Armchair Apologist
Member
Thanks for the insight! I am certainly not like "Those" Calvinists you have mentioned and had I encountered such along the way, I bet I'd make Leighton Flowers look like he was reformed! I have dipped my toes into the Calvinist pool but have never actually took a swan dive into the deep end! I am unaware of Van's background but JonC said he was a former "Calvinist" and I am guessing that in order to walk away from Calvinism, he felt he also had to walk away from PSA for the reasons you have mentioned? This would explain quite a bit.I do have to say that @JonC and @Van are correct in that I have heard and read Calvinists clearly state that if you don't have limited atonement you don't have penal substitution. What they are doing in these arguments is defining penal substitution as each individual sin of each elect person being either forgiven or not atoned for at the time of Jesus death. The reasoning behind this would be that it is the only way sin can truly be dealt with in an actual way. Christ's death did something real and therefore it must be only for the elect or else there has to be another explanation of the atonement.
With penal substitution, that particular view of it (no pun intended) does indeed require a definite or particular atonement. For a hyper-Calvinist, one who believes that the elect are truly saved from God's decree or at least from the time of Christ's death - no problem. For a moderate Calvinist, or other groups that still believe in penal substitutionary atonement the general belief is that Christ has died, and upon faith and repentance, or upon becoming united with Christ, then the benefits of the atonement are applied.
Those groups do not buy John Owen's famous argument of did Christ die for all the sins of some or some of the sins of all, and therefore, how can you believe in a universal atonement and not be a true universalist. That is outside of the scope of this but I do have to admit that some Calvinists do indeed insist that no limited atonement, no penal substitution (as they define it). Furthermore, they don't want any help from Arminians, or Weslyans whose evidence that I have seen (from primary sources Jon, like Wesley and Arminius) indicate that they did indeed believe in penal substitutionary atonement - but some Calvinists, unfortunately, won't align with them on this. It makes things more complicated when defending PSA that half of our side doesn't consider arguments from Arminians as useful at all!
I do believe that the atonement is ultimately limited only to God's elect but probably differ from John Owen regarding the way I would arrive such a conclusion as I would examine the intent, extent, and application of the atonement in order to do so. I think we also have to remember that the concept of a "Limited Atonement" wasn't fully developed during Calvin's time but Beza who took much of Calvin's teachings to a logical supralapsarian extreme.
I am guessing that if we just set aside all of the "theories" and wrote out our actual position on the atonement in 500 words or less, we would come to the conclusion that we agree on far more than we disagree. Care to test this hypothesis?
