TULIP is Not Just a Pretty Flower: Radical Calvinism

Josiah

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Josiah

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Here's a video that just deals with the best known part of TULIP, double predestination (or God's choosing to damn most people)... It's 9 minutes long, which I realize is too long for many, but it does a good job with this...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uuGA6Nq7a_Q
 

Josiah

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TULIP...

This was a logical response to some points in Arminianism.... it is a logical reaction NOT by Calvin himself (it is argued by some Calvin never went this far with most of the points; another discussion for another day and thread)... but is a construction by Calvin's followers. The points in Arminianism that they are responding to were wrong.... but some Calvinists logically arguing thus the opposite is true is... well.... faulty. TULIP is logical (if we assume some things)... just not always biblical.




T: "total depravity"

Calvinism: Man after the Fall has no ability to cooperate with God's grace in conversion
Arminianism: Man after the Fall freely chooses to accept or reject God's grace and gifts.
Lutheranism: Agrees with Calvinism on total depravity. Lutherans embrace original sin and argue that the dead man cannot give self life and faith - these are gifts of God.
Relevant Bible passages: Romans 3:9-20; Gal. 3:22


U: "unconditional election"

Calvinism: Before the world was created, God unconditionally elected some (the elect) for salvation and the others (reprobates) for damnation.
Arminianism: Before the world was created, God foresaw those who would choose Him of their own free will and elected them to salvation
Lutheranism: Before the world was created, God unconditionally elected some (the elect) for salvation but did not reprobate (chose for damnation) any.
Relevant Bible passages: Romans 9:11; 1 Timothy 2:3-4; 2 Cor. 5:14-15; Mat. 25:34.


L: "limited atonement"

Calvinism: Jesus only died for the elect, objectively atoning for only their sin, but he did not die for the sins of the reprobates.
Arminianism: Christ died to give all the possibility to be saved.
Lutheranism: Christ’s death objectively atoned for all the sin of the world; by believing we receive this objective atonement and its benefits.
Relevant Bible passages: John 1:29; 1 John 2:2; 2 Cor. 5:14-15, 19.


I: "irresistable grace"

Calvinism: In all of God's outward actions (preaching, baptism, etc.) there is an outward call which all receive, yet there is also a secret effectual calling which God gives to the elect alone. This effectual calling alone saves and is irresistable.
Arminianism: God gives in His outward actions the same grace to all; this grace can be resisted by all.
Lutheranism: The question is not answerable; for the elect, grace will triumph, yet those who reject Christ have rejected that grace; yet the grace is the same.
Relevant Bible passages: Eph. 2:1-10; Acts 13:48; James 1:13-15


P: "perseverance of the saints" ("once saved, always saved.")

Calvinism: Salvation cannot be lost. If one "falls" they never effectively believed and were never saved.
Arminianism: Salvation can be lost through unrepentant sin.
Lutheranism: Salvation can be lost through unbelief, but this legal warning does not cancel the Gospel promise of election
Relevant Bible passages: 1 Cor. 10:12. 2 Peter 2:1, 20-22.



See the video in the opening post.... it's 9 minutes long and I realize that's too long for many, but it does a good job explaining these points.


Please note that while Reformed (aka Calvinist) theology is usually defined as "TULIP" theology (what makes it distinctive) 1) this is only PART of Reformed/Calvinist theology and 2) MANY (some would say nearly all) Reformed/Calvinist reject at least some of these points or may strongly, radically modify them. We should not assume that one who identifies themselves as Reformed or Calvinist holds to these views (they probably don't). One Presbyterian minister posted, "Most Presbyterians hold that TULIP is just a pretty flower - and this goes as much for the clergy as the laity." Good to keep these in mind. This was a strong debate 400 years ago, not so much now since not too many hold to TULIP anymore.


Calvinism and Arminianism are both logical constructs (I'd say equally so) but both run head-on into very clear Scripture. Go to any website where Calvinists and Arminians FIGHT and you'll fine endless posts, "That's directly against Scripture!" And they are both right.... the arguments are humanly logical but both aren't biblical. Lutherans approach Scripture with respect, humility and awe, and they are very hesitate to subject it to OUR "logic" or "reason" (even through such ends up contradicting what Scripture says). Yes.... we end up with some "loose ends" or "unanswered questions" or simply as "mystery" as Lutherans put it. We simply do not fully and humanly understand the "dynamics" or "workings" of all this, in exactly HOW all this "cranks out" in practice. Lutherans are okay with mystery.... Calvin and Arminius both insisted that God MUST be humanly logical (or He could not be God) and thus "answer" things via their own "logic."





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Lamb

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Calvinism:
T Total Depravity
U Unconditional Election
L Limited Atonement
I Irresistible Grace
P Preservation of the Saints

The video states that Lutherans really only agree with the T. He wouldn't say that Lutherans are 1 point Calvinists. Instead he says that Calvin got 1 of out 5 right since we don't agree with how Calvin taught the other points.

This is the short version of what the video addresses for those who don't want to spend 9 minutes. It really isn't long but some of us pop on for only a few moments at a time here :)
 

MennoSota

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Calvinism:
T Total Depravity
U Unconditional Election
L Limited Atonement
I Irresistible Grace
P Preservation of the Saints

The video states that Lutherans really only agree with the T. He wouldn't say that Lutherans are 1 point Calvinists. Instead he says that Calvin got 1 of out 5 right since we don't agree with how Calvin taught the other points.

This is the short version of what the video addresses for those who don't want to spend 9 minutes. It really isn't long but some of us pop on for only a few moments at a time here :)
Of course Calvin was dead when his disciples in Holland rebuked the Remonstrants who followed Arminius. The Remonstrants shared five points for their belief and the Calvinists responded.
It's interesting that history has forgotten the 5 points of the Remonstrants while remembering the 5 points of Calvinists. Why do you think that is?
 

atpollard

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Since we have discussed this before, let’s just cut to the bottom line ...

“Double” Predestination
by R.C. Sproul

“A horrible decree… .” “Most ruthless statement… .” “A terrible theological theory… .” “An illegitimate inference of logic… .” These and other similar epithets have been used frequently to articulate displeasure and revulsion at the Reformed doctrine of double predestination. Particularly abhorrent to many is the notion that God would predestinate (in any sense) the doom of the reprobate.

The “Double” of Predestination

The goal of this essay is not to provide a comprehensive analysis, exposition, or defense of the doctrine of election or predestination. Rather, the essay is limited to a concern for the “double” aspect of predestination with particular reference to the question of the relationship of God’s sovereignty to reprobation or preterition.

The use of the qualifying term “double” has been somewhat confusing in discussions concerning predestination. The term apparently means one thing within the circle of Reformed theology and quite another outside that circle and at a popular level of theological discourse. The term “double” has been set in contrast with a notion of “single” predestination. It has also been used as a synonym for a symmetrical view of predestination which sees election and reprobation being worked out in a parallel mode of divine operation. Both usages involve a serious distortion of the Reformed view of double predestination.

Viewing double predestination as a distinction from single predestination may be seen in the work of Emil Brunner. Brunner argues that it is impossible to deduce the doctrine of double predestination from the Bible. He says:

The Bible does not contain the doctrine of double predestination, although in a few isolated passages it seems to come close to it. The Bible teaches that all salvation is based on the eternal Election of God in Jesus Christ, and that this eternal Election springs wholly and entirely from God’s sovereign freedom. But wherever this happens, there is no mention of a decree of rejection. The Bible teaches that alongside of the elect there are those who are not elect, who are “reprobate,” and indeed that the former are the minority and the latter the majority; but in these passages the point at issue is not eternal election but “separation” or “selection” in judgment. Thus the Bible teaches that there will be a double outcome of world history, salvation and ruin, Heaven and hell. But while salvation is explicitly taught as derived from the eternal election, the further conclusion is not drawn that destruction is also based upon a corresponding decree of doom.1

Here Brunner argues passionately, though not coherently, for “single” predestination. There is a decree of election, but not of reprobation. Predestination has only one side—election. In this context, double predestination is “avoided” (or evaded) by the dialectical method. The dialectical method which sidesteps logical consistency has had a pervasive influence on contemporary discussions of double predestination. A growing antipathy to logic in theology is manifesting itself widely. Even G. C. Berkouwer seems allergic to the notion that logic should play a role in developing our understanding of election.

It is one thing to construct a theology of election (or any other kind of theology) purely on the basis of rational speculation. It is quite another to utilize logic in seeking a coherent understanding of biblical revelation. Brunner seems to abhor both.

Let us examine the “logic” of Brunner’s position. He maintains that
(1) there is a divine decree of election that is eternal;
(2) that divine decree is particular in scope (“There are those who are not elect”);
(3) yet there is no decree of reprobation.
Consider the implications. If God has predestined some but not all to election, does it not follow by what Luther called a “resistless logic” that some are not predestined to election? If, as Brunner maintains, all salvation is based upon the eternal election of God and not all men are elect from eternity, does that not mean that from eternity there are non-elect who most certainly will not be saved? Has not God chosen from eternity not to elect some people? If so, then we have an eternal choice of non-election which we call reprobation. The inference is clear and necessary, yet some shrink from drawing it.

I once heard the case for “single” predestination articulated by a prominent Lutheran theologian in the above manner. He admitted to me that the conclusion of reprobation was logically inescapable, but he refused to draw the inference, holding steadfastly to “single” predestination. Such a notion of predestination is manifest nonsense.

Theoretically there are four possible kinds of consistent single predestination.
(1) Universal predestination to election (which Brunner does not hold);
(2) universal predestination to reprobation (which nobody holds);
(3) particular predestination to election with the option of salvation by self-initiative to those not elect (a qualified Arminianism) which Brunner emphatically rejects; and
(4) particular predestination to reprobation with the option of salvation by self-initiative to those not reprobate (which nobody holds).

The only other kind of single predestination is the dialectical kind, which is absurd. (I once witnessed a closed discussion of theology between H. M. Kuitert of the Netherlands and Cornelius Van Til of Westminster Seminary. Kuitert went into a lengthy discourse on theology, utilizing the method of the dialectic as he went. When he was finished, Dr. Van Til calmly replied: “Now tell me your theology without the dialectic so 1 can understand it!” Kuitert was unable to do so. With Brunner’s view of predestination the only way to avoid “double” predestination is with the use of “double-talk.”

Thus, “single” predestination can be consistently maintained only within the framework of universalism or some sort of qualified Arminianism. If particular election is to be maintained and if the notion that all salvation is ultimately based upon that particular election is to be maintained, then we must speak of double predestination.

The much greater issue of “double” predestination is the issue over the relationship between election and reprobation with respect to the nature of the decrees and the nature of the divine outworking of the decrees. If “double” predestination means a symmetrical view of predestination, then we must reject the notion. But such a view of “double” predestination would be a caricature and a serious distortion of the Reformed doctrine of predestination.
 
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The Double-Predestination Distortion

The distortion of double predestination looks like this: There is a symmetry that exists between election and reprobation. God works in the same way and same manner with respect to the elect and to the reprobate. That is to say, from all eternity God decreed some to election and by divine initiative works faith in their hearts and brings them actively to salvation. By the same token, from all eternity God decrees some to sin and damnation (destinare ad peccatum) and actively intervenes to work sin in their lives, bringing them to damnation by divine initiative. In the case of the elect, regeneration is the monergistic work of God. In the case of the reprobate, sin and degeneration are the monergistic work of God. Stated another way, we can establish a parallelism of foreordination and predestination by means of a positive symmetry. We can call this a positive-positive view of predestination. This is, God positively and actively intervenes in the lives of the elect to bring them to salvation. In the same way God positively and actively intervenes in the life of the reprobate to bring him to sin.

This distortion of positive-positive predestination clearly makes God the author of sin who punishes a person for doing what God monergistically and irresistibly coerces man to do. Such a view is indeed a monstrous assault on the integrity of God. This is not the Reformed view of predestination, but a gross and inexcusable caricature of the doctrine. Such a view may be identified with what is often loosely described as hyper-Calvinism and involves a radical form of supralapsarianism. Such a view of predestination has been virtually universally and monolithically rejected by Reformed thinkers.

The Reformed View of Predestination

In sharp contrast to the caricature of double predestination seen in the positive-positive schema is the classic position of Reformed theology on predestination. In this view predestination is double in that it involves both election and reprobation but is not symmetrical with respect to the mode of divine activity. A strict parallelism of operation is denied. Rather we view predestination in terms of a positive-negative relationship.

In the Reformed view God from all eternity decrees some to election and positively intervenes in their lives to work regeneration and faith by a monergistic work of grace. To the non-elect God withholds this monergistic work of grace, passing them by and leaving them to themselves. He does not monergistically work sin or unbelief in their lives. Even in the case of the “hardening” of the sinners’ already recalcitrant hearts, God does not, as Luther stated, “work evil in us (for hardening is working evil) by creating fresh evil in us.”2 Luther continued:

When men hear us say that God works both good and evil in us, and that we are subject to God’s working by mere passive necessity, they seem to imagine a man who is in himself good, and not evil, having an evil work wrought in him by God; for they do not sufficiently bear in mind how incessantly active God is in all His creatures, allowing none of them to keep holiday. He who would understand these matters, however, should think thus: God works evil in us (that is, by means of us) not through God’s own fault, but by reason of our own defect. We being evil by nature, and God being good, when He impels us to act by His own acting upon us according to the nature of His omnipotence, good though He is in Himself, He cannot but do evil by our evil instrumentality; although, according to His wisdom, He makes good use of this evil for His own glory and for our salvation.2

Thus, the mode of operation in the lives of the elect is not parallel with that operation in the lives of the reprobate. God works regeneration monergistically but never sin. Sin falls within the category of providential concurrence.

Another significant difference between the activity of God with respect to the elect and the reprobate concerns God’s justice. The decree and fulfillment of election provide mercy for the elect while the efficacy of reprobation provides justice for the reprobate. God shows mercy sovereignly and unconditionally to some, and gives justice to those passed over in election. That is to say, God grants the mercy of election to some and justice to others. No one is the victim of injustice. To fail to receive mercy is not to be treated unjustly. God is under no obligation to grant mercy to all—in fact He is under no obligation to grant mercy to any. He says, “I will have mercy upon whom I will have mercy” (Rom. 9). The divine prerogative to grant mercy voluntarily cannot be faulted. If God is required by some cosmic law apart from Himself to be merciful to all men, then we would have to conclude that justice demands mercy. If that is so, then mercy is no longer voluntary, but required. If mercy is required, it is no longer mercy, but justice. What God does not do is sin by visiting injustice upon the reprobate. Only by considering election and reprobation as being asymmetrical in terms of a positive-negative schema can God be exonerated from injustice.
 
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The Reformed Confessions

By a brief reconnaissance of Reformed confessions and by a brief roll-call of the theologians of the Reformed faith, we can readily see that double predestination has been consistently maintained along the lines of a positive-negative schema.

The Reformed Confession: 1536

Our salvation is from God, but from ourselves there is nothing but sin and damnation. (Art. 9)

French Confession of Faith: 1559

We believe that from this corruption and general condemnation in which all men are plunged, God, according to his eternal and immutable counsel, calleth those whom he hath chosen by his goodness and mercy alone in our Lord Jesus Christ, without consideration of their works, to display in them the riches of his mercy; leaving the rest in this same corruption and condemnation to show in them his justice. (Art. XII)

The Belgic Confession of Faith: 1561

We believe that all the posterity of Adam, being thus fallen into perdition and ruin by the sin of our first parents, God then did manifest himself such as he is; that is to say, MERCIFUL AND JUST: MERCIFUL, since he delivers and preserves from this perdition all whom he, in his eternal and unchangeable council, of mere goodness hath elected in Christ Jesus our Lord, without respect to their works: JUST, in leaving others in the fall and perdition wherein they have involved themselves. (Art. XVI)

The Second Helvetic Confession: 1566

Finally, as often as God in Scripture is said or seems to do something evil, it is not thereby said that man does not do evil, but that God permits it and does not prevent it, according to his just judgment, who could prevent it if he wished, or because he turns man’s evil into good… . St. Augustine writes in his Enchiridion: “What happens contrary to his will occurs, in a wonderful and ineffable way, not apart from his will. For it would not happen if he did not allow it. And yet he does not allow it unwillingly but willingly.” (Art. VIII)

The Westminster Confession of Faith: 1643

As God hath appointed the elect unto glory, so hath He, by the eternal and most free purpose of His will, foreordained all the means thereunto. Wherefore, they who are elected … are effectually called unto faith in Christ by His Spirit working in due season, are justified, adopted, sanctified, and kept by His power, through faith, unto salvation. Neither are any other redeemed by Christ, effectually called, justified, adopted, sanctified, and saved, but the elect only.

The rest of mankind God was pleased, according to the unsearchable counsel of His own will, whereby He extendeth or withholdeth mercy, as He pleaseth, for the glory of His Sovereign power over His creatures, to pass by; and to ordain them to dishonour and wrath for their sin, to the praise of His glorious justice. (Chap. III-Art. VI and VII)


These examples selected from confessional formulas of the Reformation indicate the care with which the doctrine of double predestination has been treated. The asymmetrical expression of the “double” aspect has been clearly maintained. This is in keeping with the care exhibited consistently throughout the history of the Church. The same kind of careful delineation can be seen in Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, Calvin, Zanchius, Turrettini, Edwards, Hodge, Warfield, Bavinck, Berkouwer, et al.
 
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atpollard

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Foreordination to Reprobation

In spite of the distinction of positive-negative with respect to the mode of God’s activity toward the elect and the reprobate, we are left with the thorny question of God predestinating the reprobate. If God in any sense predestines or foreordains reprobation, doesn’t this make the rejection of Christ by the reprobate absolutely certain and inevitable? And if the reprobate’s reprobation is certain in light of predestination, doesn’t this make God responsible for the sin of the reprobate? We must answer the first question in the affirmative, and the second in the negative.

If God foreordains anything, it is absolutely certain that what He foreordains will come to pass. The purpose of God can never be frustrated. Even God’s foreknowledge or prescience makes future events certain with respect to time. That is to say, if God knows on Tuesday that I will drive to Pittsburgh on Friday, then there is no doubt that, come Friday, I will drive to Pittsburgh. Otherwise God’s knowledge would have been in error. Yet, there is a significant difference between God’s knowing that I would drive to Pittsburgh and God’s ordaining that I would do so. Theoretically He could know of a future act without ordaining it, but He could not ordain it without knowing what it is that He is ordaining. But in either case, the future event would be certain with respect to time and the knowledge of God.

Luther, in discussing the traitorous act of Judas, says:

Have I not put on record in many books that I am talking about necessity of immutability? I know that the Father begets willingly, and that Judas betrayed Christ willingly. My point is that this act of the will in Judas was certainly and infallibly bound to take place, if God foreknew it. That is to say (if my meaning is not yet grasped), I distinguish two necessities: one I call necessity of force (necessitatem violentam), referring to action; the other I call necessity of infallibility (necessitatem infallibilem), referring to time. Let him who hears me understand that I am speaking of the latter, not the former; that is, I am not discussing whether Judas became a traitor willingly or unwillingly, but whether it was infallibly bound to come to pass that Judas should willingly betray Christ at a time predetermined by God.3

We see then, that what God knows in advance comes to pass by necessity or infallibly or necessity of immutability. But what about His foreordaining or predestinating what comes to pass? If God foreordains reprobation does this not obliterate the distinction between positive-negative and involve a necessity of force? If God foreordains reprobation does this not mean that God forces, compels, or coerces the reprobate to sin? Again the answer must be negative.

If God, when He is decreeing reprobation, does so in consideration of the reprobate’s being already fallen, then He does not coerce him to sin. To be reprobate is to be left in sin, not pushed or forced to sin. If the decree of reprobation were made without a view to the fall, then the objection to double predestination would be valid and God would be properly charged with being the author of sin. But Reformed theologians have been careful to avoid such a blasphemous notion. Berkouwer states the boundaries of the discussion clearly:

On the one hand, we want to maintain the freedom of God in election, and on the other hand, we want to avoid any conclusion which would make God the cause of sin and unbelief.4

God’s decree of reprobation, given in light of the fall, is a decree to justice, not injustice. In this view the biblical a priori that God is neither the cause nor the author of sin is safeguarded. Turrettini says, “We have proved the object of predestination to be man considered as fallen, sin ought necessarily to be supposed as the condition in him who is reprobated, no less than him who is elected.”5 He writes elsewhere:

The negative act includes two, both preterition, by which in the election of some as well to glory as to grace, he neglected and slighted others, which is evident from the event of election, and negative desertion, by which he left them in the corrupt mass and in their misery; which, however, is as to be understood, 1. That they are not excepted from the laws of common providence, but remain subject to them, nor are immediately deprived of all God’s favor, but only of the saving and vivifying which is the fruit of election, 2. That preterition and desertion; not indeed from the nature of preterition and desertion itself, and the force of the denied grace itself, but from the nature of the corrupt free will, and the force of corruption in it; as he who does not cure the disease of a sick man, is not the cause per se of the disease, nor of the results flowing from it; so sins are the consequents, rather than the effects of reprobation, necessarily bringing about the futurition of the event, but yet not infusing nor producing the wickedness… .6

The importance of viewing the decree of reprobation in light of the fall is seen in the on-going discussions between Reformed theologians concerning infra-and supra-lapsarianism. Both viewpoints include the fall in God’s decree. Both view the decree of preterition in terms of divine permission. The real issue between the positions concerns the logical order of the decrees. In the supralapsarian view the decree of election and reprobation is logically prior to the decree to permit the fall. In the infralapsarian view the decree to permit the fall is logically prior to the decree to election and reprobation.

Though this writer favors the infralapsarian view along the lines developed by Turrettini, it is important to note that both views see election and reprobation in light of the fall and avoid the awful conclusion that God is the author of sin. Both views protect the boundaries Berkouwer mentions.

Only in a positive-positive schema of predestination does double-predestination leave us with a capricious deity whose sovereign decrees manifest a divine tyranny. Reformed theology has consistently eschewed such a hyper-supralapsarianism. Opponents of Calvinism, however, persistently caricature the straw man of hypersupralapsarianism, doing violence to the Reformed faith and assaulting the dignity of God’s sovereignty.

We rejoice in the biblical clarity which reveals God’s sovereignty in majestic terms. We rejoice in the knowledge of divine mercy and grace that go to such extremes to redeem the elect. We rejoice that God’s glory and honor are manifested both in His mercy and in His justice.

Soli Deo Gloria.


Chapter Notes

1. Emil Brunner, The Christian Doctrine of God (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1950), p. 326.

2. Martin Luther, The Bondage of the Will (Westwood: Fleming H. Revell, 1957), p. 206.

3. Ibid., p. 220.

4. G. C. Berkouwer, Divine Election (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1960), p. 181.

5. Francois Turrettini, Theological Institutes (Typescript manuscript of Institutio Theologlae Elencticae, 3 vo]s., 1679-1685), trans. George Musgrave Giger, D.D., p. 98.

6. Ibid., p. 97.
 
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So now, let’s tiptoe through the TULIPs with some who actually holds a Reformed (aka. Calvinist) perspective.

T is for TOTAL DEPRAVITY which can also be described as TOTAL INABILITY.

The basic idea behind Total Depravity/Inability is not that people are sociopaths and as evil as they possibly can be. Rather, the “total” reflects the belief that because of the sin of Adam, every part of our being suffers the effect of sin at least a little. Our FLESH is fallen and our natural pleasures have a tendency to draw us to the wrong actions (like the lust of the eyes). The logic of our MIND is also imperfect and drawn to make bad choices and wrong decisions (like believing that science proves there is no God, or that if we just work harder we can make ourselves perfect and then God will be pleased with us). So too, our SOUL/SPIRIT ... whatever you call the seat of your emotions and identity ... that voice that just makes something ‘feel right’ is a compass that does not reliably point us to God or the right actions. (“How can it be wrong when I love her so much?”).

So every aspect of our lives is out of alignment. Some parts may only be off by a single degree and other parts are way off the mark. How much is not as important as the reality that every single aspect of your life is off the mark by some amount. Because of this warped alignment, we can never please God. Our BODY will steer us towards sin. Our MIND will reach the wrong conclusion and never understand God’s perfect truth. Our SPIRIT is an idol factory that is constantly stuffing any worldly thing it can into the God-shaped hole to try and fill it ... we worship our children, our job, the next challenge.

All this means that we cannot find God, God must find us.

That is TOTAL DEPRAVITY.

Anyone have any questions ... or care to disagree and argue that people have some part of them that is still 100% perfect?
 

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Lucifer rivaled God and therefore brought down his followers with him and deceived man... is this statement true?
I believe that God created man in his image and therefore had every intent in creating mankind as his chosen.
What a dilemma, I consider free will as an act of obedience and by betraying God we have become naturally selected to be slaves of sin unless directed otherwise which I believe God has done effectively through Christ.
This topic is on another level so bare with me... I had a conversation online recently with a fellow who said that he "revels in sin" and called me "weak and closed minded", I rebuked him by stating that I have freedom now (freedom of choice) but when I was an atheist I had no freedom, I was a slave to sin, but I have liberty now in Christ.
Point being, that just as it was in the beginning so it shall be in the end, Adam had liberty but "missed the mark" and lost it all causing mankind to fall with him, but now we are redeemable by the blood of Christ and have put on the "new Adam" where we have that liberty again (walk with God) wise as serpents and free BUT obedient through Faith and Grace in the Holy Spirit.
Long lectures are rather boring, either you have 'it' or you don't and if you don't you wont even know it but if you 'do' you will show it ;)
 

Albion

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T is for TOTAL DEPRAVITY which can also be described as TOTAL INABILITY....

Anyone have any questions ... or care to disagree and argue that people have some part of them that is still 100% perfect?
I think it is not just a matter of us being out of synch or of being incapable. This point means that man, in his natural state, is estranged from God by sin. That is the ”depravity” spoken of in point #1.
 

Josiah

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Josiah said:

See the video in the opening post.... it's 9 minutes long and I realize that's too long for many, but it does a good job explaining these points.


Please note that while Reformed (aka Calvinist) theology is usually defined as "TULIP" theology (what makes it distinctive) 1) this is only PART of Reformed/Calvinist theology and 2) MANY (some would say nearly all) Reformed/Calvinist reject at least some of these points or may strongly, radically modify them. We should not assume that one who identifies themselves as Reformed or Calvinist holds to these views (they probably don't). One Presbyterian minister posted, "Most Presbyterians hold that TULIP is just a pretty flower - and this goes as much for the clergy as the laity." Good to keep these in mind. This was a strong debate 400 years ago, not so much now since not too many hold to TULIP anymore.


Calvinism
and Arminianism are both logical constructs (I'd say equally so) but both run head-on into very clear Scripture. Go to any website where Calvinists and Arminians FIGHT and you'll fine endless posts, "That's directly against Scripture!" And they are both right.... the arguments are humanly logical but both aren't biblical. Lutherans approach Scripture with respect, humility and awe, and they are very hesitate to subject it to OUR "logic" or "reason" (even through such ends up contradicting what Scripture says). Yes.... we end up with some "loose ends" or "unanswered questions" or simply as "mystery" as Lutherans put it. We simply do not fully and humanly understand the "dynamics" or "workings" of all this, in exactly HOW all this "cranks out" in practice. Lutherans are okay with mystery.... Calvin and Arminius both insisted that God MUST be humanly logical (or He could not be God) and thus "answer" things via their own "logic."



.

The distortion of double predestination looks like this: There is a symmetry that exists between election and reprobation. God works in the same way and same manner with respect to the elect and to the reprobate. That is to say, from all eternity God decreed some to election and by divine initiative works faith in their hearts and brings them actively to salvation. By the same token, from all eternity God decrees some to sin and damnation (destinare ad peccatum) and actively intervenes to work sin in their lives, bringing them to damnation by divine initiative. In the case of the elect, regeneration is the monergistic work of God. In the case of the reprobate, sin and degeneration are the monergistic work of God. Stated another way, we can establish a parallelism of foreordination and predestination by means of a positive symmetry. We can call this a positive-positive view of predestination. This is, God positively and actively intervenes in the lives of the elect to bring them to salvation. In the same way God positively and actively intervenes in the life of the reprobate to bring him to sin.

.


Yes, it seems few modern Calvinists actually accept TULIP...



View/listen to the Lutheran video below. Are you saying you actually agree with Lutherans on this? Do you agree with the Lutheran position related by this pastor (whether or not you agree with his description of the uber-Calvinist position)?


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uuGA6Nq7a_Q




. Another point here....

Pick up the video at minute 9 or so.... My beautiful wife was raised in a very conservative Reformed church and this is her main point. For example, she noted that she has been to the Plymouth Plantation in Plymouth, MA - the place of the Pilgrims. They were Calvinists.... and the church they founded, the first non-Anglican church in the English colonies, the original and historic Calvinist church - is now a Unitarian Universalist church (and has been since about the 1820's or so); indeed there are Unitarian Universalists churches all over New England and they were all once Calvinists. Calvinism, she notes, is all about what seems LOGICAL to the Calvinist - no matter how seriously that runs head-on into Scripture (no problem since God MUST be logical so if it SEEMS He is not, it must be spun so as to be logical). The rejection - eventually - of the Trinity, the Two Natures of Christ, and so much more by Calvinists all result from this rubric.

But I digress.... this thread is about TULIP - the defining distictives of Calvinist/Reformed theology (which do seem to be mostly logical constructs). I agree with you that these mostly can't be traced to Calvin but rather are (over) reactions to the errors of the Arminianists by later-day Calvinists My wife (probably not me) would argue this process might well be what ultimately lead to Unitarian-Universalism (all "logic trumps Scripture") but certainly to the current displacement and/or "watering down" of all this.

I'm curious what you think of Lutheran position related in this video - whether or not you agree with the portrayal of the later-day Calvinist invention.




- Josiah



.
 
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atpollard

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Yes, it seems few modern Calvinists actually accept TULIP...



View/listen to the Lutheran video below. Are you saying you actually agree with Lutherans on this? Do you agree with the Lutheran position related by this pastor (whether or not you agree with his description of the uber-Calvinist position)?


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uuGA6Nq7a_Q

. Another point here....

Pick up the video at minute 9 or so.... My beautiful wife was raised in a very conservative Reformed church and this is her main point. For example, she noted that she has been to the Plymouth Plantation in Plymouth, MA - the place of the Pilgrims. They were Calvinists.... and the church they founded, the first non-Anglican church in the English colonies, the original and historic Calvinist church - is now a Unitarian Universalist church (and has been since about the 1820's or so); indeed there are Unitarian Universalists churches all over New England and they were all once Calvinists. Calvinism, she notes, is all about what seems LOGICAL to the Calvinist - no matter how seriously that runs head-on into Scripture (no problem since God MUST be logical so if it SEEMS He is not, it must be spun so as to be logical). The rejection - eventually - of the Trinity, the Two Natures of Christ, and so much more by Calvinists all result from this rubric.

But I digress.... this thread is about TULIP - the defining distictives of Calvinist/Reformed theology (which do seem to be mostly logical constructs). I agree with you that these mostly can't be traced to Calvin but rather are (over) reactions to the errors of the Arminianists by later-day Calvinists My wife (probably not me) would argue this process might well be what ultimately lead to Unitarian-Universalism (all "logic trumps Scripture") but certainly to the current displacement and/or "watering down" of all this.

I'm curious what you think of Lutheran position related in this video - whether or not you agree with the portrayal of the later-day Calvinist invention.

- Josiah

What I think is that few non-Calvinists (non-Reformed) accurately represent what TULIP and Reformed Theology actually believe and teach. I did watch the Lutheran video and found it to be no exception. I agree with his rejection of what a Calvinist would call Positive-Positive Schema Double Predestination (that God forces some people to be saved and God forces other people to be damned by the direct act of His divine will so that ‘salvation’ and ‘damnation’ are both equivalent acts of God) ... as would every Calvinist/Reformed Theologian that I am aware of. The video soundly defeats a straw man argument.

Both R.C. Sproul and I were/are (he is dead) Reformed/Calvinists and both Mr Sproul and I believe in all 5 points of TULIP. Thus there are at lest two modern Calvinists that accept TULIP. What we do not believe is what Calvinists have never believed ... the form of Positive-Positive Double Predestination that you and that Lutheran video are ascribing to TULIP.

Let me present an easier to understand version of TULIP

[John 6:44 NIV] "No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws them, and I will raise them up at the last day.

  • No one can = Total Inability = We are powerless to save ourself
  • come to me = Limited Atonement = it is not about EVERYONE, it is about those who will come to Jesus.
  • unless the Father = Unconditional Election = the Father makes the decision, not the person
  • who sent me draws them, = Irrisistable Grace = God draws, compels like fish drawn in a net or like a sword drawn from its scabbard. The power to decide is in the hand of the Fisherman or the hand of the soldier or in the hand of God and not in the fish or the sword or the man.
  • and I will raise them up at the last day. = Perseverance of the Saints = Those whom God chooses to draw are those who will come to Jesus and those who come to Jesus are the same ones that Jesus WILL RAISE on the last day.
 

Josiah

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What I think is that few non-Calvinists (non-Reformed) accurately represent what TULIP and Reformed Theology actually believe and teach. I did watch the Lutheran video and found it to be no exception. I agree with his rejection of what a Calvinist would call Positive-Positive Schema Double Predestination (that God forces some people to be saved and God forces other people to be damned by the direct act of His divine will so that ‘salvation’ and ‘damnation’ are both equivalent acts of God) ... as would every Calvinist/Reformed Theologian that I am aware of. The video soundly defeats a straw man argument.

Both R.C. Sproul and I were/are (he is dead) Reformed/Calvinists and both Mr Sproul and I believe in all 5 points of TULIP. Thus there are at lest two modern Calvinists that accept TULIP. What we do not believe is what Calvinists have never believed ... the form of Positive-Positive Double Predestination that you and that Lutheran video are ascribing to TULIP.

Let me present an easier to understand version of TULIP

[John 6:44 NIV] "No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws them, and I will raise them up at the last day.

  • No one can = Total Inability = We are powerless to save ourself
  • come to me = Limited Atonement = it is not about EVERYONE, it is about those who will come to Jesus.
  • unless the Father = Unconditional Election = the Father makes the decision, not the person
  • who sent me draws them, = Irrisistable Grace = God draws, compels like fish drawn in a net or like a sword drawn from its scabbard. The power to decide is in the hand of the Fisherman or the hand of the soldier or in the hand of God and not in the fish or the sword or the man.
  • and I will raise them up at the last day. = Perseverance of the Saints = Those whom God chooses to draw are those who will come to Jesus and those who come to Jesus are the same ones that Jesus WILL RAISE on the last day.


Since God chose to Jesus to die for only a FEW people (and thus there is no possibilty for any other to be saved ), how can it be that God wills that all be saved? How can be be that God only "passes over some" with the gift of faith since faith is irrelevant for them anyway? It wouldn't matter since God chose to have Jesus not die for them, not save them. Doesn't the Calvinist invention of "Limited Atonement" (God chose to make Jesus' work meaningless for most people) mandate the "double" senario you claim modern Calvinists now reject?


I only agree with the Total depravity part. The rest is a logical construct dependent on the assumption that God wants most to be damned - no matter what, even determining that Jesus' work will NOT be for them. IMO a direct and clear contradiction of Scripture. TULIP all seems designed to support that and to make salvation unknowable, uncertain, a matter of terror. Seems to me, TULIP makes Jesus irrelevant, faith irrelevant - all that matters is God's predetermination (positive and negative), a view that "fits" with Islam and the Greek idea of fate but IMO not with Scripture.


- Josiah




.
 

atpollard

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Where does scripture say that God wills all to be saved?

Where did I ever claim that faith was unnecessary?

You should reread the posts from RC Sproul, he does a thorough job of explaining the difference between your flawed Double Predestination and the Biblical Reformed Double Predestination. He also points out the folly of ‘single predestination’ like Lutherans claim to believe but cannot explain.
 
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Josiah

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Josiah said:
Since God chose to Jesus to die for only a FEW people (and thus there is no possibilty for any other to be saved ), how can it be that God wills that all be saved? How can be be that God only "passes over some" with the gift of faith since faith is irrelevant for them anyway? It wouldn't matter since God chose to have Jesus not die for them, not save them. Doesn't the Calvinist invention of "Limited Atonement" (God chose to make Jesus' work meaningless for most people) mandate the "double" senario you claim modern Calvinists now reject?


.

Where does scripture say that God wills all to be saved?


Among other places...

1 Timothy 2:4
2 Peter 3:9


Yes, TULIP all appears to be a humanly "logical" construct all to support the assumption that God desires to populate Hell and thus assures it. And yes, since it all goes back to God's decision that Jesus would be meaningless and irrelevant for most people (regardless of whether they have faith or not).



.
 
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MennoSota

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Among other places...

1 Timothy 2:4
2 Peter 3:9


Yes, TULIP all appears to be a humanly "logical" construct all to support the assumption that God desires to populate Hell and thus assures it. And yes, since it all goes back to God's decision that Jesus would be meaningless and irrelevant for most people (regardless of whether they have faith or not).



.
Josiah, you know that both your references do not make your case. We have gone over both verses and shown, in context, why your claim is utterly wrong. I will not regurgitate the evidence against your claim. You should, at this point, have the hermeneutic skills to understand.
 

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T is for TOTAL DEPRAVITY which can also be described as TOTAL INABILITY.

The basic idea behind Total Depravity/Inability is not that people are sociopaths and as evil as they possibly can be.

[But] ...that we cannot find God, God must find us.

That is TOTAL DEPRAVITY.


Anyone have any questions ... or care to disagree and argue that people have some part of them that is still 100% perfect?

Thank-you...

The term depravity is therefore a misnomer...

Because depravity is indeed for sociopaths...

Which explains popular conceptions about Total Depravity that are at odds with the Reformation...


Arsenios
 

atpollard

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Thank-you...

The term depravity is therefore a misnomer...

Because depravity is indeed for sociopaths...

Which explains popular conceptions about Total Depravity that are at odds with the Reformation...


Arsenios
NOW it is a misnomer (hence the preference among modern Reformed Theologians for ‘Total Inability’.)
However, what was the meaning of ‘depravity’ in the 16th Century when the the foundations were being laid and many terms being first defined.

It is not unlike the call in the KJV for the head of John the Baptist on a “Charger” ... I thought a charger was a medieval warhorse? Who ever describes a large serving tray as a charger these days? It made sense when the KJV was first written.


Depravity (Oxford Dictionary): 1 Moral corruption; wickedness.
1.1 Christian Theology: The innate corruption of human nature, due to original sin.
Origin: Mid 17th century: alteration (influenced by deprave) of obsolete pravity, from Latin pravitas, from pravus ‘crooked, perverse’.
 
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