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Calvinists are synergists

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Revmitchell

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The pastor/preacher is not causing the other to get saved at all!

They are preaching the gospel, cant get saved without the gospel, romans 10 says how shall they hear without a preacher, they are at least playing an equal role to us when we believe.
 

Revmitchell

Well-Known Member
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Cals have used the tired old accusation."you don't know what that means" or "you don't understand the gospel" it has lost all sense of any real meaning and has become totally worthless.
 

Yeshua1

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Cals have used the tired old accusation."you don't know what that means" or "you don't understand the gospel" it has lost all sense of any real meaning and has become totally worthless.
None here were saved apart form the Holy Spirit "convincing them" that Jesus is the Lord, as we all came thru our own Paul Damascus road to God!
 

The Archangel

Well-Known Member
I understand that. However, if one believes others are "synergists"because they see in scripture that we must believe to be saved, then you must also claim to be a "synergist" if you believe man must preach the gospel for men to be saved. Else you are involved in an inconsistency.

Your understanding of "Synergist" is fallacious and flawed. Calvinists, such as myself, whole-heartedly agree we must believe to be saved. The hyper-Calvinist does not, but hyper-Calvinists are outside the scope of orthodoxy. Synergy, in soteriological discussions refers to man's cooperation with God in his own salvation, not his receiving of the gospel. So, at best you are ignorant; at worst you've set up a strawman.

What I am saying is not that the receiver of the gift of salvation works in cooperation but that the preacher of the gospel works in cooperation with God. Either way Cals do believe in synergism (as they put it) since they believe man should work with God to save other men by the preaching of the word.

The preacher does not work "in cooperation" with God. The preacher is the means of the delivering the gospel. Just as no one in their right mind would claim a newspaper delivery boy is involved in the publication of said newspaper, no one in their right mind can rightly claim that the preacher delivering the gospel has anything to do with the salvation it proclaims.

Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God. I didn't say it God did.

The power unto salvation is the gospel. I didn't say it God did.

Now, here's where a deeper problem shows itself. Faith comes by hearing, it is true. But, in your error, you assume everyone can hear. Jesus Himself says to His disciples that they'd been given eyes to see and ears to hear. Which clearly shows having ears to hear is not given to everyone. Furthermore, in the very same passage, is Jesus' own explanation of the Parable of the Sower. It is clear from His explanation that hearing the gospel is not necessarily the only factor, as if the gospel was some type of talisman.

In fact, Jesus' description of the Sower shows us that more than one factor is involved in the reception of the gospel and hearing is only one of those factors. Just as combustion requires three things (fuel, spark, and oxygen), the reception of the gospel requires multiple factors.

The Archangel
 

The Archangel

Well-Known Member
Holman's Christian Standard Bible says at I Thess 3:2 that Timothy is "God's coworker [Greek: synergon] in the gospel of Christ."

First, you are citing a textual variant. Many manuscripts substitute "servant" as opposed to co-worker. While I do think that "coworker" is the better reading, there is no small mess in the manuscripts in relation to this particular verse.

Second, given the entire corpus of Pauline literature, it is laughable (almost to the point of shooting milk out of one's nose) to think that Paul means what you're taking him to mean. Gordon Fee explains:


But what Paul almost certainly intended is what one finds in the TNIV, that Timothy, who ultimately belongs to God, is being commended first of all as Paul’s and Silas’s own “brother,” and further as their co-worker “in the gospel of Christ.” At the same time he is God’s person in all this missionary activity. Although Paul’s phrase for this activity may mean, as the TNIV has it, “in spreading the gospel of Christ” (which as an English idiom means to evangelize), he far more likely intended, “in the continuing work of the gospel of Christ,” which would thus include his past and present visit to Thessalonica.

Gordon D. Fee, The First and Second Letters to the Thessalonians, The New International Commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2009), 116.
In no way can Paul be meaning that Timothy is in some way participating in the life, death, and resurrection of Christ to affect the salvation of the Thessalonians.

The Archangel
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
What I am saying is not that the receiver of the gift of salvation works in cooperation but that the preacher of the gospel works in cooperation with God. Either way Cals do believe in synergism (as they put it) since they believe man should work with God to save other men by the preaching of the word.
Ah.....I misunderstood. I never thought about it in that direction.

We see hyper-Calvinists in the anti-missions movement but the average Calvinist dude believes the lost can't hear without a preacher. I guess the only glitch may be the "not I but Christ in me" argument. But it's still our striving. Again, Scripture presents it as both the work of God and our fighting the good fight.
 

HankD

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Sure... But it doesn't mean what you say it means. (see post above)

1 Thessalonians 3:2 And sent Timotheus, our brother, and minister of God, and our fellowlabourer in the gospel of Christ, to establish you, and to comfort you concerning your faith:

συνεργὸν sunergon
Friberg, UBS, Ludell Scott - Fellow laborers, fellow workers.

It's very plain what it means.

Lest we forget that Fellow Laborers are also of great importance to God in His harvest.
Apparently God does not just jettison workers into "The Harvest".

Luke 10:2 Therefore said he unto them, The harvest truly is great, but the labourers are few: pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he would send forth labourers into his harvest.

Though the glory goes to God this also seems to be a συνεργὸν (sunergon).

If the human effort/aspect of the Harvest is important to God so much so that it requires prayer on our part then it should be important to us as well and we get on our knees to petition "the Lord of the Harvest" for these laborers for the Harvest of the "elect" of our Sovereign God.

HankD
 

TCassidy

Late-Administator Emeritus
Administrator
It's very plain what it means.
I think his point was that respected manuscript evidence indicates the absence of συνεργὸν. Personally I believe the word is attested to by the majority of Greek manuscripts, so the point is not really the variant, but rather that Timothy was a fellow-laborer with Paul in the ministry, not that the preacher is the fellow-laborer with the sinner, contributing to the sinner's salvation (IE synergy). Which is simply preposterous. I have been preaching for almost 50 years and I have never saved anyone. God, and God alone, saves sin sick souls. :)
 

JonShaff

Fellow Servant
Site Supporter
Speaking of variants...

Mark 16:20 And they went forth, and preached every where, the Lord working with them, and confirming the word with signs following. Amen.
 

JonShaff

Fellow Servant
Site Supporter
2 Corinthians 4-6 has the same theme in mind...

2 Corinthians 6:1 We then, as workers together with him, beseech you also that ye receive not the grace of God in vain.
 
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