• Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!

Emotional or Exegetical?

Status
Not open for further replies.

OldRegular

Well-Known Member
The more I learned about the holiness of God and how I am 100% the opposite of that the more "sense" the Doctrines of Grace made to me. And the more I weep for those who cannot see it, whether they be brethren or not.

Coming to a better understanding of myself and the holiness of God is one thing that brought me to understanding and accepting the Doctrines of Grace.
 

psalms109:31

Active Member
As a footnote, I find it interesting that everyone quotes Charles Haddon Spurgeon, a staunch defender of Calvinism. Just a passing thought.

Now, have I not answered these two questions honestly? I have endeavoured to give a scriptural reason for the dealings of God with man. He saves man by grace, and if men perish they perish justly by their own fault. "How," says some one, "do you reconcile these two doctrines?" My dear brethren, I never reconcile two friends, never. These two doctrines are friends with one another; for they are both in God's Word, and I shall not attempt to reconcile them. If you show me that they are enemies, then I will reconcile them. "But," says one, "there is a great deal of difficulty about them." Will you tell me what truth there is that has not difficulty about it? "But," he says, "I do not see it." Well, I do not ask you to see it; I ask you to believe it. There are many things in God's Word that are difficult, and that I cannot see, but they are there, and I believe them. I cannot see how God can be omnipotent and man be free; but it is so, and I believe it. "Well," says one, "I cannot understand it. My answer is, I am bound to make it as plain as I can, but if you have not any understanding, I cannot give you any; there I must leave it. But then, again, it is not a matter of understanding; it is a matter of faith. These two things are true; I do not see that they at all differ. However, if they did, I should say, if they appear to contradict one another, they do not really do so, because God never contradicts himself. And I should think in this I exhibited the power of my faith in God, that I could believe him, even when his word seemed to be contradictory. That is faith. Did not Abraham believe in God even when God's promise seemed to contradict his providence? Abraham was old, and Sarah was old, but God said Sarah should have a child. How can that be? said Abraham, for Sarah is old; and yet Abraham believed the promise, and Sarah had a son. There was a reconciliation between providence and promise; and if God can bring providence and promise together, he can bring doctrine and promise together. If I cannot do it, God can even in the world to come.
Now, let me just practically preach this for one minute. Oh, sinners, if ye perish, on your own head must be your doom. Conscience tells you this, and the Word of God confirms it. You shall not be able to lay your condemnation at any man's door but your own. If you perish you perish by suicide. You are your own destroyers, because you reject Christ, because you despise the birthright and sell it for that miserable mess of pottage—the pleasures of the world. It is a doctrine that thrills through me. Like a two-edged sword, I would make it pierce to the dividing asunder of the joints and marrow. If you are damned it shall be your own fault. If you are found in hell, your blood shall be on your own head. You shall bring the faggots to your own burning; you shall dig the iron for your own chains; and on your own head will be your doom. But if you are saved, it cannot be by your merits, it must be by grace—free, sovereign grace. The gospel is preached to you; it is this: "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved."

C.H Spurgeon

He is also at war against Hyper-Calvinist, many who try to reconcile out of the scripture God's desire for the wicked to repent and live and not one of us is not wicked. I rather preach that God desires all men to be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth and that is His will for all, but just like His will for Adam to not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Adam didn't just as we don't repent we will not live, because man be free with a free agency I believe in the doctrine of grace and man's free agency and do not try to reconcile them.

Then be right and not preach it.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Winman

Active Member

That is a good article. And you can see this author's analogy of an older brother influencing his younger brother to steal here at BB. Calvinists use intimidation on young or unlearned believers, if they do not accept Calvinism, then they are denying God's sovereignty. And just like the little brother who is intimidated into doing what he knows is wrong, Calvinists influence young or unlearned believers to believe what their conscience and sense of justice tells them is not right.
 

HeirofSalvation

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
That is a good article. And you can see this author's analogy of an older brother influencing his younger brother to steal here at BB. Calvinists use intimidation on young or unlearned believers, if they do not accept Calvinism, then they are denying God's sovereignty. And just like the little brother who is intimidated into doing what he knows is wrong, Calvinists influence young or unlearned believers to believe what their conscience and sense of justice tells them is not right.

Yes...Only I try, and the author of the article (though it is rather hard-hitting) tried to be irenic about it....He attempted to say that "Calvinism" sort of does that..not "Calvinists". He tried to re-word it a little on his blog which is linked to at the bottom of that page. From the article:

To be clear, we are not saying that Calvinists always call people to a hasty commitment to Calvinism. On the contrary, they will often say, “Take time to study and see what God’s word says.” It is not the Calvinist that pushes the disciple, but the accusing claims of Calvinism.

Calvinism is like a manipulative elder brother

We do see that here on BB over and over...I remember when as a younger believer I studied the claims of Calvinism that I worried myself that I was using my own "depraved sense of Justice" and "Replying to God"...and all that mess. It was a powerful urge to accept the claims of Calvinism. It is a sort of built-in guilt trip to that Theology which makes it rather comforting to accept actually. I would have been quite comfortable to be a Calvinist. I would have breathed a sigh of relief, to have finally been able to claim to myself that I "let go" and "let God be God" and blah blah blah. Calvinism, if accepted, gives one the feeling of possessing a monopoly on Truth and piety or it easily could. It is just a natural facet of the Theology itself, and also, I think, the way its apologists have for ages framed the nature of the debate. Ultimately...I think there are probably "Emotional" AND "Exegetical" influences for MOST Theologies...Arminianism, Calvinism et.al. and I think they work both FOR and AGAINST accepting or rejecting a Theology. The OP does point out, to me, that we all must be careful that we divorce ourselves from sheer emotion when it comes to discerning truth.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Winman

Active Member
Yes...Only I try, and the author of the article (though it is rather hard-hitting) tried to be irenic about it....He attempted to say that "Calvinism" sort of does that..not "Calvinists". He tried to re-word it a little on his blog which is linked to at the bottom of that page. From the article:

We do see that here on BB over and over...I remember when as a younger believer I studied the claims of Calvinism that I worried myself that I was using my own "depraved sense of Justice" and "Replying to God"...and all that mess. It was a powerful urge to accept the claims of Calvinism. It is a sort of built-in guilt trip to that Theology which makes it rather comforting to accept actually. I would have been quite comfortable to be a Calvinist. I would have breathed a sigh of relief, to have finally been able to claim to myself that I "let go" and "let God be God" and blah blah blah. Calvinism, if accepted, gives one the feeling of possessing a monopoly on Truth and piety or it easily could. It is just a natural facet of the Theology itself, and also, I think, the way its apologists have for ages framed the nature of the debate. Ultimately...I think there are probably "Emotional" AND "Exegetical" influences for MOST Theologies...Arminianism, Calvinism et.al. and I think they work both FOR and AGAINST accepting or rejecting a Theology. The OP does point out, to me, that we all must be careful that we divorce ourselves from sheer emotion when it comes to discerning truth.

Exactly. These "scholars" terrify a new or unlearned believer so that they are afraid to trust their own thoughts, but they assure you that their interpretations are correct, even when you see MUCH scripture that easily refutes their doctrine. The Catholic church did this for centuries, forbidding the layman from even reading the scriptures, and labeling anyone who disagreed with their interpretations a heretic. It is an old game.

But you are correct, and so is Luke to a degree, you cannot let your theology be ruled by emotions, this is where Universalism came in. Hell is real, and many people are going to hell, the scriptures clearly tell us this. Charles Taze Russell admitted he was terrified of hell as a youth, and so he simply argued it away, this is where Jehovah's Witnesses came from. It is interesting to know that Russell was raised a Presbyterian in his youth.
 

Mexdeaf

New Member
Calvinists often say things like this. It is never believable. Kind of like the character Uriah Heep in the novel David Copperfield who always said how humble he was.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uriah_Heep

That is 'below the belt' and uncalled for.

William Carey, Adoniram Judson, David Brainerd, John G. Paton, and Henry Martyn were all Calvinist missionaries.

Carey: Carey had a consuming concern for the souls of men. Once while still in England, he was criticized for preaching to the neglect of his shoe business. He replied "My real business is to preach the Gospel and win lost souls. I cobble shoes to pay expenses." While teaching, he would weep as he studied a map of his own making and say to his students "The people living in these areas are pagans. They're lost-hundreds of millions of them not knowing the Blessed Savior."

Judson: God indeed causes all things to work together for good to those who love Him as the following story from Adoniram's life so beautifully illustrates. As a result of Adoniram's 21 months in the squalid Burmese prison, for the rest of his life he carried the ugly marks made by the chains and iron shackles which had cruelly bound him. Undaunted, he asked for permission to enter another province where he might resume preaching the Gospel. The godless ruler indignantly denied his request, saying, "My people are not fools enough to listen to anything a missionary might SAY, but I fear they might be impressed by your SCARS and turn to your religion!"

[FONT=Times New Roman,Times]
Judson so fervently pursued his passion of evangelizing the Burmese that by 1839 recorded 47 baptisms. During 1832 there were 217 who came to Christ and 1144 baptisms in 1836.
[/FONT]
Brainerd said: [FONT=&quot][/FONT][FONT=&quot]"I care not where I go, or how I live, or what I endure so that I may save souls. When I sleep I dream of them; when I awake they are first in my thoughts…no amount of scholastic attainment, of able and profound exposition of brilliant and stirring eloquence can atone for the absence of a deep impassioned sympathetic love for human souls."

John G. Paton's son wrote: "How much my father's prayers impressed me," he writes, "I can never explain, nor could any stranger understand. When, on his knees, and all of us kneeling around him in family worship, he poured out his whole soul with tears for the conversion of the heathen world to the service of Jesus, and for every personal and domestic need, we all of us felt as if in the presence of the living Saviour, and learned to know and love Him as our divine Friend.

It was written of Henry Martyn: On one occasion during this time he was surrounded by a group of very fanatical Muslim clerics who were trying to convert him to Islam. In their vehement discussion with him, they blasphemed the name of Jesus Christ. Henry Martyn began to weep. This was a source of wonder to these Muslim fanatics. They asked him why he was weeping, for they had not personally injured him. He replied, "You have just blasphemed the name of my wonderful friend and Savior, Jesus Christ." This had a profound effect upon these Fundamentalist Muslims.[/FONT]
 

Mexdeaf

New Member
Charles Taze Russell admitted he was terrified of hell as a youth, and so he simply argued it away, this is where Jehovah's Witnesses came from. It is interesting to know that Russell was raised a Presbyterian in his youth.

So? Many current JW's are former Baptists. The broad brush paints in both directions.
 

Mexdeaf

New Member
That is a good article. And you can see this author's analogy of an older brother influencing his younger brother to steal here at BB. Calvinists use intimidation on young or unlearned believers, if they do not accept Calvinism, then they are denying God's sovereignty. And just like the little brother who is intimidated into doing what he knows is wrong, Calvinists influence young or unlearned believers to believe what their conscience and sense of justice tells them is not right.

Another false accusation.
 

Winman

Active Member
That is 'below the belt' and uncalled for.

Well, I do not get the impression that many Calvinists here at BB are full of compassion and weep over the lost. It might be the many insulting and snide responses of Calvinists here that give me this impression. What do you think?

I have no doubt that there have been many compassionate and loving Calvinists who sincerely weep and mourn over the lost.

But you did not say you weep over the lost, but those who disagree with the Doctrines of Grace as though they are the same thing. You imply that if a person disagrees with you they are lost. This is the very sort of intimidation that the article HoS posted addresses. Perhaps you weren't aware that you were using this tactic. Calvinists use this form of argument so often that it becomes almost second nature. You are simply using the same form of argument that was used on you.
 

humblethinker

Active Member
Why do or would you weep?

In no way am I denying that Mexdeaf or anyone else weeps. If I were calvinist, one reason I might weep would be because my emotions betrayed actuality, and that I will ever be tortured by the cognitive dissonance between my sense of mercy and good and my theology, or at least until I die.

I'm not saying that this is the reason that cals would weep, which is why I asked the question, I'd like to understand their state of sorrow.
 

Mexdeaf

New Member
Well, I do not get the impression that many Calvinists here at BB are full of compassion and weep over the lost. It might be the many insulting and snide responses of Calvinists here that give me this impression. What do you think?

I have no doubt that there have been many compassionate and loving Calvinists who sincerely weep and mourn over the lost.

But you did not say you weep over the lost, but those who disagree with the Doctrines of Grace as though they are the same thing. You imply that if a person disagrees with you they are lost. This is the very sort of intimidation that the article HoS posted addresses. Perhaps you weren't aware that you were using this tactic. Calvinists use this form of argument so often that it becomes almost second nature. You are simply using the same form of argument that was used on you.

You need to read my post more carefully and with less of a chip on your shoulder. God bless.
 

Mexdeaf

New Member
In no way am I denying that Mexdeaf or anyone else weeps. If I were calvinist, one reason I might weep would be because my emotions betrayed actuality, and that I will ever be tortured by the cognitive dissonance between my sense of mercy and good and my theology, or at least until I die.

I'm not saying that this is the reason that cals would weep, which is why I asked the question, I'd like to understand their state of sorrow.

Fair enough question. (Although you make it sound as I am off my rocker or something.) I hope I can make it somewhat clear- words are such weak things sometimes.

I weep for sorrow, because I remember the depths of my lostness and the great peril of my sin. I see how I was utterly without hope and dead to God and his promises.

Then I weep for joy because when I could not see Him, He helped me see. When I could not believe, He helped me to believe. When I could do nothing to save myself, He did it all for me. And I of all people, me- the scum of the earth, the chief of sinners, the most unworthy- who blasphemed His name, me He loved and chose from the foundation of the world to be His own.

And I weep because I wish others could see and feel God's grace as deeply as I feel it. I wish they could see it is not a prayer that saves them, or responding to an altar call, or anything they they could DO that saves them but only the mercy and grace of God.

For what it's worth, that is the best way I can honestly express it.

God bless.
 

Winman

Active Member
You need to read my post more carefully and with less of a chip on your shoulder. God bless.

I read your post carefully, here is what you said;

The more I learned about the holiness of God and how I am 100% the opposite of that the more "sense" the Doctrines of Grace made to me. And the more I weep for those who cannot see it, whether they be brethren or not.

You said that the more you learned about the holiness of God, that the more the "Doctrines of Grace" (Calvinism) made sense to you, and that you weep over those who cannot see this. Granted, you also said "whether they be brethren OR NOT" which is carefully worded so that you cannot be accused of saying non-Cals are not saved, but it also does not confirm that you believe they are. Clever.

This is the very technique or tactic discussed in the article HoS posted. Calvinists very subtly imply that those who do not agree with their doctrine are lost. I can think of one Calvinist in particular here at BB who uses this technique in almost every post he writes. He is always "praying" for us non-Cals that we come to a knowledge of truth... Others say it is "sad" that we have been deceived, etc...

Right.

I do not equate condescension with compassion.

I am glad that you weep and mourn for the lost, we all need to do that.
 

HeirofSalvation

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I was actually thrilled that Luke opened up this particular can...because I think it is worthy of discussion....I will, point by point, respond to where I think he is absolutely correct (and he is on many levels IMO) and then suggest some counter-arguments:
On this board there is a diversity of theologies. Some are Arminian, some are Calvinists, some are Molinists and many have no systematized theology but think of themselves as simply believing the Bible.

But we all have some things in common.

#1 We all believe the Bible is the infallible Word of God.

#2 We all interpret the Bible with very fallible minds and hearts.

So the most important thing we can do in this life is develop a very solid set of hermeneutics- rules whereby we fallible beings can dive into the infallible Word of God and mine its treasures.

If we don't we will carry in with us a great deal of fool's gold which dumps out everywhere and when we go to pick up what we perceive to be the gold of Scripture, it turns out to be fool's gold that fell out of our pockets upon entrance. Thus we are no more enriched than we were before we dove in.

One of those rules which keep us from doing so is- Dump the pockets of your heart and mind of all the preconceived ideas and strongly held emotional convictions BEFORE going into the Word of God.

Agreed on all points, and well-spoken.

You will absolutely, in my opinion, HAVE to do this if you are to ever become a Calvinist
.

No doubt about that.
Calvinism is, at first, a VERY hard pill to swallow.

Yes, it is. The gospel in general is....so anyone who is "Saved".....does have to swallow a hard-pill to begin with anyway:
Pe 2:7 Unto you therefore which believe [he is] precious: but unto them which be disobedient, the stone which the builders disallowed, the same is made the head of the corner,
1Pe 2:8 And a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence, [even to them] which stumble at the word, being disobedient: whereunto also they were appointed.


Here's why- it is purely exegetical and SEVERELY grates against the preconceived notions and emotional convictions of human beings.

Yes, it does grate against many Pre-concieved and emotional convictions of humans....but I think no Theology is "Purely exegetical"...in that, we all come from a certain Philosophical point of view. Ultimately. I cannot shake the conviction that Calvinism, Arminianism, Molinism....O.T....they all have certain philosophical pre-suppostitions which are unavoidable. Unfortunately, many who are passionate adherents simply are unaware of them. They do not understand the assumptions they bring into their reading of Scripture. Too many people truly "Believe" that they believe "Only" the Bible, and "nothing else" (with respect to their Theology)...but they then inadvertently bely that they assume too many (debatable) Philosophical assumptions which are not inherent in Scripture. I actually contend that the new-fangled term "Biblicist" is the most insultingly ignorant term extant in modern parlance. No ONE is a "Biblicist"....we all attempt to be, and that is the goal, but we know only what we CAN know, and we see through a glass darkly. It is of signifigance that in the Middle Ages (for instance) no one was even ALLOWED to study "Theology" until they had first formally learned Philosophy, Mathematics, Dialectic and so on.....

I think that many "non-calvinists" think the reason some of us are Calvinists is because we are cold hearted humans.

As a rule...they would be mistaken

They think we don't have the emotional problems of warm hearted humans who do not like to see God as one who is not doing all he can to save every human being in history.But we do.

They would again be mistaken, and you are correct, I think, some people do think that way.
They think our human sense of justice is terribly marred and we don't have a hard time seeing God as one who creates many who he knows he will destroy.
But we do.I grimace at those thoughts from time to time even now having been a Calvinists for several years.
NO doubt :applause:


BUT...

I came to the point where I was willing to lay aside those emotions because I recognized that they were as marred and unholy as the rest of me is and I came to the Scripture with empty pockets and said- "OK- what are you REALLY saying about these things? No matter how hard it is for my depraved sense of justice, no matter how badly it grates me emotionally- I want to know what you are REALLY saying."
I think that's how most Calvinists became Calvinists.

This is quite probably true of some Arms...but it is actually the words I bolded that I think are disputable....Given what I bolded, then here is where I think we disagree:

1.) Emotions:

It is not always strictly speaking an "emotional" issue, but an actually exegetical one...which truly believes propositionally that it is simply not "true" that God would actually want or desire for their to be those who are not saved...to wit:
We call to mind Scriptures such as:
Mic 7:18 Who [is] a God like unto thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage? he retaineth not his anger for ever, because he delighteth [in] mercy.

Eze 33:11 Say unto them, [As] I live, saith the Lord GOD, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked; but that the wicked turn from his way and live: turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways; for why will ye die, O house of Israel?


These are merely two examples...but what our Argument might be, is that, like a Calvinist...we TRULY BELIEVE that he worketh ALL things according to his OWN GOOD PLEASURE...

Eph 1:9 Having made known unto us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure which he hath purposed in himself:
Eph 1:10 That in the dispensation of the fulness of times he might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are on earth; [even] in him:


We honestly believe that He has TOLD us what his "GOOD PLEASURE" is...and that it does NOT involve the Death of the wicked:
Eze 33:11 Say unto them, [As] I live, saith the Lord GOD, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked;

I have no doubt that one's personal emotions are often too powerful in determining our Theology....But I think it can work in more ways than one. It is a difference often in our "Theology Proper" not our "Soteriology" wherein lies the disconnect. It seems (to me) that to the Calvinist, "Soteriology" tends to define their "Theology Proper" whereas to the Arminian (or non-Cal) that "Theology Proper" effects our "Soteriology".
In other words...we don't merely "dislike" Calvinism...we believe that it is a mis-representation of WHO God IS.


And I think, having been an Arminian for better than a dozen years, that the thing that keeps non-cals from seeing these truths is that they come to the Scriptures loaded with depraved human emotions and a thoroughly human and man-centered sense of justice.

"Emotions" I contend, are not the sole issue....this actually kind of smacks to me of Vulcans delineating their "logic" from human "emotion"...Moreover, we do not believe, I think, that a truly regenerate person is so very en-slaved to "depraved human emotions" as a non-regenerate person is. We tend to believe that we are being continually:
Rom 12:2 And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what [is] that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.

This suggests to us that we are not merely objecting to certain Calvinist assumptions because of a "depraved" point of view...but that, we have an indwelling Holy Spirit and that as we grow and learn more of God and his nature, and who he is...than our minds are truly transformed to where we think more LIKE Christ, and LIKE God. We believe we no longer:
1Cr 13:11 When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.

We believe that we have learned to develop a "Spidey-sense" :laugh: or a capacity for discernment about what God has told us is his NATURE...And we do not believe PROPOSITIONALLY....that God is at all "Glorified" or "Pleased" with the death of the wicked. We believe that as we "grow in grace" that (by definition) our no longer "depraved" but, rather, "regenerate" sense of what defines "justice" is worthy of respect.
Now, that does not mean that they don't mine all kinds of glorious treasures from the Word of God. They do. It does not mean that they are not very intelligent- many are. It does not mean that they aren't fine Christians- MANY of them are.
I love and respect many of my brethren who are not Calvinists.

And I return this compliment to my Calvinist Brethren :applause::thumbsup:

It means that, FROM THESE PARTICULAR DIFFICULT TRUTHS, their minds are veiled by human emotions.
Their doctrines along these lines then, I think, are emotional not exegetical

See above...I am glad you began an irenic thread about this. It is Very worthy of discussion. God Bless YOU!!
 
Last edited by a moderator:

OldRegular

Well-Known Member
Fair enough question. (Although you make it sound as I am off my rocker or something.) I hope I can make it somewhat clear- words are such weak things sometimes.

I weep for sorrow, because I remember the depths of my lostness and the great peril of my sin. I see how I was utterly without hope and dead to God and his promises.

Then I weep for joy because when I could not see Him, He helped me see. When I could not believe, He helped me to believe. When I could do nothing to save myself, He did it all for me. And I of all people, me- the scum of the earth, the chief of sinners, the most unworthy- who blasphemed His name, me He loved and chose from the foundation of the world to be His own.

And I weep because I wish others could see and feel God's grace as deeply as I feel it. I wish they could see it is not a prayer that saves them, or responding to an altar call, or anything they they could DO that saves them but only the mercy and grace of God.

For what it's worth, that is the best way I can honestly express it.

God bless.

I believe you sum up most eloquently the feelings of those who are willing to give God all glory and praise for saving us: "the scum of the earth, the chief of sinners, the most unworthy- who blasphemed His name, me [us] He loved and chose from the foundation of the world to be His own."

God Bless you Mexdeaf!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top