can anyone else confirm that this is our first reformed one?
No, there are others. For practical purposes, there is not a big difference between Calvinism/Reformed (often used interchangeably).
can anyone else confirm that this is our first reformed one?
No, there are others. For practical purposes, there is not a big difference between Calvinism/Reformed (often used interchangeably).
Pre-mill. is the biblical, historical view. Thank Augustine, et al, for amill. which relies on an allegorical approach (subjective) to Scripture vs a normative literal, grammatical, historical, contextual approach.
These issues are peripheral when you have a defective Christology. If you were Reformed on the doctrine of God, we would rejoice. Many of the other issues are not salvific.
I hear "normative, literal, grammatical etc." spouted by a few but when I tell them Jesus and the apostles expected Jesus to return in their (at least John') lifetime, not 2000+ years later, they tell me "to God a thousand years is but a day," implying I should not take those time cues literally. The same ones also want me to take the symbols in Rev. as literal even though they are obviously symbols, especially when vs. 1 says the angel sent and "symbolized" them.
So you tell me who's got the "normative, literal, grammatical" approach, me or them.
Do I agree with that statement?
The words are nearly synonomous, though from a historical standpoint, it wouldn't be the case. John Calvin was a Reformer. So was Zwigli, Luther, etc. More accurately, then, Reformed would be someone who holds to the Reformed Confessions of Faith. Like the Westminster. The three forms of Unity. Belgic. Heidelberg. Etc.
Does that help?
Austin Brown
www.soundofdoctrine.com
Sola Dei Gloria
so why don't you call yourself a Calvinist?
Absolutely. From one to another,Why not call myself a Calvinist? I do. I have no problem with the term.
It's kind of like human being and caucasian. Caucasian is a little more narrow. But all caucasians are humans.
Most people associate Calvinism with the doctrines of sovereign grace (TULIP). But Reformed is broader in its conception.
Austin Brown
www.soundofdoctrine.com
Sola Dei Gloria!
The literal approach certainly factors in symbols and figurative language vs wooden literalism. Most literalists fully recognize symbols/figures of speech that convey literal truth. The bigger problem is a subjective, allegorical approach that takes clearly literal truths and makes them figurative, without warrant.
Jesus, Paul, early church did expect the imminent return of Christ. I would not use the perspective (1000 years/day is a metaphor/simile, not literal equivalent) issue to negate this. Dispensationalism and Open Theism would account for the INDETERMINATE Church Age that was mystery, not prophesied. Depending on the unfolding of history, God's plan and timing was in flux, not fixed (hence Jesus not knowing the hour of return because Father had not fixed it yet).
You will like AMR (who does not like me), but I will not be your cup of tea. So be it.:dog:
I would love to recommend a couple books. "The Millennial Maze: Sorting out Evangelical Options" is a must read, if you want a fair and balanced introduction to all four major views. I would also recommend Kim Riddlebarger's book, "The Case for Ammillennialism." It is very readable.
Those would be where I would start you. I can also recommend a lot of audio as well (which is free). But I need to limit how much I do that here.
But thanks for the question.
Austin Brown
www.soundofdoctrine.com
Sola Dei Gloria
So they all believed in the imminent return of Christ in error?
:shocked:Let's just assume that God doesn't know the future.
As for stuff online....