Since I am in no wise a "Calvinist," your brief comments are helpful to me. No plans to "convert," but I am not all that familiar with John Calvin. Thanks for the brief.*Lots of links - I think it'll take a bit to get one's feet wet on this particular discussion. It will help dispense some myths and strawmen concerning those who are Reformed. We are not all 5 Point Calvinists but think a good many of us are on TOL. I still wrestle between Amyraldian views and 5 points because there are good points on both sides of this discussion.
I would definitely view this thread as potentially instructive and beneficial. At the least, it could be used to link to for some who are so blatantly biased that their threads are caricatures against Calvinism. And, perhaps even correct a stigmatism or two. We really haven't had much Amyraldian discussion on TOL.
On to preliminaries:
Here is a Limited Atonement/Unconditional Election Rebuttal if one has the time and inclination.
It is basically the difference in the Reformed Community, between 5 pts TULIP Calvinism ( Such as RC Sproul and Amyraldism (Calvinist "light" (Such as John Piper).
The 5 points is right to insist on a logical necessity and the Amyraldist is endeavoring to reconcile all scriptures in a meaningful way.
This is a great discussion on TOL because it seeks to bridge gaps between doctrinal divides yet maintain those divides as scripturally necessary.
On TOL, we have extremes of doctrinal positions, even to the exclusion of other theology doctrines, as Christians. The movement of Amyraldianism in these past two centuries, seems to seek to bridge gaps by talking of the overall picture of who is in the Church universal and thus, there is a tendency in this view to also seek to placate all scriptures as well as, to some small degree, all scriptural views regarding soteriology. A universal atonement is the answer to that aim and goal: It is looking at 'who is in Christ' and is concerned with the church universal, rather than denominational/theological barriers. I 'think' the doctrine follows those scriptural lines of thinking, and are included in the works of Karl Barth etc.
I think anyone interested in this OP, would do well to brush up on Amyradianism, though I might be mistaken on that count. I'm currently learning a bit about the diversity in the Reformed Churches. Would it be correct to view the differences as being "hard" Calvinist vs "soft" Calvinists (called "Calminians" in the link)?
*Lots of links - I think it'll take a bit to get one's feet wet on this particular discussion. It will help dispense some myths and strawmen concerning those who are Reformed. We are not all 5 Point Calvinists but think a good many of us are on TOL. I still wrestle between Amyraldian views and 5 points because there are good points on both sides of this discussion.
I would definitely view this thread as potentially instructive and beneficial. At the least, it could be used to link to for some who are so blatantly biased that their threads are caricatures against Calvinism. And, perhaps even correct a stigmatism or two. We really haven't had much Amyraldian discussion on TOL.
On to preliminaries:
Here is a Limited Atonement/Unconditional Election Rebuttal if one has the time and inclination.
It is basically the difference in the Reformed Community, between 5 pts TULIP Calvinism ( Such as RC Sproul and Amyraldism (Calvinist "light" (Such as John Piper).
The 5 points is right to insist on a logical necessity and the Amyraldist is endeavoring to reconcile all scriptures in a meaningful way.
This is a great discussion on TOL because it seeks to bridge gaps between doctrinal divides yet maintain those divides as scripturally necessary.
On TOL, we have extremes of doctrinal positions, even to the exclusion of other theology doctrines, as Christians. The movement of Amyraldianism in these past two centuries, seems to seek to bridge gaps by talking of the overall picture of who is in the Church universal and thus, there is a tendency in this view to also seek to placate all scriptures as well as, to some small degree, all scriptural views regarding soteriology. A universal atonement is the answer to that aim and goal: It is looking at 'who is in Christ' and is concerned with the church universal, rather than denominational/theological barriers. I 'think' the doctrine follows those scriptural lines of thinking, and are included in the works of Karl Barth etc.
I think anyone interested in this OP, would do well to brush up on Amyradianism, though I might be mistaken on that count. I'm currently learning a bit about the diversity in the Reformed Churches. Would it be correct to view the differences as being "hard" Calvinist vs "soft" Calvinists (called "Calminians" in the link)?
Go soft on Limited Atonement, and the doctrines of Unconditional Election, Total Depravity, and Irrestible Grace are all undermined, and in too many instances, lost altogether.
Amyraut was tried by Reformers more than once for heresy, but escaped receiving full condemnation from the fathers.
Why? Because sound Reformers know that the wrong teaching of unlimited atonement throws the matter of salvation back to the sinner, and a free will decision must still be made to realize and apply the atonement and acquire grace.
I requested this thread be moved to ECT or Theology general. I hope that serves the purpose and intent.
Correction, some of the leaders of the Reformed church, mainly from the English speaking side of the tradition, after the death of John Knox, and in reaction to Arminius, met in Dort and gave articulation to the acrostic TULIP.
John Calvin, however, never wrote in his Institutes of "limited atonement"; nor did he write of "double predestination."
These terms developed as logical extensions of Calvin's thought but were never uttered by Calvin himself. There is and has long been a strong tradition within the Reformed church who believes that Calvin, had he worked his thoughts to their logical conclusions, would have promptly backed away from them. Barth and the Torrances stood at the pinnacle of that tradition.
Guys like George Hunsinger, Gary Deddo, Trevor Hart, Alan Torrance, Baxter Kruger, Gerrit Scott Dawson, Paul Molner, Alister McGrath, Elmer Colyer and others, all students of theirs and accomplished theologians in their own right teach in the line of that tradition. To lump them in with Arminians is to prove ignorance of your own heritage.
"Universal atonement" is not Arminianism, nor does it lead in that direction, nor for that matter is it Amyraldian.
Far from throwing salvation on the backs of sinners, it centers salvation where it ought to be: in Christ alone. In point of truth it is far closer to the teaching of John Calvin than are you.
In the account of the prodigal son, both sons were fully accepted by the father, and undeservedly so, but the one son walked away from his blessings and would have died in the absence of those blessings, had he not come to his senses. I think that is what 5280 is talking about. In this parable, I see the universal atonement coupled with the possibility of "salvation lost."
As to the use of the term "dialectic," is it a shame that we have lost the use of that word. 100 years ago, it was a very common word. Karl Marx's book, the Communist Manifesto, had, as a part of its title, "dialectical materialism." At the time, that phrase communicated his thinking. I am 70, and just 40 years ago, I could buy the Marx book with that term on its cover. That is not the case, today.
update: Revelatory truth, is not the result of an existential use of Hegelian process (dialectic). Rather, is it, in the final sense, the blessing of God's interaction between us and our reading of the written word in the spirit of II Pet 1:20-21.
Suffice it to say, that the "dialectic" as a word to describe biblical revelation, does not have a "synthesis" as a resolution to the conflict between "thesis" and the "antithetical" statement. In biblical terms, only God in Christ gives us the solution or synthesis. Whether you want to delve into the use of "dialectic" as a motif of biblical revelation or not, just know that "dialectic" is a hardcore "paradox." While we might see the solution to a paradox, a dialectic needs the involvement of God in Christ to give us answer to the tension between the positive statement and its negative counterpart. Hope this helps.
I think anyone interested in this OP, would do well to brush up on Amyradianism, though I might be mistaken on that count. I'm currently learning a bit about the diversity in the Reformed Churches. Would it be correct to view the differences as being "hard" Calvinist vs "soft" Calvinists (called "Calminians" in the link)?
Two problems with labels: they almost always fall short of catching the scope and essence of a movement, and are in most instances derogatory in nature, having been introduced by antagonists to the movement.
I am not happy with either of the labels above. The first narrows Universal Atonement to a basic objection to the article of limited atonement and ties it to a man who is not of the heritage from which I write. Barth et al were not Amyraldians. Before transferring to Fuller, I studied at Reformed Theological Seminary ~ about as Calvinistic a place as it gets. At Fuller I had professors from several of the major walks of our Faith. I've studied the Torrances, T.F. and J.B, extensively, am well introduced to Karl Barth, was taught by students of all three and have read works from many of their other students. In all of that, not once did I come across the name Amyraut or encounter "Amyraldianism." The first I've heard of either was here on TOL. As an influence in and to trends in the history of theology, it is insignificant.
The second label links Arminianism to Calvinism and seeks to extract the best of all worlds, the thought being that somewhere in the middle of the two is THE truth. Well guess what: the box is bigger than either one (as you [all] will discover if you'll but bear with me). The idea that Christ's atonement is "sufficient" for all but "effective" for only some, is equivocation. It either is atonement or it is not atonement. Don't talk about sufficiency if in the end there is no ultimacy attached to it. There are numerous theologians in this latter camp ~ John Piper, Charles Ryrie, and Norm Geisler being perhaps the most prominent.
That said, yes, I share tenets of beliefs from both of these camps (We'll go into them along the way). I do not ascribe to limited atonement as prescribed by Dortian Calvinists. My view of election is far narrower than theirs. Jesus Christ and he alone is the elect of God, the fulfillment of God's covenant cut with Abraham. Our "election" is as broad and inclusive as Christ's representation of humanity: I simply ask you, is Christ the second Adam or not? Don't catch yourself elevating Adam at the expense of Jesus Christ. Either Christ is the second representative of humanity or Paul is mistaken. Why is it so simple to ascribe universal scope and status to Adam but not to Christ his creator? I don't get it.
I'll go into more on this later on. For now, suffice it to say, either all means all or it means no-thing at all.
Good morning, BTW
If I may: It was ascribed to both and, in both cases, man had to choose it. That is the response God requires in either "creation".
What was intended for Adam, Adam didn't choose. Jesus, on the the otherhand, did.
Romans 5:12 implies an individual component to the "universal" nature of Adam's sin: clearly, the scriptures argue for individual involvement as we find our place in (into) Christ, as well. Not that we earn our status but, only, that we remain participants in the Blessing, i.e. the prodigal son, whose only "cause for loss" was the fact that he walked away from the blessing.If I may: It was ascribed to both and, in both cases, man had to choose it. That is the response God requires in either "creation".
What was intended for Adam, Adam didn't choose. Jesus, on the the otherhand, did.
CR, I understand your point, and thank you for making it; and while I respect it, I do not embrace it. Christ is not just "man" choosing to obey; He is also God electing to save. As such, of the two, He is the unique Son, mediating salvation from both poles. Read my "signature" below. Thanks again, though.
I tend to agree with this as an interpretation of Romans. Of course, further discussion would be off-topic but suffice that God looks at the heart not at the outward appearance. He looks not at your success rate at keeping the law but at your faith.These are not people with a orientation problem, but people who have given up because of their sin (we all have sins that continue in our lives, you know) and now simply serve darkness. What may not have been a part their lives, as a matter of will, is now a matter of choice-without-the-fight.
Romans 5:12 implies an individual component to the "universal" nature of Adam's sin: clearly, the scriptures argue for individual involvement as we find our place in (into) Christ, as well. Not that we earn our status but, only, that we remain participants in the Blessing, i.e. the prodigal son, whose only "cause for loss" was the fact that he walked away from the blessing.
Personally, I would not use the word "require," at this point in the discussion. While obedience is "required," at some level, it is only that disobedience that is sooooo egregious, so comprehensive, as to be a personal declaration of our intent not to worship and serve the living God. Romans, chapter one, does not tell of a God who gave up on a homosexual, but a God who gave up on one whose sin [homosexual behavior] was so comprehensive as to become a declaration that this sinful man had completely surrendered to evil, "I will now worship idols and NOT God; I will now leave the knowing of God behind; I will now serve the flesh to the exclusion of serving God; I will now follow after depravity, even as I accept and understand "depravity." and my wickedness will now go far far beyond my homosexuality (vv 29 and following). This fellow, lost for all time, is simply full of sin by his own will.
These are not people with a orientation problem, but people who have given up because of their sin (we all have sins that continue in our lives, you know) and now simply serve darkness. What may not have been a part their lives, as a matter of will, is now a matter of choice-without-the-fight.
As a retired pastor, back in the day, my highest concern, was in dealing with fellow Christian who could not get past a particular sin, and because of that failure (the universality of Adam's sin) they "quit the church" and walked away from God (the "individual component" I mentioned above). The glaring truth of Romans 7:25 is what I am talking about, as far as "complicit duplicity" is concerned. When we quit that existential dialectic, when we quit the problem as described in v 25, we are either in heaven, or we have decided to walk away from the frustrations of being adamic/humans.
At least, that is how I resolve the theoretical issue; the practical issue? well, I could only encourage my church members to continue in the struggle, sometimes failing to tell them I had the same temptation to walk away. It is the struggle that reminds us that we are alive in Christ, as much as the victories He gives us.
Hope this does not sound too heretical. But, it is how I unpack Paul in Romans.
2. Jesus could not be God and die. Simple reasoning here: God cannot die nor could be in anyway related to the cross except in the disposition of the MAN Jesus Who was in was in complete union with God.. In addition, only a man could be the offering for canceling out Adam's transgression.
If you disagree please be specific as to which points you don't accept.
Whatever particulars beside the above statement I am confident can be resolved over time. You say Jesus could not be God and die. I can agree with that. How can God cease being God? Impossible. He who is LIFE in absolute essence cannot cease being so. Speaking of logical absurdities, there it is! That said, you are faced with the same absurdity to contend that God the Logos Son ceased being God when taking on the form of humanity in incarnation. Again impossible. How can God cease being God, the essence of LIFE stop being so. He can't.
How can God cease being??? Well, how did God the create the universe and everything living in it? Answer that correctly to know that God is the great "I AM" what I need to be in order to accomplish My purposes.