Ask Mr. Religion
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Limited Atonement was and still is one i wrestle with.
In what sense?
AMR
Limited Atonement was and still is one i wrestle with.
:nono: Hardly ever. You don't really know as much as you think you do. You are kinda newbie, Truster. I don't know why, but Christmas time seems to bring out the worst in you. Odd that.Reformed theology is just another idol. People who have an interest in religion move from one denomination to another and thus change their theology. The move from one theology to another does have an effect, but it is an emotional effect that is fueled by pride. People tend to arrive at ''reformed theology'' and get stuck in it.
Says "justme-and-my-bible" :sigh: It amounts to you and only you that says so and you have an incredibly high opinion of yourself.I'm not saying that reformed theology is devoid of truth, but the mixture of law and grace that is promoted, is as deadly as any sin of the flesh.
This is just ignorant says, as ignorant lone-ranger thinks and does. You simply assert, all on your own authority. Here is something incredibly important that you miss from scripture and Christ: Christianity is not only your relationship with Christ, but your relationship to the church which you reject. That is incredibly immature and incredibly arrogant in ignorance.If you do get caught up in it, but you are by regeneration, an heir of grace, the Great Shepherd of the flock will not leave you there. He will come and lead you out.
''I have gone astray like a lost sheep; seek thy servant; for I do not forget thy commandments''.
If you are not regenerate, then you are in the broad way that leads to destruction, no theology will help you.
''.....for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat:''
The wide gate is the gate of denominations and therefore denominational theology.
Died for all in what way? We know all are not saved, so what was the Christ's death all about for those that are not saved?Well, I was raised Southern Baptist and was taught that Christ died for all. And it made sense to me because i was only introduced to the verses that appeared to support that theology. But now that Christ is in me, I have a desire to know him and i am challenged with scripture like Romans 9. And to tell the truth my heart aches for the non-elect. not sure if that's right but that;s my feeling.
ARM
Died for all in what way? We know all are not saved, so what was the Christ's death all about for those that are not saved?
AMR
Yes, it's reformed- As in, it is the undoing of all the centuries of heresy.
People like assume control.. while saying that God is control. They say they chose God.. but it was the predisposition God put one in that made one choose.
Calvinism is the Gospel. Predestination and the elect are mentioned all through the Scriptures, and it's because there was a belief among the authors themselves that God decides all things. They would be skeptical of Arminian ideology before they ever would Calvinism, I can guarantee it.
Why? Paul says the Lord Jesus Christ died for all sin. Peter says he died for all sin of all time. Death reconciles God and sinners, just like as it is told in that Christmas carol. The cross is not salvation, it is reconciliation. Salvation is a gift. That gift is his life. People still have to accept that gift.
Romans 5
18 Therefore, as through one man’s offense judgment came to all men, resulting in condemnation, even so through one Man’s righteous act the free gift came to all men, resulting in justification of life.
I think Christ's death purchased common grace for all mankind.
Calvinism is a faulty belief system created by those who
misinterpret, misunderstand, and misrepresent the Bible
and God Himself.
I think Christ's death purchased common grace for all mankind.
Unconditional election
a reformed doctrine relating to Predestination that describes the actions and motives of God in eternity past, before He created the world, where he predestinated some people to receive salvation, the elect, and the rest he left to continue in their sins and receive the just punishment, eternal damnation, for their transgressions of God's law as outlined in the old and new Testaments of the Bible. God made these choices according to his own purposes apart from any conditions or qualities related to those persons.
All the way from the lineages of the wicked and God's chosen to now, Broseph. Every author of the Bible believed in Unconditional Election.
God providentially restrains evil.
Limited Atonement was and still is one i wrestle with.
Er the kind of love that saves the salvable.Your god loves his creation so much that he decided ahead of time who gets to spend an eternity in hell? What kind of love is that?
:nono: "Salvable." Understand? If you are salvable, you will be saved. On top of that, Calvinism is a pretty small section of Christianity. This then, isn't why people walk away from Christianity.And you wonder why people with any sense look at Christian theology and walk away.
The latter.How's that working our for you? Lots of evil in the world, either your reformed god is not very good at what you think he does or he allows certain evil.
So 'you' are the passenger rather than connected to this generation? "We" are responsible for what happens on this earth. News focuses on the few scant atrocities all-the-while missing the beautiful acts one human being does upon another 99.9% of time and by 99.9% of the people. You've been duped by media hype. As much as people want to think they are not media-driven drones, they certainly are. Atrocity is the 'least' thing happening in the world. We do have parents not doing a good job with their kids, but we can actually do something about those things.If the first then he is not very "godlike", if the second he is just playing with us for his own amusement.
It is exactly what the Universalist says to you: That God 'can' save everybody and that not doing so makes him somehow guilty. Calvinism isn't much different from you, when you address a universalists. God saves all that are salvable (to whatever extent that definition holds both to God and man). The separation between the Calvinist and another tends to be over EDF (God's Omniscience) and how God owns that knowledge, but owning knowledge doesn't by necessity implicate guilt. The God of my Calvinism should be innocent until 'proven' guilty and He is innocent.Do you have concerns about the idea of God damning people for unbelief when not believing is exactly what He intended they do?
Why are you trolling this thread, Jonah? It doesn't have a lot to do with your disgruntling. I was thinking of reporting 'trolling' for your posts. While they are trolling and not at all helpful to this thread, I thought to address perhaps a greater need of your own, but what is it? It has nothing to do with the specific topic of this thread. I'm trying to remember where there is a thread where the actual topic deals with these objections. Is there an 'Ask a Reformed' thread?
It is exactly what the Universalist says to you: That God 'can' save everybody and that not doing so makes him somehow guilty.
Calvinism isn't much different from you, when you address a universalists. God saves all that are salvable (to whatever extent that definition holds both to God and man).
The God of my Calvinism should be innocent until 'proven' guilty and He is innocent.
This is a little like asking if God is not good because many are going to hell, isn't it?Lon,
The idea that some are "unsavable" solely due to His decree for them in eternity past still doesn't pose a problem for you?
Really?
I think Christ's death purchased common grace for all mankind.