TOL's James Hilston Agrees: Yes, God Can Change!!

ApologeticJedi

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sentientsynth said:
Yeah. Hypocritical. Saying that you take someone's words for what they are, and that you do not attempt to impute foreign meanings to them, and then criticizing others for not doing the same; that's hypocritical? How strange.

If you are going to give a quote and say we must, as you put it, “take someone’s words for what they are”, then when someone shows you places where Augustine backed the idea of absolute immutablility, leaving no room for exception, shouldn’t you and Hilston have the courage to take those words for what they are as well?

I think that’s a clear bias of thinking to say that only your quotes should be taken from their plain meaning, but other quotes … well, we can’t read his mind on those. :) … I mean you can say that, but don’t pretend it isn’t some sort of hypocritical dodge. You aren't fooling anyone.
 

Poly

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Hilston said:
Do you believe God could become evil if He wanted to?

Why are you getting off topic? My post was an agreement in response to comments made about change being equated to imperfection or sin. I merely gave examles of how not changing can sometimes be equated with imperfection showing how easy it is to refute Augustine's bizzare idea on what change means.

And I have no idea why you would think asking such a question was relevant to anything. If God cannot become evil, this still doesn't prove that God can't change in any way whatsoever. And it certainly doesn't prove that change is evil.
Hilston said:
This has nothing to do with essential attributes, Poly.

Again, I'm not talking about this but about the ability to change compared being compared to imperfection.

Do you view your body as comprising your essential attributes?
I'm not sure this makes sense but no doubt your suggesting that change can only take place in the body and not in essential attrubutes. So you keep saying.

God changing does not compromise His essential attributes such as righteousness, goodness, justice and mercy, all of which can be carried out perfectly and the ability to change does take away from them.

Hilston said:
This again is the humanist trying to judge God according to man's experience.

No, this is a former Calvinist, who was fully convinced that what she believed about God came straight from the word and was fortunate to wake up and realize that it wasn't biblical at all but came straight from man.

I choose to take God at His word. I choose to beleive Him, when He says He brought the animals to Adam "to see" what He would name them.when He says "Now I know" concerning Abraham's willingness to be obedient. I no longer take it upon myself to suggest that God really knew ahead of time, what Adam would name the animals and how Abraham would react.

I limited God and minimized His power when I based my faith on Him being able to carry out righteousness only if He cannot change. I choose not to limit Him anymore. I choose to see Him just as He's described in the word as The Living God. I'm so confident in His righteousness, goodness, and power that I have no doubt that He can accomplish His will, having the ability to change while interacting with us, daily, moment by moment.
 
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ApologeticJedi

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Hilston said:
This isn't merely a "want" question; it's a "can" question. Can God become evil if He wants to? If so, then you have no assurance that He someday will not become evil. And the worst kind of evil is the evil that feigns righteousness. How do you know God hasn't already succumbed to evil and is playing all the believers for chumps?


You are trying to pretend that you have some high ground because you believe God "can't" become evil. Yet, this too has no assurance.

Your belief that God can't become evil is not tied to what you absolutely know. What I mean is that you don't know it because you've seen God or because you know what it is like to become a deity.

Your claim to know that God can't be evil is because ….. you believe He said in His word.

So if God was evil, and all you have is His word, then how do you know He didn't lie? After all, the worst kind of evil is the evil that feigns righteousness. How do you know God hasn't already succumbed to evil and is playing all believers for chumps?

That is where faith comes into play on both camps. To pretend your side has some higher footing is to be kidding yourself (and not thinking through your posts very well, imo).
 
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koban

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Hilston said:
Look at that! Koban is using BIG words, and trying to act all grown-up and stuff. Awwwwwww, how cute! :baby:

:freak: You consider "absolute" to be a big word? :confused:

:darwinsm: Just another installment of the "Jim's a jerk" show!





Tell the truth, Jimmy-boy - you afraid to answer the question?


koban said:
Do you believe God is absolute?

Or do you believe that "good" and "evil" exist outside of God?
 

koban

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ApologeticJedi said:
That's a dumb argument. You are trying to pretend that you have some high ground because you believe God "can't" become evil. That argument falls completely apart. Your belief that God can't become evil is not tied to reality. What I mean is that you don't know it because you've seen God or because you know what it is like to become a deity. You claim to know that God can't be evil boils down to ..... you believe He said so.

Now think about that .... so if God was evil, and all you have is His word (all any of us have is our relationship and His word for that matter), then how do you know He didn't lie? How do you know God hasn't already succumbed to evil and is playing all believers for chumps?

That is where faith comes into play on both camps. To pretend your side has some higher footing is to be kidding yourself (and not thinking through your posts very well).


Does "evil" exist for God? Maybe, for God, evil is defined as going against His will.

Certainly many of the things that God has done would be considered evil if done by man. :think:
 

ApologeticJedi

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koban said:
Does "evil" exist for God? Maybe, for God, evil is defined as going against His will.

God seems to know what evil is. And it seems He is not capable of changing evil into good.

koban said:
Certainly many of the things that God has done would be considered evil if done by man.


Just as some thing done by the police are 'legal', but they become 'criminal' when citizens try to do them.
 

koban

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ApologeticJedi said:
Just as some thing done by the police are 'legal', but they become 'criminal' when citizens try to do them.

I agree and think it's an apt analogy.

However, what would your opinion be of the legality of police actions if they resulted in the deaths of innocents?


ApologeticJedi said:
God seems to know what evil is. And it seems He is not capable of changing evil into good.

Can you define "evil"?

Does it exist outside of God?

Can you define it without invoking God?
 

Vaquero45

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Hilston said:
This isn't merely a "want" question; it's a "can" question. Can God become evil if He wants to? If so, then you have no assurance that He someday will not become evil. And the worst kind of evil is the evil that feigns righteousness. How do you know God hasn't already succumbed to evil and is playing all the believers for chumps?

Jim
Hear Hilston's latest musical release!


Hilston said- you have no assurance that He someday will not become evil.

It's the determinist view that claims God planned every instance of evil that has ever occured and will ever occur. Obviously I still am not sure how you have seperated God "decreeing" all evil from God "being" evil. I know you figure you have somehow, but it sure looks like the settled view God is already evil, and doesn't have to wait for someday from this side of the fence. You claim that the OV'ers can't trust God to stay good, but (again from our side) your "God could be evil?" problem is much worse.

To answer your question above for myself, I do not think God "can" become evil, because He "immutably" does not want to. He has perfect character. :)
 

Hilston

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koban said:
:freak: You consider "absolute" to be a big word? :confused:
YES! It's a very very large word. And you did so well in your use of it. Great job!!! :up:

koban said:
:darwinsm: Just another installment of the "Jim's a jerk" show!
To the jerk I become a jerk. Notice that I don't treat very many people this way. Only those who beg for it.

koban said:
Tell the truth, Jimmy-boy - you afraid to answer the question?
Yes, of course I'm afraid. You're way too smart for me. My massive ego couldn't handle the embarrassment of being bested by your superior intellect. :loser:

Now, back to more relevant matters ...

"I RAWK!" is not a country in the Middle East,
Jim
Hear Hilston's latest musical release!
 

koban

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Hilston said:
YES! It's a very very large word. And you did so well in your use of it. Great job!!! :up:

Did your mommy have to explain what it meant to you?

Never mind. I'll ask her tomorrow night *when I escort her to the purely platonic social function in town.

To the jerk I become a jerk. Notice that I don't treat very many people this way. Only those who beg for it.

Actually, Jim, you tend to respond, eventually, in this manner to anyone who dares disagree with your massive intellect. In this regard, you are similar to Sozo, and equally as unappealing.


You should realize, doofus, the difference between a non-antagonistic question and an antagonistic one. (yes, I know - big words again. See if your mommy can explain them to you. If not, I'll explain them to her tomorrow and she can pass it on, * after our purely platonic evening.

Yes, of course I'm afraid. You're way too smart for me. My massive ego couldn't handle the embarrassment of being bested by your superior intellect.

Well, overcome your fears, little man, and give it a crack. The worst you can do is be wrong, and you should be used to that by now. :chuckle:


Now, back to more relevant matters ...

"I RAWK!" is not a country in the Middle East

No, unfortunately, it seems to be the diversionary tactic of a :flamer: :loser: who can't muster the intellect to answer the following questions:


koban said:
Do you believe God is absolute?

Or do you believe that "good" and "evil" exist outside of God?



Talentless Poseur said:
Hear Hilston's latest musical release!

I did.
 
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sentientsynth

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ApologeticJedi said:
If you are going to give a quote and say we must, as you put it, “take someone’s words for what they are”, then when someone shows you places where Augustine backed the idea of absolute immutablility, leaving no room for exception,
If this were the case then I'd write this person off as contradictory. I'd say, "Look, this guy believes two competely opposite things. Both qualified AND unqualified immutability? Either he's confused, or I'm not reading it right."

It's one thing to tilt at a windmill. Quite another to tilt at the very *** upon which you sit.

shouldn’t you and Hilston have the courage to take those words for what they are as well?
:chew:

I think that’s a clear bias of thinking to say that only your quotes should be taken from their plain meaning, but other quotes … well, we can’t read his mind on those. :) … I mean you can say that, but don’t pretend it isn’t some sort of hypocritical dodge. You aren't fooling anyone.
Not even myself? Don't I count for something?
 

Poly

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Koban, Hilston may have unreasonably insulted you but you're crossing the line in your vulgar comments to him. Please refrain from these kinds of insults.
 

koban

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Poly said:
Koban, Hilston may have unreasonably insulted you but you're crossing the line in your vulgar comments to him. Please refrain from these kinds of insults.


Post # 72 has been edited.

Hilston's mom has approved the changes. :chuckle:
 

Hilston

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Combined reply to:
  • ApologeticJedi
  • Drbrumley
  • Poly
  • ApologeticJedi (again)

ApologeticJedi said:
If you are going to give a quote and say we must, as you put it, “take someone’s words for what they are”, then when someone shows you places where Augustine backed the idea of absolute immutablility, leaving no room for exception, shouldn’t you and Hilston have the courage to take those words for what they are as well?
I do take those words for what they are, AJ. Every time Augustine and Calvin talk about immutability and God as unchanging, they do so specifically, not generally. They do so with clear qualifiers. Read my posts on the subject. Check their contexts for yourself and see if I'm not being accurate.

ApologeticJedi said:
I think that’s a clear bias of thinking to say that only your quotes should be taken from their plain meaning, but other quotes … well, we can’t read his mind on those.
You missed the point, AJ. When I said we can't read Augustine's mind, the point was that we can only go on Augustine's WRITTEN WORDS. Bob was asking me explain what Augustine means beyond what Augustine actually wrote. In order to respond, I had to guess, I had to put myself in Augustine's shoes. He was asking me to offer an opinion that went beyond Auggie's writings.

Here's a transcript:
Bob: "Why don't you explain to the audience what Augustine means by that [excerpt Enyart read].
Jim: "Again, I can't say that I know what he means; I can guess based on what I've read. And if he [Augustine] says elsewhere that God is immutable in His substance and nature, then I take that passage to mean ~ and I know that he had a Platonic influence ~ that, if that which is perfect in its essence and nature, changes, then it ceases to be perfect.
Bob: And that's, of course, not biblical. You agree that that's not biblical, right?
Jim: Well, regardless of what I think, it seems that that's was what Augustine was saying; that God in His nature and essence is unchangeable. And if He were to change in His essence and nature, He would cease to be perfect.

ApologeticJedi said:
I mean you can say that, but don’t pretend it isn’t some sort of hypocritical dodge. You aren't fooling anyone.
You must be desperate, AJ. Where is the hypocrisy? Where is the dodge? I'm not above hypocrisy or dodging. I've been guilty both, but where is it here?

Drbrumley said:
God is immutable in His character.
Does God have a choice about being immutable? Could God be evil if He wanted to be?

Drbrumley said:
What is your point Hilston?
Augustine agrees with you. So does Calvin. The Calvinistic view of immutability regards God character, His essential character, i.e. a qualified immutability. Open Theists allege that Calvinists believe God cannot change at all in any way whatsoever. Yet Augustine claims that God changes in His ways and actions.

Hilston wrote: Do you believe God could become evil if He wanted to?

Poly said:
Why are you getting off topic?
It's not off-topic. Immutability has everything to do with what are God's essential attributes. Is it that God WILL NOT deny Himself, or is it that God CANNOT deny Himself?

Poly said:
My post was an agreement in response to comments made about change being equated to imperfection or sin.
Yes, and whenever someone does that without specifying what is said to change, there is the potential for misunderstanding and error. You fell into this in your statements, and I sought to specify and qualify for the sake of the discussion.

Poly said:
I merely gave examles of how not changing can sometimes be equated with imperfection showing how easy it is to refute Aristotles bizzare idea on what change means.
You don't understand Aristotle. The essential attributes of that which is Perfect cannot change and remain perfect. Perfect is an absolute that only applies to God. For Him to be anything other than what He ESSENTIALLY is, or to change in some way in those ESSENTIAL ATTRIBUTES would be a change away from perfection, to become imperfect. And God cannot do that. God does not WILL Himself to be perfect; He ESSENTIALLY IS perfect. Do you see the distinction?

Poly said:
And I have no idea why you would think asking such a question was relevant to anything. If God cannot become evil, this still doesn't prove that God can't change in any way whatsoever.
Who said God can't change in anyway whatsoever? I didn't. Augustine didn't. Neither did Calvin.

Poly said:
And it certainly doesn't prove that change is evil.
For the Perfect God to change in His ESSENTIAL ATTRIBUTES would be evil. For example, if God violated His truthfulness and lied, that would be evil; that would mean a change in His essential attribute of truthfulness. If God violated His justice and did something unjust, that would be evil; that would mean a change in His essential attribute of being just. God's essential attributes are what define God as God. If any of those attributes were to change, they would change for the worse, and God would cease to be God, which is utterly impossible. According to Open Theist/humanistic tenets, however, this is entirely possible.

Poly said:
God changing does not compromise His essential attributes such as righteousness, goodness, justice and mercy, all of which can be carried out perfectly and the ability to change does take away from them.
I agree with you. So do Calvin and Augustine.

Hilston wrote: This again is the humanist trying to judge God according to man's experience.

Poly said:
No, this is a former Calvinist, who was fully convinced that what she believed about God came straight from the word and was fortunate to wake up and realize that it wasn't biblical at all but came straight from man.
What came straight from man?

Poly said:
I choose to take God at His word. I choose to beleive Him, when He says He brought the animals to Adam "to see" what He would name them.
Did God know where Adam was when Adam was hiding and God asked "Adam, where are you?"

Poly said:
... when He says "Now I know" concerning Abraham's willingness to be obedient.
Did God know the woman at the well was shacking up with someone who was not her husband when He asked her to "Go get your husband"?

Poly said:
... I no longer take it upon myself to suggest that God really knew ahead of time, what Adam would name the animals and how Abraham would react.
Did God know where Adam was ahead of time? Did Jesus know ahead of time that the woman at the well already had several husbands, and that her current beau was not her husband?

Poly said:
I limited God and minimized His power when I based my faith on Him being able to carry out righteousness only if He cannot change.
How so? Are you saying God has the power to be evil? Does God have the power to lie? Heb 6:17,18 and 2Ti 2:13 say otherwise.

Poly said:
... I choose not to limit Him anymore. I choose to see Him just as He's described in the word as The Living God.
But you HAVE limited Him. You've made God finite. Ask Jeremy Finkenbinder. He believes God is finite. It's the logical conclusion of your view.

Poly said:
... I'm so confident in His righteousness, goodness, and power that I have no doubt that He can accomplish His will, having the ability to change while interacting with us, daily, moment by moment.
Note the equivocation. Over and over, Open Theists have agreed with me that God does not change in His righteous character and attributes; over and over again, Open Theists have agreed with me that God can change in relationships and actions, yet the Open Theists continue to irrationally accuse Settled Viewers of somehow believing that God cannot change in His relationships and actions.

ApologeticJedi said:
You are trying to pretend that you have some high ground because you believe God "can't" become evil. Yet, this too has no assurance.
Why not?

ApologeticJedi said:
Your belief that God can't become evil is not tied to what you absolutely know.
Finite beings cannot have absolute knowledge, AJ.

ApologeticJedi said:
... What I mean is that you don't know it because you've seen God or because you know what it is like to become a deity.
Of course not. We have to go on the testimony of God's infallible and inerrant Word that says God cannot lie, cannot oppose His own immutable decrees, and cannot deny Himself.

ApologeticJedi said:
Your claim to know that God can't be evil is because ….. you believe He said in His word.
Correct.

ApologeticJedi said:
So if God was evil, and all you have is His word, then how do you know He didn't lie?
It's not my problem. I don't believe God can do evil. You, however, do.

ApologeticJedi said:
... After all, the worst kind of evil is the evil that feigns righteousness. How do you know God hasn't already succumbed to evil and is playing all believers for chumps?
I know because it's not possible for God to be able to lie, contradict His own desires and decrees, or deny Himself. You cannot know, because you believe in a God who could do all those things.

ApologeticJedi said:
That is where faith comes into play on both camps. To pretend your side has some higher footing is to be kidding yourself (and not thinking through your posts very well, imo).
Incorrect. My view is rational; yours is not only irrational, but leads to uncertainty, ambiguity, confusion, equivocation, and obscurantism.

Jim
Hear Hilston's latest musical release!
 
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