Thank you
@FollowingHim and
@Verifyveritas76 for helping me resurrect my account. I feel a kind of kinship to Lazarus now. Hopefully my posts won't make you regret giving me new life on the forum. It's probably good for everyone that my time to post is limited.
This could be fun, but it could also be boring. I look at things one way, and you look at them another. I've attempted to lay out the logic behind my philosophy and even attempted to lay out the logic behind my logic. It could descend into total absurdity if I attempt to lay out the logic behind the logic of my original logic, so I'm just going to cry uncle instead of trying to kick Lucy's football in a game in which one of us pretends to agree with the other only to rearrange the words into another salad designed to trip up the other. The last thing I want to do is to end up on the head of a pin dancing with angels, fallen or otherwise.
Peace out on this one!
I appreciate the logic of what you wrote in the other thread, but I understand bowing out too. It can be too much like beating your head against a wall, or trying to convince a modern pastor that polygyny is moral.
I mean no disrespect to anyone that holds a different view, but I have learned that not all things are as they first appear. We all tend to interpret things with the knowledge we have, and none of us have perfect knowledge.
I believe in the God that created all things and has revealed Himself through the ages. There is a difference between evil that is moral corruption and the evil that God creates. God does create "evil" (Is 45:7) the Hebrew word Ra that means all kinds of sorrow and calamity. These are the promised curses of Deut. 28 and are in response to man's "evil" which is moral corruption. God said He would do these things to His people. If you read Deut 28 you can see that this evil is purposed to either turn man back to God, or destroy those who choose to oppose the creator God and His plan.
God did create man perfect and called it good, even though man was created with human nature including the lusts of the flesh. Man was perfect, he had not yet sinned. Christ being the second Adam was also created perfect, with the same ability to sin, but overcame temptation. Christ and Adam were created with the same human nature including the lusts of the flesh. My understanding is that the lusts of the flesh is our/THE adversary. When you resist the adversary he flees from you, when you give in to the adversary man creates evil. Matthew 15:18 But the things that come out of a person’s mouth come from the heart, and these defile them. v.19 For out of the heart come evil thoughts—murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false testimony, slander.
Though God made us in this manner He did not create evil, but rather gave man a will and the ability to oppose Him. Man's sin nature was no surprise to God, He was not blindsided. He is the author and finisher of our faith and has declared the end from the beginning (Isaiah 46:10). Paul says that the creature was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of him who has subjected the same in hope. (Rom. 8:20) The plan of salvation is the hope of the ages, and existed before creation.
I challenge anyone to show where "satan" fell. It has always been man falling, being humbled, eating grass like the ox, repenting and returning to his creator.
Revelation is probably a subject for another thread, but the beginning of the book says that the events recorded must shortly come to pass, not that they happened before the sin in the garden of Eden. I believe that the events of John's vision had not yet happened when he wrote it, and are still unfolding today.