Double Predestination

Imalive

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Your theology is not biblical theology. Ian McCormack is a cult leader.
God may have been gracious and I hope he was. What you preach is not the gospel of grace, but salvation by works. Paul addressed this heresy when he wrote to the believers in Galatia.

Nonsense. Salvation by works is trying to keep the law to save yourself without Jesus' offer.
Thats about Judaizers.
God uses His body to do something. 1 Timothy pray for all men cause God wants em saved.
Heresy is that God doesnt want em saved and predestines some to hell for His pleasure. What nonsense. God has no pleasure in the death of the wicked.
 

MennoSota

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Nonsense. Salvation by works is trying to keep the law to save yourself without Jesus' offer.
Thats about Judaizers.
God uses His body to do something. 1 Timothy pray for all men cause God wants em saved.
Heresy is that God doesnt want em saved and predestines some to hell for His pleasure. What nonsense. God has no pleasure in the death of the wicked.

No one here teaches that God "predestines some to hell for His pleasure." That is something you are making up.
What the Bible teaches is that "all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God." It gives God no pleasure to observe law breakers rebel and so receive their just sentence of eternal hell. But a loving God is a just God.
God does extend unmerited favor to some, but not to all. Why not extend this unmerited favor to all? Why doesn't God do this for all humanity? Is it because God is too weak to do so? Is it because humans have power over God to reject Him and cast God off like a rag doll? Or...is it because God does not choose to extend unmerited favor to everyone? God chose to whom He would extend unmerited favor before the foundation of the world. Why? Because God can. He is Sovereign and we are not.
You teach that God is subject under your will. You choose to accept or reject. God can by no means overpower your will. Whatever you choose, you get. You are the master of your world and God is your servant.
Your teaching is a false gospel.
 

Josiah

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Josiah said:

o, how does Dr. Biermann contradict the words of Scripture?

How does SINGLE Predestination, as he promotes, contradict the words of Scripture as has been charged?

What Scriptures would you, as a Reformed Christian (but not hyper or uber Calvinist, but rather a MODERN Reformed), condemn him because of the words of Scripture?

How does the words of Scripture make Dr. Biermann heretical but clearly DOUBLE Predestination to be correct?

Again, I'd love to see the Scriptures that flatly state Dr. Biermann and single predestination are wrong (or heretical as another charged), the exact contradiction to the words in the Scriptures, how he obviously "hates" the words of Scripture and turns them 180 degrees so that they mean the opposite of what is stated; how does he clearly HATE Scripture and CHANGE the meaning of the words 180 degrees as you indicated those who affirm Single Predestination do?



.


However, to answer your challenge ... it is an argument of semantics. What you and Biermann call "Single Predestination", Reformed Theology calls "Positive-negative Double Predestination".

So, there are MODERN ("still alive") "Calvinists" who actually have come to agree with Lutheranism on this?



What you and Biermann call "Double Predestination", Reformed Theology calls "Positive-positive Double Predestination"

Did Calvin boldly and clearly condemn this? Do the Reformed Confessions condemn it? Do no Reformed today teach this but all denounce it?




Lutherans refuse to speculate on why the reprobate (those who end up in Hell) are not saved, which is OK with me ... that's your right.


1. Well, you NOW seem to be suggesting that Calvinists never do, either - they agree with Lutherans.

2. Is basing one's theology on what you suggest is SPECULATION a good idea, even if it clearly contradicts a bunch of Scriptures? Wasn't Protestantism born in large part out of protesting how the medieval church SPECULATED about a number of things and turned them into Dogmas (in spite of some clearly contradicting Scripture and a number of them entirely without the support of the words of Scripture)? Isn't doing what you suggest the very thing Protestants protest? Is it not returning to the rubric of medieval Catholicism, that God's Word is SUBJECT to the conjectures, theories, philosophies, prescience ideas, and speculations of man (man's brain being sovereign over God)?




So we actually believe almost the same thing, we just use terms that have different definitions:
LUTHERAN: "Single Predestination": God 100% saves some, the rest ... we don't know.
REFORMED: "Positive-negative Double Predestination": God 100% saves some and those God does not save, have no other chance to get saved.[/quote]


So, your position seems to be that either:

1. Calvinists have always agreed with Lutherans on this.... and there is no basis for Calvinism's emphasis on LIMITED Atonement, on the predestination of the reprobate, that God does not love the whole world, that God does not will all to be saved, that Jesus did not die for the sins of all (you know, pretty much the points that make Calvinism, well.... Calvinism).

2. Calvinism has become Lutheran on this point. The original and confessional position may be old... and the "hyper" and "uber" Calvinists still hold to it, but the MODERN and "still alive" ones are now pretty much Lutheran.

Maybe?


- Josiah
 

Lamb

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Your teaching is a false gospel.

Did you read Imalive's post? She doesn't believe in Universalism if that's what you're thinking.
 

MennoSota

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Did you read Imalive's post? She doesn't believe in Universalism if that's what you're thinking.
That's not what I am addressing.
 

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MennoSota

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LUTHERAN: "Single Predestination": God 100% saves some, the rest ... we don't know.

- Josiah
So...this is your personal belief?

God saves some. Are these some elected (chosen by God) or does salvation come by man's choosing?
The rest...mystery. Correct?
People could wind up on the surface of Beetlejuice, Pluto, a volcano on Mars or...just maybe...hell. We don't know because...God doesn't tell us? Is that correct? Is that what you are saying?
Is God mysterious about hell? Is Jesus not clear? Is the Bible silent and we just don't know?
 

MennoSota

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Maybe you can clear things up then?
I have spoken clearly to Imalive and presented exactly where her beliefs are in biblical error. Just read what wrote.
The entire issue revolves around her insistence that God is incapacitated without human assistance.
 

Imalive

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No one here teaches that God "predestines some to hell for His pleasure." That is something you are making up.
What the Bible teaches is that "all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God." It gives God no pleasure to observe law breakers rebel and so receive their just sentence of eternal hell. But a loving God is a just God.
God does extend unmerited favor to some, but not to all. Why not extend this unmerited favor to all? Why doesn't God do this for all humanity? Is it because God is too weak to do so? Is it because humans have power over God to reject Him and cast God off like a rag doll? Or...is it because God does not choose to extend unmerited favor to everyone? God chose to whom He would extend unmerited favor before the foundation of the world. Why? Because God can. He is Sovereign and we are not.
You teach that God is subject under your will. You choose to accept or reject. God can by no means overpower your will. Whatever you choose, you get. You are the master of your world and God is your servant.
Your teaching is a false gospel.
Oh. Jesus taught it too. I stretched forth My hands day in day out but you did not want.
So then why is a mystery. Nice solution. I read in a link that calvin said that but they might have made that up.
He foreknew. Thats all. He predestined whom He foreknew.
 

MennoSota

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Oh. Jesus taught it too. I stretched forth My hands day in day out but you did not want.
So then why is a mystery. Nice solution. I read in a link that calvin said that but they might have made that up.
He foreknew. Thats all. He predestined whom He foreknew.
Imalive what does the Bible say about predestination. What Calvin, Luther, Pope Beatrice or any ancient says is secondary to what God says. Read it in God's word.
 

Imalive

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What makes you think God wants to save ppl who really dont want Him? Thats not weak. He just doesnt want to be married to a rebellious bride He has to force. No way Jesus was gonna magically turn a pharisee who just blasphemed the Spirit into a bride for Him.
 
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Imalive

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Take a million aborted babies who got aborted w a morning after pill after one day. Which go to heaven and which go to hell?
 

MennoSota

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What makes you think God wants to save ppl who really dont want Him? Thats not weak. He just doesnt want to be married to a rebellious bride He has to force. No way Jesus was gonna magically turn a pharisee who just blasphemed the Spirit into a bride for Him.
First: No one wants Him.
Romans 3:10-12
[10]As the Scriptures say, “No one is righteous— *** not even one.
[11]No one is truly wise; *** no one is seeking God.
[12]All have turned away; *** all have become useless. No one does good, *** not a single one.”
Second: God did exactly that with a Pharisee named Saul of Tarsus. But, it wasn't magic...it was grace. Unmerited favor given as a gift to a blasphemous Pharisee who was terrorizing the church.
Never do we read of God saying "I won't force you Saul. You will have to magically accept me before I can go any farther because I am powerless to go any farther without your verbal consent." We never read such a silly thing from God. Never in the Old Testament or New Testament do we find God being incapable of doing something without verbal consent of a human.
 

MennoSota

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Take a million aborted babies who got aborted w a morning after pill after one day. Which go to heaven and which go to hell?
God knows.
We pray that since He ordained their tragic death, he also extended grace. But the Bible gives us little information about God's choice.
 

atpollard

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So, there are MODERN ("still alive") "Calvinists" who actually have come to agree with Lutheranism on this?
R.C. Sproul died this year and his discussion of the topic in the first few posts says as much. There are Reformed Theologians from the 1500's on that agree with this, it is the historic Orthodox Reformed view. Lutherans and "Calvinists" seem to mostly trip over semantics.
But the short answer is "Yes." (although we do not agree on the mystery part, Calvinists have a working theory that does not require God to push people into damnation.

Did Calvin boldly and clearly condemn this? Do the Reformed Confessions condemn it? Do no Reformed today teach this but all denounce it?
I have no idea about John Calvin specifically. His Institutes is 1700 pages all by itself and is only one of several works he wrote. In any case, it is not relevant. Calvin started a movement based on an idea and the Lutheran Church named those who followed his movement "Calvinists". But just as Lutheranism is not the same as the beliefs of Martin Luther, so Calvinism is not the same as the beliefs of John Calvin.

Westminster Confession of Faith
Chapter III
Of God's Eternal Decree

I. God from all eternity, did, by the most wise and holy counsel of His own will, freely, and unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass;[1] yet so, as thereby neither is God the author of sin,[2] nor is violence offered to the will of the creatures; nor is the liberty or contingency of second causes taken away, but rather established.[3]

II. Although God knows whatsoever may or can come to pass upon all supposed conditions;[4] yet has He not decreed anything because He foresaw it as future, or as that which would come to pass upon such conditions.[5]

III. By the decree of God, for the manifestation of His glory, some men and angels[6] are predestinated unto everlasting life; and others foreordained to everlasting death.[7]

IV. These angels and men, thus predestinated, and foreordained, are particularly and unchangeably designed, and their number so certain and definite, that it cannot be either increased or diminished.[8]

V. Those of mankind that are predestinated unto life, God, before the foundation of the world was laid, according to His eternal and immutable purpose, and the secret counsel and good pleasure of His will, has chosen, in Christ, unto everlasting glory,[9] out of His mere free grace and love, without any foresight of faith, or good works, or perseverance in either of them, or any other thing in the creature, as conditions, or causes moving Him thereunto;[10] and all to the praise of His glorious grace.[11]

VI. As God has appointed the elect unto glory, so has He, by the eternal and most free purpose of His will, foreordained all the means thereunto.[12] Wherefore, they who are elected, being fallen in Adam, are redeemed by Christ,[13] are effectually called unto faith in Christ by His Spirit working in due season, are justified, adopted, sanctified,[14] and kept by His power, through faith, unto salvation.[15] Neither are any other redeemed by Christ, effectually called, justified, adopted, sanctified, and saved, but the elect only.[16]

VII. The rest of mankind God was pleased, according to the unsearchable counsel of His own will, whereby He extends or withholds mercy, as He pleases, for the glory of His sovereign power over His creatures, to pass by; and to ordain them to dishonor and wrath for their sin, to the praise of His glorious justice.[17]

VIII. The doctrine of this high mystery of predestination is to be handled with special prudence and care,[18] that men, attending the will of God revealed in His Word, and yielding obedience thereunto, may, from the certainty of their effectual vocation, be assured of their eternal election.[19] So shall this doctrine afford matter of praise, reverence, and admiration of God;[20] and of humility, diligence, and abundant consolation to all that sincerely obey the Gospel.[21]

Not my favorite document because of its difficult to read archaic language (same complaint I have with the KJV Bible), however it was careful to use the word "predestinated" to life and the word "foreordained" to death. The use of different words is deliberate and done to denote that God's actions are not the same in each case. So a quick summary:
III. Some will be saved and some will be lost (no Universalism).
IV. God already knows the exact number of each (God knows whom he will save from the beginning).
V. Those chosen for salvation, were not chosen for anything in men (including future actions), but for reasons known only to God.
VI. Those God chooses to save, will be saved and there is no other way to get saved than 100% God's grace.
VII. For reasons that are unclear to us, but which bring glory to God, those God has chosen to pass over for salvation will not be saved and will be damned for their sin according to God's justice.
VIII. We (the saved) are to handle this truth with special care; it's purpose is to assure us of our salvation (avoid despair in Lutheran terms) and make us humble and grateful to God.


[Speculate]: 1. Well, you NOW seem to be suggesting that Calvinists never do, either - they agree with Lutherans.
Naw, Calvinists LOVE to speculate. We just do not give definitive answers on WHY God does something. My mentor from Moody describes it as 'pushing the mystery around'. For example, a LUTHERAN would say "It is a mystery why some are not saved". A CALVINIST would say, "Well, since God saves the people who are saved, and only God can save the lost, then those that are not saved are not saved because God did not save them." This follows from irrefutable logic. The next obvious question is then 'Why did God not save them?' and the CALVINIST answer is "Because God didn't, that's what Sovereign means." To which the logical man will not let the CALVINIST get away with a circular answer, that is a logical flaw. Then the CALVINIST is forced to admit "It is a mystery why God didn't save him, but God not saving him is why he was not saved." See how the mystery just got pushed around to a new place.

2. Is basing one's theology on what you suggest is SPECULATION a good idea, even if it clearly contradicts a bunch of Scriptures? Wasn't Protestantism born in large part out of protesting how the medieval church SPECULATED about a number of things and turned them into Dogmas (in spite of some clearly contradicting Scripture and a number of them entirely without the support of the words of Scripture)? Isn't doing what you suggest the very thing Protestants protest? Is it not returning to the rubric of medieval Catholicism, that God's Word is SUBJECT to the conjectures, theories, philosophies, prescience ideas, and speculations of man (man's brain being sovereign over God)?
Here is speculation: A Pharisee would accept the command to "be fruitful and multiply" as a command from God to marry and have children. Any man who was unmarried and without children would be seen, and if a Pharisee, view himself, as sinning against God. This is a verifiable historic fact. The command can be read in Genesis and the Rabbinical teachings survive. Paul (Saul) describes himself as a Jew's Jew and a Pharisee's Pharisee (loose paraphrase) who was flawless in obeying the Pharisaical Law. Is it unreasonable to speculate that 'Saul' was probably married at some point in his life?

There is no harm in speculating, but one must always treat speculation as potentially incorrect. There are benefits that can be derived from speculation: The doctrine of the trinity is speculation, as is MOST of what any denomination (including Lutherans) believes about the Sacraments. However I agree that Scripture trumps speculation and any doctrine that contradicts scripture is a weak one. The hard part tends to be getting people to want to read scripture in context.
 

atpollard

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So we actually believe almost the same thing, we just use terms that have different definitions:
LUTHERAN: "Single Predestination": God 100% saves some, the rest ... we don't know.
REFORMED: "Positive-negative Double Predestination": God 100% saves some and those God does not save, have no other chance to get saved.

So, your position seems to be that either:

1. Calvinists have always agreed with Lutherans on this.... and there is no basis for Calvinism's emphasis on LIMITED Atonement, on the predestination of the reprobate, that God does not love the whole world, that God does not will all to be saved, that Jesus did not die for the sins of all (you know, pretty much the points that make Calvinism, well.... Calvinism).

2. Calvinism has become Lutheran on this point. The original and confessional position may be old... and the "hyper" and "uber" Calvinists still hold to it, but the MODERN and "still alive" ones are now pretty much Lutheran.

Maybe?

- Josiah
No, I think my position is closer to those terms are thrown around, poorly defined or defined incorrectly, and there are real differences (because Calvinists are willing to speculate to move the mystery, while Lutherans refuse to accept unavoidable logical consequences.

Just a quick response, I'd be happy to discuss each point in detail on its own topic ...

LIMITED ATONEMENT: Only the sins of those who would be saved were placed on Jesus on the Cross. God forgives 100% of all sins placed on Jesus and all sins not placed on Jesus are paid for by their owners in Hell.
UNLIMITED ATONEMENT: God places 100% of all sins ever committed on Jesus, so all sin is paid for on the Cross. Only some of the sin paid for on the cross is able to be applied to the sinner to prevent their eternal punishment. (Atonement is still limited, but the limit is Jesus ability to save some whose sin he has paid for). God then punishes the exact same sin for a second time as the sinner pays again for his own sins in Hell (sins for which Christ was already punished).

Limited atonement is 100% a logic and bookkeeping argument about how God chooses to apply sin, punishment and grace against His requirement for Justice. I always felt it was a silly thing to argue over. As if God cares about our opinion. The logical conclusions are just natural outgrowths of monergism-Total Depravity and synergism-Pelageanism. Personally, I never got much further than gratitude that Jesus died for MY sins ... any other sins he died for are His business.
[Most of Calvinism actually grows out of "Total Depravity".]

Predestination of the reprobate: This is sort of a default logical argument, not an act of God. If God predestined some to be saved, and the only way to be saved is by God, then those that God did not predestine to be saved cannot save themselves.
Do Lutherans teach that some people be saved without God? The video said it required a "miracle" to save, so I assume the answer is no. But Calvinists do not call it 'predestination' of the reprobate because that makes it seem like an active will of God, which Calvinists acknowledge that the scripture says isn't the case.

God does not love the whole world: Except Esau. You have to admit that God said He hated Esau. :)

God does not will all to be saved: Maybe we should talk about the word OMNIPOTENT. If God REALLY wanted it, it would be so. So there must be some limit on God's 'will'. The trick is to not try and make these say what they do not say. "God does not will all to be saved" does not mean "God wants some to be damned", it means God allows some to be damned and God does 'whatever it takes' to DRAW (compel by force*) some to Jesus. (* John 6:44 - Strong's G1670 = his words not mine)
 

Imalive

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First: No one wants Him.
Romans 3:10-12
[10]As the Scriptures say, “No one is righteous— *** not even one.
[11]No one is truly wise; *** no one is seeking God.
[12]All have turned away; *** all have become useless. No one does good, *** not a single one.”
Second: God did exactly that with a Pharisee named Saul of Tarsus. But, it wasn't magic...it was grace. Unmerited favor given as a gift to a blasphemous Pharisee who was terrorizing the church.
Never do we read of God saying "I won't force you Saul. You will have to magically accept me before I can go any farther because I am powerless to go any farther without your verbal consent." We never read such a silly thing from God. Never in the Old Testament or New Testament do we find God being incapable of doing something without verbal consent of a human.

He did not blaspheme the Spirit.
He says why:

And I thank Christ Jesus our Lord who has enabled me, because He counted me faithful, putting me into the ministry, 13 although I was formerly a blasphemer, a persecutor, and an insolent man; but I obtained mercy because I did it ignorantly in unbelief.
 

Imalive

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I didnt know that stuff was so old and introduced by Augustine.

https://bekkos.wordpress.com/predestination-in-the-new-testament-and-st-augustine-part-two/

Origen, for instance, thinks that Paul’s use of the figure of the potter in Romans 9 should be compared with something Paul says elsewhere: in the Second Letter to Timothy (which, if it is really by Paul, is probably the last thing written by him), St. Paul says the following:

“But in a great house there are not only vessels of gold and of silver, but also of wood and of earth; and some to honour, and some to dishonour. If a man therefore purge himself from these, he shall be a vessel unto honour, sanctified, and meet for the master’s use, and prepared unto every good work.” (2 Tim 2:20-21)

In this passage, St. Paul seems to say that being a vessel appointed to honor is a matter of one’s own choosing. That seems to mitigate considerably the force of Paul’s argument in Romans 9 concerning God’s forming vessels of mercy and vessels of wrath.
 
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ImaginaryDay2

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Is there any way to avoid the fact that any time a person dies in their sin, God has not worked a miracle?

Are we made God that we can answer?

You are avoiding. You know the answer, but you don't like it because it goes against your own self.
If I answer "no", then the response will be "so you agree that God predestines some to damnation"
If I answer "Yes", then I am stuck, because I am "calling out" God for not performing the miracle when he should have (making me "God" for having known the miracle should have taken place)
If I answer as I did, ball's back in your court for assuming knowledge of what God has worked.

If one is so Biblically inclined (either you, Menno, or someone else) to know the answer as to what God has worked or not worked, then answer.

And I'm avoiding... *sigh
 

Josiah

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No, I think my position is closer to those terms are thrown around, poorly defined or defined incorrectly, and there are real differences because Calvinists are willing to speculate to move the mystery


.


1. SO... it's not primarily "semantics" as you suggested earlier; there are real, fundamental, defining difference between Single and Double Predestination; indeed, it may well be THE issue that defines Calvinism. So I think we're pretty much back to square one. And, it seems to me, if Double Predestination is abandoned by "modern" Calvinism, there goes pretty much the rest of TULIP, it all pretty much rests on the Double Predestination thing because without it, the rest isn't "logical." ???


2. See, there's my problem..... Even in this thread (and since the first Calvinist I met), the whole issue is how Calvinism is accepting the WORDS of Scripture (their definition of Sola Scriptura) whereas Lutherans "hate" the words of Scripture (that verbatim accusation from a Calvinist has been made repeatedly here at CH toward me and Lamm and Tigger) and it's NON-Calvinists who interject their denominational ideas into Scripture whereas Calvinists just accept the words "as is". You seem to be saying the exact opposite - it's Lutherans accepting the words (and stopping with them) whereas Calvinists like to interject their "speculations" (a word you use) to "push aside the mystery" (ie to replace it with the speculation). It seems to ME you are saying that the constant din that Calvinist charge everyone else with actually applies to Calvinists. I wonder what MennoSota for example thinks of that, lol....


3. Curious, because Protestantism was born largely out of a protest and rejection of what you claim Calvinism is about - interjecting speculation into things and then making that speculation into dogma. The Reformers protested Catholicism inventing stuff no one before had ever so such as mentioned.... human stuff, human conjectures and speculations, human philosphies and prescience concepts, human logic and reason... and then infusing and imposing those speculations into Scripture (where it is certainly NOT taught as even Catholic theologians are apt to admit) - and making DOGMA out of it. It's largely what split the church in 1054 and again in 1521. Now, you seem to be saying, Calvinism thinks Catholicism had the right idea, the most sound rubric, the best approach - just the wrong new human speculations interjected, imposed and dogmatized. You seem to be rebuking Lutheranism for the same reason Catholics do - sticking too much to Scripture and not swallowing new human speculations that some men think are really smart and "resolve" a lot of issues God forgot to. See my point?



while Lutherans refuse to accept unavoidable logical consequences.


No. Lutherans refuse to dogmatize human speculations (intended to alterwhat God said) when it contradicts Scripture. Such as when "all" means "few" and when "save" actually means "condemn." Refer to the video. Hey, we refuse to dogmatized pure speculation even when it doesn't so clearly contradict Scripture (such as the Perpetual Virginity of Mary or the Infallible Pope or Assumption of Mary), but certainly when it does (such as Limited Atonement, Double Predestination, etc.).



LIMITED ATONEMENT: Only the sins of those who would be saved were placed on Jesus on the Cross. God forgives 100% of all sins placed on Jesus and all sins not placed on Jesus are paid for by their owners in Hell.
UNLIMITED ATONEMENT: God places 100% of all sins ever committed on Jesus, so all sin is paid for on the Cross. Only some of the sin paid for on the cross is able to be applied to the sinner to prevent their eternal punishment. (Atonement is still limited, but the limit is Jesus ability to save some whose sin he has paid for). God then punishes the exact same sin for a second time as the sinner pays again for his own sins in Hell (sins for which Christ was already punished).


Which did God say?



Limited atonement is 100% a logic

So is Purgatory.... so is the infallible Pope.... so is Transubstantiation.... They aren't biblical but they are logical.

Okay, I miss it but maybe it's 100% human logic. But it seems like 0% God revelation, 0% Scripture. It's certainly a view not only missing in Scripture but I don't know if even one Christian before Calvin thought of it (so Scripture and all Christians for over 1500 years much have lacked sufficient "logic" to even theorize it?

Here's a pretty fair article by a grad of Dallas Theological Seminary and with a fair amount of Calvinist "logic" thrown in. http://home.earthlink.net/~ronrhodes/Atonement.html


Most of Calvinism actually grows out of "Total Depravity".


I wonder if it rather grows out of what you are saying..... what God said in Scripture is very inadequate and that there are those who are to interject, impose, add human speculations and conjectures (even if no Scripture and no Christian knew a thing about it previously), human philosophies and theories, human "logic" and "reason" and "sense" - all because the one who can do this (usually only self) is smarter, more logical, and can make God make sense to self (but may mean a lot of what God said actually means the exact opposite of what he said). Catholicism too believed Scripture is very inadquate... and that one should supplement and correct and refine what God said with the conjectures, speculations, philosophies, theories that self suddenly came up with. Catholicism claims this whole other stream comes from God via invisible "Tradition" from the Apostles (and so at least baselessly CLAIMS some divine source) but it seems Calvinists just point to their own brain. ??????



Predestination of the reprobate: This is sort of a default logical argument

God does not love the whole world: Except Esau. You have to admit that God said He hated Esau. :)[/quote]


God hates everyone because he hates sin. But God loves everyone because God is love and His love is unconditional. Nowhere does the Bible say, "God desires most people to fry eternally in hell and so before the world began chose to send them there." " God does not love the world but only a small percentage of it." "God desires most people to fry in hell."


I think we're back to two very different theologies. And we're actually embracing the OPPOSITE of what Calvinists accuse others of, that it's Calvinists who (like Catholicism before it that it protested for doing what it does), appoints self to interject its own new speculations, conjectures, "logic" and theories into things (speculations not mentioned in Scripture, not mentioned by any Christian before) not because Scripture says it but because Scripture does NOT... unwilling to let God have the last word, bow before the sovereignty of God, leave mystery along, admit God likely knows more than self.... Even if the conjecture or theory means a LOT of Scriptures have to be twisted (as you've tried to do?) 180 degrees from what they say. In any case, I'm wondering about the constant din from Calvinists that Lutherans hate Scripture and ignore Scripture and twist Scripture..... maybe it's that, like Catholicism, Calvinism ADDS to Scripture - things it doesn't not say and no one mentioned before them - based entirely on its own speculations, conjectures, constructs, philosophy, "logic," "sense" - even if the result means a lot of Scripture must be twisted 180 degrees to mean something different than what God actually states. Did Calvin simply replace the "Tradition" of the RCC with the "brain" of himself? All to correct God, to make God make sense to self, to subject God to self, to deny the soverignty of God? I keep thinking of my Greek Orthodox friend, "The problem with much of Western Christianity it that it forgot how to shut up."


Interesting discussion....



- Josiah




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