Someone who wants to counter the contradiction between God's goodness and omnipotence with the existence of evil by claiming goodness is not God's sole attribute is tacitly assuming that God can be analyzed this way.
On the contrary, you can't even follow your own argument. When
you say that there is a tension or even a contradiction between God's omniscience (I think you actually mean omnipotence - but never mind your demonstration you don't know your way through basic Theology Proper) and goodness, answering that "Goodness is not God's only attribute" is actually answering you on your own grounds. The original post to which I was responding made reference to this,
so answering it is merely answering it on the grounds on which it was originally made. Try again.
I don't have to prove this is true, nor do I have to prove that God is, well, God and beyond human analysis.
On the contrary, the very statement that God is x (x in this case being the statement "God is beyond human analysis") is a statement about God's nature. So, on the one hand you're trying to state that I am the one who has to prove God can be discussed in terms of attributes and on the other that God cannot be discussed in terms of attributes - which is, when closely examined a statement about the attributes of God. Once again, you can't follow your own argumentation. I don't have to prove that God can be "analyzed according to attributes" when, in referring to the tension between particular attributes yourself, you have tacitly agreed that God can be so analyzed.
The problem for the alleged exegetical proof is that without the additional assumption, the exegetical proof fails.
Notice that you haven't engaged any exegetical argument as yet. You've merely done some posturing.
The Greater Good is not the subject of any Bible verse.
Really, and what exactly is the exegetical argument for the Greater Good Defense. If it's not the subject of any Bible verse, then, by all means why do Calvinists employ an exegetical argument?
The essence of the GGD is simply that God has a purpose for the existence of evil.
1. Scripture God’s goodness involves his commitment to his own moral perfections. These include not just love but justice. God is good when he punishes evil.
2. Job is devoted to the greater good defense from beginning to end.
3. Ephesians upholds God's goodness while declaring that He accomplishes all things, literally all - all things, by the power of His will.
4. Isaiah is very clear that the decree that includes the existence of what may be called moral evils foreordains all things, including that evil, while at the same time stating that God has a purpose for its existence. Indeed, this is a repetitive theme.
5. In Gen. 50:20, Joseph answered his brothers: “You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives.” Here Joseph’s words anticipated Romans 8:28 which reads: “And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.”
6. Acts not once but twice declares that the murder of Jesus Christ was itself foreordained by God - literally by the predetermined counsel of His will.
That's just a part of the GGD.
Now, if you have a counter-exegetical argument to present, and I seriously doubt you can begin to muster one, then by all means do so. Time is wasting. Here's a thought, instead of posturing and characterizing actually craft a counterargument.
It is an idea devised to rationalize the real Bible verses, which are contradictory.
You have yet to demonstrate any such contradiction exists. So far, all you've done is assert that some verses (which ones, you have
yet to cite) are contradictory.
Similarly, someone who wants to say it is rational to accept an uncaused God while criticizing the notion of choices without determinate causes as irrational, must rely on supplementary assumptions about ontology and epistemology to make the case. My untutored is that all of "ontology" is a really dumb category mistake. I don't see any reason to get tutored on ontology.
In other words, this is a tacit admission you are unfamiliar with the concepts and you don't want to bother yourself to get acquainted with the relevant literature. Wow, that's a real timesaver. I'll remember that for the future.
FYI, it's hardly a Calvinist conceit that choices require determinate causes and that uncaused choice is irrational. That's also a common atheist conceit. Again, if you'd bother to familiarize yourself with the literature, you'd know that. Try again.
"Of course, this is only relevant if I believe every interpretation to be equally valid." This comes from someone who keeps misreading my posts as defending libertarian free will! This is an inadvertent admission that exegesis will be accepted or rejected upon standards not derived from the text. Those standards are the unspoken assumptions require to rationalize the chosen theology.
1. You're the one who cited JW beliefs about the soul. That's only relevant to me if I think that all interpretations are equally valid.
2. Why don't you actually make a cogent presentation about free will. You have two choices: determinate freedom or libertarian freedom. Which of these constitutes true freedom?
3. Your cute, trite, and altogether incompetent attempt to mimic my own statements about exegesis is duly noted. I'm merely answering you on your own grounds. If you're going to disagree with the Reformed confessions on the freedom of the will, this commits you to LFW, since our confessions do not deny Free Will, rather they deny LFW.
" On the contrary, Reformed Theology affirms Romans 1 quite soundly. Man knows God exists, yet it is man, not God, who suppresses that knowledge." This may be an exegetical argument, but it has the difficulty of falsehood. Man does not know God exists. The extraordinary variety of human religions proves this conclusively. This is ignorant twaddle comparable to the claim that idolatry causes homosexuality.
1. The plethora of human religions is actually proof that man knows God exists, but perverts that knowledge. Your conclusion is a nonsequitur.Of course, this phenomenon is by no means inconsistent with Christian theology. The Bible furnishes a theological explanation for the origin of idolatry and infidelity.
2. You have yet to demonstrate that man does not know God exists. This is merely an assertion. What is the epistemic warrant for that assertion?
3. Of course that's not the argument with respect to homosexuality. You can't even get that right. The Bible does link the two, but it doesn't link them in that manner. Try again.
I think there's a typographical error in there. Still, it is obvious that regenerated reason is an elaborate construct. The false correlation of faith with the unseen, and sight with the seen, quite aside from being flummery from a mountebank, is moot---one can reason about the unseen. The "faith" in these verses is still a feeling of certitude. Emotions are felt, not willed.
1. You have yet to cite anything the Bible says about the concept of faith. You're referring, I take it, to Hebrews 11:1. Hebrews 11 is hardly the be all and end all of the biblical definition of "faith." In fact, all you seem to be capable of doing is characterizing a term - not explaining a term. Try this on for size: argue your case.
2. You have yet to demonstrate the falsity of the correlation of faith with the unseen and sight with the seen.
You're full of assertion. Where are the supporting arguments? I'm merely answering you on your own grounds when you call faith an emotion as a critique of the biblical concept. Is that an internal critique? If so, where's the argument? Is that an external critique, if so, where's the argument?
The repeated appeals to authorities such as the Westminster Confession, which I admit has long fled my memory, and theologians, are also assertions.
On the contrary, I'm referring you to material to actually help you actually engage the argument. If you're going to set yourself up as a critic of Calvinism, then it is altogether appropriate for me to refer you to the classic Calvinist confessions and theologians. You're the one who said that Calvinism, depends on certain assumptions, etc. so I'm asking you to document that - for example by citing certain theologians that do this.
I need not reinvent the wheel, when there is a mountain of literature that has already covered much of this. When I refer you to Berkhof, to take just one example, I'm merely referring you to material that you can access yourself and read.
Appeals to authority, when the authorities' credentials are not examined, are fallacious arguments, however.
Then by all means examine the credentials of the Westminster Divines or any number of our theologians and tell me how they are not proper authorities on the subject of Reformed Theology. If you're going to critique our theology, then it's up to you, not me, to do that.
I suspect what's really going on here is another adolescent attempt on your part to avoid actually engaging Reformed Theology. Sorry, I'm not playing that game with you. You're the one who decided to critique it, not me. In so doing, you took upon yourself certain obligations. Reformed Theology has a long and distinguished history, so any critic of it needs to avail himself of the opportunity to engage our theologians.
Deceit, like duress, impairs the freedom of the will.
How so? Freedom of the will simply means men do what they desire to do. How does deceit impair that freedom?
Man can see a variety of religious texts purporting to be the Word of God, yet the one that is supposedly true does not manifest its truth by plainly revealing hitherto unknown knowledge.
Is this an internal critique or an external critique? If the former, please cite, chapter and verse the problem. If an external critique, please give me a nonarbitary reason to accept your standards over that of the Bible itself.
I submit this is deceit by omission.
Omission of what? Deceit by omission suggests somehow that God
owes each and every man "the truth" such that man can come to a saving knowledge of God.
1. I would argue that Scripture is plain with regard to salvation itself.
2. I would argue that it is man's fault, not God's fault, that he rejects that truth or does not see that truth in the text.
3. I would argue that the target audience is not all men without exception - it is the elect and only the elect. So, the fact that all men w/o exception do not see or understand the text in this regard is only an argument that would work against the Arminian. I'm a Supralapsarian Calvinist. I have no problem with that. Do you have an argument that actually touches mine or not?