popsthebuilder
New member
Morning Sir....Good morning to all.
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Morning Sir....Good morning to all.
Morning Sir....
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nothing wrong with graphic expressions. it expresses truths to very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very stubburn brothers and sisters. They has no clue how useless their theology are.You seem to be taking stabs at brothers and sisters in Christ. Of they are wrong, then how is what you are doing helping them?
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That's simply not true. My initial faith was not from the preaching of the gospel by any man. It was a free gift that I only needed to hope for and realize my own weakness in order to be given, and really, I'm not certain that I had to do that. How does one limit the capacities of GOD, justifiably?Calvinist seldom talk about "Faith" they don't talk about it, because they don't have it.
Faith is a product of the Holy Spirit. Those that have faith are those that are indwelt with the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is only given to those that hear and believe the Gospel. No Gospel, no faith, no faith, no Holy Spirit, no Holy Spirit, no salvation, no salvation, eternal damnation.
Calvinist seldom talk about "Faith" they don't talk about it, because they don't have it.
Faith is a product of the Holy Spirit. Those that have faith are those that are indwelt with the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is only given to those that hear and believe the Gospel. No Gospel, no faith, no faith, no Holy Spirit, no Holy Spirit, no salvation, no salvation, eternal damnation.
To call the faith of any or the derived theology of said faith a thing of no worth seems terribly wrong to me. To strengthen ones faith you don't break it. How does it go? A cracked vessel is still good to hold some substance, but a broken vessel is of no worth. You cannot re-kiln a pot, and doing so will only weaken it.nothing wrong with graphic expressions. it expresses truths to very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very stubburn brothers and sisters. They has no clue how useless their theology are.
They both cannot be true at the same time and in the same sense. This is indisputable, for they are quite immiscible. Thanks be to God that from the division between the two views, the truth emerges (1 Cor. 11:19).Arminianism and Calvinism are so similar you can't really say one is wholly wrong without incriminating the other.
Presumably good response. I will look into the scripture and compare it to your words and contexts when I have more time.@popsthebuilder
They both cannot be true at the same time and in the same sense. This is indisputable, for they are quite immiscible. Thanks be to God that from the division between the two views, the truth emerges (1 Cor. 11:9).
Given 1 Cor. 11:9 and 2 Cor. 10:5, I generally do not shirk from discussing division in doctrine with the man sincerely willing to engage at a substantive level in hopes we both be edified, and God glorified (1 Cor. 10:31), from the discussion. Unfortunately, what passes for "discussion" in most cases with the anti-Calvinist is but sweeping characterizations and opinions.
Arminianism in general, along with its cousin open theism, have but one primary view: anything that opposes Calvinism. Calvinists write the big books, the systematics, the lengthy exegetical commentaries, and so on. The heavy lifting as it were. Our confused anti-Calvinist brethren stand atop the efforts of their opponents, emptily proclaiming, "I disagree!" "Moral Monster!" "Servetus!" "Robots!". Very rarely is an actual argument put forth that another can take under consideration and perhaps learn from. In fact, it is the Calvinist who will actually dig into another's attempts at providing a response and actually try to glean something from it or demonstrate why what has been profferred suffers from inadequacy.
The anti-Calvinist generally prefers to adopt the Three Blind Mice stance, refusing to read beyond the first appearance of the word "Calvinist" or "Reformed". Even when the anti-Calvinist weighs in with something worthwhile, they soon wilt away as their views are examined, their logical conclusions demonstrated, and errors revealed. Under such careful scrutiny using the full counsel of Scripture, the anti-Calvinist retreats behind "Too many words!" "I did not say that!" "You assume what I did not!" "You are a fool!" "I won't respond until you apologize!" or whatever rationalization that will help them retain some modicum of face among the watching mobs rather than driving the topic being discussed to ground.
If we know one thing from Scripture it is that ignorance is not bliss, but the very stuff that sends a man off to his just desserts. The sad view, Just Me and My Bible, is not found in Scripture. Rather what we find is the writers of Scripture, speaking under the superintendence of God the Holy Spirit, admonishing the believer to confess that which he believes using the sound patterns of Scripture (Rom. 6:17; Rom. 15:5-6; Phil. 1:27; Eph. 4:14; 2 Tim 2:13). A man that cannot articulate a summary of what he holds dear and why he does so is a man that is in rebellion against the very Scripture they cling to.
Unfortunately, deep theological discourse is regularly shunned by the anti-Calvinist. If and when the anti-Calvinist actually does weigh in with something the Calvinist can actually work with, one generally finds it laden with lachrymose appeals to humanistic notions that seek to elevate man beyond his actual station in life, mere quotations of Scripture with some boldface or underlining presumed to substitute for exegesis, and a bold declaration of victory.
If my many years of experience and those of others in my wheelhouse is any indication, I have found very few Arminians willingly open to have their assumptions about Calvinism examined, and potentially corrected, by the Calvinist or the Reformed believer. On the other hand, you would have to look very hard to find the Reformed or Calvinist believer reticent to discuss that which he holds dear, unwilling to read in detail all that is offered up by the anti-Calvinist, and not open to correction offered up in honest and sincere dialog. In fact this very post is ample evidence of what I am speaking about. Few are the persons who will avail themselves of its full content and take it all into consideration. Many just prefer a Dominoe's Pizza approach to weighty matters, "thirty minutes or its free", unwilling to dig deeper.
AMR
Not quite sure of the context you are employing. Reconciliation between two parties in the context of forgiveness?Just curious; do you hold universal reconciliation dear, and if not, is it not proclaimed in scripture ultimately?
You were too quick to reply. I was just adding a post to note that citation should be 1 Cor. 11:19. I have corrected my original post. My apologies.Ask Mr. Religion,
I don't generally take scripture out of context and also usually have at least a decent grasp of the message at hand but cannot understand why you referenced
1 Corinthians: 11. 9. Neither was the man created for the woman; but the woman for the man.
Nothing I have written implies "all" with respect to the anti-Calvinist. I took great pains to make sure I qualified my statements along those lines. Similarly, I also did not write anything that accords with your "utter error" summary. I maintained in my post that the two systems in question cannot be homogenized due to their differences. They both cannot be correct views at the same time and in the same situation. I am on record in numerous posts as considering Arminians brothers in the Lord until it can be demonstrated otherwise. Nevertheless, I consider them confused brothers, but brothers nonetheless. At the same time we ought to make the distinction between different kinds of errorists, as made in Jude 22-23. Some require compassion, and some require fear. Sadly, most of those in the anti-Calvinist category posting herein do not extend me the same consideration.Though the scripture you listed does explain the nature of the true believer to some extent, surely all arminianists aren't wholly bereft of knowledge and understanding of their own doctrine. And though I see your point about leading those in error to things pleasing to GOD, I can't agree that arminianism is utter error based on your statements. Can't some be elect and others be followers of the elect? To me elect is synonymous with shepard and the masses are the sheep.
What am I missing exactly that make the two not work together in theory? Does arminianism sent that there are any elect whatsoever?
I think they may indeed believe. Unfortunately they just do not believe what they think they believe. One need only examine one's private prayer life to see how their prayers actually reveal what they truly believe versus what they say they believe. Lex orandi, lex credenda: everyone is a Calvinist on their knees.I agree with what you said about honest inquiry about ones own stance and it's relation to others; if one is haphazard about understanding and explaining and justifying their faith to others then they most likely don't take it too seriously. In other words; they don't actually believe, but are going through the motions.
I think Arminianism is death to Christianity. RC Sproul
Don’t misunderstand, the Calvinist doctrine is not that God drags us kicking and screaming into His Kingdom. We don’t want to be there, but He’s going to drag us anyway. Rather, the doctrine is that God changes us so that we do want, we will necessarily want. The scary part is that God teaches that God doesn’t bless everyone in the same way. He gives new life to whom He will. He tells us “I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy.” Our calling is to recognize, by His grace, our need for His grace. In other words, at the end of the day, it’s not that Jesus changes some things, and I have to help, but rather, Jesus changes everything. found at http://rcsprouljr.com/blog/general/arminianism/
Moronic Arguments.
Exhibit A:
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Election is in the Bible, as well as predestination. You fools skip right over it all and pretend it doesn't exist. So how does your argument stack to anything other than being a mass of hot air?
That is incontrovertibly false by the very standard of what election and predestination is in the Bible. There is nobody in the Bible elected who fails God's will, because their own will is part of God's fore-sought election in the first place.
God justifying a reprobate, and condemning a principled non-believer, is calling evil good and good evil. Election is what it is, not what it isn't- and you perpetuate the latter. If a person is not a principled believer, then they are, in general, not of the elect.
This seems to be the crux of our discussion to me. Per your view, those so drawn may refuse this "drawing", yet Scripture's treatment of the word is more than mere wooing that may be ineffectual. If your view is correct, then God the Holy Spirit calls (your "prompts") yet His calling is not effectual in many cases because you aver that love cannot be compelled (to which I agree). This compelling I assume you assign to the Calvinist view, but this would be incorrect. The Calvinist view is the efficacious calling of God's children removes their hearts of stone and consequently they actually decide of their own regenerated free will to believe. No violence is done to their will, rather their marred, fallen, will is now restored to that which they possessed when man was first created before Adam's fall...a will inclined always for the good. The regenerated (born again) are not "forced" to believe, rather following re-birth they inevitably want and will believe, for this belief the first fruits of their regeneration. This is the Reformed/Calvinistic view.
AMR