rogereolson says:
What is your answer to the dilemma about rooster and Peter’s denial (and David’s census as either inspired by God or Satan)?
i)
Before I get to that, I’d like to make a general observation about the dog that
didn’t bark. Why aren’t Arminian bloggers defending the Bible against Olson’s
repeated aspersions? Why don’t they circulate a petition to have him booted off
the SEA? Why so quiescent? Why so acquiescent? In post after post, Olson tears
down the Bible. Tries to rationalize his impious attack on God’s word. Yet
Arminian bloggers continue to push the snooze button. Sleeping dogs that loll
around as the burglar ransacks the house.
Is it
because the defining motivation for Arminians isn’t devotion to Scripture, but
hatred of Calvinism?
It’s as
if many Arminians entered into a devil’s pact with Roger Olson. As long as he’s
attacking Calvinism, they give him a pass for attacking Scripture. Even if they
don’t like it when he attacks the Bible (although I haven’t seen much evidence
to that effect), bashing the Bible is the price they pay to have him bash
Calvinism. Openly opposing him on the inerrancy of Scripture would violate the
terms of their Faustian bargain. Roger keeps the originals, signed in blood, on
file. If they renege on the deal, he’ll swing by to collect their indentured
souls. Dispatch the hellhounds.
ii) I
already addressed his challenge regarding Peter’s denial in another post. What
about David’s census?
iii)
Why does Olson think the variant accounts of David’s census pose a “dilemma”?
On the face of it, there’s a pretty straightforward way of harmonizing the two
accounts: we simply distinguish between primary and secondary causes. In
Samuel, God is the ulterior cause–while in Chronicles, Satan is the
instrumental cause.
Indeed,
there are numerous biblical passages in which we see that alternation. God is
the ultimate source of whatever happens, but God typically works through
intermediate agents or agencies, viz., men, angels, demons, and natural forces.
iv) And
this isn’t just an extraneous harmonization which the dreaded “inerrantist” is
imposing on the text. The Chronicler himself is glossing the text in Samuel.
This is an intertextual commentary on the earlier account.
v)
Incidentally, this may also be the way to harmonize Jas 1:13 with various
Biblical examples in which God incites people to evil. James may be saying God
never “tempts” anyone directly. Rather, he uses intermediaries.
vi) But
an Arminian might say that doesn’t solve the problem. For in that event, God
would still be morally complicit.
Indeed,
there’s a striking parallel between Arminian objections to predestination and 2
Sam 24. Just as Arminians say, how can God condemn what he ordains?–we
might just as well ask, how can God condemn David and punish Israel when God
himself incited David to conduct the census?
The
text itself doesn’t answer that question. On the other hand, it wouldn’t be
inconsistent for God to do that. For the cycle of temptation and punishment
advances the narrative to the next stage. God is moving the action forward, to
his appointed end.
vii) Of
course, that doesn’t resolve the moral question of how God can justly condemn
something which he himself incited–whether directly or indirectly. And that, in
turn, is parallel to what Arminians find so abhorrent about Calvinism. Yet the
Biblical narrator doesn’t share their concern.
We can
explore philosophical models of freedom, determinism, and responsibility, but
that’s after the fact.
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