by jimwalton » Sun May 12, 2019 2:37 pm
> In other words, it's God who offers the gift and it's God who works in one to accept his gift, yet you seem to be saying God is not in control of the gift.
That's correct. He offers, invites, and plants the seed in us. But it is up to us to respond.
> I can provide verses saying God hates evildoers.
I can only think of one, but if you know more, I'll be glad to discuss them. Ps. 11.5 says, "...but the wicked and those who love violence his soul hates.” Even a simple and superficial reading of the psalm shows that what it speaks of is God's wrath on the wicked, not an emotion of hate. Read Jer. 20.12 for a similar thought. He examines the righteous and is pleased with integrity (integrity (1 Chr. 29.17; Ps. 17.3; Jer. 11.20). They will live in His presence (Ps. 11.7). He also examines the wicked and finds they are worthy of judgment (Ps. 11.6).
> And until his enemies reconcile to him, he will grant them damnation instead of salvation.
You do realize what an enemy of God is, I hope. It is someone who has set themselves against Him in rebellion and rejection. In our modern world it's called treason. And why should a rebellious traitor be granted salvation? I'm curious what your reasoning is.
> I don't see our world as getting worse and worse, even though I hear that narrative sometimes (especially from Christians it seems). Life is getting easier compared to past generations and crime and murder rates are down across the globe.
Fascinating.
* The US and Iran taunting each other in the Persian Gulf. Nuclear war could be the result.
* Impeachment activity against the President, which would be a historic first if successful.
* The US and North Korea taunting each other with the prospect of war.
* Close to 300 people killed by bombs in Sri Lanka last month
* 50 dead at a Christchurch, NZ, mosque shooting
* White supremacism alive and well in the US
* Racism on the rise in the US
* Anti-Semitism on the rise globally
That's what I'm talking about.
> The storm we would need saving from is the threat of Hell.
You misunderstand hell. Hell is the biblical image for God judging people properly and fairly. Everyone gets exactly what they should get. It's no threat, but only justice at work in an ideal sense.
> What's the difference between a system that gives either reward or punishment in varying degrees based on one's actions and a system that gives people what they earn based on their actions?
Think of it this way: Whether you spend your life in freedom or in jail depends on whether you've committed a crime or not. So the first level is: freedom or jail. But then the degree of punishment is suited to the depth of crime. People who default on debts get fined, but the amount of fine is commensurate with the offense. People who commit crimes go to jail, but the amount of jail time is commensurate with the crime.
No one goes to heaven because they've earned it, but only because they've accepted the free gift of God's love and responded with their love. That's the first level. Those who are in heaven accepted the gift, those who are in hell refused it. But after that there's another understanding: the people in heaven get rewarded fairly according to their actions, and the people in hell get punished fairly according to their actions. No one gets treated unfairly.
You are making one foundational and huge mistake: you assume or have concluded that there is something about hell that is unfair. But since we're talking about the Bible, the one thing we can say for certain is that God is just and will do exactly what is fair for each person.
> Is your definition of "earn" something close to "gain deservedly in return for one's behaviour or achievements."? So in the system of Christianity, one obtains reward or punishment deservedly in return for one's behavior, correct? Yet you contend that they didn't earn this supposed reward or punishment?
No. Incorrect. In the system of Christianity, one obtains reward or punishment in return for whether one accepted the free gift of God's love or rejects God's love. Period.
It is the DEGREE of reward or punishment after that juncture that is according to one's behavior.
> The difference I see between the Bible and any other document (well, any other document besides perhaps a small amount of other holy books) is the Bible is said to have the greatest mind ever devised behind it and is said to be there for Divine guidance on the text. Yet, we still don't see people agreeing about the text.
God can't write a book that isn't subject to interpretation. Any communication has three parts: the giver (and the intent) of the message, the message itself, and the receiver (and therefore interpreter) of the message. You can something as clear as clear can be and still be interpreted wrongly by someone who sees you differently and hears your message the way he or she wants to hear it. It is impossible to give communication that is above interpretation. We are thinking, free agents, and our interpretations are no reflection on the quality of the messenger or the message.
> He could alter our brain structure to fully and completely understand it.
It seems you want God to make you a robot with regard to His revelation. It's something He'll never do. His invitation is that you come to Him by choice, out of love, not because He twisted your mind into forcing you to acknowledge Him. It's a repulsive thought.
> I never went into specifics about Hell. I said only that it was "torment" and there's Bible verses saying such. I think it safe to say it's not a pleasant place and "torment" seems a fair description to me.
God is trying to warn you that rejection of him will be far from a pleasant experience. He would be remiss not to warn people. If people got to hell and it was awful, but they had never been told or warned, they could rightly say, "Hey, this isn't fair. Somebody should have told me." But now that you've been warned, you are still saying, "Hey, this isn't fair. Why should it be awful?" It's awful because you are finally seeing the actual quality of your soul without any rose-colored glasses.
> I said in the title and the beginning of the OP that this was addressed to: "those who think salvation is through God alone without the individual earning it and that think all deserve Hell". If you don't think everyone deserves Hell, you weren't the target audience.
Well, see, this is a triple statement.
* "those who think salvation is through God alone." This is true, to an extent. Salvation is through God alone, but we must respond by faith. God doesn't save people without their responding to Him in love.
* "...without the individual earning it." Right. According to the Bible, earning salvation is impossible.
* "...and that think all deserve Hell." It depends what you mean by this. All communication has to be interpreted. Do you mean that we're all evil? (No, we're not.) Do you mean by this that earning salvation is impossible? (Yes, it is.) Do you mean that the system is unjust? (No, it's not.) Does it mean that salvation is like winning the lottery? (No, it's not.) Does it mean that some are chosen seemingly at random to receive it? (No, it doesn't.) Does it mean that "Would it not be more in line with justice to simply give people what they deserve based on their actions?" (No, this is salvation by works [by earning it] that is contrary to justice. Justice necessarily has to include mercy.)
> if we don't earn our way to Heaven, as you say, how is it deserved? We don't deserve it outright based on nothing we've done, do we?
It is only deserved in the sense that I have responded to God's gift by accepting it and by responding to His love by my love in return. Therefore I have taken action that makes the gift effective (I took it, "opened" it, was happy to get it, said thank you, and then lived with the joy of that gift). My action has made the gift effective for me. But to say I "earned" it or "deserved it" is a terrible misunderstanding. And yet at the same time, there was something I had to do.
> If salvation is not earned, and sinners deserve Hell, what is it exactly that makes the saved not deserve Hell anymore and instead deserve Heaven?
Suppose I owed you a $1 million. And suppose someone approached me and said, "I will pay the debt for you if you want." The offer is there, but I have to accept it. Otherwise the debt won't get paid (except by me, as if I ever could). So I agree and the debt gets paid. Woo-hoo! Now, do I deserve to get thrown into prison because I didn't pay the debt? No. It's true that I didn't pay it, but it's also true that I accepted the offer for someone to pay it on my behalf. Therefore I don't deserve punishment any longer, but it wasn't because of anything I did. All I did was accept a gift, and it changed the whole situation. That's what makes the system just.
> In other words, it's God who offers the gift and it's God who works in one to accept his gift, yet you seem to be saying God is not in control of the gift.
That's correct. He offers, invites, and plants the seed in us. But it is up to us to respond.
> I can provide verses saying God hates evildoers.
I can only think of one, but if you know more, I'll be glad to discuss them. Ps. 11.5 says, "...but the wicked and those who love violence his soul hates.” Even a simple and superficial reading of the psalm shows that what it speaks of is God's wrath on the wicked, not an emotion of hate. Read Jer. 20.12 for a similar thought. He examines the righteous and is pleased with integrity (integrity (1 Chr. 29.17; Ps. 17.3; Jer. 11.20). They will live in His presence (Ps. 11.7). He also examines the wicked and finds they are worthy of judgment (Ps. 11.6).
> And until his enemies reconcile to him, he will grant them damnation instead of salvation.
You do realize what an enemy of God is, I hope. It is someone who has set themselves against Him in rebellion and rejection. In our modern world it's called treason. And why should a rebellious traitor be granted salvation? I'm curious what your reasoning is.
> I don't see our world as getting worse and worse, even though I hear that narrative sometimes (especially from Christians it seems). Life is getting easier compared to past generations and crime and murder rates are down across the globe.
Fascinating.
* The US and Iran taunting each other in the Persian Gulf. Nuclear war could be the result.
* Impeachment activity against the President, which would be a historic first if successful.
* The US and North Korea taunting each other with the prospect of war.
* Close to 300 people killed by bombs in Sri Lanka last month
* 50 dead at a Christchurch, NZ, mosque shooting
* White supremacism alive and well in the US
* Racism on the rise in the US
* Anti-Semitism on the rise globally
That's what I'm talking about.
> The storm we would need saving from is the threat of Hell.
You misunderstand hell. Hell is the biblical image for God judging people properly and fairly. Everyone gets exactly what they should get. It's no threat, but only justice at work in an ideal sense.
> What's the difference between a system that gives either reward or punishment in varying degrees based on one's actions and a system that gives people what they earn based on their actions?
Think of it this way: Whether you spend your life in freedom or in jail depends on whether you've committed a crime or not. So the first level is: freedom or jail. But then the degree of punishment is suited to the depth of crime. People who default on debts get fined, but the amount of fine is commensurate with the offense. People who commit crimes go to jail, but the amount of jail time is commensurate with the crime.
No one goes to heaven because they've earned it, but only because they've accepted the free gift of God's love and responded with their love. That's the first level. Those who are in heaven accepted the gift, those who are in hell refused it. But after that there's another understanding: the people in heaven get rewarded fairly according to their actions, and the people in hell get punished fairly according to their actions. No one gets treated unfairly.
You are making one foundational and huge mistake: you assume or have concluded that there is something about hell that is unfair. But since we're talking about the Bible, the one thing we can say for certain is that God is just and will do exactly what is fair for each person.
> Is your definition of "earn" something close to "gain deservedly in return for one's behaviour or achievements."? So in the system of Christianity, one obtains reward or punishment deservedly in return for one's behavior, correct? Yet you contend that they didn't earn this supposed reward or punishment?
No. Incorrect. In the system of Christianity, one obtains reward or punishment in return for whether one accepted the free gift of God's love or rejects God's love. Period.
It is the DEGREE of reward or punishment after that juncture that is according to one's behavior.
> The difference I see between the Bible and any other document (well, any other document besides perhaps a small amount of other holy books) is the Bible is said to have the greatest mind ever devised behind it and is said to be there for Divine guidance on the text. Yet, we still don't see people agreeing about the text.
God can't write a book that isn't subject to interpretation. Any communication has three parts: the giver (and the intent) of the message, the message itself, and the receiver (and therefore interpreter) of the message. You can something as clear as clear can be and still be interpreted wrongly by someone who sees you differently and hears your message the way he or she wants to hear it. It is impossible to give communication that is above interpretation. We are thinking, free agents, and our interpretations are no reflection on the quality of the messenger or the message.
> He could alter our brain structure to fully and completely understand it.
It seems you want God to make you a robot with regard to His revelation. It's something He'll never do. His invitation is that you come to Him by choice, out of love, not because He twisted your mind into forcing you to acknowledge Him. It's a repulsive thought.
> I never went into specifics about Hell. I said only that it was "torment" and there's Bible verses saying such. I think it safe to say it's not a pleasant place and "torment" seems a fair description to me.
God is trying to warn you that rejection of him will be far from a pleasant experience. He would be remiss not to warn people. If people got to hell and it was awful, but they had never been told or warned, they could rightly say, "Hey, this isn't fair. Somebody should have told me." But now that you've been warned, you are still saying, "Hey, this isn't fair. Why should it be awful?" It's awful because you are finally seeing the actual quality of your soul without any rose-colored glasses.
> I said in the title and the beginning of the OP that this was addressed to: "those who think salvation is through God alone without the individual earning it and that think all deserve Hell". If you don't think everyone deserves Hell, you weren't the target audience.
Well, see, this is a triple statement.
* "those who think salvation is through God alone." This is true, to an extent. Salvation is through God alone, but we must respond by faith. God doesn't save people without their responding to Him in love.
* "...without the individual earning it." Right. According to the Bible, earning salvation is impossible.
* "...and that think all deserve Hell." It depends what you mean by this. All communication has to be interpreted. Do you mean that we're all evil? (No, we're not.) Do you mean by this that earning salvation is impossible? (Yes, it is.) Do you mean that the system is unjust? (No, it's not.) Does it mean that salvation is like winning the lottery? (No, it's not.) Does it mean that some are chosen seemingly at random to receive it? (No, it doesn't.) Does it mean that "Would it not be more in line with justice to simply give people what they deserve based on their actions?" (No, this is salvation by works [by earning it] that is contrary to justice. Justice necessarily has to include mercy.)
> if we don't earn our way to Heaven, as you say, how is it deserved? We don't deserve it outright based on nothing we've done, do we?
It is only deserved in the sense that I have responded to God's gift by accepting it and by responding to His love by my love in return. Therefore I have taken action that makes the gift effective (I took it, "opened" it, was happy to get it, said thank you, and then lived with the joy of that gift). My action has made the gift effective for me. But to say I "earned" it or "deserved it" is a terrible misunderstanding. And yet at the same time, there was something I had to do.
> If salvation is not earned, and sinners deserve Hell, what is it exactly that makes the saved not deserve Hell anymore and instead deserve Heaven?
Suppose I owed you a $1 million. And suppose someone approached me and said, "I will pay the debt for you if you want." The offer is there, but I have to accept it. Otherwise the debt won't get paid (except by me, as if I ever could). So I agree and the debt gets paid. Woo-hoo! Now, do I deserve to get thrown into prison because I didn't pay the debt? No. It's true that I didn't pay it, but it's also true that I accepted the offer for someone to pay it on my behalf. Therefore I don't deserve punishment any longer, but it wasn't because of anything I did. All I did was accept a gift, and it changed the whole situation. That's what makes the system just.