Skandelon
<b>Moderator</b>
The other thread was closed for whatever reason, so I didn't have opportunity to reply to this response from Luke and others:
First my original Quote:
First my original Quote:
Originally Posted by Skandelon
Merit - "deserve or be worthy of (something, esp. reward)"
In Calvinism, man comes to faith by a irresistible divine work of grace. Even so, does that faith merit or earn their salvation? In other words, are men saved by the "works" that God graciously caused them to do? Or are they saved by grace alone and the works are merely an outflow or fruit of that grace?
In non-Calvinism, we believe that faith and repentance are responses to God's gracious provisions...responses for which we are 'responsible' (response-abled). But, even still, the act of repenting or confessing in faith doesn't merit salvation. Someone doesn't deserve to be forgiven because they ask for it. The CHOICE to forgive anyone, even those who humbly confess, is all of Grace. God indeed will give grace to the humble, but its not BECAUSE they are humble, but because he is gracious. Their humility doesn't EARN or MERIT salvation. If not for grace, even the most faith filled and humble people in the world would die and go to hell.
Well, that depends on how you define RESPOND. If it is seen as a genuine, reaction, or reply of one agent in RESPONSE to the action or words of another agent, then I do not believe your deterministic system leaves room for this concept of a 'response.' (now, I admit, guys like Biblicist are less deterministic than you are, so I may address him a bit differently on this point).Luke's replies: First of all I will address this "response-able" thing you like so much.
No Calvinist has the slightest problem with God making creatures able to respond.
This is a perfect analogy of puppetry or robotics in your system and the very reason I reject your concept of response. If you think we are mere reactionary (pendulum like) creatures that God punishes for our innate reactions then so be it. But that makes about as much since as someone pulling the pendulum back and then when it swings the other way, taking the pendulum in your hands and yelling at at saying, "Why do you swing the other way! I told you not to do that!" and then slamming it to the ground and kicking it into a fire. It is just non-sense from my perspective. I know it makes since to you, but I'm telling you how I see that view.A pendulum is made "response-able". I pull it one way, it responds by rocking the other. It is enabled, in the design of it, to respond to my initial action. However it is responding EXACTLY as I designed it to respond doing exactly what I preordained it would do. Is it able to respond? Yes. Is it doing exactly what it was made to do? Yes. Is it independent? No.
Because I do consider that a moral 'response.' If anything it is a innate reflex or instinctive reaction...not a rational moral response.So... I don't see why you think this "response-able" stuff is any point in your favor.
Question begging...you're assuming determinism's premise is true when that is the very point up for debate.There is a reason why John chooses Christ and Jack rejects Him.
Either John is smarter or less depraved or whatever. But there is a reason.
So Jack then is dumber or more sinful or whatever.
So in your system, God is still electing to save some and leave the others to damnation.