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Re: plagues [Re: Tom] #118095
08/24/09 05:28 PM
08/24/09 05:28 PM
Mountain Man  Offline
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Originally Posted By: Tom
To put it another way, the way you perceive God as acting is that He escalated the use of His power until Pharaoh gave in. Since I've avoided the use of the words "force" or "violence," I think I've said this in a way you would agree with. So let's stop here for a moment, and let me ask, do you agree that I have characterized your view correctly? That is, do you agree with the following:

God escalated the use of His power until Pharaoh gave in.

Ellen White explains what I believe about it:

Quote:
Moses declared to Pharaoh, after he required the people to make brick without straw, that God, whom he pretended not to know, would compel him to yield to his claims, and acknowledge his authority, as supreme ruler. {3SG 238.2}

The time had come when God would answer the prayers of his oppressed people, and would bring them from Egypt with such mighty displays of his power that the Egyptians would be compelled to acknowledge that the God of the Hebrews, whom they had despised, was above all gods. He would now punish them for their idolatry, and for their proud boasting of the mercies bestowed upon them by their senseless gods. God would glorify his own name, that other nations might hear of his power and tremble at his mighty acts, and that his people, by witnessing his miraculous works, should fully turn from their idolatry to render to him pure worship. {3SG 238.3}

I believe God accomplished everything He set out to do.

Quote:
T: If God lifts His protecting hand, then we see the effects of these unseen dangers. In the plagues we see 10 of the dangers from which God was protecting the Egyptians. His power is shown in that we're only seeing the tip of the iceberg. That is, God's removing His protection resulted in such devastation as the Egyptian plagues. We can't even imagine how powerful God really is in protecting them against the 990 unseen dangers He didn't remove His protection from.

Who or what is managing the forces of nature when God withdraws His protection? Isn't nature totally dependent on God for everything it does? Ellen White wrote:

Quote:
God's judgments were awakened against Jericho. It was a stronghold. But the Captain of the Lord's host Himself came from heaven to lead the armies of heaven in an attack upon the city. Angels of God laid hold of the massive walls and brought them to the ground.--3T 264 (1873). {LDE 243.1}

Under God the angels are all-powerful. On one occasion, in obedience to the command of Christ, they slew of the Assyrian army in one night one hundred and eighty-five thousand men.--DA 700 (1898). {LDE 243.2}

The same angel who had come from the royal courts to rescue Peter had been the messenger of wrath and judgment to Herod. The angel smote Peter to arouse him from slumber. It was with a different stroke that he smote the wicked king, laying low his pride and bringing upon him the punishment of the Almighty. Herod died in great agony of mind and body, under the retributive judgment of God.--AA 152 (1911). {LDE 243.3}

A single angel destroyed all the first-born of the Egyptians and filled the land with mourning. When David offended against God by numbering the people, one angel caused that terrible destruction by which his sin was punished. The same destructive power exercised by holy angels when God commands, will be exercised by evil angels when He permits. There are forces now ready, and only waiting the divine permission, to spread desolation everywhere.--GC 614 (1911). {LDE 243.4}

You seem to be saying the angels named above caused the death and destruction described above by withdrawing their protection and allowing evil angels to do it. Am I hearing you correctly?

Re: plagues [Re: Tom] #118099
08/24/09 06:32 PM
08/24/09 06:32 PM
Mountain Man  Offline
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Originally Posted By: Tom
M: Are you suggesting you in no way believe God must work supernaturally to arbitrarily prevent the forces of nature from causing universal devastation and mass extinction?

T: I think that's a very odd way of putting things. It's hard to know exactly what it means. I would say that God manages nature, and if He withdraws His management, bad things are bound to happen.

M: Why are bad things bound to happen? What laws or forces would be at work when God stops managing nature?

T: There's too many to list. One example of God's managing things for the protection of man is in the great beasts such as dinosaurs dying out. The SOP points out that man did not have the strength to manage these beasts.

True, but we weren’t talking about what God does to protect us. Instead, we were talking about what laws or forces are at work when nature is destructive. You seem to think things like tornadoes and hurricanes and earthquakes happen naturally when God withdraws His protection. But you have yet to explain what laws or forces are at work when natural disasters happen. Do you agree nature can do nothing without the intimate involvement of God? If so (or if not), who or what do you think is responsible for natural disasters?

Quote:
M: I see no place in the Bible or the SOP where God is portrayed as using force or violence to get His way.

T: The Egyptian plagues is one such example. Do you think the following are true?

1. God caused the plagues to happen?
2. God did so to get His way?

The only way I think you could deny what I said was to say that the plagues did not involve force or violence. Is this your contention?

An atheist or an unsympathetic outsider might criticize God and conclude He was using force and violence to get his way. In the quotes I’ve posted earlier on this thread, Ellen White explains why God employed the 10 plagues in Egypt. Again, all "the manifestations of retributive justice [are] perfectly consistent with the character of God as a merciful, long-suffering, benevolent being."

Quote:
M: Nor do I see a relative or rational connection between Jesus suffering and dying as our Substitute and Jesus executing justice and judgment.

T: We disagree on this point. I believe there is a connection, and that because you don't perceive this connection, you are not interpreting the violent events of the OT correctly.

You seem determined to unnaturally force everything in the Bible that sounds like God executed retributive justice and judgment to punish and destroy sinners to mean He withdrew His protection and allowed either nature or evil angels to do it. You seem to base this idea and strategy on the fact Jesus did not punish or destroy sinners while He was here in the flesh. However, you seem to be overlooking the fact that neither did Jesus employ the “withdraw and permit” method of allowing death and destruction to happen while He was here in the flesh. The fact Jesus didn’t punish and destroy sinners while He was here in the flesh is consistent with the aims, goals, and purposes of His first advent. Not until His second and thirds advents will Jesus punish and destroy sinners.

Quote:
M: You seem to be making the same mistake John did.

T: We disagree on this point. I think you're making the same mistake the Jews did in regards to Christ's first coming, by missing the spiritual implications. For example, in DA 107, 108, I think your understanding of things is similar to the Jews:

Quote:
To sin, wherever found, "our God is a consuming fire." Heb. 12:29. In all who submit to His power the Spirit of God will consume sin. But if men cling to sin, they become identified with it. Then the glory of God, which destroys sin, must destroy them....

At the second advent of Christ the wicked shall be consumed "with the Spirit of His mouth," and destroyed "with the brightness of His coming." 2 Thess. 2:8. The light of the glory of God, which imparts life to the righteous, will slay the wicked.

In the time of John the Baptist, Christ was about to appear as the revealer of the character of God. His very presence would make manifest to men their sin. Only as they were willing to be purged from sin could they enter into fellowship with Him. Only the pure in heart could abide in His presence. (DA 107,108)

I think you interpret this in physical/literal terms instead of spiritually, which is the same mistake the Jews made. I think the principles involved here are the same principles involved at the cross. We're not dealing with two different Gods here. All that can be known of God really was revealed in the life and character of His Son during the first Advent. Only as we understand what Christ revealed in the first Advent can we understand what happens in the second. I think it's because of a lack of this understanding that Christ hasn't come. The same mindset the Jews had prevails.

“His very presence would make manifest to men their sin.” Elsewhere she wrote, “Human pride and self-sufficiency stand rebuked in His presence. {DA 48.5} “There were some who sought His society, feeling at peace in His presence; but many avoided Him, because they were rebuked by His stainless life. {DA 89.1} “His presence has healing virtue for the sinner. {DA 266.1} “The souls who came to Jesus felt in His presence that even for them there was escape from the pit of sin. {COL 186.2} “Selfishness in all its forms stood rebuked in His presence. {4T 418.3} “We may not in person approach into His presence; in our sin we may not look upon His face; but we can behold Him and commune with Him in Jesus, the Saviour. {Ed 28.1}

“The unconverted man thinks of God as unloving, as severe, and even revengeful; His presence is thought to be a constant restraint, His character an expression of "Thou shalt not." {1SM 183.2} “God did not excuse [Nadab and Abihu] because the brain was confused [by wine]. Fire from his presence destroyed them in their sin. {4aSG 125.1}

So, as you can see, several things can happen in “His presence”. We can feel guilty of sin, or we can feel forgiven and saved, or we can be burned alive. But, back to my original point – you seem to be making the same mistake John did. “He did not distinguish clearly the two phases of Christ's work,--as a suffering sacrifice and a conquering king . . . {DA 136.4} Jesus did not come the first time to punish and destroy sinners.

It should not come as a surprise, then, that He did not act like He did in the OT or like He will at the end of time when He comes as a conquering king. However, you seem to be insisting the fact Jesus didn’t punish and destroy sinners while He was here in the flesh that it means neither did He do it in the OT nor will He do it in the future. But, like John, are you not failing to clearly distinguish between the two phases of Christ’s work?

Re: plagues [Re: Mountain Man] #118103
08/24/09 09:38 PM
08/24/09 09:38 PM
Tom  Offline
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Quote:
M:Ellen White explains what I believe about it.


Here's what I wrote:

Quote:
T:To put it another way, the way you perceive God as acting is that He escalated the use of His power until Pharaoh gave in. Since I've avoided the use of the words "force" or "violence," I think I've said this in a way you would agree with. So let's stop here for a moment, and let me ask, do you agree that I have characterized your view correctly? That is, do you agree with the following:

God escalated the use of His power until Pharaoh gave in.


So is this accurate? This is what you believe? Or do you see some difference between what I wrote here and your understanding of what Ellen White said? If so, what?

Quote:
M:I believe God accomplished everything He set out to do.


God's primary purpose was the salvation of the Egyptians.

Quote:
M:Who or what is managing the forces of nature when God withdraws His protection?


God manages nature, if that's what you're asking.

Quote:
M:Isn't nature totally dependent on God for everything it does?


If you mean in the sense that God created the laws that govern nature, yes. If you mean in the sense that God places every molecule where He wants it, no.

Quote:
M:You seem to be saying the angels named above caused the death and destruction described above by withdrawing their protection and allowing evil angels to do it. Am I hearing you correctly?


You're lumping a bunch of different cases together, so to answer I'll state that I believe the principles laid out in GC 35-37 apply to all these cases. Simply put, the wicked cause God's protection to be removed from them, and He allows them to receive the results of their choice.


Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
Re: plagues [Re: Tom] #118105
08/24/09 09:50 PM
08/24/09 09:50 PM
Tom  Offline
Active Member 2012
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Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 14,795
Lawrence, Kansas
Quote:
M: Are you suggesting you in no way believe God must work supernaturally to arbitrarily prevent the forces of nature from causing universal devastation and mass extinction?

T: I think that's a very odd way of putting things. It's hard to know exactly what it means. I would say that God manages nature, and if He withdraws His management, bad things are bound to happen.

M: Why are bad things bound to happen? What laws or forces would be at work when God stops managing nature?

T: There's too many to list. One example of God's managing things for the protection of man is in the great beasts such as dinosaurs dying out. The SOP points out that man did not have the strength to manage these beasts.

M:True, but we weren’t talking about what God does to protect us. Instead, we were talking about what laws or forces are at work when nature is destructive.


I said this above, "I would say that God manages nature, and if He withdraws His management, bad things are bound to happen." I was giving an example of this.

Quote:
M:You seem to think things like tornadoes and hurricanes and earthquakes happen naturally when God withdraws His protection.


I think things like these in general happen because two fronts collide, one with air that is warmer and moister than the other.

Quote:
M:But you have yet to explain what laws or forces are at work when natural disasters happen.


Physical laws and forces.

Quote:
Do you agree nature can do nothing without the intimate involvement of God?


I pointed out to you that nature is not self-acting.

Quote:
If so (or if not), who or what do you think is responsible for natural disasters?


Here's a quote which speaks to the toxicity of plants:

Quote:
Christ never planted the seeds of death in the system. Satan planted these seeds when he tempted Adam to eat of the tree of knowledge, which meant disobedience to God. Not one noxious plant was placed in the Lord's great garden, but after Adam and Eve sinned, poisonous herbs sprang up. In the parable of the sower the question was asked the master, "Didst not thou sow good seed in thy field? From whence then hath it tares?" The master answered, "An enemy hath done this." [Matthew 13:27, 28.] All tares are sown by the evil one. Every noxious herb is of his sowing, and by his ingenious methods of amalgamation he has corrupted the earth with tares. (16 MR 247)


I think a similar principle applies to all the ills that sin or Satan have brought us. God is not responsible for these things. If there were no sin, there would be no natural disasters.

Quote:
T: The Egyptian plagues is one such example. Do you think the following are true?

1. God caused the plagues to happen?
2. God did so to get His way?

The only way I think you could deny what I said was to say that the plagues did not involve force or violence. Is this your contention?

M:An atheist or an unsympathetic outsider might criticize God and conclude He was using force and violence to get his way.


Or you? If not, why not? Because you don't think the things that were done were violent? (like the killing of the first born) Or is there some other reason?

Quote:
In the quotes I’ve posted earlier on this thread, Ellen White explains why God employed the 10 plagues in Egypt. Again, all "the manifestations of retributive justice [are] perfectly consistent with the character of God as a merciful, long-suffering, benevolent being."


I'm interested in what you think. It's fine if you want to quote her, but if you do so, please explain what you think she is saying.

Quote:
So, as you can see, several things can happen in “His presence”. We can feel guilty of sin, or we can feel forgiven and saved, or we can be burned alive. But, back to my original point – you seem to be making the same mistake John did. “He did not distinguish clearly the two phases of Christ's work,--as a suffering sacrifice and a conquering king . . . {DA 136.4} Jesus did not come the first time to punish and destroy sinners.

It should not come as a surprise, then, that He did not act like He did in the OT or like He will at the end of time when He comes as a conquering king. However, you seem to be insisting the fact Jesus didn’t punish and destroy sinners while He was here in the flesh that it means neither did He do it in the OT nor will He do it in the future. But, like John, are you not failing to clearly distinguish between the two phases of Christ’s work?


I already commented on this. I think the same principles are at work in both comings. Jerusalem was destroyed due to Christ's first coming (more accurately, as a result of the cross), and the same principles are involved when Christ comes again in the destruction of the wicked. I addressed this on another thread.

The wicked destroy themselves. She makes this same point in response to both the destruction of Jerusalem and the destruction of those who reject Christ before His second coming.


Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
Re: plagues [Re: asygo] #118118
08/25/09 03:37 AM
08/25/09 03:37 AM
teresaq  Offline OP
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Last edited by Green Cochoa; 08/31/09 11:11 AM. Reason: Edited for content

Psa 64:5 ...an evil matter: they commune of laying snares privily; they say, Who shall see them?

Psa 7:14 Behold, he travaileth with iniquity, and hath conceived mischief, and brought forth falsehood. 15 He made a pit, and digged it, and is fallen into the ditch which he made. 16 His mischief (and his violent dealing) shall return upon his own head.

Psa 7:17 I will praise the LORD according to his righteousness: and will sing praise to the name of the LORD most high.
Re: plagues [Re: teresaq] #118119
08/25/09 03:38 AM
08/25/09 03:38 AM
teresaq  Offline OP
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IN WHAT SENSE DID THE LORD HARDEN PHARAOH'S HEART?

IT cannot be denied that some minds find serious difficulties in this subject. This fact is a sufficient reason for an effort to relieve the subject of its difficulties, and to set it in the light of reason and of Scripture. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.23}

It is supposed by some that the Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart by an exertion of divine power, that was, first, direct; second, irresistible; and, third, of set purpose to produce this result. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.24}

Over against this view, we maintain that God's agency in the hardening of Pharaoh's heart was, first, indirect and permissive; second, negative (not positive) - and consisted in leaving him to himself, withholding efforts of mercy to save him; third, that it was not irresistible, but was in perfect harmony with Pharaoh's free moral agency; fourth, that God's agency and policy in the case were judicial - done as a just judgment on Pharaoh for his sin, and under circumstances which fully justified Jehovah in revealing his power, his justice, and his righteous retribution on a persistent sinner. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.25}

The reader will now very properly inquire, On what grounds do you give the Scriptures the construction you propose? For the Scriptures declare repeatedly that the Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart. He first said to Moses, Ex.iv,21; vii,3, that he would do it; and after it was done, said more than once (for example, Ex.x,1; xi,10) that he had done it. Do you not, therefore, evade the plain sense of Scripture when you interpret God's agency as only indirect, permissive, negative, and not purposing the end of his hardening for its own sake? {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.26}

In reply we have several things to say in support of the construction we give: {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.27}

1. The known character of God requires it. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.28}

It is absolutely known that God is good - from which we must infer that he cannot delight in having his creatures sin, and much less (if this were possible) in making them sin, compulsorily. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.29}

It is certainly known that God is just - from which we must infer that he cannot press, urge, over-persuade one of his creatures to sin, and then punish him for yielding to his own influence. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.30}

But quite apart from our reasonings on this subject, yet most fully sustaining these reasonings, the Scriptures explicitly teach us that God never tempts men to sin. "Neither tempteth he any man," is the inspired affirmation. James i,13. Hence he did not tempt Pharaoh to sin. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.31}

Again, by implication the Scriptures deny that God can ever desire to have men sin, so that he could take measures for the purpose of leading them into sin. He solemnly avers, "As I live, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked," which certainly must imply that he has no pleasure in their sin, for their sin is the thing to be morally hated, even more than their death. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.32}

The Bible gives us also most emphatic utterances of God's strong desire that men would not ever sin: "O do not that abominable thing which I hate!" We must assume that this is said in sincerity, and hence precludes the possibility of his desiring men to sin, and of his using means and influences to lead them into sin. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.33}


Psa 64:5 ...an evil matter: they commune of laying snares privily; they say, Who shall see them?

Psa 7:14 Behold, he travaileth with iniquity, and hath conceived mischief, and brought forth falsehood. 15 He made a pit, and digged it, and is fallen into the ditch which he made. 16 His mischief (and his violent dealing) shall return upon his own head.

Psa 7:17 I will praise the LORD according to his righteousness: and will sing praise to the name of the LORD most high.
Re: plagues [Re: teresaq] #118120
08/25/09 03:39 AM
08/25/09 03:39 AM
teresaq  Offline OP
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Yet further, the Bible teaches us that God works both in men and upon men, toward their holiness. Indeed, this is one of the greatest truths of divine revelation. The Bible is richly filled with statements respecting this fact, the means employed, the results, the criteria by which we may identify them, the condition on which we may enjoy this divine power, and the glory due to God for it. Now if it were true that God always works in sinners and upon sinners in the same way, or in any analogous way, toward their sinning - working in them to will wrong and to do wrong; then, by analogy, we ought to find this truth taught also in scripture, in the same or in similar methods, and, for aught that appears, with equal explicitness and fullness. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.34}

But no such teachings are found in the Scriptures; and hence we must infer that there is no analogous working of God in and upon sinners to make them sin. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.35}

Besides, apart from Scripture, it is intrinsically absurd and impossible that the same God should love both holiness and sin, and should therefore use similarly direct positive influences to produce one as the other. "Doth the same fountain send forth at the same place sweet water and bitter" - "salt water and fresh?" {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.36}

We pass to another and quite different argument, and say, {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.37}

2. The detailed history of the transaction evinces our position. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.38}

Very kindly and wisely God has given us a full analysis of the steps by which Pharaoh's heart was hardened. We can trace all their influences and their operations. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.39}

1st. He ignored Jehovah and his claims. He said, "Who is the Lord that I should obey his voice and let Israel go? I know not the Lord, neither will I let Israel go." This is the common way of sinners when they give themselves up to stubborn resistance against God. But (to our present point) let it be noted, this state of heart is not from God. He does not impel men to ignore himself and thrust away his claims. This ignoring of God, and this repelling of his claims by denying or half denying his existence, is from the Devil, not from God; or it comes up from the foul depths of the sinner's own heart. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 138.40}

2nd. Pharaoh was encouraged by the apparent temporary success of the magicians. This is twice indicated - to wit, in the account of rods turned to serpents, Ex.vii,11-13, and in the miracle of water becoming blood. Verse 22. But this work of the magicians was by instigation and help of the Devil, and not God. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.1}

3rd. Pharaoh prodigiously desired the unpaid labor of this great nation of operatives. His heart was set on these mountain masses of brick they were making - these cities they were building. He sought this in the spirit of real oppression. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.2}

But this spirit cannot be from God; never! whether in Egypt or in "Secessia" - it never can be from the Lord. He hates oppression with the utmost intensity of his soul. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.3}

4th. Human nature stands out again most palpably in the fact that while the plague oftentimes softened Pharaoh's heart, its removal in mercy hardened it. Under the plague of frogs, Pharaoh had said, "I will let the people go;" but when he saw there was respite, he hardened his heart. Ex.viii,8,15. Under the hail he begged for mercy and promised to let the people go; but "when he saw that the rain and hail and thunders were ceased, he sinned yet more, and hardened his heart, he and his servants." Ex.ix,27,28,34. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.4}


Psa 64:5 ...an evil matter: they commune of laying snares privily; they say, Who shall see them?

Psa 7:14 Behold, he travaileth with iniquity, and hath conceived mischief, and brought forth falsehood. 15 He made a pit, and digged it, and is fallen into the ditch which he made. 16 His mischief (and his violent dealing) shall return upon his own head.

Psa 7:17 I will praise the LORD according to his righteousness: and will sing praise to the name of the LORD most high.
Re: plagues [Re: teresaq] #118121
08/25/09 03:53 AM
08/25/09 03:53 AM
teresaq  Offline OP
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Who does not know that this is the way of all stubborn sinners? One is sick, nigh to death: he begs for mercy and promises to forsake his sins forever, if God will only spare his life. God spares him, and he hardens his heart and sins yet the more. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.5}

The softening is due to divine mercy and to God's own Spirit; the hardening is not God's work, but the sinner's own. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.6}

5th. Pharaoh was apparently irritated and made because the magicians failed and frankly acknowledged God's hand. After the lice-plague they said to Pharaoh, "This is the finger of God, and Pharaoh's heart was hardened." Ex.viii,19. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.7}

This too is human nature. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.8}
6th. Pharaoh hardened his own heart by allowing himself to banter, parley, and debate the question with God. He had three seasons of this, narrated in Ex.viii,25-28; x,8-12; x,24. The demand being, "Let my people go that they may serve me," he plead successively that they would sacrifice in the land (of Egypt); in the wilderness, only very far way; that the men only should go, leaving behind the women and the little ones; and that finally all might go, save their cattle. Just so sinners sometimes banter and try to drive a sharp bargain with Jehovah - every thought of which goes to harden the heart against God. Yet who could say, This is God's influence? {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.9}

7th. In one case, Pharaoh seems to have hardened his heart because he saw a discrimination made between his people and Israel. After the plague on cattle, "Pharaoh sent, and behold, there was not one of the cattle of the Israelites dead. And his heart was hardened," etc. Sinners are often hardened when they see more mercy shown to others than to themselves. This is the fruit of their proud, jealous, rebellious, hearts. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.10}

8th. In the one case the hardening seems specially occasioned by the nervous irritability produced by acute suffering, to wit, the plague of boils. Here the effect needs no direct agency from God for its philosophical explanation. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.11}

9th. In many of these cases Pharaoh seems to have been under the influence of a dogged committal to his wicked course. He had said: should not a king stick to it? He had taken his ground; his pride and his stubborn will, as well as his love of such power, held him to his purpose. This too is human nature. It is not wrought by God's Spirit on men's hearts. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.12}

10th. More than once Pharaoh not only relents, but even confesses his great sin. See Ex.ix,27,28; x,16,17. "I have sinned this time; the Lord is righteous, and I and my people are wicked." "I have sinned against the Lord your God, and against you. Now therefore, forgive, I pray thee, my sin only this once," etc. This is a fact of prime importance to our main question, since it gives us the testimony of Pharaoh's own consciousness. Pharaoh knew that God had not put sin into him in any such way as would throw his moral responsibility off from himself and upon God. He was conscious of no compulsory hardening of his heart. In plain words, he knew that all his sin was his own act and doing - his own thinking, feeling, and willing, and that he had none to blame for it but himself. And what testimony can be more decisive to our point than this? {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.13}


Psa 64:5 ...an evil matter: they commune of laying snares privily; they say, Who shall see them?

Psa 7:14 Behold, he travaileth with iniquity, and hath conceived mischief, and brought forth falsehood. 15 He made a pit, and digged it, and is fallen into the ditch which he made. 16 His mischief (and his violent dealing) shall return upon his own head.

Psa 7:17 I will praise the LORD according to his righteousness: and will sing praise to the name of the LORD most high.
Re: plagues [Re: teresaq] #118122
08/25/09 03:58 AM
08/25/09 03:58 AM
teresaq  Offline OP
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Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 1,984
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11th. With the utmost propriety, therefore, and with the clearest reason, the historian repeatedly avers that Pharaoh hardened his own heart. See Ex.vii,23; viii,15,32. "Pharaoh turned and went into his house, neither did he set his heart to this also." "When he saw that there was respite, he hardened his heart." "And Pharaoh hardened his heart at this time also." {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.14}

Now it needs no argument to show that if God hardened Pharaoh's heart by any direct, positive, resistless power, Pharaoh did not do it himself. In such agency of God he must work alone. Its very nature precludes human co-operation. You might as well say that man co-operates with God in the lightning and the earthquake, or in gravitation. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.15}
12th. The entire history of the hardening of Pharaoh's heart shows that God's agency in it was in no respect peculiar, as compared with the hardening of sinners' hearts in all ages. It did not differ from the million cases that fall under observation in these days. This history is so written that in nearly or quite every instance of hardening stated, we can see how the thing was done; we can trace the influence under which Pharaoh rallied his courage, strengthened his purpose, and once more set a bold and yet bolder front against God. All through, it was the Devil and his own human nature; nowhere is it any other power or agency. The well-known laws of wicked sinning cover the whole ground, and provide for all the influences necessary for the results. Hence it is altogether unphilosophical to introduce any other agency. With reverence we say it: There is no room here for any direct, positive agency from God's Spirit; no room for any other agency from God, save that of the external events, the providences, the surroundings, within which Pharaoh acts. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.16}

3. We pass to a third general argument in favor of our construction: The laws of language allow it. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.17}

1st. And first let it be noted that the Bible makes more account of God's agency than any other book in the world. None other teaches as this does that God feeds the ravens, and clothes the lilies, and lets not a sparrow fall without his hand in it. It should be expected therefore, that in this Bible, very great and special prominence would be given to an agency put forth by God, though it were only the very indirect agency of his providence. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.18}

These hints, if faithfully carried out, would suffice to show that Bible usage - in other words, the laws of language as employed in the Bible - allow the construction we maintain. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.19}

2nd. But again, it seems plain that in the cases where the Lord is said to have hardened Pharaoh's heart, the language looks rather to the certainty of the event, or to the incidental results God would educe from Pharaoh's sin by over-ruling and punishing it, than to the nature of the agency by which it was done. Phrases sometimes take their shape from their first use. The first use of this is prophetic, Ex.iv,21, spoken to Moses while yet in Midian, and manifestly having reference to the certainty of the event, and not to the particular kind of agency employed in producing it. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.20}

3rd. We give to the words all the meaning they naturally call for, when we explain them to refer to that permissive and providential agency whereby the Lord sent Moses to Pharaoh with his own commands; brought plagues on him and his people; let his wicked heart have its own way, withheld all divine restraining influence, and gave some, more or less, scope to Satan's temptations. This done, any sinner hardens his heart fast enough. There is never occasion for any other influences from God to make men sin. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.21}


Psa 64:5 ...an evil matter: they commune of laying snares privily; they say, Who shall see them?

Psa 7:14 Behold, he travaileth with iniquity, and hath conceived mischief, and brought forth falsehood. 15 He made a pit, and digged it, and is fallen into the ditch which he made. 16 His mischief (and his violent dealing) shall return upon his own head.

Psa 7:17 I will praise the LORD according to his righteousness: and will sing praise to the name of the LORD most high.
Re: plagues [Re: teresaq] #118123
08/25/09 04:03 AM
08/25/09 04:03 AM
teresaq  Offline OP
SDA
Active Member 2024

Very Dedicated Member
Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 1,984
CA, USA
4th. There is no detailed account of the operation of any direct influence from God. The detail of the history shows us very fully how Pharaoh's own mind worked; how under judgments he relented, yielded; but under respite, rallied his proud, rebellious spirit again. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.22}

Now if the history had expanded the account of God's agency, and if it had shown some direct power working irresistibly on Pharaoh's heart, then the exigencies of the case would compel us to put more and other significance than we have into the words, "The Lord hardened his heart." But no such exigency exists. Its absence confirms our interpretation. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.23}

5th. Yet once more. The several allusions to the objects which the Lord would accomplish by hardening Pharaoh's heart, such as to make his own great power known in all the earth; to read to all kings and to all sinners indeed, solemn moral lessons on the peril of hardening their hearts against God, do not call for any other agency from God than that permissive, negative one which our construction assigns. If the case were otherwise; if God had objects in view which required some direct power of his, then the exigencies of the case would perhaps demand that this be given to his language. Thus, for example, if the object had been to glorify his grace by converting Pharaoh to a holy man, then, leaving him to a merely external providence and an indirect influence, were not enough. For the occurrence of any amount of sin and hardness of heart, a very remote and merely permissive agency from God is sufficient. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.24}

Hence it appears manifest from various points of view, that the construction we give the words, "The Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart," is amply allowed by legitimate laws of interpretation. It meets all the known exigencies of the case. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.25}

4th. It only remains now to urge, fourthly, in support of our construction, that the principles and ends of God's moral government confirm it. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.26}

We allude to such principles as these - that this government is properly moral - over free intelligent agents; that it never interferes with human freedom; never abrogates personal responsibility; brings down no coercive power upon human hearts; and above all, never includes any agency from God which tempts men to sin - that is, which leads, draws men to sin by its natural, legitimate influence, and with intent on God's part that it should make men sin. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.27}

These principles forbid us to suppose any direct, positive influence from God to harden Pharaoh's heart. Consequently they confirm the view we have taken. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.28}

As to the ends of God's moral government, illustrated in this case of Pharaoh, God would teach all sinners that he does not hold himself responsible for placing them amid such surroundings that they cannot sin. He does not try to frame this world to such a result. Even when he sends judgments in discipline, he cannot forestall the possibility of their being abused to yet greater sin. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.29}

God would show sinners that it is a fearful thing to harden their hearts against him - that every step in it is guilt, and its certain end is fearful ruin; and that there is in truth no escaping from its moral responsibility by attempting to throw it over upon their Maker and Ruler. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.30}
Perhaps we may add that in this whole history we may see that the Lord seems not to be specially careful to shield his own ways against cavilers. Those who choose and who try to blame God, can do so. They are free to do this - even as Pharaoh was free to harden his heart under the respite granted from the plagues in answer to his imploring cry. Sometimes it may seem to us that scripture language leaves the ways of God unguardedly open to cavil. Let us rather say, Their tone is that of perfect honesty, and of a full and peaceful consciousness of integrity. The entire Bible history reveals a God whose absorbing concern it is to be, not merely to seem, right; and who throws upon all readers the responsibility of being candid and fair-minded as toward God. If they will not be fair and unsuspicious; - if they will not dispel from their souls all prejudice against God's ways and character, they must bear their own responsibilities. - Ob. Evan. {April 1, 1862 JWe, ARSH 139.31}


Psa 64:5 ...an evil matter: they commune of laying snares privily; they say, Who shall see them?

Psa 7:14 Behold, he travaileth with iniquity, and hath conceived mischief, and brought forth falsehood. 15 He made a pit, and digged it, and is fallen into the ditch which he made. 16 His mischief (and his violent dealing) shall return upon his own head.

Psa 7:17 I will praise the LORD according to his righteousness: and will sing praise to the name of the LORD most high.
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