For Calvinists: Do you skip evangelizing because God chooses?

  • Christian Chat is a moderated online Christian community allowing Christians around the world to fellowship with each other in real time chat via webcam, voice, and text, with the Christian Chat app. You can also start or participate in a Bible-based discussion here in the Christian Chat Forums, where members can also share with each other their own videos, pictures, or favorite Christian music.

    If you are a Christian and need encouragement and fellowship, we're here for you! If you are not a Christian but interested in knowing more about Jesus our Lord, you're also welcome! Want to know what the Bible says, and how you can apply it to your life? Join us!

    To make new Christian friends now around the world, click here to join Christian Chat.

For Calvinists: Do you skip evangelizing because God chooses?

  • Yes.

    Votes: 2 8.7%
  • No.

    Votes: 21 91.3%

  • Total voters
    23
Sep 6, 2017
1,331
13
0
Meddico, you follow Arminius who was a Ramist and Infralapserianist. So you're a Dutch Remonstrandt.

(Since we're going to be outrageous in our attacks based on sheer arrogance and stupidity.)
I LOVE YOU as well my dear sister, My heart hurts for you, I know you have been deeply hurt for many years from what happened long ago, I am truly sorry that happened to you.
 

trofimus

Senior Member
Aug 17, 2015
10,684
794
113
I LOVE YOU as well my dear sister, My heart hurts for you, I know you have been deeply hurt for many years from what happened long ago, I am truly sorry that happened to you.
And what happened to you that you behave like a spoiled child, flooding threads you do not like with irrelevant posts?
 
Sep 6, 2017
1,331
13
0
Meddico, you follow Arminius who was a Ramist and Infralapserianist. So you're a Dutch Remonstrandt.

(Since we're going to be outrageous in our attacks based on sheer arrogance and stupidity.)
When I first saw your testimonies some time ago, I cried and my heart still cries.
 
D

Depleted

Guest
History disagrees with you.

Calvin was born into a Catholic family and baptized and confirmed Catholic. At 12 he was employed as a clerk to a catholic Bishop. His Father wanted all 3 of his Sons, including John, to join the priesthood. Calvin left the Catholic Church in 1530.
History disagrees with you.

I was born and raised RCC, was saved at 16, stayed RCC for 4 years, just-couldn't, became Arminian for 10-20 years, just-couldn't-anymore, and then became Reformed. Tell anyone who knows me that I'm Catholic and you'd get this look of surprise on their face, followed by hearty laughter. And that, even from my family who is still RCC. Just because you are born into a religion doesn't tell the rest of the story, and you knew that all along.

Kind of like blaming Christians on Hitler because he was Catholic. It's a silly game with no purpose other than you think you look good doing the pointing. Nope, the word is "silly," not "good."

(This was originally a poll for Calvinists, but the haters got to hate like Pharisees.)
 
Sep 6, 2017
1,331
13
0
And what happened to you that you behave like a spoiled child, flooding threads you do not like with irrelevant posts?
Yes brother, you too I Love You, you can say what you want to, too me I will never hold it against you or think anything different of you, for I Love You with all my heart. You are seeing me as I am,
 
D

Depleted

Guest
Yeah he used burning at the stake as well.
And Arminius lead millions astray from the word of God and is still doing that.

Considering the Lord forgave David for murdering Uriah, and forgave Paul for murdering Stephen, I think Calvin was forgiven. Arminius? I doubt it, but I don't know if he repented right before he died.
 
D

Depleted

Guest
Babies are innocent. God extends His grace to innocent babies. The self righteous must choose to receive the righteousness of Christ.

For the cause of Christ
Roger
And this is what Arminius brought to God's word -- a forever waver to stick things in it that weren't ever said.
 
Feb 28, 2016
11,311
2,972
113
JAMES 1:8.
A double minded man is unstable in all his ways.

and you are right about your last statement - 'You are seeing me as I am'.
hub and I and some others' are 'seeing you as you really are'...
your transparent as clear-glass...
 
Last edited:

notmyown

Senior Member
May 26, 2016
4,776
1,175
113
1. Angela, as always, I want to point out that I respect you, and appreciate you, before moving on to pick at something you've said.

You are my friend, as well as my sister in the Lord, and it's appropriate to be respectful of, and appreciate for, the brethren.


2. I'm not going to attack Calvinism here, I'm just going to nitpick a few points of logic...
and how, in this particular debate, we often use straw men without realizing it.


3. Although your testimony is moving, and powerful, and we SHOULD be using our personal testimonies in both our witnessing and our counseling... that does not mean some PARTICULAR POINT of your testimony makes a good PROOF for some particular little thing.

This isn't a matter of appreciating your testimony... this is a matter of logic, and whether or not some particular point of your testimony supports some particular point of this debate.

We all need to be careful of this...
myself included.


4. The point:
The final conclusion to your testimony, though very powerful and meaningful, makes a couple of logical errors in its "application" to this debate.
This is not to say I don't appreciate your testimony... this is just a matter of logical application to a particular debate point.

The issue:
When you state the reason you became reformed is because "I knew I never could have ever saved myself," ... although this is an important tenant of the christian faith, it cannot be applied, in this context, to this debate.

Why?
Because the other side of the debate ALSO believes the same thing.
It's like saying you became reformed because you believe in wearing socks and shoes...
but if you looked more closely, you'd see the other side also wears socks and shoes.

In this particular debate, your point carries no weight of logical necessity.

You don't have to be reformed to believe you cannot save yourself.
Most christians, who are evangelical, all believe the same.
Logical necessity cannot uphold the point "I became Reformed because of ABC" when the other side also believes in ABC.
This is a straw man.

It is a straw man, and a fair sized presumption, to assume the other side does NOT believe God alone saves them.
This is a classic straw man in this centuries old debate.

I know you are an honest person, and you don't intentionally set up straw men... but in theology, we all hear the straw men, and we sometimes have the straw men beaten into us... and we often use them without even thinking about it.

What the other side actually believes... dealing with the straw man:
Regarding this point about the other side believing the same thing: It is certain that, in traditional Arminianism, people DO believe they can lose their salvation... implying they "keep" their own salvation, and thereby implying they esentially "earn" their own salvation.

However, in the modern era, this is NOT what most "non calvinists" believe at all. And most people labeled as "Arminian" are NOT Arminian... this is just a label thrown on them.
I know VERY FEW evangelicals who actually hold to the Arminian view that they can lose their salvation. Labeling all non-calvinists as Arminian is a huge error, and is itself an act of setting up another straw man.




Conclusion: what has happened here?

1. By using a traditional straw man about the "other side's" beliefs, we create one particular distinction which DOES NOT REALLY EXIST, and then, on the grounds of this straw man distinction, we can easily claim "logical necessity" as the reason for choosing sides.

2. However, all of this is built not upon reality, but upon a straw man.

3. I am not accusing Angela of anything intentional or unethical. I think we use a plethora of straw men, CONTINUALLY, on BOTH SIDES of the Calvinist/Arminian debate... and we hear them so often we use them without thinking.

4. Let everyone take notice: if a good Christian woman like Angela, who is highly intelligent, and highly educated, and of good character, can make an occasional logical slip regarding these traditional straw men... then I think the rest of us are apt to do far worse, and we should be very careful in our reasoning.
dear Max,

i hope you know i hold you in high esteem, and stand in awe of your abilities regarding logic and reason. i am, perhaps, the most illogical creature!

buuuut... since we're picking at nits :)o), i thought you might like to know (because it's something i would like to know) we're not er, renting the faith.

not 'tenant', but rather tenet: a principle, belief, or doctrine, not to be confused with Tennant, that guy who played Doctor Who. :p

with love in Christ,
your sister, the grammar nazi :)
(yes, in spite of my apparent inability to capitalize, lol)
 
D

Depleted

Guest
I'm not teaching anything...I'm just saying babies that die never had a chance to commit sin...they do not understand it therefore they are innocent.
You're teaching babies are innocent. No biblical proof for that, yet you're teaching it anyway.
 

trofimus

Senior Member
Aug 17, 2015
10,684
794
113
You're teaching babies are innocent. No biblical proof for that, yet you're teaching it anyway.
Is there any biblical proof that babies, animals, people without mental abilities etc are guilty of something?
 
Feb 28, 2016
11,311
2,972
113
Originally Posted by maxwel
1. Angela, as always, I want to point out that I respect you, and appreciate you, before moving on to pick at something you've said.

You are my friend, as well as my sister in the Lord, and it's appropriate to be respectful of, and appreciate for, the brethren.


2. I'm not going to attack Calvinism here, I'm just going to nitpick a few points of logic...
and how, in this particular debate, we often use straw men without realizing it.


3. Although your testimony is moving, and powerful, and we SHOULD be using our personal testimonies in both our witnessing and our counseling... that does not mean some PARTICULAR POINT of your testimony makes a good PROOF for some particular little thing.

This isn't a matter of appreciating your testimony... this is a matter of logic, and whether or not some particular point of your testimony supports some particular point of this debate.

We all need to be careful of this...
myself included.


4. The point:
The final conclusion to your testimony, though very powerful and meaningful, makes a couple of logical errors in its "application" to this debate.
This is not to say I don't appreciate your testimony... this is just a matter of logical application to a particular debate point.

The issue:
When you state the reason you became reformed is because "I knew I never could have ever saved myself," ... although this is an important tenant of the christian faith, it cannot be applied, in this context, to this debate.

Why?
Because the other side of the debate ALSO believes the same thing.
It's like saying you became reformed because you believe in wearing socks and shoes...
but if you looked more closely, you'd see the other side also wears socks and shoes.

In this particular debate, your point carries no weight of logical necessity.

You don't have to be reformed to believe you cannot save yourself.
Most christians, who are evangelical, all believe the same.
Logical necessity cannot uphold the point "I became Reformed because of ABC" when the other side also believes in ABC.
This is a straw man.

It is a straw man, and a fair sized presumption, to assume the other side does NOT believe God alone saves them.
This is a classic straw man in this centuries old debate.

I know you are an honest person, and you don't intentionally set up straw men... but in theology, we all hear the straw men, and we sometimes have the straw men beaten into us... and we often use them without even thinking about it.

What the other side actually believes... dealing with the straw man:
Regarding this point about the other side believing the same thing: It is certain that, in traditional Arminianism, people DO believe they can lose their salvation... implying they "keep" their own salvation, and thereby implying they esentially "earn" their own salvation.

However, in the modern era, this is NOT what most "non calvinists" believe at all. And most people labeled as "Arminian" are NOT Arminian... this is just a label thrown on them.
I know VERY FEW evangelicals who actually hold to the Arminian view that they can lose their salvation. Labeling all non-calvinists as Arminian is a huge error, and is itself an act of setting up another straw man.




Conclusion: what has happened here?

1. By using a traditional straw man about the "other side's" beliefs, we create one particular distinction which DOES NOT REALLY EXIST, and then, on the grounds of this straw man distinction, we can easily claim "logical necessity" as the reason for choosing sides.

2. However, all of this is built not upon reality, but upon a straw man.

3. I am not accusing Angela of anything intentional or unethical. I think we use a plethora of straw men, CONTINUALLY, on BOTH SIDES of the Calvinist/Arminian debate... and we hear them so often we use them without thinking.

4. Let everyone take notice: if a good Christian woman like Angela, who is highly intelligent, and highly educated, and of good character, can make an occasional logical slip regarding these traditional straw men... then I think the rest of us are apt to do far worse, and we should be very careful in our reasoning.
====================================================

you've topped yourself, Max...

amazing!
 
D

Depleted

Guest
LOL... I think You just answered it for yourself..but I'll explain it the way I see it...no ones body is ever saved...Body and soul are two different things...the wages of sin is spiritual death...Everybody will physically die whether they sin or not. Hence, babies who have never sinned yet they still can die...
And teaching some more outside of the Bible. Where are you getting this? Because were Adam and Eve supposed to die, or was it part of the punishment for their sin?

In truth, you've been taught a lot of junk by whoever. (Probably people who considered themselves pastors, even though, obviously, they didn't have a grasp of scripture.) We're all taught a lot of junk along the way, but we're supposed to be studying the scripture to pick out the junk and trash it. When are you going to get to that point?

And, if you're going with "I do study the Bible," then show me where babies are innocent and the wages of sin is spiritual death, not physical death.

(Don't worry. Not holding my breath. Feel free to take months of research to try and prove either, because you won't be able to. BUT, at least, you'll be learning something of God's word on your own rather than accepting the junk being given to you.)
 

preacher4truth

Senior Member
Dec 28, 2016
9,171
2,718
113
Is there any biblical proof that babies, animals, people without mental abilities etc are guilty of something?
All humans outside of Christ are in Adam. Sympathetic and emotional ideologies aside.
 
D

Depleted

Guest
Please read all the verses right before that it's talking about spiritual death and spiritual life. Well unless you think you are never going to die and live forever on this earth:rolleyes:
Romans 6:22-23
22 But now being made free from sin, and become servants to God, ye have your fruit unto holiness, and the end everlasting life.
23 For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
You too. Read all the verses in Romans before this and after this, because Paul took 7.5 chapters just to prove absolutely no one can do anything to save ourselves. It's all in God's hands. (The next few chapters explains how it's all in God's hands. The last chapters tell what we are then supposed to do about it, since we ARE the ones God saved.)
 

trofimus

Senior Member
Aug 17, 2015
10,684
794
113
All humans outside of Christ are in Adam. Sympathetic and emotional ideologies aside.
How do you know they are outside of Christ?

Also, what would be the just reason (not just some "theological one") for them to burn in hell?
 
D

Depleted

Guest
What I believe is not "full blown Pelagianism".


^^^ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelagianism

I believe that original sin DID taint human nature, which is why all men sin, and need salvation.

But people CAN choose to do good.

Gen 3:
22) And the LORD God said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil: and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live for ever:

Deut 30:
15) See, I have set before thee this day life and good, and death and evil;
...
17) But if thine heart turn away, so that thou wilt not hear, but shalt be drawn away, and worship other gods, and serve them;
...
19) I call heaven and earth to record this day against you, that I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing: therefore choose life, that both thou and thy seed may live:

Ps 34:
14) Depart from evil, and do good; seek peace, and pursue it.

Prov 15:
3) The eyes of the LORD are in every place, beholding the evil and the good.

Isa 7:
15) Butter and honey shall he eat, that he may know to refuse the evil, and choose the good.

Rom 12:
21) Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good.

There are dozens more.
Semipelagian. Not much different. (We actually don't have to look up the words, or we wouldn't be using them in the first place.) All in all, you believe there is more than one way to God. You can get to him through Jesus or by being sinless. You might have "babies are innocent" as a third way. Often hard to count how many ways Pelagians and semipelagians have. What they really have in common is the belief some, or all, humans will make it to heaven by their own abilities, bypassing God all together. (And bypassing him in two ways -- that Jesus is the only way, and that heaven, not God, is the goal.)
 

1ofthem

Senior Member
Mar 30, 2016
3,729
1,912
113
No, lay that on Arminius, the one you follow.
I would but I just don't know him well enough...Guess I'll have to read up on him, and see what he's all about. :) Apparently there are more than just two extremes...Must be like extreme north, south, east, and west...I guess...but believe me when I say I don't want to follow any of those folks and end up on any one of those extremes. Just like Paul who didn't go chasing after the disciples, first thing, to ask them what to do. He said immediately he conferred not with flesh and blood.

I like the strait and narrow path myself...:)
 
Sep 6, 2017
1,331
13
0
JAMES 1:8.
A double minded man is unstable in all his ways.

and you are right about your last statement - 'You are seeing me as I am'.
hub and I and some others' are 'seeing you as you really are'...
your transparent as clear-glass...
Thank you for being honest with me, I've longed hidden myself, guarded my heart, though I truly desire others to love and have compassion for others, as Jesus does.