R.C. Sproul taught me this helpful diagnostic tool.
I often ask those who appeal to "free will" as the ultimate reason to explain why they've responded positively to God's call but "uncle Billy" has not. I ask them, are you smarter than uncle Billy? Are you more humble than uncle Billy? Are you more righteous than uncle Billy? To which they know they mustn't answer in the affirmative, but they also know they must. If one isn't aware of the trap he is about to walk into, or, if he is intellectually honest, he will answer in the affirmative. He will say that something in/about him was the deciding factor in his being saved over "uncle Billy" being saved.
Just two days ago I heard of such a case. A man said, "Yes. I believed because I had an advantage. I grew up in a Christian home so I heard the gospel preached and we read the Bible. . .". That answer, which was an honest one, inflicts a fatal wound to his own view, which has an equitable God giving all men, without exception, an equal shot at salvation.
The wiser non-Cals here on BB understand this dilemma, which is why one of two things happen in the threads that directly expose the error of Pelagianism - Arminianism. First, as @Reformed has already pointed out, they refuse to own their position, That's when they start sounding a lot like Calvinists, or, as in the case of a few of my threads, they simply don't respond, avoiding the issue altogether.
Why do you believe that you are saved and uncle Billy is not? Does "free will" explain it? If so, how?
*In case you hadn't already guessed, "Uncle Billy" is a fictitious relative who has heard the gospel but remains unrepentant.
I often ask those who appeal to "free will" as the ultimate reason to explain why they've responded positively to God's call but "uncle Billy" has not. I ask them, are you smarter than uncle Billy? Are you more humble than uncle Billy? Are you more righteous than uncle Billy? To which they know they mustn't answer in the affirmative, but they also know they must. If one isn't aware of the trap he is about to walk into, or, if he is intellectually honest, he will answer in the affirmative. He will say that something in/about him was the deciding factor in his being saved over "uncle Billy" being saved.
Just two days ago I heard of such a case. A man said, "Yes. I believed because I had an advantage. I grew up in a Christian home so I heard the gospel preached and we read the Bible. . .". That answer, which was an honest one, inflicts a fatal wound to his own view, which has an equitable God giving all men, without exception, an equal shot at salvation.
The wiser non-Cals here on BB understand this dilemma, which is why one of two things happen in the threads that directly expose the error of Pelagianism - Arminianism. First, as @Reformed has already pointed out, they refuse to own their position, That's when they start sounding a lot like Calvinists, or, as in the case of a few of my threads, they simply don't respond, avoiding the issue altogether.
Why do you believe that you are saved and uncle Billy is not? Does "free will" explain it? If so, how?
*In case you hadn't already guessed, "Uncle Billy" is a fictitious relative who has heard the gospel but remains unrepentant.