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I'm talking about the part where Christ basically says evil thoughts are sins too. So, is Pelagius saying that anyone who thinks even one lustful or hateful thought after baptism is immediately and irrepairably damned?

If it's done deliberately, yes, Pelagius would say that's a damnable sin. If it's not deliberate, then no.

Nobody is arguing that Christians are called to live moral lives. What I am arguing is that there is no way the Scriptures teach that any sin after Baptism leads to condemnation.

You're probably right. However, I would say that they don't teach the opposite either. They don't address the issue at all. This is usually the case when theological disputes arise. If there were clear biblical teaching on the matter, there would be a dispute in the first place. Remember that our key writings by Pelagius are letters which are absolutely jam-packed with quotations from the Bible, and commentaries on books of the Bible. If his views were contradicted by the Bible, he'd have noticed. Of course, exactly the same is true of his opponents. Neither could appeal to the Bible as a knock-down argument in favour of their own views, although of course both did their best.

I think this is a fair answer. That said, who can claim, honestly, that they have never "Deliberately" sinned in their actions or thoughts? Can you give me a working definition of what Pelagius' definition of sin was so we have something to work with?

I can't seem to find such a definition. The best I can do is something like this: according to Pelagius, sin is the deliberate failure to follow God's commandments. Pelagius thinks that God's commandments are known to us by revelation but also by natural reason, as he writes in his Letter to Demetrias:

Pelagius said:
There is, I maintain, a sort of natural sanctity in our minds which, presiding as it were in the mind's citadel, administers judgement equally upon the evil and the good and, just as it favours honourable and upright actions, so too condemns wrong deeds and, on the evidence of conscience, distinguishes the one side from the other by a kind of inner law; nor, in fine, does it seek to deceive by any display of cleverness or of counterfeit brilliance in argument but either denounces or defends us by our thoughts themselves, surely the most reliable and incorruptible witnesses. This is the law which the apostle recalls when he writes to the Romans, testifying that it is implanted in all men and written as it were on the tablets of the heart (Rom. 2:15,16)... It is this law that all have used whom scripture records as having lived in sanctity and having pleased God between the time of Adam and that of Moses...

And he goes on to list them in considerable detail.

Not only that, but it seems to me that Pelagius is lying through his teeth if he feels that every person who believes that everyone sins after Baptism is believing that to "Excuse" their own sin is utter nonsense and utterly, deplorably, lying through his teeth. And that, I'm afraid, IS a sin by any stretch of imagination. Thus, if Pelagius is right, he is also a sinner, and thus in Hell himself.

Now you're just being silly. Pelagius doesn't say that; he just rhetorically denounces people who attempt to excuse their own sin by saying that they can't help it. And suppose he really did think that everyone who believes post-baptismal sin to be inevitable does think that, in part, as a way of excusing their own sinfulness. Are you so sure that that's false? It seems perfectly plausible to me. Much of what we believe, we believe to reduce cognitive dissonance - that is, to make ourselves seem better, at least to ourselves. Most people, when they do things that they think are wrong, excuse their actions to themselves and try to explain to themselves why they were justified in doing it - because it is psychologically painful to accept that you did something wrong. I'd say that it's perfectly plausible, from a Pelagian perspective, to suppose that those who believe that it's impossible not to sin believe it - at least in part - because believing it makes it easier to excuse their own sin. It's also quite possible that such a motive can be subconscious.

Now I don't know whether Pelagius would really go so far as to say that if you think it's impossible not to sin, you definitely think that, in part, because you want to excuse your own sinfulness. But if he did, I don't see how you could be so sure that he's wrong.

Perhaps, were he to say that, he would still be wrong. Still, that doesn't mean he's deliberately lying. I think that's a ridiculous charge. There cannot be any serious doubt that Pelagius was utterly sincere in what he said. His actions and lifestyle as well as his writings testify to his sincerity and, as I said before, his humility and decency. You really have to learn to accept that it's possible to be sincerely mistaken about quite important things and yet not deliberately deceitful. This includes things that other people might think are obviously wrong. I think that a great deal of what you've said in this thread is completely wrong. I also think that some of the things you've said - particularly regarding science and secular scholarship - are absurdly wrong, to such a degree that I find it genuinely difficult understanding how anyone could possibly believe such ridiculous things. However, that's just how it seems to me. I don't think you're lying when you say them; I just think you're very mistaken. This is because I understand that different people think differently, and what is obvious to one person is not obvious to another. I also know that whether a belief seems obviously true or obviously false, or anything in between, depends greatly upon one's culture and background, and that you have a wildly different culture and background from me which means that you and I simply do not perceive these beliefs in the same way. So one should be very, very wary of accusing people of dishonesty if they say things that you think are obviously false. It's far more likely that they just have a totally different perspective on these things. You will never be able to understand your own religion, let alone anyone else's, if you don't learn that.

You are correct that they weren't raped, and that they raped him. That said, this was only because of the angels who protected him, and had nothing to do with it. Attempting to sin is still a Sin, since sin is a matter of the intent (At least according to Pelagius.)

And yet Lot, even after this, is listed as a "Righteous man." Can a condemned man be "Righteous?"

I don't know. But what's the point of arguing about it? As I said, the contradiction is in the biblical story, not in Pelagius' use of it. It's the biblical story which presents Lot as righteous and spared by the angels who came to destroy the unrighteous. It's also the biblical story which presents Lot as treating his daughters with such callousness. If you think there's a problem here, you're surely right, but take it up with the author of Genesis, not with Pelagius!

And as for "Standards" they are irrelevant. Only God's standards matter, and they are unchanging.

That may be so, but the story in Genesis reflects the standards of its author and of the society in which he lived, which were obviously different from our own standards. What God's standards may be is neither here nor there when the question is one of interpreting a test.

I take it Pelagius believed that (For the AD times anyway) Baptism was necessary for Salvation?

I can't find a text for that, but I should think so. This was the common view of the time and is implied by Romans 6.

Samson is listed in Hebrews 11's Hall of Faith, (I don't know off hand if David is listed) even though Samson essentially slept around with prostitutes.

If Samson is burning in Hell, why is he listed in the Hall of Faith?

I don't understand why you've dragged Samson into it. What's this got to do with anything?

My apologies to Plot for not answering more quickly and continually starting posts but not finishing them, but TBH its not easy to find time to take 2 hours to write a post when I'm busy, on Vacation, and have little cousins who want to be entertained, I simply cannot tell them to "Wait 2 hours so I can post on the internet." But I WILL get to them eventually. Since I was able to respond to Magister's point very quickly, I decided to just do it. But I will make sure I finish responding to what you posted.

That's all right. I would rather have a properly thought out response than a hasty one.
 
I heard a talk from Fr. Thomas Hopko where he suggested that iconographing and venerating King Solomon is improper. What has the historical view of this been?
 
Personally, I am more inclined to take cheap shots at Saint Nicholas Romanov.
 
*Note, another quick post that doesn't do yours justice, but I'm just explaining something quick, I haven't forgotten about the rest.*

I don't understand why you've dragged Samson into it. What's this got to do with anything?

There is no way to deny Samson deliberately committed sin. That said, he is listed in the Hall of Faith.

As for your Lot point, the problem is, I can buy that Lot was, in general, a righteous man, and was a Follower of God, despite his clear sin in Genesis 19.

I DON'T see how Pelagius can argue that Lot was not a sinner "After Baptism" whatever that means.
 
Pelagius doesn't say that Lot was not a sinner "after baptism". Baptism doesn't apply to pre-Christian figures. He cites Lot and the other Old Testament characters as examples of people who led righteous lives - Noah, Enoch, and the others are described as living righteously and finding favour with God as a result. His point is that these show that it's possible to live without sinning, and that it is incumbent upon Christians to do the same. And in the context of the Old Testament, Lot doesn't do anything sinful, at least not at the time the angels visit him. Lot is supposed to have lived before the Law was ever given.

Pelagius is not arguing anything about Lot or the other Old Testament characters. He's using them as illustrations. His main argument for the possibility of sinlessness rests upon the biblical injunctions not to sin, and the point that God could not morally command us to do something that we can't do. I think that to keep on cavilling at Pelagius' illustrations and ignore his central argument isn't enormously helpful.

As for Samson, I don't know what Pelagius would say about him, as I can't find any reference to that story in the texts I have to hand. I can think of various things he might say. He might say that someone can have faith and yet still commit sin; that would merely show that, to be saved, it's not enough just to have faith - you have to act on it as well, as the letter of James states repeatedly. Alternatively, he might say that Samson committed his sins before he came to have faith. Or he might say that Samson didn't really sin because he didn't know that what he did was wrong. So there, straight off the top of my head, are three obvious possible ways he might answer your point, but since he apparently didn't address it, we can't know what he would say. All I'm doing is trying to explain what Pelagius did actually say, since that's what you asked about - not defend Pelagianism against new objections.
 
He might say that someone can have faith and yet still commit sin; that would merely show that, to be saved, it's not enough just to have faith - you have to act on it as well, as the letter of James states repeatedly.
So the modern, fundamentalist Christian screed about you needing to accepting Jesus Christ into your heart to avoid eternal damnation, even seconds before death as Jack Chick and his ilk are fond of preaching, is also theologically unfounded?
 
If you're a Pelagianist sure, but that's pretty unlikely considering that it was condemned at the Council of Carthage in 418. :dunno:
 
Was the letter of James a Pelagianist text? I recall one of Chick's more far-out tracts where a missionary couple are on a plane, talking to a Chick-vangelist about their years of good works in Africa. All of them die and the Chick guy is saved, but the missionaries are cast into a sea of flames for not accepting Chick-Christ into their hearts.
 
Arakhor said:
Was the letter of James a Pelagianist text?

No, but whether or not that interpretation is representative of Christian views now, is an entirely different question.
 
I just spent thirty minutes typing out a reply, and then somehow it deleted itself. Argh!

I had a really good answer too, but I can't bring myself to rewrite it, so I will simply quote this and do the rest later:

15“If your brother sins against you,b go and show him his fault, just between the two of you. If he listens to you, you have won your brother over. 16But if he will not listen, take one or two others along, so that ‘every matter may be established by the testimony of two or three witnesses.’c 17If he refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church; and if he refuses to listen even to the church, treat him as you would a pagan or a tax collector.

I don't think this allows for Pelagius' views to be possible, since it clearly shows a Christian sinning and being forgiven.
 
I heard a talk from Fr. Thomas Hopko where he suggested that iconographing and venerating King Solomon is improper. What has the historical view of this been?

I honestly don't know, but I will try to find out.

So the modern, fundamentalist Christian screed about you needing to accepting Jesus Christ into your heart to avoid eternal damnation, even seconds before death as Jack Chick and his ilk are fond of preaching, is also theologically unfounded?

No, it's much more complex than that. The proper interpretation of the letter of James - not to mention of Paul, whom it appears to contradict - is a matter of controversy. On the surface, at least, the notion that salvation is based on faith and has nothing to do with works is perfectly well founded in the letters of Paul, notably the first few chapters of Romans. The problem, if there is one, is that James (and Matthew) seem to contradict this.

Even Pelagius would presumably accept that someone who acquires faith in Christ mere seconds before death would be saved, assuming that that person is baptised in time. Contrary to popular belief, Pelagius did not teach that we are saved by works - he taught that we are saved by Christ's sacrifice (for pre-baptismal sin) and by works (after baptism). Or something like that.

I just spent thirty minutes typing out a reply, and then somehow it deleted itself. Argh!

This is why it's a good idea to write long replies in Word or something and then paste them into the website. Much safer!

I had a really good answer too, but I can't bring myself to rewrite it, so I will simply quote this and do the rest later:



I don't think this allows for Pelagius' views to be possible, since it clearly shows a Christian sinning and being forgiven.

I have to say I think that that is a pretty good argument against Pelagianism. I don't know what the Pelagian response would be, as I took the Pelagian books back to the library just a few minutes ago.

People today often think of Pelagius positively, as a champion of human free will and goodness, against Augustine's gloomy doctrines of predestination and innate sinfulness. But they tend to forget that Pelagius stressed not people's ability to do good but their responsibility to do so, and insisted that anyone who failed to meet the standard would be condemned. They also forget that Augustine's emphasis on human sinfulness was counterbalanced by his insistence on the ability of divine grace to save people despite their sinfulness. Pelagius would have consigned far more people to hell than Augustine did.

It is worth pointing out that the doctrine of the perfectibility of human beings and the possibility of leading a sinless life was not the main element of Pelagianism, at least not the main element in the controversy. The main element was the issue of grace and free will. Augustine thought that Pelagius was wrong mainly because (in Augustine's interpretation) Pelagius taught that people are saved through their own efforts and not through divine grace. And Pelagius thought that Augustine was wrong mainly because (in Pelagius' interpretation) Augustine taught that human beings are mere puppets in the hands of God, or of original sin, and have no control over what they do. This was the key issue which eventually led to the condemnation of Pelagius. And after that, it was the key issue which continued to be debated between Pelagians and Augustinians, and later, between semi-Pelagians and Augustinians. All of these debates concerned the relation of grace to free will; to put it crudely, Augustinians thought that grace trumps free will, Pelagians thought that free will trumps grace, and semi-Pelagians thought that they cooperate.

Interestingly, however, before Pelagius' controversy with Augustine, he had already come under attack from Jerome. And what Jerome objected to in Pelagius' teaching had nothing to do with his understanding of grace and free will at all. What he objected to was Pelagius' doctrine of the perfectibility of man. Jerome thought that this was basically Origenism in a new guise, which was why he attacked Pelagius with his customary vitriol. (Jerome had dedicated the second half of his career to attacking Origenism - having devoted much of the first half to promoting it. He also spent a lot of time insisting that he had never changed his mind on the subject, which convinced no-one.) So it's rather strikign that you should be objecting to Pelagianism almost entirely on the same grounds as Jerome and ignoring the more well-known issues concerning it.

Doctrinally speaking, "Pelagianism" means the belief that human beings can save themselves through their own efforts, rather than the belief that it's possible to lead a sinless life.
 
This is why it's a good idea to write long replies in Word or something and then paste them into the website. Much safer!

If I were on my own Computer, I would (And then I could actually do your posts some justice;))

However, I am not.

I have to say I think that that is a pretty good argument against Pelagianism. I don't know what the Pelagian response would be, as I took the Pelagian books back to the library just a few minutes ago.

People today often think of Pelagius positively, as a champion of human free will and goodness, against Augustine's gloomy doctrines of predestination and innate sinfulness. But they tend to forget that Pelagius stressed not people's ability to do good but their responsibility to do so, and insisted that anyone who failed to meet the standard would be condemned. They also forget that Augustine's emphasis on human sinfulness was counterbalanced by his insistence on the ability of divine grace to save people despite their sinfulness. Pelagius would have consigned far more people to hell than Augustine did.

It is worth pointing out that the doctrine of the perfectibility of human beings and the possibility of leading a sinless life was not the main element of Pelagianism, at least not the main element in the controversy. The main element was the issue of grace and free will. Augustine thought that Pelagius was wrong mainly because (in Augustine's interpretation) Pelagius taught that people are saved through their own efforts and not through divine grace. And Pelagius thought that Augustine was wrong mainly because (in Pelagius' interpretation) Augustine taught that human beings are mere puppets in the hands of God, or of original sin, and have no control over what they do. This was the key issue which eventually led to the condemnation of Pelagius. And after that, it was the key issue which continued to be debated between Pelagians and Augustinians, and later, between semi-Pelagians and Augustinians. All of these debates concerned the relation of grace to free will; to put it crudely, Augustinians thought that grace trumps free will, Pelagians thought that free will trumps grace, and semi-Pelagians thought that they cooperate.

Interestingly, however, before Pelagius' controversy with Augustine, he had already come under attack from Jerome. And what Jerome objected to in Pelagius' teaching had nothing to do with his understanding of grace and free will at all. What he objected to was Pelagius' doctrine of the perfectibility of man. Jerome thought that this was basically Origenism in a new guise, which was why he attacked Pelagius with his customary vitriol. (Jerome had dedicated the second half of his career to attacking Origenism - having devoted much of the first half to promoting it. He also spent a lot of time insisting that he had never changed his mind on the subject, which convinced no-one.) So it's rather strikign that you should be objecting to Pelagianism almost entirely on the same grounds as Jerome and ignoring the more well-known issues concerning it.

Doctrinally speaking, "Pelagianism" means the belief that human beings can save themselves through their own efforts, rather than the belief that it's possible to lead a sinless life.

*Very interesting*

I sort of had this question in my other post, but what did Augustine believe about Total Depravity? I mean, I know the TERM was invented by Calvin, but it does seem based on your posts that he believed in something like it.

Another unrelated question as well: Have any theologians ever claimed to be "Three Point" Calvinists? (Accepting all points except L and U in TULIP.) Because I heard someone claim that this was their view, and to me it seems basically a contradiction to accept Irresistable Grace but not Unconditional Election.

So: Have any theologians believed this? And is doing so a contradiction?
 
What are your thoughts on the SATOR square situation going on regarding early Christianity? Recently watched an episode of "The Naked Archaeologist" on the History Channel, and the host was positing that Christianity was much more accepted and practiced among Romans and Roman soldiers very early on, when apparently the accepted view is that Rome was very hostile towards this Jewish sect.

I'm also curious on your views of that television show, and its host Simcha Jacobovici. He seems to portray himself in the series as going against conventional views. I enjoyed very much his special concerning the Exodus and the Ark. He claims to have built a strong case authenticating the Jewish exodus from Egypt in objection to other more 'mainstream' theories that it is merely a myth.

I recall hearing a description of Judaism as a very ethnocentric and geographically based religion and paradigm concerning God. I remember the lecture saying that at the time of Abraham, who was apparently a polytheist, the majority belief was that the Abrahamic God was tied to the land of Israel intimately and was considered the place where God was. And in fact the God Abraham worshipped was considered the chief deity in a pantheon of gods. By being tied to a region, if a Jew were to leave Israel, it was like leaving the territory in which God resided, and explains the attachment to the Temple in Israel and why it was such a tragedy that Jews were dispersed across the world away from Israel/God. This sentiment of geographical regions being tied to god(s) sounds very much like Hindu beliefs as well.
 
http://forums.civfanatics.com/showthread.php?t=412158&page=13

My interpretation of your post that Ajidica quoted was merely that, in your opinion, God, assuming he exists, could not do the literally impossible (For instance, making a person over 4 feet tall and under 4 feet tall at the same time), not him being bound by the laws of Physics, which you would say he would NOT have to be to avoid a contradiction. Am I correct?
 
I sort of had this question in my other post, but what did Augustine believe about Total Depravity? I mean, I know the TERM was invented by Calvin, but it does seem based on your posts that he believed in something like it.

This is a difficult and controversial question, since Augustine's views on this matter were complex and evolving. As I understand it, Augustine believed that all human beings (other than Jesus) are sinful, in two senses. First, they suffer from concupiscence, which is a tendency to sin, which cannot be resisted (whether that means it's literally impossible to resist it, or whether it's just very difficult and in fact no-one does resist it, I'm not sure). That means that everyone commits sins. Second, human beings inherit guilt from Adam's sin, which means that even babies are born sinful - in the sense of being culpable, rather than in the sense of having actually committed sin. These two factors - concupiscence and inherited guilt - compose original sin as Augustine understood it.

Total depravity is a much more radical doctrine, since it is the claim that human beings are utterly incapable of doing anything good, and that consequently every human action is sinful. Augustine never said these things, and the Catholic Church rejects the doctrine of total depravity as a denial of free will.

I don't know whether Calvin himself coined the term "total depravity".

Another unrelated question as well: Have any theologians ever claimed to be "Three Point" Calvinists? (Accepting all points except L and U in TULIP.) Because I heard someone claim that this was their view, and to me it seems basically a contradiction to accept Irresistable Grace but not Unconditional Election.

So: Have any theologians believed this? And is doing so a contradiction?

I don't know if any theologians have believed this, because I don't really know much about the history of Calvinism (I must admit I find pretty much everything about the Reformed tradition, from its history to its theology, deathly dull and unsympathetic). As I understand it, Arminians - including Wesleyans, if we count them as Arminian - hold the doctrine of Total Depravity but reject the other four, at least to some degree, but I don't know if anyone has rejected just the two you mention and held the others.

It doesn't seem a contradiction to me, at least not in the way you suggest. Unconditional Election means that when God graciously saves someone, it is not on the basis of any kind of action or merit on their part. Irresistible Grace means that when God graciously saves someone, that person is definitely saved and nothing they can do will un-save them.

So it is surely conceivable that God could choose to save people on the basis of how good they have been in the past (if so, the doctrine of Unconditional Election would be false), but once he has made that decision, nothing they subsequently do could reverse or counteract God's decision (if so, the doctrine of Irresistible Grace would be true).

However, it seems to me that to believe in Total Depravity but to reject Unconditional Election is, if not a contradiction, at least rather implausible; this would involve saying that although all actions are sinful, God neverthless saves some people on the basis of their actions, but not others. Of course, the doctrine of Total Depravity does not involve saying that all human actions are equally bad (that would be the highly implausible doctrine of Utter Depravity), so it could be that God could rank people on the basis of their actions even though all those actions are sinful; but then it seems to me that the notion of "sin" as something distinct from "morally wrong" becomes very weak. I can understand the notion of "sin" as something distinct from "morally wrong" if, say, "sin" means an act that God disapproves of; but to reject the doctrine of Unconditional Election is to say that God does approve of some acts; which would seem to mean that not all acts are sinful after all, at least not in that sense. In which case, in what other sense could they be sinful? If to perform a sinful act doesn't mean to do something morally wrong, and it doesn't mean to do something that God disapproves of, what does it mean?

For that reason, it does seem to me that the five points of orthodox Calvinism hang together quite well. To hold some but not others isn't impossible but it would require a bit of fancy footwork to explain how the system is consistent.

What are your thoughts on the SATOR square situation going on regarding early Christianity? Recently watched an episode of "The Naked Archaeologist" on the History Channel, and the host was positing that Christianity was much more accepted and practiced among Romans and Roman soldiers very early on, when apparently the accepted view is that Rome was very hostile towards this Jewish sect.

On the SATOR square, I'm not sure what scholarly opinion really is; as far as I can tell, the idea that it's a Christian thing is just speculation. We don't have any real evidence that it was Christian at all, let alone exclusively Christian - although we don't have any real evidence that it wasn't, either.

On Christianity and Roman society, the situation was certainly quite variable. It depends rather on what you mean by "very early on". In the first and early second century, we know very little about Christianity's place in society; we know that there were persecutions under Nero and, later, Trajan; and there may have been under Domitian, but we really don't know, and we don't know what the persecutions that did happen really involved or what the views of general society were. For much of the second century, persecutions remained sporadic and there is good reason to suppose that, while Christianity was illegal, many governors were tolerant of it. That situation seems to have deteriorated towards the end of the second century. The first half of the third century was again rather calm, but the middle of the century saw empire-wide persecutions under Decius and Valerian. But at all of these times, it would have made a great deal of difference where one was, and which local governor one was dealing with.

I don't know what evidence there is that Christianity was widely practised among Roman soldiers. There certainly were Christian soldiers in the Roman army. Tertullian's On the crown is about an incident where a Christian soldier refused to wear a triumphal wreath, on the basis that it was a pagan symbol. But it seems to me unlikely that there were many. The Apostolic tradition attributed to Hippolytus of Rome permits soldiers to become Christians, but they cannot be involved in executions and they cannot take a military oath (presumably because this would conflict with their oath to Christ). That doesn't seem to me very hopeful for the notion that Christianity was widespread among the military or that the military looked kindly upon it. I don't know many soldiers but I think they take a dim view of people who disobey orders.

Tertullian insists that no Christian can be a soldier, but obviously Tertullian held much more stringent standards than most Christians of the day, so clearly not all Christians agreed with this view (or he wouldn't have felt the need to insist upon it). Nevertheless, it does seem to me that a generally anti-military feeling was pervasive in early Christianity, to varying degrees, which makes the claim that it was widespread in the army implausible.

I'm also curious on your views of that television show, and its host Simcha Jacobovici. He seems to portray himself in the series as going against conventional views. I enjoyed very much his special concerning the Exodus and the Ark. He claims to have built a strong case authenticating the Jewish exodus from Egypt in objection to other more 'mainstream' theories that it is merely a myth.

I haven't seen any of his films or that TV programme, so I can't really comment on them.

I recall hearing a description of Judaism as a very ethnocentric and geographically based religion and paradigm concerning God. I remember the lecture saying that at the time of Abraham, who was apparently a polytheist, the majority belief was that the Abrahamic God was tied to the land of Israel intimately and was considered the place where God was. And in fact the God Abraham worshipped was considered the chief deity in a pantheon of gods. By being tied to a region, if a Jew were to leave Israel, it was like leaving the territory in which God resided, and explains the attachment to the Temple in Israel and why it was such a tragedy that Jews were dispersed across the world away from Israel/God. This sentiment of geographical regions being tied to god(s) sounds very much like Hindu beliefs as well.

I don't know much about Jewish history, but that seems fairly plausible. As I understand it, the usual view is that Judaism began as a polytheistic religion and gradually evolved monotheism, passing along the way through intermediary stages such as the belief that there are many gods but their god is better than the rest. Whether Abraham was a polytheist or not is impossible to know - indeed I think it's impossible to know whether Abraham really existed or not.

http://forums.civfanatics.com/showthread.php?t=412158&page=13

My interpretation of your post that Ajidica quoted was merely that, in your opinion, God, assuming he exists, could not do the literally impossible (For instance, making a person over 4 feet tall and under 4 feet tall at the same time), not him being bound by the laws of Physics, which you would say he would NOT have to be to avoid a contradiction. Am I correct?

Yes, that's right. The law of the conservation of energy is a law of physics, not a logical law - obviously we can imagine possible universes in which it does not hold. So I'd say that an omnipotent being could certainly perform actions which break that law. I don't see any contradiction in supposing that God could bring into existence a brand new quantity of energy or matter, or annihilate an existing one.

Indeed, it's also important to bear in mind the distinction between laws of physics as they actually are and laws of physics as we understand them. Any physical law that science has deduced is just a model, reflecting what we have observed to happen and what we predict will happen. They are all subject to revision, depending on future observations - even incredibly well established ones like the inverse square law of gravitational attraction (it's just that future observations would have to be pretty startling to undermine laws such as that). They are "laws" in the descriptive sense, meaning that they describe what is always observed to happen, not in the prescriptive sense, meaning that they determine what must happen. So any of these laws might turn out to be incomplete or even plain wrong - at least in theory - and that goes for the law of the conservation of energy. Perhaps there are circumstances under which this law does not hold after all, but these circumstances do not break the underlying physical laws of the universe - they just prove that our model of these laws is imperfect. In which case it could be the case that some entity would be capable of breaking the law of the conservation of energy without even trangressing the physical laws of the universe. It's just that current scientific theory says that that can't be done, but that is a provisional ruling, at least in principle.
 
IIRC Plot would say he doesn't know.

I would say absolutely Yes.

As always, thank you for the answers Plot:)

I have another question, on page 3 you posted:

You should read The private memoirs and confessions of a justified sinner by James Hogg, which is about exactly this idea, and is in part a satire on the kind of extreme Calvinism which also taught the infallibility of the saints, meaning that if you're going to heaven already, there's nothing you can do that would stop you going to heaven (so why not murder a few sinners along the way?).

The arguments against the policy that you suggest all seem pretty sound to me. More fundamentally, a Christian would believe that it is simply wrong to kill a human being anyway, irrespective of the consequences, because human beings are made in God's image, are objects of his infinite love, and thus have the moral right not to be killed.

Wait, how can you be a Calvinist who doesn't believe in Perseverance of the Saints? Doesn't like the whole doctrine depend on it?

Also, I may have asked this before (I think it was in my post that I lost) but if I did ask it, it was never answered so: I once had someone tell me they believed in Irresistable Grace but NOT Unconditional Election. Is there any logical way to hold this view? And have any theologians held it?

EDIT: I just realized that I posted two times in a row. Feel free to merge these posts, I forgot to just edit them.
 
I think what Plotinus is saying that Hogg is satirizing is not the perseverance of the saints per se, but the notion that being destined for the reward of heaven instead of the punishment of hell makes all sinful actions in this life perfectly acceptable. It seems to have less to do with the Perseverance of the Saints than with a Consequentialism, although said Calvinist doctrine does make the problems with such Consequentialism more extreme. Consequentialist ethics are not nearly as compatible with Christianity (especially Calvinism) as are Virtue Ethics or Deontology.

It also seems to ignore passages of scripture that seem to make clear that there are different degrees of reward and punishment.
 
Does the Bible state in clear words different degrees of reward? (I agree they exist but I'm not sure where its found.) I do agree there are at least three (Possibly more) degrees of punishment though.

Also, what is consequentionalist ethics?

Also, I should point out the difference between Perseverance of the Saints and Eternal Security. The latter essentially says you can do what you want and still be a Chrisitan, even if you turn your back on it, you still won't lose it. Perseverance of the Saints says if you turned your back on it, its evidence that you never had it.
 
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