Calvinist Kitchen...stirring the pot

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SoulWeaver

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Oct 25, 2014
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“But the objection is not yet resolved, that if all things are done by the will of God, and men contrive nothing except by His will and ordination, then God is the author of all evils.”
John Calvin

God's sovereignty is not properly understood within the Calvinist dogma... rather than correctly understand how God works in the affairs of men... and brings His to pass without direct control Calvin makes God responsible for all evil.... Calvin has issues with his own will, and the will of others as did Augustine.

There is some irony in that Calvin who preached the "bondage of the will" had no problem putting other people's will under his bondage.

God in the end did give us "a will" and the ability to choose and this is evidenced throughout scripture.
I challenged Calvinism teachers here twice on the false dichotomy with Arminianism (both being Scripturally wrong, man's self will and God's will cannot exclude one another, since the Bible speaks of both they apparently work together in a mysterious way) and still get no reply from its teachers, yet they continue in other posts. By doing this they admit to being dishonest and not rightfully diving the Word. What reward do they hope to get out of it? Just stubbornly sticking to a teaching that doesn't pass the most basic criterion for a good teaching - not contradicting other parts of the Bible.
 

Grandpa

Senior Member
Jun 24, 2011
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If men have no choice or no ability to see the testimony of creation and or the teatimony of the invisible (Romans) then the statement (they are without excuse) has no purpose. If God made men for hell the above statement is idiotic........A man made for hell has no choice, even though creation testifies and makes them accountable and without excuse, yet they have no option or choice to believe even though everything testifies to them...

Calvinism is occultic...end of story!
People have no choice or no ability to save themselves.

You have a thread called "not by works" where you have argued for thousands of pages that Salvation is not by our works.

Calvinism agrees with you.
 

calibob

Sinner saved by grace
May 29, 2018
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Anaheim, Cali.
People have no choice or no ability to save themselves.

You have a thread called "not by works" where you have argued for thousands of pages that Salvation is not by our works.

Calvinism agrees with you.
Even a broken clock is correct twice a day!
 
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eternally-gratefull

Guest
I made all kinds of great decisions. The first one was reading the bible over and over from cover to cover. The second one was trying to do what Jesus commanded. The third one was asking the Lord for His Help when I found out I could not do the things He Commanded. All my prayers were perfectly aligned with the Will of God and attaining Salvation.

I was amazing. Or, I should say, the Lord and I were amazing...:ROFL:

And that was when I found out that it was the Lord that was leading me the whole time and not my "genius" and great decisions.
We agree brother. It was not my great power at most all I could do was sin because every thought was about self praise God he broke my pride
 
Apr 2, 2020
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People have no choice or no ability to save themselves.

You have a thread called "not by works" where you have argued for thousands of pages that Salvation is not by our works.

Calvinism agrees with you.
The thing about Calvinism is that it is close in all of its doctrine but takes them a step beyond.

The sad condition of man in his natural state of being blind and naked and doomed to die for sin is taken a step further to say that man is even unable to respond to a gospel message without first being regenerated.

The fact that in some manner God chooses those who are saved is twisted into God arbitrarily saving some and creating some for no reason besides condemning them.

The fact that some will not find salvation becomes a matter of design rather than being a consequence of their own choice.

The power of the grace of God to draw sinners and entice them becomes a sort of compulsion where their own desires are immaterial since God will simply make them desire things.

Perseverance of the saints is ok other than being built on the faulty premises that precede it.

Altogether it adds up to a perversion of grace that reduces human beings to objects rather than subjects of God's love.
 

Grandpa

Senior Member
Jun 24, 2011
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We agree brother. It was not my great power at most all I could do was sin because every thought was about self praise God he broke my pride
Me too.

If it wasn't lust it was coveting. If it wasn't coveting it was definitely pride.


We just go about explaining Gods Act of Salvation differently. We try to do it in a biblical way, but in the end it is still just a description of Gods Work in our lives.


That's why I usually don't get upset with these conversations. Everyone looks at things differently.

I've taken the "safe" route and place ALL the credit of Salvation right at Gods Feet.
 

SoulWeaver

Senior Member
Oct 25, 2014
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People have no choice or no ability to save themselves.

You have a thread called "not by works" where you have argued for thousands of pages that Salvation is not by our works.

Calvinism agrees with you.
People have no ability to save themselves, agreed. But people do have choice, otherwise many Scriptures simply make no sense. The notion of God's sovereignty in itself isn't wrong; Calvinism is wrong by ignoring the Scriptures that speak about choice and creating contradiction.

If we choose either, make man either a puppet of sovereign God's will (Calvinism), or completely autonomous from God's will (Arminianism), then we make the Bible argue against itself.

When we display righteousness that's of course thanks to God. But can we say the same for sin? Why would God repeat the phrase "(but) ye would not" 10 times in the Bible? According to Calvinism, that would mean that God forgot that He created them spiritually deaf, and then kept trying to speak to them in vain. Also, "choose ye this day whom ye shall serve"... And so forth.
 

Grandpa

Senior Member
Jun 24, 2011
11,551
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The thing about Calvinism is that it is close in all of its doctrine but takes them a step beyond.

The sad condition of man in his natural state of being blind and naked and doomed to die for sin is taken a step further to say that man is even unable to respond to a gospel message without first being regenerated.

The fact that in some manner God chooses those who are saved is twisted into God arbitrarily saving some and creating some for no reason besides condemning them.

The fact that some will not find salvation becomes a matter of design rather than being a consequence of their own choice.

The power of the grace of God to draw sinners and entice them becomes a sort of compulsion where their own desires are immaterial since God will simply make them desire things.

Perseverance of the saints is ok other than being built on the faulty premises that precede it.

Altogether it adds up to a perversion of grace that reduces human beings to objects rather than subjects of God's love.
In the Old Testament did Israel choose to be Israel?

Did Egypt choose to be Egypt?

Was Egypt holding the Hebrews as slaves a matter of design or was it a consequence of their own choice?


Depends on how you look at it, I suppose.

After being saved I have a completely different outlook on just about everything. I am more surprised than anything else when I find other people agreeing with me. I find myself, more and more, being a stranger in a strange land, with a unique outlook on most things.
 
Apr 2, 2020
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In the Old Testament did Israel choose to be Israel?

Did Egypt choose to be Egypt?

Was Egypt holding the Hebrews as slaves a matter of design or was it a consequence of their own choice?


Depends on how you look at it, I suppose.

After being saved I have a completely different outlook on just about everything. I am more surprised than anything else when I find other people agreeing with me. I find myself, more and more, being a stranger in a strange land, with a unique outlook on most things.
The first act Israel did as a nation was to put blood on their doorsteps marking themselves off voluntarily in Exodus 12. So yeah, they chose to embrace the faith of their fathers.

Given that Israel was a mixed multitude when it set out into the wilderness, individual Egyptians had the choice to place their trust in the God of Israel and to join with the passover through circumcision. Again, they had a choice.

The last one doesn't speak to the charge I leveled at Calvinism. The issue is not that God makes plans and sets things in motion, but that Calvinism paints the picture as if God's sole purpose in creating some is to torture them for all eternity because somehow Calvinists think torturing people gives God glory.

While our outlooks are different, I find myself in the same situation. The biggest issue with Calvinism is it attempts to break a tension that seems to be intentionally in the Bible, the tension between God's sovereignty and man's freedom. Calvin and those aligned with him since choose to place God's sovereignty as absolute without considering He may choose to limit that sovereignty to allow for men to be fully men and not merely puppets.
 

SoulWeaver

Senior Member
Oct 25, 2014
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Was Egypt holding the Hebrews as slaves a matter of design or was it a consequence of their own choice?
This is just my opinion, but I really believe it's both.
There are things we simply can't perceive from our human perspective, and that makes us think it must be either-or. But I believe this type of contradiction in the Bible is always an appearance because of our limited perspective.
 

Grandpa

Senior Member
Jun 24, 2011
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This is just my opinion, but I really believe it's both.
There are things we simply can't perceive from our human perspective, and that makes us think it must be either-or. But I believe this type of contradiction in the Bible is always an appearance because of our limited perspective.
I wonder about this as well.

How much is Gods pre-determination and how much is God just operating off the few choices that people will make.


Like those books we used to read in elementary school. If you choose this then go to page 33. If that then go to page 53. The book is already written. But your choices change the story. And God influences some (or more) of those choices.
 
Dec 28, 2016
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I wonder about this as well.

How much is Gods pre-determination and how much is God just operating off the few choices that people will make.


Like those books we used to read in elementary school. If you choose this then go to page 33. If that then go to page 53. The book is already written. But your choices change the story. And God influences some (or more) of those choices.
Sounds like Molinism to me. Would have to take a pass on that one.
 
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eternally-gratefull

Guest
The ability to choose what?

You can't choose something you don't believe in. Its an impossibility.

You can only choose what you do believe in.


And then we ask the simple question "where did that belief come from to begin with"?
Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God
 
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eternally-gratefull

Guest
The tax collector in Luke 18 is vindicated. The prideful calvinist, I mean Pharisee, on the other hand . . . 😊
The Pharisee thought he was righteous by his works.

Our brothers here do not believe this. This kind of stuff makes you look bad man. I mean really.
 

SoulWeaver

Senior Member
Oct 25, 2014
4,889
2,534
113
I wonder about this as well.

How much is Gods pre-determination and how much is God just operating off the few choices that people will make.

Like those books we used to read in elementary school. If you choose this then go to page 33. If that then go to page 53. The book is already written. But your choices change the story. And God influences some (or more) of those choices.
I am thinking more along the lines of 100% choice and 100% God's will at the same time (like Jesus being 100% God and 100% man).
But I am refraining from making any of my thoughts about it into a teaching. I believe it's hard to definitely support from the Bible any theory about how these things work together. We are told is that we are saved by God's will drawing us and God prepared the good works for the elect, but also God continually tells people to choose Him, to serve Him, to repent and get born again so they don't perish, and so forth. I stick to both of these as revealed pieces of the big picture that we don't yet see. :)
 

NOV25

Well-known member
Nov 23, 2019
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Heres one explanation of the doctrine of election.
 
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EleventhHour

Guest
The Pharisee thought he was righteous by his works.

Our brothers here do not believe this. This kind of stuff makes you look bad man. I mean really.
But many believe this as a Calvinist writer states...

“The perseverance of the saints means that all those who are truly born again will be kept by God’s power and will persevere as Christians until the end of their lives, and that only those who persevere until the end have been truly born again.”
Wayne Grundem

Sounds like works to me.
 
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eternally-gratefull

Guest
Me too.

If it wasn't lust it was coveting. If it wasn't coveting it was definitely pride.


We just go about explaining Gods Act of Salvation differently. We try to do it in a biblical way, but in the end it is still just a description of Gods Work in our lives.


That's why I usually don't get upset with these conversations. Everyone looks at things differently.

I've taken the "safe" route and place ALL the credit of Salvation right at Gods Feet.
I am with ya bro. That why I have no problem sharing what I see with you. You don’t feel attacked by you believe it words, and you do not attack back. Your a true brother in Christ
Wish others would learn how to be this way
 
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eternally-gratefull

Guest
But many believe this as a Calvinist writer states...

“The perseverance of the saints means that all those who are truly born again will be kept by God’s power and will persevere as Christians until the end of their lives, and that only those who persevere until the end have been truly born again.”
Wayne Grundem

Sounds like works to me.
Nothin in there sounds like works. Your looking for something that is not there
 
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