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Faith From The Heart...

TCGreek

New Member
webdog said:
It comes from the ability to reason together with the Lord (Isaiah).

Some do, but it's not proper exegesis. "That" is referring back to the whole of "by grace are you saved through faith"...salvation. "That" is the gift of God...not faith.

1. Your own word says, "That" is referring back to the whole of "by grace are you saved through faith" ...salvation."

2. The whole of the statement you say, not part.

3. But now you say, Not the whole because we need to deal with "through."

4. Make up your mind, Is it the whole or part of it, the part not dealing with "through"?
 

webdog

Active Member
Site Supporter
1. Your own word says, "That" is referring back to the whole of "by grace are you saved through faith" ...salvation."
Correct. Salvation is the gift, not the phrase.
2. The whole of the statement you say, not part.
The whole of the statement is in reference to salvation. If I state "I'm going to California by the way of Texas, and I should be there by noon", it would be foolish to assume I was talking about arriving in Texas by noon.
3. But now you say, Not the whole because we need to deal with "through."
Like most calvinists do, you deliberately try to confuse the issue by playing word games.
4. Make up your mind, Is it the whole or part of it, the part not dealing with "through"?
It is made up...and I told you. The phrase is speaking about salvation as the gift, not individual prepositional phrases you want to yank out of context to support your theology.
 

TCGreek

New Member
webdog said:
Correct. Salvation is the gift, not the phrase.

The whole of the statement is in reference to salvation. If I state "I'm going to California by the way of Texas, and I should be there by noon", it would be foolish to assume I was talking about arriving in Texas by noon.

1. This is now different to what you said. You said that "That" referred to the whole statement, "by grace are you saved through faith."

2. Forgive me for misunderstanding that a whole statement is really not a whole statement.
 

Mr.M

New Member
I have a question. The Scriptures state "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved". The verb is present active...meaning YOU believe. If the believing were an action being done by another to me, meaning the Spirit believing or exercising faith for me, wouldn't it use the passive voice?

An example of that is where Paul commands us, "Be ye filled with the Spirit" and "Be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind" Both appear to be passive voices that recognize we yield and the action is done actually to us not by us. Both can be translated "Allow yourself to keep on being filled" Meaning yield to the filling. We don't actually do the action of being filled, that is done by the Spirit but we do act passively and yield. The same with being transformed. It appears passive meaning, "Allow yourself to keep on being transformed". Again the transformation is done by the spirit of God through the renewing of the mind. We cannot do the transforming but yield to it by learning Bible doctrine and the spirit transforming us.

However, when it says, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ" If the Spirit were doing the action as above, wouldn't it or shouldn't it rightly be a passive voice and not an active voice which reflects US doing the action?
 

webdog

Active Member
Site Supporter
TCGreek said:
1. This is now different to what you said. You said that "That" referred to the whole statement, "by grace are you saved through faith."

2. Forgive me for misunderstanding that a whole statement is really not a whole statement.
I think you know exactly what I meant. From the calvinist Barnes...

And that not of yourselves - That is, salvation does not proceed from yourselves. The word rendered "that" - τοῦτοtouto - is in the neuter gender, and the word "faith" - πίστιςpistis - is in the feminine. The word "that," therefore, does not refer particularly to faith, as being the gift of God, but to "the salvation by grace" of which he had been speaking. This is the interpretation of the passage which is the most obvious, and which is now generally conceded to be the true one; see Bloomfield. Many critics, however, as Doddridge, Beza, Piscator, and Chrysostom, maintain that the word "that" (τοῦτοtouto) refers to "faith" (πίστιςpistis); and Doddridge maintains that such a use is common in the New Testament. As a matter of grammar this opinion is certainly doubtful, if not untenable; but as a matter of theology it is a question of very little importance.


 
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TCGreek

New Member
webdog said:
I think you know exactly what I meant. From the calvinist Barnes...

As a matter of grammar this opinion is certainly doubtful, if not untenable; but as a matter of theology it is a question of very little importance.
[/SIZE]

Now we must ask ourselves, What is the theology behind this verse?
 

webdog

Active Member
Site Supporter
TCGreek said:
Now we must ask ourselves, What is the theology behind this verse?
The theology is that we are saved by grace through faith. Period.

RWP -
And that
(kai touto). Neuter, not feminine tautē, and so refers not to pistis (feminine) or to charis (feminine also), but to the act of being saved by grace conditioned on faith on our part. Paul shows that salvation does not have its source (ex humōn, out of you) in men, but from God. Besides, it is God’s gift (dōron) and not the result of our work.
 

TCGreek

New Member
webdog said:
The theology is that we are saved by grace through faith. Period.

RWP -
And that
(kai touto). Neuter, not feminine tautē, and so refers not to pistis (feminine) or to charis (feminine also), but to the act of being saved by grace conditioned on faith on our part. Paul shows that salvation does not have its source (ex humōn, out of you) in men, but from God. Besides, it is God’s gift (dōron) and not the result of our work.

We are both in agreement that we are save by grace through faith.
 

webdog

Active Member
Site Supporter
YES! I knew we could do it! :) We worked our way backwards :D

Immutable truth is immutable truth. The mechanics getting there is where the differences lie. It all comes back to God's grace, though and Jesus Christ.
 

TCGreek

New Member
webdog said:
YES! I knew we could do it! :) We worked our way backwards :D

Immutable truth is immutable truth. The mechanics getting there is where the differences lie. It all comes back to God's grace, though and Jesus Christ.

Afterall, Calvinists and non-Calvinists can agree at times.
 

Allan

Active Member
webdog said:
I think you know exactly what I meant. From the calvinist Barnes...

And that not of yourselves - That is, salvation does not proceed from yourselves. The word rendered "that" - τοῦτοtouto - is in the neuter gender, and the word "faith" - πίστιςpistis - is in the feminine. The word "that," therefore, does not refer particularly to faith, as being the gift of God, but to "the salvation by grace" of which he had been speaking. This is the interpretation of the passage which is the most obvious, and which is now generally conceded to be the true one; see Bloomfield. Many critics, however, as Doddridge, Beza, Piscator, and Chrysostom, maintain that the word "that" (τοῦτοtouto) refers to "faith" (πίστιςpistis); and Doddridge maintains that such a use is common in the New Testament. As a matter of grammar this opinion is certainly doubtful, if not untenable; but as a matter of theology it is a question of very little importance.


Yes, Barnes is one and so is Clarke and many others (editted in - specifically Calvinists) regarding this passage and that the 'gift' spoken of here is not of 'faith' but salvation. Even John Calvin in his commentary on this passage says the same. Now many of those who see the 'gift' HERE being salvation will also state that in other places there is the 'gift' of 'faith' as well but that THIS passage is not speaking to that end.
 
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Allan

Active Member
I think even the Non-Cals will agree that 'faith' can be seen as a 'gift', after a fashion.

What I mean by that is:
1. No man seeks after God
2. By mercy and grace God intervenes to reveal/draw
3. Man can yield faith toward the God he never would have sought after on his own.

So in a sense , the faith we have would have never been used in a saving manner toward God, if God had not come to us and revealed Truth. It can be seen as a 'gift' that way.

However, you are hard pressed to show that the "faith" scripture commands of us toward Christ is something that is specifically imparted to us that we may have life.
Logically it would make no sense regarding the regeneration/faith/salvation order.

When we are regenerated (made alive unto God), we therefore (in the Calvinstic view) are compelled to believe and have faith IN God. There is no option for the one regenerated; just as the sinner must reject and die so the regenerated must believe and live.

So then why is it necessary for God to 'give faith' to the one regenerated. Scripture never states that man is without the capcity to beleive it just states that man will not seek after God himself. We as fallen man can not and will not believe the Word of God because we understand it (or better it is interpreted) through the Natural man which is twisted and depraved by sin. Therefore it according to our own understanding will always be rejected because we can not see the truth through our sin. It blinds us.

This is why God must reveal truth to man directly and bypass the natural means (natural man) of how man aquires understanding which he makes his truth by believing it. Those regenerated must believe and have Faith, so why is it necessary to give them faith when it is the natural tendency and desire in the new nature of the one regenerated to believe already? Can one desire to do what one can not do? It makes no logical sense because IMO - because it is a logical fallicy.

edditted out....

This is why we see things like:
God draws us but we must believe.
God gives to us but we must partake.
God offers but we must receive.

Though salvaition is all of God, man must still believe.
 
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Rippon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Points Of Clarification

Adam Clarke ( d.1832 ) was certainly NOT a Calvinist . He was similiar to John Wesley in his soteriology .

Also , Albert Barnes (d. 1870 ) though kind of Calvinistic and helpful at times , bought into New England theology and that was not good .
 

Allan

Active Member
Allan said:
Yes, Barnes is one and so is Clarke and many others (editted in - specifically Calvinists) regarding this passage and that the 'gift' spoken of here is not of 'faith' but salvation. Even John Calvin in his commentary on this passage says the same. Now many of those who see the 'gift' HERE being salvation will also state that in other places there is the 'gift' of 'faith' as well but that THIS passage is not speaking to that end.
Allow me to clarify for the those who might misunderstand.

Here is a quote from Bloomfield off of Christian Classic Ethereal Library regarding the Commentaries of John Calvin on Eph 2:8-10 - it is a side note (not sure it was Calvins or it is just there to establish it as a commonly held view among many Calvinists:
http://www.ccel.org/ccel/calvin/calcom41.iv.iii.iii.html
124124 “ Καὶ τοῦτο οὐκ ἐξ ὑμῶν . It has been not a little debated, among both ancient and modern commentators, to what noun τοῦτο should be referred. Some say, to πίστωες ; others, to χάριτι ; though on the sense of πίστις they differ in their views. The reference seems, however, to be neither to the one nor to the other, but to the subject of the foregoing clause, salvation by grace, through faith in Christ and his gospel; a view, I find, adopted by Dr. Chandler, Dean Tucker, Dr. Macknight, and Dr. A. Clarke. And to show that this interpretation is not a mere novelty, I need only refer the reader to Theophylact, who thus explains: Οὐ τὴν πίστιν λέγει δῶρον Θεοῦ ἀλλὰ τὸ διὰ πίστεως σωθὴναι τοῦτο δῶρόν ἐστι Θεοῦ . ‘He does not say that faith is the gift of God; but to be saved by faith, this is the gift of God.’ Such also is the view adopted by Chrysostom and Theodoret.” — Bloomfield.

We see the that Bloomfield being a Calvinist himself and speaking of the position of other Calvinists (like himself) on the subject of if Eph 2:8-9 and if the gift is inclusive of 'faith' (spoken of specifically there) or not.
 
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ReformedBaptist

Well-Known Member
I think its interesting that folks have had a different view on the passage as to what the "that" is referring to entirely. Good info and thanks for sharing.

I do think the heart of the issue is whether an unregenerate man has the ability, in himself, to believe savingly on the Lord Jesus Christ. As I mentioned before, as I understand the teaching of our Lord Jesus the answer is emphatically no. While I believe Eph 2 is a supportive Scripture to this, it certainly is not the only place in Scripture that teaches this. The Gospel of John is a great place to turn, since this seems to a matter in need of clarity, to turn to in allowing Scripture to interpret Scripture.

I say the Gospel of John because our Lord Jesus Christ specifically address man's ability in the act of believing in Him, which He says no man can (ability) do.
 

David Lamb

Well-Known Member
Rippon said:
Adam Clarke ( d.1832 ) was certainly NOT a Calvinist . He was similiar to John Wesley in his soteriology .

Also , Albert Barnes (d. 1870 ) though kind of Calvinistic and helpful at times , bought into New England theology and that was not good .

Yes, a quick "Google" search brought me to a site which states that Albert Barnes

. . . was brought to trial for heresy by the Second Presbytery of Philadelphia, and was acquitted, but his accusers succeeded in having him suspended from the ministry, but he was again acquitted of heresy in 1836. The charges of heresy primarily related to his comments on Romans and the fact that Barnes broke from strict Calvinism and taught that man had free will to accept or deny the Gospel. He was a leader in the "New School" branch of the Presbyterian church.

That was at: http://www.swordsearcher.com/christian-authors/albert-barnes.html

Another site: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_Clarke says this about Clarke (and I realise that Wikipedia is not the most reliable source):

Clarke followed Wesley in opposing a Calvinistic scheme of salvation, preferring instead the Wesleyan-Arminian positions regarding predestination, prevenient grace, the offer of justification from God to all persons, entire sanctification, and assurance of salvation.​
 

ReformedBaptist

Well-Known Member
David Lamb said:
Yes, a quick "Google" search brought me to a site which states that Albert Barnes

. . . was brought to trial for heresy by the Second Presbytery of Philadelphia, and was acquitted, but his accusers succeeded in having him suspended from the ministry, but he was again acquitted of heresy in 1836. The charges of heresy primarily related to his comments on Romans and the fact that Barnes broke from strict Calvinism and taught that man had free will to accept or deny the Gospel. He was a leader in the "New School" branch of the Presbyterian church.

That was at: http://www.swordsearcher.com/christian-authors/albert-barnes.html

Another site: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_Clarke says this about Clarke (and I realise that Wikipedia is not the most reliable source):

Clarke followed Wesley in opposing a Calvinistic scheme of salvation, preferring instead the Wesleyan-Arminian positions regarding predestination, prevenient grace, the offer of justification from God to all persons, entire sanctification, and assurance of salvation.​

Great information David. Thanks for sharing.
 

Allan

Active Member
David Lamb said:
Yes, a quick "Google" search brought me to a site which states that Albert Barnes

. . . was brought to trial for heresy by the Second Presbytery of Philadelphia, and was acquitted, but his accusers succeeded in having him suspended from the ministry, but he was again acquitted of heresy in 1836. The charges of heresy primarily related to his comments on Romans and the fact that Barnes broke from strict Calvinism and taught that man had free will to accept or deny the Gospel. He was a leader in the "New School" branch of the Presbyterian church.

That was at: http://www.swordsearcher.com/christian-authors/albert-barnes.html

Another site: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_Clarke says this about Clarke (and I realise that Wikipedia is not the most reliable source):

Clarke followed Wesley in opposing a Calvinistic scheme of salvation, preferring instead the Wesleyan-Arminian positions regarding predestination, prevenient grace, the offer of justification from God to all persons, entire sanctification, and assurance of salvation.​
You are right about Adam Clarke. For some reason I kept thinking Gordon Clark which is my mistake. So regarding the notation on the Ethereal Library - though the others on the list are Calvinistic it is speaking to the issue of Calvinists and other Scholarly/Educateded men that see the Eph 2:8-9 passage concerning the 'gift' refering to salvation only.

But you can't insinuate Barnes was not a Calvinist. He was not found guilty of heresy in relation to his beliefs. Though he may not stick to the Supra view he was - IMO - undenably an Infra to say the least.
 
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