Tom Butler
New Member
Obviously Cary believed in free-will as well as election.
Yep, he did. And here's a list of other Calvinists who share that belief:
John Gill
A. H. StrongA determination of the will to some one thing, is not contrary to choice, for the human will of Christ, and the will of angels and glorified saints, are determined only to that which is good, and yet they both choose and do that good freely . . . . Besides, neither the disability of man, nor the efficacious influence of grace, at all hinder the freedom of human actions. A wicked man, who is under the strongest bias, power, and dominion of his lusts, acts freely in fulfilling of them; as does also a good man, in doing what is spiritually good; and never more so, than when he is under the most powerful influences of divine grace. (Cause of God and Truth, pp. 184, 185).
Jonathan EdwardsFree agency is the power of self-determination in view of motives or man's power (a) to choose between motives, and (b) direct his subsequent activity according to the motive thus chosen (Systematic Theology, p. 176).
To sum up, man always acts freely within his nature.....the "power, opportunity or
advantage that any one has to do as he pleases. (Freedom of the will p. 17).
Even if we see this question differently, we have a clear, unmistakable mandate to carry the gospel wherever we go, and wherever we can. When Jesus said "you shall be my witnesses, in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria, and to the uttermost parts of the earth," it was not just a mandate. It was an assumption that believers would be witnesses as a natural outgrowth of their faith.
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