by jimwalton » Fri Apr 06, 2018 3:42 pm
> No, I am reading the Bible as if it says what it means, and it means what it says.
Then please be consistent and not selective with this position. And secondly, remember that our text is a translation. We have to get back to the author's intent to know what it clearly says.
If you are being both fair and consistent, you have to admit that Pharaoh reveals a hard heart towards the people of Israel in Ex. 1.11-22. You have to admit that Pharaoh shows a hard heart towards God in Ex. 5.2. Exodus 7.13 says Pharaoh's heart became hard and he would not listen to them. Exodus 7.14 says Pharaoh's heart was unyielding. Exodus 7.22 says Pharaoh's heart became hard. Exodus 8.15 says Pharaoh hardened his own heart. You did admit that Pharaoh is said to have hardened his own heart in 8.32. And THEN we read that God hardened Pharaoh's heart, and you blame God for it all. That's not reading the Bible as if is says what it means and means what it says. God hasn't interfered with his free will but has left Pharaoh to harden his own hear. By the time in 9.12 it says for the first time "The Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart, Pharaoh was resolved already to pursue the course he had freely chosen. God gave him over to it (read also Romans 1.18-32: when people exercise their free will in rebellion against God, he doesn't stop them but lets them do it. He doesn't interfere with their free will.) God is not forcing Pharaoh to be rebellious, Pharaoh has already decided that on his own. It's easy to see if we are reading the Bible as if it says what it means and means what it says.
> You can't go to some part of the bible that says what you want it to say, and then pretend that it means you can change what the bible says elsewhere. It's dishonest.
Oh, this isn't fair at all. I didn't even get close to doing this. Please be fair. Where did I go cherry picking texts and pulling them out of context to pretend it means something? Every text I gave you was earlier in Exodus pertaining to the hardening of the heart of Pharaoh. Every one. Please be fair.
> How do you know this is what the Egyptians meant? What evidence can you show?
It's in spell 125 of the Egyptian Book of the Dead. "Spell 125 describes the judging of the heart of the deceased by the god Osiris in the Hall of Truth, one of the best known images from ancient Egypt, even though the god with his scales is never actually described in the text. As it was vital that the soul pass the test of the weighing of the heart in order to gain paradise, knowing what to say and how to act before Osiris, Thoth, Anubis, and the Forty-Two Judges was considered the most important information the deceased could arrive with. When a person died, they were guided by Anubis to the Hall of Truth (also known as The Hall of Two Truths) where they would make the Negative Confession (also known as The Declaration of Innocence). This was a list of 42 sins the person could honestly say they had never indulged in. Once the Negative Confession was made, Osiris, Thoth, Anubis, and the Forty-Two Judges would confer and, if the confession was accepted, the heart of the deceased was then weighed in the balance against the white feather of Ma'at, the feather of truth. If the heart was found to be lighter than the feather, the soul passed on toward paradise; if the heart was heavier, it was thrown onto the floor where it was devoured by the monster goddess Ammut and the soul would cease to exist."
My point is still firm: God doesn't interfere with humans' free will.
> No, I am reading the Bible as if it says what it means, and it means what it says.
Then please be consistent and not selective with this position. And secondly, remember that our text is a translation. We have to get back to the author's intent to know what it clearly says.
If you are being both fair and consistent, you have to admit that Pharaoh reveals a hard heart towards the people of Israel in Ex. 1.11-22. You have to admit that Pharaoh shows a hard heart towards God in Ex. 5.2. Exodus 7.13 says Pharaoh's heart became hard and he would not listen to them. Exodus 7.14 says Pharaoh's heart was unyielding. Exodus 7.22 says Pharaoh's heart became hard. Exodus 8.15 says Pharaoh hardened his own heart. You did admit that Pharaoh is said to have hardened his own heart in 8.32. And THEN we read that God hardened Pharaoh's heart, and you blame God for it all. That's not reading the Bible as if is says what it means and means what it says. God hasn't interfered with his free will but has left Pharaoh to harden his own hear. By the time in 9.12 it says for the first time "The Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart, Pharaoh was resolved already to pursue the course he had freely chosen. God gave him over to it (read also Romans 1.18-32: when people exercise their free will in rebellion against God, he doesn't stop them but lets them do it. He doesn't interfere with their free will.) God is not forcing Pharaoh to be rebellious, Pharaoh has already decided that on his own. It's easy to see if we are reading the Bible as if it says what it means and means what it says.
> You can't go to some part of the bible that says what you want it to say, and then pretend that it means you can change what the bible says elsewhere. It's dishonest.
Oh, this isn't fair at all. I didn't even get close to doing this. Please be fair. Where did I go cherry picking texts and pulling them out of context to pretend it means something? Every text I gave you was earlier in Exodus pertaining to the hardening of the heart of Pharaoh. Every one. Please be fair.
> How do you know this is what the Egyptians meant? What evidence can you show?
It's in spell 125 of the Egyptian Book of the Dead. "Spell 125 describes the judging of the heart of the deceased by the god Osiris in the Hall of Truth, one of the best known images from ancient Egypt, even though the god with his scales is never actually described in the text. As it was vital that the soul pass the test of the weighing of the heart in order to gain paradise, knowing what to say and how to act before Osiris, Thoth, Anubis, and the Forty-Two Judges was considered the most important information the deceased could arrive with. When a person died, they were guided by Anubis to the Hall of Truth (also known as The Hall of Two Truths) where they would make the Negative Confession (also known as The Declaration of Innocence). This was a list of 42 sins the person could honestly say they had never indulged in. Once the Negative Confession was made, Osiris, Thoth, Anubis, and the Forty-Two Judges would confer and, if the confession was accepted, the heart of the deceased was then weighed in the balance against the white feather of Ma'at, the feather of truth. If the heart was found to be lighter than the feather, the soul passed on toward paradise; if the heart was heavier, it was thrown onto the floor where it was devoured by the monster goddess Ammut and the soul would cease to exist."
My point is still firm: God doesn't interfere with humans' free will.