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Originally Posted by
Rhyfelwyr
It doesn't specifically state that Job was transformed by God, but it does say that he was righteous, and does the rest of the scripture not support the idea that God transforms the hearts of those who believe? I'm not arguing the order of believing/transformation here, but surely even an Arminian would grant that Job, already being a God-fearing man, had been transformed by the grace of God?
Therefore, though God withdrew his direct protection of Job, Job's ability to face his tribulations and retain his faith did ultimately rest of the change the Lord wrought in him.
Presumably though God was allowing Job to demonstrate his own righteousness. I'm not going to argue about the power of God to transform, but it Job will always follow God regardless becuase of God's power over him then all God has done is allowed the Accuser to torment him.
Is that Good? (We trigger our old friend Epicurus here.)
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That is indeed what Jesus came to do, but that does not change the fact that God, the Trinity in its entirety, had a special covenant in existance with Israel, which is still very much in existance. The New Covenant certainly has parallels in its message (delivering a chosen people to the promised land), but just because Jesus came as a Jewish Messiah, does not mean that the prophecies of him oppose the idea that he could be a saviour also for the Gentiles (and since he is the lamb slain before the foundation of the world..). Indeed, Jews today do not recognise Jesus because he did not conquer the world in the military sense that they imagined, but through the Second Coming He will surely be King of all the earth? His Kingdom is not of this world, but the one to come...
Read the Sermon on the Mount and tell me Jesus does not revoke the Law. Personally the, "I come not to change the Law" bit seems like one of Christ's little jokes. I get the sense he had a somewhat black sense of humour. I suppose you need that if you're going to be a king crucified by his own people.
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Fair enough, this really ties into our discussion about the Cannanitish woman and whether or not we accept the idea of uncovenanted grace, since obviosuly if it was covenanted it must have been by the New Covenant.
Well, if the New Covenant is sealed with Christ's blood... The important point is that Acts has a whole section to establish the point at which the Ministry becomes universal.
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With the Pentateuch stuff here its a bit off the top of my head, but I'm guessing that a few command posts wouldn't stop a mass migration. Presumably if they did alert Pharaoh then it would take a while to summon/gather a large army, and by the time they caught up with the Jews they might be somewhere about the Red Sea? Also, Judaea must have been the frontier of the Jewish Empire, and so all there would be to stop the Jews would be a few client states, and all the ones up the shore would be more largely autonomous city states, with little military capacity.
At the time of Exodus the Egyptian and Hittite Empires are butting heads, they meet in Lebanon, it would be like trying to establish a new country in the DMZ in Korea. You'd be smashed between two hammars. Arcaeological evidence is pitifully thin on the ground, most of the cities Joshua is supposed to have "captured" were not even occupied at the time.
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As for Paul, I said he wasn't perfect, the scripture records his errors, and we should be wary of them. We should aim to be like Jesus, not Paul.
That raises the question of whether his letters should be ignored in a doctinal debate, which is what I usually do.
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Since Jesus disciples kick-started the process of evangelising, there should always be people able to train themselves through the Gospel. You make a valid point in the copying out of scripture though, I guess I tend to think in the era of the printing press. That would be a valid occupation if there was a demand for Bibles, similarly I've no problem with someone dedicating their life to missionary work. Although all you need to do to minister is read the Gospel in your spare time. If everyone is learned in the word, they can just pick someone they like to lead the services.
The problem with the Biblical parralel is that the leaders of the Church then were men who knew Jesus personally. They spoke the language he spoke, they remembered what he said and how he taught. Much of that is Apophrycal now, because it wasn't necessary include it in the Bible. That brings us to another problem, Bishops wrote the Bible, Bishops translated it.
Today, if you have a "part time" Church leader he lacks the literate Greek and Hebrew, so he is at the mercy of the translators (often from another denomination). He might as well have his own Bishop, or priest.
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I agree its a bit vague, but you can tell that Jesus sees the power as lying in the congregation, certainly that is how it would have been for the early converts without established hierarchies watching over them.
I think it's very vague, and I fail to see how it disallows a priesthood. Notice he says the Gentiles, contextually it is the Gentiles (Greek and Romans) who do not have a priesthood, but who's leaders (King, Senators etc.) perform priestly functions. You might say that Jesus is actually arguing for a seperate priesthood which is not part of the governmental administration!
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No Calvinist ever believes for certain that they are of the elect, because they won't know until they persevere to the end (hence the Puritan frenzy). It's not because they could lose salvation, rather that they would have been mistaken in thinking that they had it in the first place. If you are of the elect, you work out your salvation with fear and trembling, hoping to the end. If you are not of the elect, you will happily live a life of sin and pay for it at the end.
Pretty sure Cromwell did. Anyway, that means that even if you worship God you will go to Hell if he wants you to.
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Well, I just remind myself that they are no different from me, and I know that I'm in no position to expect forgiveness. Often, people demand forgiveness from God, demand that they be justified for what they are, and they denounce Him if He will not do it. If you are an Arminian, do these people appear to be humbling themselves before God? :no:
I just don't like a God that destroys children and babies. I have less concern for my own salvation than for all those around me. I care about what happens to people, even if they are not good people.
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Jesus gives me comfort to, maybe I should abandon him because of it?
No, but if you follow him because he comforts you, that is not a good reason.
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Also, you just commented on my views on compassion, how on earth could you bear to live with yourself knowing a person is in Hell because of you? God is just in punishing those who transgress against Him, but a lot of those people never harmed us, by inaction we would be condemning them to Hell. If people truly thought about the consequences of this, how could they live with it?
You learn to live with it, the first year is the hardest bit, but since you have Free Will, and so does everyone else around you, you keep going and asking God for forgiveness.
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Yes, as Christianty has declined, it was inevitable that this would happen. But Christianity has reached the point where if it is to survive, revival will have to come from the bottom up, because, besides God, there's little at the top to provide such a resurgence. Even at a coffee morning after my church's service today, people were commenting on just how useless/uncaring other ministers were, and how their congregations are plummeting because of it.
Either you're in a black spot or your congregation is engaging in trash-talk. All the ministers I have met (and that's a few denominations) have been great people, caring an compasionate.
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He never lived in the ideal society, I said it would have to be a consolidated Christian community for several generations (OK it was Christian but not the way Calvin envisaged it). Calvin was a missionary, he went to spread the gospel to a population disillusioned with Catholicism (heck they were even willing to adopt the Bogomil heresies in the past), and his life was devoted to that work. Even at Geneva he had to restart after the authorities kicked him out, he didn't have the control some people claim he did.
It doesn't change the fact that in order to come up with his doctrines he needed a university education, which is the mark of a good priest. Bear in mind that at one time only priests went to universities, it's what they were created for.
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Even the Scottish Bishops would never have wanted to return to the Anglican Church, since many of them, especially in the north-east, were strongly Calvinistic. And if Rowan Williams ever tries to do what you are suggesting, I will be drawing up the 2009 National Covenant and taking up arms against the Kingdom of Antichirst.
Rowen Williams has a very difficult job right now, I don't think the Bishop Primus et al. are his major concern.