1689Dave
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2022
- Messages
- 1,871
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Baptist
- Marital Status
- Married
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- No
Why Universal Atonement is Pelagianism.
In the end, Pelagius taught that people save themselves through obedience. That Christ didn’t save anyone. People must save themselves through works. The council of Ephesus condemned this as heresy and affirmed Augustinianism the truth according to the scriptures. “Augustine spilled much ink responding to Pelagius. He simply says back to Pelagius, quoting Romans 9:16 that it depends not on human will or exertion, but on God’s mercy.”
“For Pelagius to be right, Augustine said, we have to flip that around. Imagine if Romans 9:16 read this way: it depends not on God’s mercy, but on human will. Augustine said if that were the case, we would all be doomed. But that’s not the case. And our God is a God full of mercy and full of grace. Our salvation does not depend on human will or human exertion, but it depends on God’s mercy.”
https://www.ligonier.org/podcasts/5...tephen-nichols/augustine-the-triumph-of-grace
All the Reformers were Augustinians as well as most Protestants.
But the problem today is the Pelagianism found in the idea that Jesus didn’t save anyone on the cross. He only made it possible for everyone to save themselves as Pelagius taught.
Free will is a necessary ingredient of this. That is, salvation is available to all, but only those who freely choose to be obedient God saves. This is essentially a Pelagian understanding of salvation as it turns out.
Luther proved Free Will to be a lie in his irrefutable book “Bondage of the Will.”
Free will (Pelagianism), though condemned as heresy at Ephesus remains the key doctrine of the Roman Catholic and other like-minded churches. Anyone is free to take the sacraments and save themselves. Just as anyone is free to pick up a penny on the sidewalk. But in this case, the Church and the sacraments replace Christ as the savior and make you your own savior.
Other non-sacramental means still rely on the myth of free will to make human-produced faith the means of salvation. But they still end with salvation by works since the person causes the faith they supposedly save themselves with. Faith is not of human origin. It is a fruit of the Holy Spirit one must have before they can believe in the biblical sense. And the works that come from this faith come from a new heart God creates in His elect. They act like Christians just as a cat acts like a cat, because of their nature.
The mention of the elect proves Christ died only for them since they are the only subjects marked out for salvation by God. We can recognize Augustine, Luther, Calvin, and the host of reformers whom God used to free us from the false savior of universal atonement and its most necessary ingredient, free will.
In the end, Pelagius taught that people save themselves through obedience. That Christ didn’t save anyone. People must save themselves through works. The council of Ephesus condemned this as heresy and affirmed Augustinianism the truth according to the scriptures. “Augustine spilled much ink responding to Pelagius. He simply says back to Pelagius, quoting Romans 9:16 that it depends not on human will or exertion, but on God’s mercy.”
“For Pelagius to be right, Augustine said, we have to flip that around. Imagine if Romans 9:16 read this way: it depends not on God’s mercy, but on human will. Augustine said if that were the case, we would all be doomed. But that’s not the case. And our God is a God full of mercy and full of grace. Our salvation does not depend on human will or human exertion, but it depends on God’s mercy.”
https://www.ligonier.org/podcasts/5...tephen-nichols/augustine-the-triumph-of-grace
All the Reformers were Augustinians as well as most Protestants.
But the problem today is the Pelagianism found in the idea that Jesus didn’t save anyone on the cross. He only made it possible for everyone to save themselves as Pelagius taught.
Free will is a necessary ingredient of this. That is, salvation is available to all, but only those who freely choose to be obedient God saves. This is essentially a Pelagian understanding of salvation as it turns out.
Luther proved Free Will to be a lie in his irrefutable book “Bondage of the Will.”
Free will (Pelagianism), though condemned as heresy at Ephesus remains the key doctrine of the Roman Catholic and other like-minded churches. Anyone is free to take the sacraments and save themselves. Just as anyone is free to pick up a penny on the sidewalk. But in this case, the Church and the sacraments replace Christ as the savior and make you your own savior.
Other non-sacramental means still rely on the myth of free will to make human-produced faith the means of salvation. But they still end with salvation by works since the person causes the faith they supposedly save themselves with. Faith is not of human origin. It is a fruit of the Holy Spirit one must have before they can believe in the biblical sense. And the works that come from this faith come from a new heart God creates in His elect. They act like Christians just as a cat acts like a cat, because of their nature.
The mention of the elect proves Christ died only for them since they are the only subjects marked out for salvation by God. We can recognize Augustine, Luther, Calvin, and the host of reformers whom God used to free us from the false savior of universal atonement and its most necessary ingredient, free will.