Of course you will have some explaining to do given my earlier reference to 2 Thessalonians.
Something like this, perhaps?
http://theologyonline.com/showthrea...Universalism&p=5268120&viewfull=1#post5268120
Of course you will have some explaining to do given my earlier reference to 2 Thessalonians.
Epic fail. You mount an argument based upon supposed error in translation.Something like this, perhaps?
http://theologyonline.com/showthrea...Universalism&p=5268120&viewfull=1#post5268120
Epic fail. You mount an argument based upon supposed error in translation.
Bryson's anti-Calvinist crusade with CCA is well-known. Perhaps you and he should actually read the sermon from wherein this quote is liberally lifted:
Sermon VI - 2 Tim. 2:19
I suspect not a few who cavil about Calvinism have even read the man's sermons, nor fully apprised themselves of his full corpus of works. No, they simply prefer to quote mine from them, never doing their due diligence to take every word captive for the glory of God.
We ought also to have a care of our brethren, and to be sorry to see them perish; for it is no small matter to have the souls perish, who were bought by the blood of Christ.
-John Calvin
I always enjoy your pointless tantrums. Please continue. [emoji41]Here's the quote, again:
Calvin said that, didn't he? Yeah, he did. So, your pretense of superiority over those who may not have read all (or any) of the literary works of Calvin that you, personally, claim to have mastered, is obviously useless, and silly. At least that one quote from Calvin starkly militates against your ideology--the very ideology named after the man who said it. The "Here is a 10' stack of one-thousand page Reformed theology treatises; don't talk to me until you've read them all, all the way through!" ploy can't hide the simple, Calvinism-damning fact that Calvin expressly declared, publicly, that some persons perish who were bought by the blood of Christ. Not only does your attempt fail to hide that fact, but it also draws attention to the fact that you're merely trying to create a diversion so as to draw attention away from the force of that quote. And, of course, that quote is necessarily embarrassing to Calvinism crusaders, as it highlights the hypocrisy inherent in their ideology.
Why ought a Calvinist be sorry to see anyone's soul perish, anyway? That's ludicrous. Obviously, according to Calvinism, that soul was not one of the elect, and so, God's not the least bit sorry to see that soul perish. Nay, God, from all eternity, expressly decreed that soul to perish, and created it for that very purpose; God has pleasure in the death of that wicked soul, according to Calvinism. According to Calvinism, that's why God created that soul in the first place, for His own pleasure in inflicting the perishing of that soul. And, mind you, as per Calvinism, God doesn't just allow that soul to perish, God predestined that soul to perish. God never loved, and always hated, that soul, and always intended for that soul to perish, and that with unfathomable agony! The real question is why any self-respecting, God-fearing Calvinist would ever be the least bit sorry to see anyone's soul perish. Why be sorry over what God is pleased with? Can you not help sorrowing for the soul who perishes? Maybe, then, you ought to question whether you're really one of the elect; wouldn't it seem that God would have decreed His own elect to become (at least upon regeneration by the Holy Spirit) of a mind to hate whom He hates, rather than to love, and pity, those whom God hates, and pities not? Would it not be downright disobedient, nay, blasphemous to God, and also, a cause of great displeasure to Him, for His elect to go about loving whom He hates--namely, the eternally reprobate? But, Calvinists, who vehemently object to saying to all men, indiscriminately, "Jesus loves you!" turn right around, as hypocrites, and say "Oh, sure, I care about the souls of my fellow man; I am sorry to see any of them perish!"
Now, at least one famous Calvinist, Jonathan Edwards, actually pictured the elect, in heaven, as rejoicing over, and getting pleasure by watching, from heaven, God's endless, fiery torment upon the non-elect (those who, in the above quote, Calvin referred to as "our brethren") in the lake of fire. According to what Edwards said, an elect mother, for instance, would come to be rejoicing, in heaven, at the sight of her non-elect son being in the agony of endless torment in the lake of fire. Now, that's ghastly enough, and nowhere to be found countenanced in Scripture. But, in observing that spectacle of madness, the question arises: Why, only then, in heaven, is that elect person given a mind to hate those whom God has hated from all eternity? Why did God decree--not merely allow, but positively decree--for that elect person to go along in his/her earthly life loving and pitying the non-elect?
The word "bought" regards temporal mercies and deliverance, which these reprobate men enjoyed, and is used as an aggravation of their sin in denying the Lord, both by words, and by works, turning the doctrine of the grace of God into lasciviousness, being disobedient and reprobate to every good work. See Deuteronomy 32:6 from where this phrase is borrowed, and to which it manifestly refers: "do ye thus requite the Lord, O foolish people and unwise! is not he thy Father that hath bought thee? hath he not made thee, and established thee?"
I always enjoy your pointless tantrums. Please continue. [emoji41]
You were answered ad nauseum. You just don't have ears to hear or eyes to see. You prove that with every post.I had stopped specifically addressing posts to you after I got tired of you refusing to answer my questions, and now, you have addressed a post to me, for what reason, I do not know, as you, therein, still respond to none of the things I have written. To supplement the absurdity of your actions, you think it edifying to type an insincere smiley face. I would scarcely be surprised to learn that you were even driving down the freeway at 70 mph when you typed it. All I can figure is that you are begging for attention.
Now, why do you childishly mock someone whom you consider to be unregenerate?
Some questions you might consider asking yourself are these:
1. Obviously he's unregenerate, but suppose he's one of the elect; should I then be mocking one of the elect? Does Scripture warrant me to do so? Especially when my mocking is unprovoked?
2. Suppose he's one of the non-elect; does Scripture tell me that I should be mocking the non-elect? Especially when my mocking is unprovoked?
You were answered ad nauseum. You just don't have ears to hear or eyes to see. You prove that with every post.
No liar. You just cannot comprehend my answer because you are so narrow minded and blind to scripture.You are a hardened liar. You answered none of my questions. You repeatedly lie, saying that you have answered all of them. You answered not a one. Please stop lying to me, and stop begging for attention.
Like I wrote earlier, you obviously did not actually read the sermon in question. You are operating outside your weight class and it shows.Here's the quote, again:
I don't think you understand the decree of God at all.Why, only then, in heaven, is that elect person given a mind to hate those whom God has hated from all eternity? Why did God decree--not merely allow, but positively decree--for that elect person to go along in his/her earthly life loving and pitying the non-elect?
You are simply not reading my written words carefully. Slow down and compose yourself.You call God's deliberate aggravation of a non-elect person's sin "mercies and deliverance"?
The options regarding atonement:
God imposed his wrath due unto, and Christ underwent the pains of hell for, either all the sins of all men, or all the sins of some men, or some sins of all men.
If the last, some sins of all men, then have all men some sins to answer for, and so shall no man be saved . . .
If the second, that is it which we affirm, that Christ in their stead and room suffered for all the sins of all the elect in the world. If the first, why then are not all freed from the punishment of all their sins? You will say, 'Because of their unbelief; they will not believe.'
But this unbelief, is it a sin, or not?
If not, why should they be punished for it? If it be, then Christ underwent the punishment due to it, or not. If so, then why must that hinder them more than their other sins for which he died from partaking of the fruit of his death? If he did not, then did he not die for all their sins.
Let them choose which part they will".
John Owen: The Death of Death in the Death of Christ.
Like I wrote earlier, you obviously did not actually read the sermon in question. You are operating outside your weight class and it shows.
The options regarding atonement:
God imposed his wrath due unto, and Christ underwent the pains of hell for, either all the sins of all men, or all the sins of some men, or some sins of all men.
If the last, some sins of all men, then have all men some sins to answer for, and so shall no man be saved . . .
If the second, that is it which we affirm, that Christ in their stead and room suffered for all the sins of all the elect in the world. If the first, why then are not all freed from the punishment of all their sins? You will say, 'Because of their unbelief; they will not believe.'
But this unbelief, is it a sin, or not?
If not, why should they be punished for it? If it be, then Christ underwent the punishment due to it, or not. If so, then why must that hinder them more than their other sins for which he died from partaking of the fruit of his death? If he did not, then did he not die for all their sins.
Let them choose which part they will".
John Owen: The Death of Death in the Death of Christ.
Death temporal, with all its antecedents and attendants, — all infirmities, miseries, sicknesses, wasting destroying passions, casualties that are penal, all evil conducing thereunto or waiting on it, —[is] a punishment of original sin...
we affirm, that Christ in their stead and room suffered for all the sins of all the elect in the world
You are simply not reading my written words carefully. Slow down and compose yourself.
God's mercies are poured out upon the reprobate undeservedly while the walk this earth (temporally). Many are blessed with riches and success. The rain falls upon the good and bad alike. That is the point of the quoted portion you are all aflutter about. These things heap coals upon their heads, making their sins more odious to the holy God.
AMR