Quote:
Originally Posted by RevDWW
Are you discounting that God is all powerful?
Couldn't He have created all the circumstances in the translators lives to be such that they'd write what He wanted written?
Hasn't God used pagans for His purpose throughout history?
Haven' you experienced what's written in His word in a personal manner?
Then why doubt?
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That is, in essence, the main reason folks give for believing in the Bible. That it works, on a presonal level. That it passes the test, it is proven. It "works".
What about those for whom it does not "work"? There are many clearly written promises that are not always fulfilled. The prayer of faith will save the sick.
No, it doesn't. Say what you want, but that particular promise is almost never fulfilled. When it is "fulfilled", it is hard or usually impossible to distinguish between a miraculous recovery (if that's what was meant in the promise!) and medical or natural (over time) recovery. Some have the
audacity to say, when the sick one dies, well, he got his healing in Heaven.
That
completely negates the promise. It makes it utterly pointless to even write it into the Bible. No? What
is the point, then? With the healing-in-heaven excuse, it is a tautology. Utterly meaingless. Pray for the sick. If they recover, voila. Miracle. If they die, voila. Miracle.
Or maybe it's the "faith". Pray for the sick. If they recover, voila. Faith has healed them. If they die, voila. Insufficient faith.
This "promise" can't lose! So what is the point of it being there?
The Assemblies of God has made a great mistake in their 16 Fundamental Truths. (I can hear your amens from here!
) Number 12 says this:
"Divine healing is an integral part of the gospel. Deliverance from sickness is provided for in the atonement, and is the privilege of all believers."
Do you Apostolics believe this, too? Or do you see the error? It is blatant, to me. It says healing is part of the atonement. They cite "By His stripes we are healed" and other scriptures. Salvation is the other part. So, there are two (main) parts of the atonement. One of which we can tell, here and now, whether it "worked", one of which we cannot. We can't tell if our faith (and whether other "steps" you want to accept) was sufficient to save us from our sins. We can, however, tell if our faith (or whatever steps that requires) was sufficient to heal us. And here's the kicker: sometime is it not! In fact, most of the time, it is not. Oh, we pray that we'll get over the flu, and we do. But if we pray for a certain retired minister I know to "get over" his hernia, hallucinations, heart condition, etc. etc., he does not. He is living out his golden years in diapers, and barely able to walk (for now), unable to see well enough to read.
Our faith wasn't sufficient for it. Or it's not in His "timing". Or God has something
better in mind. (It makes me sick when I hear that one!)
Whatever.
And yet, the AG Fundamental Truth number 12 does seem to have scriptural basis. What's up with that? Is the Bible true or not? Would the Bible be more true if a different set of books were chosen for the canon? Maybe Isaiah should have been left out. And James. Matthew has its problems, too. And what about that "Train up a child" promise?
OK, so if it "works" for you, carry on. I guess you have a reason to believe it. Me? I believe it too, but in a very different way. There are many things in it that are clearly (to me) not meant to be taken literally. There is wisdom there. There is also some weird stuff.
Just my little way of going "Hmmmmmmmm!"