atpollard....
"The Calvinist Corner" summerizes the "U" thusly....
Unconditional Election:
God does not base His election on anything He sees in the individual. He chooses the elect according to the kind intention of His will (Eph. 1:4-8; Rom. 9:11) without any consideration of merit within the individual. Nor does God look into the future to see who would pick Him. Also, as some are elected into salvation, others are not (Rom. 9:15, 21).
The dogma invented by these few latter-day radical Calvinists is that God chose, elected, predestined some to eternal life and most to damnation... but ALL are predestined.
Flowing from this is that "obviously" God desires most people to fry eternally in hell ("It gives him glory" as one Calvinists over at CF constantly posted).
That God chooses/elects/predestines ALL - both the few going to heaven and the majority going to hell, BOTH the heaven-bound and the hell-bound, this is commonly known as "DOUBLE predestination."
I realize it is popular these days for Calvinists to wiggle on the "U" and argue that God predestines ALL but He does NOTHING regarded the lost, "predestine" thus having nothing to do with will or desire or anything God may or may do. Pretty illogical to me (odd coming from a whole dogma based entirely on what is claimed to be "logical"). The word must have two completely contradictory meanings OR the dogma is simply contradictory. Saying, "I caused the sun to rise this morning but I didn't desire it or make it happen in any way, I just stood back in total passivity and watched it" well.... These Calvinists would "come home" if they simply embraced that God chooses/elects/predestines the SAVED. Stop.
Traditional, biblical, historic Christianity affirms that God chooses/elects/predestines the SAVED. Jesus is the Savior. The Holy Spirit is the Lord and Giver of life. But stops there. Thus, we don't have the issue of denying what Scripture clearly says: God loves all.... God desires all to be saved.... Jesus died for all. TRUE, God does not give faith to all.... but we aren't told the reason for that and it is left as mystery. "Why some and not others?" Biblical Christianity: We don't know. TULIP: God hates most people, desires most to fry eternally in hell, Jesus never died for most, thus faith is irrelevant for most since there's nothing for it to apprehend even if they have faith." Then Calvinists TRY to say "but God isn't responsible for His desiring most to go to hell, God isn't responsible for causing most to go to hell, God isn't responsible for Jesus not dying for most." This from Christians who created an entire theological system out of "logic." SOME Calvinists today try to wiggle around all this - in vain. Most simply reject most of TULIP (including all the Calvinists personally known to me).
MY EVALUATION:
As I noted, all this flows from something very true: Monergism. Calvinists are as monergistic as Lutherans are (to their credit). But a few latter-day extremists in the late 16th Century severely over-reacted to Arminianism by making the very same mistakes... they abandoned historic, orthodox, biblical Christianity to invent this tight, interconnected, interrelated system of beliefs solely on the basis of their concept of "logic." They simply went WAY too far... running head long into Scripture, contradicting Scripture. The vast majority of Calvinists, it seems to me, long ago realized this... they accept the basis of these teachings but reject the radical extreme extension of them that is TULIP. Luther said, "Humility is the basis of sound theology." John Wesley said, "We are to be bold where Scripture is bold, silent where Scripture is silent, and wise to know the difference." IMO, these latter-day extremists who invented TULIP violated both, placing their claim to "logic" above Scripture.... inventing something that yes counters Arminianism (which seems to have been the sole motive) but is the same unbiblical, radical, "logical" mess.
I reject TULIP for the identical same reasons that I reject Arminianism. I realize that if we approach Scripture with humility.... accepting God's teachings whether they seem "logical" to us or not, whether they "answers" all our questions or not.... if we are bold where Scripture is bold and silent where Scripture is silent being wise to know the difference.... then, yes, we will be left with mystery at times, we may not find the direct answer to all our questions, we may not be able to connect all the dots (indeed, we likely don't even know all the dots that exists). Humility lets God have the last word. These radical, extremist, latter-day Calvinists and Arminianists simply forgot that. To their great credit, most Calvinists have realized this (and it seems to ME, most now agree with Lutheranism here). Sadly, the Arminiainists have not.
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