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Famous Four-Pointers

Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by StefanM, May 26, 2006.

  1. jw

    jw New Member

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    Here's a few Baptist 5 Pointers:

    Charles Spurgeon (1834-1892);
    Isaac Backus (1724-1806);
    W. B. Johnson (1782-1862)
    Abraham Booth (1734-1806);
    Adoniram Judson (1788-1850)
    James P. Boyce (1827-1888);
    Benjamin Keach (1640-1704)
    John Brine (1703-1765);
    William Kiffin (1616-1701)
    John A. Broadus (1827-1895);
    Hanserd Knollys (1599-1691)
    John Bunyan (1628-1688);
    John Leland (1754-1841)
    William Carey (1761-1834);
    Basil Manly Sr. (1798-1868)
    B. H. Carroll (1843-1914);
    Basil Manly Jr. (1825-1892)
    Alexander Carson (1776-1884);
    Patrick Hues Mell (1814-1888)
    John L. Dagg (1794-1884);
    Jesse Mercer (1769-1841)
    Edwin C. Dargan (1852-1930);
    J. M. Pendleton (1811-1891)
    Andrew Fuller (1754-1815);
    J. C. Philpot (1802-1869)
    Richard Furman (1755-1825);
    Arthur W. Pink (1886-1952)
    John Clarke (1609-1676);
    Luther Rice (1783-1836)
    J. B. Gambrell (1841-1921);
    John Rippon (1751-1836)
    John Gano (1727-1804);
    John C. Ryland (1723-1792)
    John Gill (1697-1771);
    John Skepp (c. 1670-1721)
    J. R. Graves (1820-1893);
    A. H. Strong (1836-1921)
    Robert Hall (1728-1791);
    John Spilsbery (1593-1668)
    Alva Hovey (1820-1903);
    H. Boyce Taylor (1870-1932)
    R. B. C. Howell (1801-1868);
    J. B. Tidwell (1870-1946)
    Henry Jessey (1601-1663);
    Francis Wayland (1796-1865)

    Among the roll call of Calvinistic Baptists can also be found four great leaders of the modern Baptist missionary movement: Adoniram Judson, Luther Rice, William Carey, and Andrew Fuller.
     
  2. webdog

    webdog Active Member
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    A starving man needs to be shown they are starving?
    Then you stand buy and watch the others in the restaurant die without doing anything?
    This is an assumption, but still, do you offer it, or do you hold them down and force feed them? If it is an offer, an offer cannot be an offer without the CHOICE of not accepting it.
    What sad ways to view God. On one hand you have someone who thinks that God only chose to buy food for some in a restaurant of "starving" people, and another who thinks that God purchased food for everyone, but didn't offer it to everyone. If God didn't offer it to everyone, after buying it for everyone, He is cruel and a respector of those He gave it to.
    God walked right into that restaurant, made the proclomation that all of their dinners were on Him, and offered it to everyone. Maybe what was on the menu was not sufficeint for some, or some didn't like what was being served, and they left. If that person starved, they would have nobody to blame but themselves, but the dinner was still paid for regardless.
     
  3. npetreley

    npetreley New Member

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    Theology by analogy. I love it.
     
  4. webdog

    webdog Active Member
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    Which "pointer" started it?
     
  5. Andy T.

    Andy T. Active Member

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    The restaurant/food analogies must go. They have nothing to do with Scripture. If any analogy applies to the atonement, it is one of debt being paid. When a debt is paid it is cancelled, period. The person is free. If the debt is not paid the person is still indebted and not free.
     
  6. jw

    jw New Member

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    I believe the argument goes that He did not give the salvation to all, but He simply purchased the salvation. Is not a single drop of Christ's blood sufficient to save all of mankind?

    I'm a 4 pointer myself... well, most days of the week [​IMG] I struggle back and forth on the issue. I just can't fully accept a limited atonement. There tends to be too much dancing around verses like this...

    1 John 2:2 And he is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world.

    You become almost as bad as the Arminians when you redefine "world" as "world of the elect" here. The context has nothing to do with a limited atonement. If you say "our" is John or the apostles and the whole world is the world of the elect, then what do you do with the very next verse using "we," which obviously refers to all Christians?

    Anyway.......
     
  7. timothy27

    timothy27 New Member

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    You are correct the food analogies are bad... forgive me.
     
  8. pituophis

    pituophis New Member

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    If we examine John's first letter we notice that when he uses "whole world" it may not necessarily mean "everyone." In 1 John 5:19, John says that "the whole world is under the control of the evil one." (NIV) I belive Paul said that those in Christ are no longer slaves to sin, but slave to righteousness. So this "whole world" may refer to those who are lost, whereas the "whole world" in 1 John 2:2 may refer to the elect (this would suppport Christ's claim to lay down His life for the SHEEP in John 10).
     
  9. timothy27

    timothy27 New Member

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    My point was to try to explain to npet that Christ's death in it's power was SUFFICIENT mean enough to cover the sins of the world but EFFECTIVE meaning it only effects or changes the elect.
     
  10. Magnetic Poles

    Magnetic Poles New Member

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    We interrupt this serious discussion for a humor break.

    Other pointers:

    Pointer Sisters
    [​IMG]

    Ten pointer
    [​IMG]

    English pointer
    [​IMG]

    Laser pointer
    [​IMG]

    Ok then, carry on!
     
  11. StefanM

    StefanM Well-Known Member
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    Any more 4-pointers?
     
  12. J.D.

    J.D. Active Member
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    Very funny Mangnetic Poles. Did you come up with that or did you find it on a web site? Check out purgatorio1.com.
     
  13. J.D.

    J.D. Active Member
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    I believe the argument goes that He did not give the salvation to all, but He simply purchased the salvation. Is not a single drop of Christ's blood sufficient to save all of mankind?

    I'm a 4 pointer myself... well, most days of the week [​IMG] I struggle back and forth on the issue. I just can't fully accept a limited atonement. There tends to be too much dancing around verses like this...

    1 John 2:2 And he is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world.

    You become almost as bad as the Arminians when you redefine "world" as "world of the elect" here. The context has nothing to do with a limited atonement. If you say "our" is John or the apostles and the whole world is the world of the elect, then what do you do with the very next verse using "we," which obviously refers to all Christians?

    Anyway.......
    </font>[/QUOTE]Hello jw - I know exactly how you feel, I had the same struggle for a while and used the same words (sufficient, effective, applicative, etc.)

    The trouble with the idea of sufficiency is that your missing the point of the atonement. The atonement IS EFFECTIVE - that is the point.

    One way to think of it, and probably the most theologically correct way, is this:

    Was the atonement (1) actual; or (2) hypothetical.

    A universal atonement is hypothetical. That is, it doesn't actually save anyone. It might save someone, if someone has some reserve of good left in them that would be willing to receive it.

    An actual atonement actually pays the penalty that was required. If the penalty is actually paid, then the recepients of the blessing are actually saved, not conditionaly or hypothetically.

    Also, the we are deterred from accepting the idea of limited atonement because it is put to us in the negative, rather than the positive. It is "limited" in a negative sense, in that the notion of limitation tells us what the atonement did NOT do.

    But we can better understand the doctrine if we place it in the light of what it DOES do - and that is, that it PROCURES and SECURES the salvation of the elect. A related teaching, that of propitiation, carries a similar pattern. Propitiation is the satisfaction of God's wrath, which can not be said in any case to apply to the lost, for if God's wrath is satisfied toward all people then the casting into the lake of fire doesn't happen, does it?

    Now we know the scripture says that He is the propitiation of our sins, but not our sins only, but the sins of the whole world. So what of the whole world? A word study will not help, the greek does not reveal the meaning, because words like world (kosmos) have to be understood in their context.

    And what is the context?

    Think of bible truths as being "thematic", that is, truth holds a consistent pattern throughout the course of the entire revalation. One of the central truths of the new testament, hidden in the old (a "mystery"), is that of the coming of the gentiles into the household of faith, a gathering of both jew and gentile into one body. Practically the whole NT should be seen in this light. It would exhaust me at this point to provide scripture reference on this, for there's barely a parable or Pauline passage that does not reveal this truth.

    Once you begin to understand that, it becomes easy, even obvious, that NT reference to the "whole world" are clearly references to God's inclusion of all nations, tribes, and tongues, in the elect body.

    Keep studying!
     
  14. 2BHizown

    2BHizown New Member

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    T U L I P

    In truth there are no 4-pointers, or christmas calvinists as the 5 points are mutually supportive and they stand or fall together! Like scripture, either take it all or leave it all. You cant have it both ways!
    Limited atonement is difficult for 'fair-minded' humans to accept. However, God's ways are far beyond our understanding. Then when you consider that all who come to Him He accepts, whosoever will may come and drink of the water of life freely. Why do any complain then? They're accepted if/when they come. They resist, are hostile, reject God, then complain about Limited Atonement! Makes no sense!
    Everyone gets what they want! If you truly want Christ, He will save you! If you reject Him you get what you want and go to hell! What could be more fair?
     
  15. Brandon C. Jones

    Brandon C. Jones New Member

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    My 2 Cents

    I stayed out of this thread for a while, but there's been other than Richard Baxter virtually no response to the OP. I would say that the lingo maybe to blame because from a reformed perspective those who differ from limited atonement are usually referred to as "dualists" or "low Calvinists." Dabney and Shedd both seem to be of this mindset. The dualist claims that both Christ died to pay the penalty for every person's sin and that his act saved those who believe (the elect).

    Here is a good explanation from David Ponter (theology list on yahoo) who can defend the dualist view quite well:

    "10 man stand condemned of X, and the same X for all. Theologically, as
    an aside of the story aspect: 4 happen to be elect, the remaining 6
    reprobate

    The Judge is also King, is also, therefore, Lawgiver and Lawmaker. He is
    the source of the Law. King has a Son. Son and King agree that Son will
    suffer X, the same X that was due to the 10.

    So, in this sense, the X of all 10, respectively, is imputed to the Son.
    Now, if X were 40 lashes, no one would say that the Son suffered 400
    lashes. No, the 40 he suffered would be sufficient for all 10.

    Now, King and Son agree to this but add that for any of the, Contrition
    is the condition set by the King in order for the sufferings of the Son
    to have effect for any of the 10.

    So now, the Son stands in for the 10, knowingly, willingly. He
    substitutes for the 10, insofar as the X due to each and any of them, he
    suffers.

    Hold all that.

    For the Augustianians, that's a fair description of how they saw the
    expiation of Christ. This was the view of most of the early Reformers,
    and early English and Lutheran Reformers.

    The Augustinians differed from the sem-Ps in that faith, the ability to
    meet the condition of contrition was given unconditionally to the 4.
    This is the sovereignty of King and God, as sourse of all law etc. Thats
    the mysterium of Augustinianism, and original Calvinism.

    Arminius, who was an Augustinian operated from out of that theological
    context. And there were Lutheran Arminians at the time.

    To this construction of expiation, Arminius decided to deny the
    Mysterium aspect. Thats his point of attack. He then proposed prevenient
    grace and free will.

    In response to him and others like him, some Calvinists reconstructed
    the expiation according to this fair enough description.

    10 men stand condemned to suffer X. King and Son decide that the Son
    would stand in for the 4 only, the 4 they had already decided to save.
    He does so. So only the X due to the 4 was imputed to Christ. He
    suffered 40 lashes only for them.

    That construction then gained ascendency in the Reformed community in
    its over-zeal to react to Arminianism. For the early Calvinists, the
    particularism is not located in the expiation itself, but in the decree
    to apply it to the elect, that's the mysterium of Calvinism. For Beza,
    Owen, Bucer, the mysterium is relocated in the expiaton itself. You, me
    in past times, most of the Calvinists here, have been trained to think
    according to the new construction and mysterium.

    So, when you now hear the old construction with its older mysterium, it
    sounds Arminian to you, exactly because of your relative point perspective.

    So for the different between classic Calvinism and Arminian thinking is
    the issie of the application of the expiation.

    Now, here is another aspect to this. The Augustinians said, Christ died
    for all sufficiently, for the elect efficiently. This now makes sense in
    the classic Augustian construction. The Son suffered the same X for all
    10, but in a sufficient sense. But he suffered for the 4 in an efficient
    sense, in that the intention is to apply the benefit of his substitution
    suffering to the 4.

    When many of us say Christ died for all sufficiently, for the elect
    efficiently, hardly anyone knows what that originally meant or how it
    could be possible. The Proteccidental benefits come to them, rain, sun
    etc. The Prots., Schol (PS from now on, or Owenists) were not happy with
    the old formula cos the Arminians were now saying, and quite obviously,
    Christ died for all sufficiently, for the elect according to bare
    foreknowledge, efficiently. And then Amyraut further complicated things
    cos he spotted the shift in how the expiation was understood from Calivn
    to the PS, so he stressed that in some sense, the death of Christ is
    equally related to every man, as he suffered the same death due to every
    man.

    So we now have a tradition overlaid on top of an earlier tradition.

    Now lets add something else. When Owen worked through all this, he was
    responding to two sorts of English dissenters, some Arminians and some
    Amyraldian types. For him, the argument for his version could work only
    if he added some new concepts. The expiation was a payment, a literal
    debt payment. The biblical ransom was not metaphor for deliverance, but
    a literal payment to the Father. Owen constructed sin along debt lines,
    and legal satisfaction along the lines of an unpaid but due debt. The
    Father is the creditor. And here now we see one of the earliest attempts
    to posit the double payment fallacy: a debt payment ipso facto remits
    debt, and a debt paid cannot be paid again. Owen constructed
    justification along these lines: the fine is paid, the man is justified.
    The bail-bond is paid, the man is justified. So for Owen, the shift in
    justification was moving to something paid, on the cross, literally. You
    and I just didn't realise we had been justified for a long time. The
    hypers ran with this, especially Gill, and posited eternal
    justification. Owen also systematised the idea that faith is purchased
    by the expiation. This was a mutation on the earlier medieval idea of
    the expiatoin of Christ meriting righteousness. So for all whom the
    expiation was made, faith was purchased. If faith was not given to a
    person, then it was not purchased for him, and therefore the expiation
    was not made for him. But its all fallacious for nowhere is it said that
    the expiation purchases faith, or that in and of itself it secures faith
    for all whom he was made. Thats a PS (rather bs;-) fabrication.

    It was Jonathan Edwards who put the original Calvin Humpty back
    together, with a little help from Grotius, Locke and the classics. But
    Edwards was only influencial in America, at Princeton, through C Hodge,
    who then influences Dabney, and Shedd and a few other minor players. But
    in England and Scotland, Owen is still supreme, as mediated now by
    Cunningham, and many others.

    So these are some of the assumptions that need to be worked through.
    From payment expiation, bunches of verses are exegeted accordingly,
    J3:16, 1:29, 1 j 2:2, 2 T2:6, etc etc. Hilasmos, in 2:2 is now seen as
    something effected and accomplished like a debt payment.

    So back to the 10. The Son suffers X, and so fulfills the oiginal
    necessary claims of the law against all 10 {note: not the added
    condition per se). Now there is no reason why any of them need be
    condemned by the law. But the King and Son set a further condition of
    contrition. 4 are contrite, as this is gifted by the King, the 6
    stubbornly refuse. So they end by suffering X completely themselves. So
    in a sense there is a double suffering, one in the surety, then again in
    the impenitent.


    > What about 2 Cor. 5:19? [the lines with the > are someone else's words that Dave is responding to here in the non >-lines --BJ]

    > that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not
    > counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the
    > message of reconciliation.

    > It reads to me as if God has already reconciled the world to Himself.
    > Hodge says, "... this reconciliation is said to be effected by the
    > death of Christ as a sacrifice ... what follows is not a proof of God
    > converting the world but it is a proof of Him being propitious"
    > (Commentary on 2 Cor). Calvin writes, "the anger of the Father has
    > been appeased by the sacrifice of the Son."

    > Do you agree with that?


    I do in the sense that God is now reconciliable and propitious but not
    actually reconciled. That part is the process.

    > How do you understand this verse? Was God rendered propitious toward
    > all men at that time or is God only reconciled to a man when God does
    > not count his trespasses against him through union with Christ?


    I would say both, as I see propitious as inclined to mercy, but in a way
    that is now legally possible to the Sinner, as sinner, as transgressor.

    You see common grace is God as inclined to mercy, to the sinner as
    creature, as image bearer. But now God can be merciful to the sinner as
    transgressor. Beforehand, God could only dispense wrath to the sinner as
    transgressor. But now that necessity has been removed, God can exercise
    the favour of a propitious inclination to the sinner as law-breaker. And
    this is why the Owenic version of common grace is also bankrupt and
    unable to account for many of the things we normally think with regard
    to common grace, like the free offer, legal obstacles being removed,
    delay of punishment, etc; for sure, it may account for rain and food.

    > It can't be the latter, since the choice of words is all wrong to
    > express the thought of application.

    You reading the words according to a certain paradigm. It only begins to
    make sense when one discards the Owenic paradigm. Then like a magic eye
    computer generated 3D image, you see it.

    Take care,
    David"

    I like this view of the atonement and I don't hold to the classic view of perserverance of the saints so I guess, technically, I'm a 3 point Calvinist, but I've found most theological nametags useless in that they're either too broad and say nothing substantive or too subjective and say so many different things to different people.

    blessings,
    BJ
     
  16. 2BHizown

    2BHizown New Member

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    What took place on the cross?

    On the cross Christ through His substitionary death for my sin actually paid for them, past, present and future sins of mine.
    If He died for the whole world, yet we know full well the whole world is not going to heaven as many have already built up quite a population in hell! So then if everyone in the world has had their sins forgiven then how and why are they still going to hell?
    No, He paid for the sins of the souls given to Him by His Father in eternity past, just like the bible says!! We have no way of knowing who these are. They are not marked. Therefore we follow the command of Christ and preach the gospel to every creature! Several places in scripture state that 'He had many people in that city' as a reason for sending someone there, in order that those elect would hear and respond to His gospel and come to salvation.
     
  17. bobbyd

    bobbyd New Member

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    Isn't Paige Patterson a 4 pointer?

    And btw...as for the foot analogies; what would you expect from a bunch of baptists?
     
  18. Dr. Bob

    Dr. Bob Administrator
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    R.V. Clearwaters, founder of Central Baptist Seminary in Minneapolis (leader in the north where we don't care WHAT the southern Baptists do :laugh: ) and pastor of the largest independent Baptist church in the Midwest, was famous for holding the position.

    His famous "all means all, that's all all means" is still quoted around.

    Guess he would be 4.5 since he taught that Christ's atonement had SOME benefits (nothing to do with salvation) for "all", but only efficacious for the elect.
     
  19. mnw

    mnw New Member

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    Did someone miss the statement on the OP about not discussion it, just listing some 4 pointers?
     
  20. J.D.

    J.D. Active Member
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    When you open a can of worms, they crawl all over the place! :)

    Oh well, what ya gonna do?
     
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