DanielFive
New Member
Brother Bill,
The question on the surface seems fair enough, but it is actually convoluted because the Word of God does not teach that in God's Sovereignty, man is without volition, or the power of choice.
Rather, it teaches that given the choice, and because of the fall of Adam, the will of man is constrained or in bondage, that he is inclined to choose evil.
We must start with the basic Biblical truth that the heart of man is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked (Jeremiah 17:9) where man is in bondage to sin, and yet he is accountable for his evil.
Sovereignty does not negate this human responsibility, rather, it is the gift of God in propitiation for it. His right to redeem from among these wicked, whosoever he elects (chooses).
Personally I think the difference in your beliefs and mine are based on our views of what happened in the Garden of Eden and what the fall meant to Adams descendants.
You always start off from the premise that God created man in bondage to sin. If that was the case you might have a point when you say that the Calvinist view makes God unjust in only saving the elect. My point is that we (through Adam) are responsible for our own depravity and bondage therefore God is merciful in that He chose to save some.
In essence you are saying that God can only be just if He saves ALL men as if He had an obligation to save any.
Would you agree that this is where the difference lies?
The question on the surface seems fair enough, but it is actually convoluted because the Word of God does not teach that in God's Sovereignty, man is without volition, or the power of choice.
Rather, it teaches that given the choice, and because of the fall of Adam, the will of man is constrained or in bondage, that he is inclined to choose evil.
We must start with the basic Biblical truth that the heart of man is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked (Jeremiah 17:9) where man is in bondage to sin, and yet he is accountable for his evil.
Sovereignty does not negate this human responsibility, rather, it is the gift of God in propitiation for it. His right to redeem from among these wicked, whosoever he elects (chooses).
Personally I think the difference in your beliefs and mine are based on our views of what happened in the Garden of Eden and what the fall meant to Adams descendants.
You always start off from the premise that God created man in bondage to sin. If that was the case you might have a point when you say that the Calvinist view makes God unjust in only saving the elect. My point is that we (through Adam) are responsible for our own depravity and bondage therefore God is merciful in that He chose to save some.
In essence you are saying that God can only be just if He saves ALL men as if He had an obligation to save any.
Would you agree that this is where the difference lies?