew and permitted snakes to kill sinners. However, you also believe if anyone else did the same thing they would be guilty of first degree murder.
2. You believe Jesus commanded holy men of God to kill criminals and combatants. However, you also believe if anyone else did the same thing they would be guilty of first degree murder.
3. You believe Jesus permitted evil men and evil angels to kill sinners. However, you also believe if anyone else did the same thing they would be guilty of first degree murder.
In all three cases it is Jesus, not sin, who is responsible for suffering, affliction, and death. It is not cause and effect. 1)You refuse to understand that God's withdrawal is not arbitrary imposition of punishment. God cannot protect those that refuse Him.
2)You refuse to understand that the people of Israel very soon after leaving Egypt rejected God as their leader and took to using their own works to gain the promised land. God did not abandon them but gave the people laws where would minimize the damage of their choices. The people took up the sword, something they NEVER were required to do. You continue to refuse to understand that God NEVER wanted divorce, but gave laws to minimize the damage. These rules and commands are not God's ways, but man's. Man took up the sword, God minimized the damage. 1. Right, punishment is not arbitrary. It is specific, deliberate, and based on law. For example, there is no cause and effect connection between complaining about manna and being killed by fiery serpents. There is no cause and effect connection in Jesus commanding holy men of God to kill criminals and combatants. There is no cause and effect connection in Jesus permitting evil men and evil angels to kill sinners. None of these kind of things would happen if Jesus did not do His part. 2. The fact remains - Jesus commanded holy men to kill criminals and combatants. No one forced Him. You seem to think Jesus was powerless. You also believe divorce is equivalent to Jesus commanding killing criminals and combatants. However, He merely permitted divorce. He never commanded it. Jesus taught to turn the other cheek, to not resist evil. Violence, even in self-defense is not God's way. Jesus did not say, take up your sword, and follow me. Commanding holy men of Gods to kill criminals and combatants is not turning the other cheek.
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Re: Does God Punish? (Part 3)
[Re: Mountain Man]
#160610
01/20/14 03:03 AM
01/20/14 03:03 AM
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SDA Active Member 2020
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Perhaps you should read Preface, the Introduction, and the first chapter of the book, The Great Controversy. Read each paragraph, and let it sink in. I did that just today.
MM: "Jesus commanded holy men to kill criminals and combatants." This is NOT God's perfect will. It is His permissive will, just as that laws of divorce were His permissive will. God's permissive will, if continued to be followed will not save.
"The great sin of the Jews was their rejection of Christ; the great sin of the Christian world would be their rejection of the law of God" {GC 22.2}
Oh, that men might open their minds to know God as he is revealed in his Son! {ST, January 20, 1890}
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Re: Does God Punish? (Part 3)
[Re: APL]
#160623
01/20/14 03:38 PM
01/20/14 03:38 PM
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SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
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M: Jesus commanded holy men to kill criminals and combatants.
A: This is NOT God's perfect will. It is His permissive will, just as that laws of divorce were His permissive will. God's permissive will, if continued to be followed will not save. His permissive will is perfect. However, there is nothing permissive about Jesus "commanding" holy men of God to kill criminals and combatants! To refuse obedience is to incur the wrath and disfavor of God. Just ask King Saul. You are using "permissive will" as if it means obeying His command to kill is evil. The exact opposite is true. You have failed to prove from the Word of God Jesus intended to fight alone for His chosen people (without their involvement). You think Jesus withdrawing and permitting death and destruction means He is innocent. Whereas anyone else would be guilty of first degree murder. Jesus never did use hornets to kill. Instead, He used armed Hebrews. Nowhere in the Bible does Jesus forbid it. The fact He commanded it is proof.
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Re: Does God Punish? (Part 3)
[Re: Mountain Man]
#160626
01/20/14 04:15 PM
01/20/14 04:15 PM
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SDA Active Member 2020
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Did I ever say that the people were not involved? Nope. In going into Canaan, the people were to march. In taking Jericho, the people were to march. There is a roll to play. IF, IF, the people had followed God's perfect will, they would have had no need to fight. But the people went backwards, not forwards after leaving Egypt.
Jeremiah 7:22-26 AKJV 22 For I spoke not to your fathers, nor commanded them in the day that I brought them out of the land of Egypt, concerning burnt offerings or sacrifices: 23 But this thing commanded I them, saying, Obey my voice, and I will be your God, and you shall be my people: and walk you in all the ways that I have commanded you, that it may be well to you. 24 But they listened not, nor inclined their ear, but walked in the counsels and in the imagination of their evil heart, and went backward, and not forward. 25 Since the day that your fathers came forth out of the land of Egypt to this day I have even sent to you all my servants the prophets, daily rising up early and sending them: 26 Yet they listened not to me, nor inclined their ear, but hardened their neck: they did worse than their fathers. His permissive will is perfect? OH - so divorce is a good thing!!! God it! Good news! MM: "To refuse obedience is to incur the wrath and disfavor of God." Right - Got it. Love me, or I'll kill you.
How is the reading of the preface, introduction, and first chapter of The Great Controversy going? Or are you going to ignore it?
Oh, that men might open their minds to know God as he is revealed in his Son! {ST, January 20, 1890}
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Re: Does God Punish? (Part 3)
[Re: Mountain Man]
#160630
01/20/14 05:23 PM
01/20/14 05:23 PM
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1. You believe He withdrew His restraining hand and permitted snakes to bite and kill men, women, and children. Where in the NT did Jesus do such things?
2. You also believe Jesus commanded holy men like Moses to punish and kill criminals and combatants. Where in the NT did Jesus command such a thing?
3. You also believe Jesus withdrew His protection and permitted evil men and evil angels to punish and kill Jews and Gentiles. When did Jesus do such a thing in the NT?
M: The obvious answers to the questions above make it clear Jesus in the NT (while here in the flesh) did not act like Jesus in the OT. Of course, there are things in common; however, there are things He didn't do while here in the flesh.
K: MM, I asked, "Why did Ellen White write that passage and how does it apply here regarding "employs fire and water to kill sinners"? I don't see how your response addresses this in any way. You agree with me that Jesus did things in the OT He didn't do in the NT (while here in the flesh). Ellen White's comment about Jesus in the NT does not undermine what she wrote about Jesus in the OT. "The Saviour is revealed in the Old Testament as clearly as in the New." {DA 799.2} I agree that "The Saviour is revealed in the Old Testament as clearly as in the New." The problem is you take what you think God is doing in the Old, and then try to interpret what you see Jesus doing in the New. But what APL and I have been saying in case you haven't caught it is that what we see Jesus doing, not killing people, is how we need to interpret what we see God doing in the Old. Otherwise, when you say "does not undermine" how do you resolve those two apparently conflicting statements?
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Re: Does God Punish? (Part 3)
[Re: jamesonofthunder]
#160633
01/20/14 05:42 PM
01/20/14 05:42 PM
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SDA Active Member 2024
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Can you clearly and concisely distinguish between murder and killing? Green could not. Maybe you can? Distinguish it so that we can use that guideline to compare against anyone and be able to determine whether they killed or murdered.
Murder is an act of war against God's righteousness. It is an act of taking the prerogatives of God into their own hands. It takes the complete separation from God's Spirit to commit murder, so in rejecting the Holy Spirit's warning and rebuke there is a rebellion against God involved. On the other hand the act of killing someone for righteouseness sake is an act of love and self preservation, empowered by God, as proven in many biblical cases and history in general. The problem is, if you are not hearing the record under the power of the Spirit of God, then self takes over and they take the righteous character of God and view Him from a fallen perspective, attributing a fallen character to Him. They turn His righteousness into a terror, or they take away His power in their views. But "those who have an ear" God empowers to "Let them hear" and they can see through His perspective and they see the mercy in His holding the four winds. In other words, Spiritual things are Spiritually discerned, and things written by God do not appear to fit with the preconceived notions of most receivers ideas on the subject, it is their perception that is altered and making the words to mean something else. If God's Spirit does not attend the words, there is no power and confusion reigns. Also when God does intend for the self willed to hear the subject, the devil interveigns and sows seads of doubt and confusion. They hear the issue from the side of the devil and begin arguing for him, thus becoming the devils advocate. Most of us like the Apostles will be found guilty of that, because it is a part of the Christian learning experience if we are sincere and learn from our mistakes through the Holy Spirit. Very few have nothing to repent of in our learning of truth. Back to the point; Many argue against the ministry of Samson having anything to do with righteousness but when he was born it was miracle and an angel heralded his birth. When Samson slew the 1000 men with the fresh jawbone of an ass the HOLY SPIRIT empowered him to do so. Miracles happened to prove God was on Samsons side, and water flowed out of the bone. They made him judge over Israel for 30 years before he was with Delilah, and the people made the emblem of the donky jaw bone their emblem of power. Tell me was God not behind the man with a bone being empowered to kill the 1000 men who intended on killing Samson? Does the bible record this incorrectly? Some influences are so insideus that God commanded childred to die, and to even kill the cattle of the wicked because of the intended use goes even deeper into the hatred of God against sin. Is it wicked for God to hate? You who think God does not have the right to execute justice yet remain unsullied are in effect saying God cannot hate. Is that true? Can a righteous God hate? The answer is yes but you would make an argument to prove it is no. Because of the fallen perspective that we are born in, being on the fallen side of reality, stuck in this prison house of mortality, we tend to make excuses for sin, and make God to be no more righteous than a mere mortal. On God's side of the mirror there is no excuse for sin. Jesus leads us to find righteousness in the words He gave in fearful majesty, as much as He wants us to see His majesty that makes the mountains shiver. In fact our whole walk of faith is to prepare us to stand before fearful majesty, so why would anyone argue against seeing God for His wonderfully merciful yet fearfully righteous character? Much of the power of the faith of the children of God is in knowing they are standing in the righteous presence of God in the sanctuary, through the body of Christ. They see the fear that should be experienced by everyone coming in repentance and they are forgiven. Power. Everyone with an earthly mentality sees this issue from the mindset of sympathy for the devil, using his arguments against the righteousness of God, and they quibble and murmer against the meanings of the words God gave. It is because of the clouded minset of men on the righteousness of God that they misrepresent God's Character in this way. And you think this is "clearly and concisely"? It almost seems that you intentionally used vague terms to define it and used many paragraphs. For example, "Murder is an act of war against God's righteousness". How can one determine if someone kills someone whether they did "an act of war against God's righteousness" or they did it for "righteousness"? This seems more of a dictator type of attitude, that whoever is in charge determines whether you did right or not. Basically, there is no right or wrong other than what someone makes up as to what is in their opinion.
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Re: Does God Punish? (Part 3)
[Re: kland]
#160635
01/20/14 05:49 PM
01/20/14 05:49 PM
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While not really surprised, I am appalled by how many people see God as doing the same acts of Hitler and other dictators by directly and intentionally torturing and killing people. And I'm further appalled that they see nothing wrong with viewing God in that way nor considering that their views may need to be looked at as to whether they are in harmony with how Jesus came to earth to represent God in flesh since man had come so far away and had so wrongly misrepresented His character.
And then there's some who say that APL, myself, and others need to have a more hostile view of God so that we are not misrepresenting His character...
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Re: Does God Punish? (Part 3)
[Re: APL]
#160637
01/20/14 06:04 PM
01/20/14 06:04 PM
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In going into Canaan, the people were to march. In taking Jericho, the people were to march. God intended to show the Israelites that the conquest of Canaan was not to be ascribed to them. The captain of the Lord’s host overcame Jericho. He and his angels were engaged in the conquest. Christ commanded the armies of Heaven to throw down the walls of Jericho, and prepare an entrance for Joshua and the armies of Israel. God, in this wonderful miracle, not only strengthened the faith of his people in his power to subdue their enemies, but rebuked their former unbelief. – {1SP 351.1} What did Jesus want the armies of Israel to do after He and His angels threw down the walls? Were they to just wait as the Canaanites walked out on their own? The following quote seems to imply that love and justice, not sin and malice, needed something a bit more proactive. And both love and justice demanded the prompt execution of these rebels against God and foes to man. – {PP 492.2}
By God's grace, Arnold
1 John 5:11-13 And this is the testimony, that God gave us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life. I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life.
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