No I don't. I have spoken to a great many of them. But I also realize that among the Calvinists here there are many stripes and colors of them--some more extreme than others.donnA said:you misunderstand.
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No I don't. I have spoken to a great many of them. But I also realize that among the Calvinists here there are many stripes and colors of them--some more extreme than others.donnA said:you misunderstand.
Is a half truth true? Or is it a lie? Or is it half a lie? Is half a lie half a false witness? etc.DHK said:Is there something in my above quote that is not true.
webdog said:Why don't you ask Isaiah40?![]()
DHK said:There are Calvinists here that deny that man has no free will, and cannot make any choice.
DHK said:The Calvinist believes that grace cannot be resisted, i.e., Irresistable Grace.
And yet, Stephen said about the Israelites "Why do ye always resist the Holy Spirit as your fathers did..."
Obviously it can be resisted, and has been many times. It is resisted because man has a free will to resist the drawing of the Holy Spirit, the conviction of the Holy Spirit. But Calvinisim says, No, this is impossible.
If I can't read one sentence in one breathe I don't bother reading it. Like I said once before, I am not "sola Westminster Confession of Faith," but sola scriptura. In the Other Denominations Forum we used to have a cult, in which the poster could never explain herself without first going to a website and then copying and pasting what was said in the website. She was unable to express her own doctrine in her own words. Your post reminds of that cult member. I am not insinuating that you are a cult member; only your manner of explanation.Rippon said:The following is from Chapter 10 , section 1 of the Westminster Confession of Faith .
All those whom God hath predestined unto life , and those only , he is pleased , in his appointed and accepted time , effectually to call , by his word and Spirit , out of that state of sin and death in which they are by nature , to grace and salvation by Jesus Christ ;enlightening their minds spiritually and savingly to understand the things of God ; taking away their heart of stone , and giving unto them an heart of flesh ; renewing their wills , and by his almighty power determining them to that which is good , and effectually drawing them to Jesus Christ ; yet so as they come most freely , being made willing by his grace .
I don't see anything in my quote to you that is false. You will have to point it out to me.reformedbeliever said:Is a half truth true? Or is it a lie? Or is it half a lie? Is half a lie half a false witness? etc.
psalms109:31 said:I'm not speaking of aminian, but for non-cals. We non-cals is a doctrine of grace which is more scriptual grace through faith. We are saved by grace through faith.
I know many calvinist who know how much faith is important to, but to say that if we are not calvinist our doctrine is not of grace , that is a lie.
psalms 109:31 said:The truth is not grace alone but grace through faith there is no other way. Which are faith did not come from our self ,but from God from His word.
DHK said:I don't see anything in my quote to you that is false. You will have to point it out to me.
Now if you are referring to the previous one which Pinoy already commented on, (as well as myself), then yes, the statement was intended to be an exagerration, a literary device known as hyperbole used to get a person's attention. And it worked, didn't it?
I am not sure if you are referring to me, but I will answer the post anyway. And I don't know what the statement is that you are referring to.pinoybaptist said:Nothing can be sadder than to have to read what a brother-in-Christ says of other brethren's beliefs, and the insinuations of such statement.
I believe the term "Doctrine of Grace" is thrown around quite loosely. I believe also in the "Doctrine of Grace," though I am not a Calvinist. Grace is the free unmerited favor of God. Christ died for our sins even though we didn't deserve it. It was nothing but love. We deserve eternal separation from God. God in his grace sent his son to die for us and pay the penalty that we deserve. That is grace.Calvinists and those who adhere to the Doctrine of Grace have so often been accused of twisting Scriptures and preaching lies, and when they argue back, they are said to be the ones who start the "fight".
"You hath he 'made alive' who were once dead in sins and trespasses."Twice, Paul states that previous to their regeneration, or their "coming to belief", if you will, they were "dead", that is to say, "spiritually dead". These are in Ephesians 2:1 and Colossians 2:13.
The Ephesians were spiritually dead, in the sense that they were not saved. I agree with that.What else can it be but "spiritually dead" ? The death that God warned Adam about was not physical death, obviously, for he did not die but lived hundreds of years, yet his close fellowship with his Creator was cut off.
In Eph.2:1, Paul refers to the Ephesians as those who were once not saved, and now were saved.Neither was Paul referring to the Ephesians or the Colossians as "resurrectees". They were regenerates. Formerly dead sinners whom the Savior reconciled with their Creator through His own blood.
I agree.Once Paul says of natural men (whether one likes to refer to them as "unregenerate", "reprobate", "unconverted", or "unsaved") that the things of God are foolishness and indiscernable to them, much less received as truth.
Because he is made in the image and likeness of God. God gave him a will, the right to choose between right and wrong. People make choices all the time. It is that characteristic that sets them apart from animals. How can you deny the free will of man, when you think of the many choices that you make every day. There is no one to force you.If the natural man, therefore, is in such spiritual condition, how then can he have a will which is contrary to a dead nature and can be manifested only by a living nature ?
Quite true.Even the Calvinist-haters of this board will concede that God cannot go against His own nature, which is good. He cannot sin. He cannot contradict Himself. He cannot not do good, even to those that hate Him, which is what Christ demonstrated while on this earth, when he fed people, healed them, ate with them, even though he knew that not all of those who milled about Him and companied with him loved Him.
Not entirely true. There are two resurrections. One day he will come back and the saved will be raptured or taken up with him, while the unsaved will be left behind to be resurrected at a later time. He is not coming back to separate the saved and unsaved. Rather there are two resurrections: one for the just and one for the unjust.He loved, because He knew what He said in His own Scriptures. To everything, there is a season.....His having loved them does not mean they will escape judgment. One day He will come back and separate the reprobate from the regenerate.
TrueGod is good, because that is His nature, and that is His nature because He is light and not darkness, life and not death. The Scripture refers to Him as the Father of lights.
You have twisted logic.If God, whose nature is good and who is the giver and source of life, cannot go against and outside of His own nature, how then is it that the natural man, which according to Scripture is dead in sin and trespasses (which I take to mean "deep fried" in sin and trespasses), able to possess more power and prerogative than the Creator, in that he is able to overcome his nature and exercise a free will that pleases His Creator with no help at all ?
No, unfortunately, it sadly shows how the Calvinist becomes so limited in his view of an all powerful God.Doesn't such a thought raise man higher than his Creator ?
God is not bound. He has given man a free choice. If you free yourself from the shackles of Calvinism, perhaps you will someday see this.Whereas his Creator is bound by His Holy and Good nature, the creature, on the other hand is not ?
DHK said:If I can't read one sentence in one breathe I don't bother reading it.
I expected when I wrote that statement that someone like yourself would respond in like manner. Of course, having already said that I was sola scriptura, I wasn't referring to the Scripture at all. If one can't put their own thoughts in their own words without referring to documents other than the Scriptures I feel sorry for them. Perhaps they should go back to school.Rippon said:I guess by 'breathe' you meant breath .
Hmm , if you can't read one sentence in one breath , you don't bother reading it . Well , I guess you haven't spent the needed time and energy to read Ephesians 1:7-12 in your KJV . That is six verses , but only one sentence .So , because you have an inability to read a long sentence I will give you the NIV rendering so you might be able to begin to grasp the content of the passage .It breaks it up into three sentences .
"In him we have redemption through his blood , the forgiveness of sins , in accordance with the riches of God's grace that he lavished on us with all wisdom and understanding . And he made known to us the mystery of his will according to his good pleasure , which he purposed in Christ , to be put into effect when the times will have reached their fulfillment -- to bring all things in heaven and on earth together under one head , even Christ . In him we were also chosen , having been predestined according to the plan of him who works out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will , in order that we , who were the first to hope in Christ , might be for the praise of his glory ."
DHK said:I expected when I wrote that statement that someone like yourself would respond in like manner. Of course, having already said that I was sola scriptura, I wasn't referring to the Scripture at all. If one can't put their own thoughts in their own words without referring to documents other than the Scriptures I feel sorry for them. Perhaps they should go back to school.
I figured you held to sola scriptura. Why not keep to that method. I prefer the KISS method of dialogue or debate. It works much better then obfiscuted, antiquated paragraphs, and generally using out-moded and garbled syntaxically-challenged and a grammatically problematic method of discussion.Rippon said:I do indeed hold to Sola Scriptura . Shame on you to say or suggest otherwise .But I am aware of your MO by now , so I am not surprised .
DHK said:I figured you held to sola scriptura. Why not keep to that method. I prefer the KISS method of dialogue or debate. It works much better then obfiscuted, antiquated paragraphs, and generally using out-moded and garbled syntaxically-challenged and a grammatically problematic method of discussion.
"Doctrine of Grace" is one thing --- "DoctrineS of Grace" is Calvinism/Reform Theology. The "DoctrineS of Grace" are like Calvies "Appendices" and "Glossary" to the Bible so that you can "really" tell what all the parts of the Bible say. Appendix 1 is likely the Westminister Confession, 2 the description of T-U-L-I-P, 3... well, you get the idea.I believe the term "Doctrine of Grace" is thrown around quite loosely.
rippon said:If the natural man, therefore, is in such spiritual condition, how then can he have a will which is contrary to a dead nature and can be manifested only by a living nature ?