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T.u.l.i.p

TULIP - I accept the following points

  • Total Depravity

    Votes: 52 76.5%
  • Unconditional Election

    Votes: 44 64.7%
  • Limited atonement

    Votes: 33 48.5%
  • Irresistible Grace

    Votes: 41 60.3%
  • Perseverance of the Saints

    Votes: 57 83.8%
  • I believe in 6 or more of the 5 points

    Votes: 7 10.3%
  • I do not accept any points of TULIP

    Votes: 7 10.3%

  • Total voters
    68
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asterisktom

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Not having read a definition for that "6 or more" I defined it myself to say that the TULIP does not accurately cover all that is entailed in the doctrines of grace.
 

J.D.

Active Member
Site Supporter
Full-bore 5 pointer here.

I noticed no zero-pointers have tuned in yet.

Come on you Arminians out there ,... Where are you?
 
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asterisktom

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
None of the inventions of modern man. I choose scripture.

What are you doing on BaptistBoard then? It is an invention of man too. All TULIP is is an attempted summary of essential scripture truth. I don't believe it goes far enough, but that is a different matter. But this board and the acronym TULIP are just based on what is in the Bible.
 

FR7 Baptist

Active Member
Full-bore 5 pointer here.

I noticed no zero-pointers have tuned in yet.

Come on you Arminians out there, ... Where are you?

If someone is a zero-pointer, then he wouldn't be an Arminian. Arminians believe in total depravity just like Calvinists.
 
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J.D.

Active Member
Site Supporter
If someone is a zero-pointer, then he wouldn't be an Arminian. Arminians believe in total depravity just like Calvinists.
A real, Wesleyan-Arminian would agree with the "T". But I've read several works by modern Baptists that oppose all 5 points. Most of them insist that man has the ability to believe. The Calvinist's "T" has man unable (inability) to believe until after the irresistable work of the Holy Spirit enable him. Most of today's Baptists, Evangelicals, Fundamentalists, Charismatics, cats, dogs, etc., are actually more like Pelagians than Arminians.

Most Baptists today believe in Calvin's salvation to keep them saved, but believe in Pelagius' salvation to get them saved.
 

FR7 Baptist

Active Member
A real, Wesleyan-Arminian would agree with the "T". But I've read several works by modern Baptists that oppose all 5 points. Most of them insist that man has the ability to believe. The Calvinist's "T" has man unable (inability) to believe until after the irresistable work of the Holy Spirit enable him.

I'm an Arminian with the caveat that I don't tend to believe it is possible for a true believer to cease having faith in Christ. I do believe that if, as a hypothetical, a true believer did finally lose faith, he would not be saved.

Most of today's Baptists, Evangelicals, Fundamentalists, Charismatics, cats, dogs, etc., are actually more like Pelagians than Arminians.

That's true, and very unfortunate.
 

J.D.

Active Member
Site Supporter
I'm an Arminian with the caveat that I don't tend to believe it is possible for a true believer to cease having faith in Christ. I do believe that if, as a hypothetical, a true believer did finally lose faith, he would not be saved.



That's true, and very unfortunate.
That's an interesting caveat. Have you held to it for a long time?
 

FR7 Baptist

Active Member
That's an interesting caveat. Have you held to it for a long time?

I've probably had this position for a year and a half or so. I didn't really start thinking about this issue until I was about sixteen and it took me a couple of years and a lot of reading and studying the issue deeply to start to really form a semi-solid position. I'm not dogmatic about it as it's very complicated to sift through all the theological and philosophical issues involved.

The main reason for my caveat is that I believe that regeneration involves such a fundamental transformation in one's nature and disposition towards God that I find it difficult to believe that a person would forsake it. I do find it possible, in theory, to forsake Christ and thereby forfeit salvation, but I don't think it actually ever happens.
 

Tom Butler

New Member
TUPLIP is stuplid.

I like R.O.S.E.S. by Timothy George.

I like ROSES, too. It is less in-your-face, without backing away from the doctrines of grace.

BTW, here are the ROSES

Radical depravity
Overcoming Grace
Sovereign Election
Eternal Life
Singular Redemption

For commentary on ROSES, Google Timothy George ROES and it'll flesh out the acronym.
 
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Havensdad

New Member
I like ROSES, too. It is less in-your-face, without backing away from the doctrines of grace.

BTW, here are the ROSES

Radical depravity
Overcoming Grace
Sovereign Election
Eternal Life
Singular Redemption

For commentary on ROSES, Google Timothy George ROES and it'll flesh out the acronym.

Timothy George stole (probably not intentionally) the acronym "ROSES" from Craig Skinner, FYI. Skinner developed a slightly different form of this alternative system, centered around his interpretation of Spurgeon's beliefs, long before George came up with it.
 

Jim1999

<img src =/Jim1999.jpg>
TULIP for me. Certainly there are more points to calvinism, but the tulip sums it up well.

The roses thing I don't get at all.

Cheers,

Jim
 
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