Doran
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2022
- Messages
- 136
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- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Protestant
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- Married
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- Yes
Here's a little advice. You lose all credibility when you start misrepresenting an opponent's views. I never said that every time the word "all" is used that it's used in a limited sense. In fact, quite often I have said that is OFTEN used in that sense. The term "often" qualifies (limits) the usage. I used often because I know that "all" isn't always used in a limited sense. I know that it is used at times quantitatively.Show us how every one of the many examples, from Scripture, that have been posted here time and time again and which seem to be saying every one ("all")...
...actually should be understood to be saying "good ones" or something like that ("qualitative sense").
While it may be the case that the word "all" can be used as you say, to dismiss every last example from Scripture on that basis is difficult to accept without something more compelling than the claim itself.
There is certainly nothing that amounts to "blindly assuming" on my part, but your counter claim surely requires some evidence to support it.
Further, I have given plenty of examples of when it is used qualitatively. Jn 3:16 is a great example, since God cannot possibly love each and every person in the world (all people) quantitatively, for ALL the unregenerate people in the world (those in Adam) bear the ungodly characteristics set forth Paul's indictment of the ungodly in Rom 3:10-17. Since all the ungodly, unregenerate people in this dark world do NOT fear God, God cannot love them since Psalm 103 tells us multiple times that God loves those who fear him -- who keep his covenant and who obey his precepts.
Therefore, if you're going to insist that God loves both God-fearers and non-God-fearers, YOU need to prove that from scripture. I have proved that God loves those who fear him and obey him. Now YOU need to prove that He also loves those who don't fear him and don't obey him.
However, since I KNOW you won't be able to do this then I can tell you that in order to avoid having Jn. 3:16 conflict with Romans 3 and Psalm 103, it is eminently reasonable to infer that the "world" is to be understood in a limited (qualitative) sense. Most especially since Jesus explicitly told his Father in John 17 that he wasn't praying for the [entire] world that his Father "so loved"! Furthermore, God has NO redemptive covenant relationship with the ungodly world -- only with his elect! God saves only those who he has sovereignly brought into a personal, intimate, loving relationship with himself.
My understanding of scripture avoids these nasty dilemmas, whereas the falsehood you believe can only create endless problems.