ReformedBaptist
Well-Known Member
This is turned into bickering. Have a nice one. And if it strickes your fancy you can say you win.
Bye bye now. :wavey:
Bye bye now. :wavey:
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Squire Robertsson said:So, far he hasn't reacted to my comment.
RB, have you read Wayland's Notes on the Principles and Practices of Baptist Churches? If not I highly recommend it. Remember in the late 19th century, there was a split between the Gillites and Fullerites. Most non-Free Will Baptists today follow the Fullerite tradition.
Further, I view pulpiteering that doesn't seek an action not to be preaching. It's many good and neccessary things but not preaching. Though, all preaching is not neccessarily evangleistic.
Excellent statement...and the way I see it :thumbs:Squire Robertsson said:A question probably for another thread:
I once heard a preacher remark, "The Calvin\Arminian v somthing else question comes down to are you looking to have a systmatic theology or a Biblical theology. The two overlap to a great extent. However, a Biblical theology allows for more unclear areas." I like to say trying to systematicly define all of the aspects of soteriology using human language is like trying to describe quantum physics using under grad calculus.
I think I should have saidI like to say trying to systematicly define all of the aspects of soteriology using human language is like trying to describe quantum physics using under grad calculus.
It isn't the description that's so hard. Many a preacher has preached a series on the "Great Salvation Words." The problem is trying to organize them into a logical system. That's when quantum physics kicks in. :tonofbricks:I like to say trying to systematicly define and organize all of the aspects of soteriology using human language is like trying to describe quantum physics using under grad calculus.
Exactly. And that is why no C/A discussion will ever be conclusive. We puny humans just don't have the brain power to figure out how God does it. We drag out our various 5 point schemes, salvation orders, etc., and end up still unsure. God is not Someone you can cram into a little human theological system. Though I've gotten good stuff from the systematic theologies, they simply can't contain God.Squire Robertsson said:Instead of I think I should have saidIt isn't the description that's so hard. Many a preacher has preached a series on the "Great Salvation Words." The problem is trying to organize them into a logical system. That's when quantum physics kicks in. :tonofbricks:
Yes, leave the person out of it. Address issues, not your opponent's person. Don't question his manhood, his sincerity, his intelligence, his patriotism, his motives, etc. Identify the specific point of disagreement and state it carefully. Be fair to your opponent--do not put words in his mouth or ascribe things to him that he denies. Starting on common ground of demonstrated Biblical principle, use logic and careful reasoning to support your view. Above all, don't despise your opponent even if he is getting the best of the argument and you are frustrated. Love him as a brother.ReformedBaptist said:For someone to apologize for my reaction seems quite condecending to me. But John made himself clear. I accept that. I wasn't asking for an apology nor thinking he had thrown in the towel as you say.
As to your last exhortation, do you wish to see Calvinism better served? Do you think I am seeking to win arguments? I am not. I am seeking to bring glory to God by defending His truth as I understand it. I make no pretence that I have often done this poorly and with much frailty. I am not always the best communicator and sometimes I get frustrated by these things.
Perhaps you can share your wisdom in these matters rather than telling me to shut-up?
paidagogos said:Yes, leave the person out of it. Address issues, not your opponent's person. Don't question his manhood, his sincerity, his intelligence, his patriotism, his motives, etc. Identify the specific point of disagreement and state it carefully. Be fair to your opponent--do not put words in his mouth or ascribe things to him that he denies. Starting on common ground of demonstrated Biblical principle, use logic and careful reasoning to support your view. Above all, don't despise your opponent even if he is getting the best of the argument and you are frustrated. Love him as a brother.
I am not fully clear on how much we are obligated to defend truth. We stand for truth but are we called upon to defend it? It seems that truth stands on its own or God defends it. Our obligation, IMHO, is to preach the truth and allow God through His Holy Spirit to convict and persaude the hearts of men. Sometimes, our perception of truth is simply that--our perception. Van Til said that our knowledge is only analogical and I tend to somewhat agree.
I'm afraid Calvinists are indeed causing trouble in IFB churches (and I don't mean the so-called IFBx crowd). On our last furlough we heard what is happening in Illinois. Unfortunately there is a type of young Calvinist that believes all Baptists simply must agree with them or they will know the reason why!
To ReformedBaptist: On another thread (you know which one) I mentioned this crowd of young Calvinists as full of vim, vigor and venom, and to tell the truth, I felt your opening gambit on that thread was venom. What I've seen from you since has been gracious and reasoned. Keep up the good work.
Having said that, I'll believe that these young Calvinists are not out to take over our churches, but are ready to follow the Great Commission, when I see some of them come on out to the mission field and start churches. Where are the Reformed Baptist mission boards? There are none to my knowledge, though a google search will turn up a very few missionaries that say they are Reformed Baptist. Years ago there was a Reformed Baptist in Japan down on the island of Shikoku, but he's been gone for years.
Apparently you did not even read my comments in the whole thread. You completely misunderstand my position.Perhaps you've heard of a man by the name of William Carey? You know the baptist father of the modern missions movement... he was a devout Calvinist.
Time will not permit me to walk you through the prominence of Calvinist evangelists, revivalists and missionaries who have circumnavigated the globe.
I believe it was Colin Hansen's book, Young Restless and Reformed, where I read that Southern Seminary is supplying the lion's share of SBC missionaries these days and MOST of them are thoroughly Calvinistic.
The Southern Baptist Convention did an official study comparing unapologetically Calvinist SBC churches to ones that deny that they are Calvinists and found that the baptism percentage was nearly identical.
This is striking since we tend to not beg and plead with manipulating music in the background for people to walk the aisles and dunk every kid that attends VBS to pump our stats like so many others do.
I attended Jeff Noblit's church in North Alabama a few months back and they are, by themselves sending out missionaries to beat the band. They, of course are THOROUGHLY reformed.
I have baptized ten in a year and a half here in my town which has a population of 1,026 people and is INUNDATED with churches of most stripes. And I hardly give an invitation at all.
Frankly, in this country, the rise to prominence of Arminian leaning Baptists is a hiccup that I sense is coming to an end.
We were here first. We were the predominant viewpoint among baptists for most of the civilized history of this continent. This was so much so that Particular Baptists simply became known as REGULAR Baptists here.
I do not think that Arminianistic type Baptists (those who are for all real practical purposes just four point Arminians) can make a historical case that they have been more effective than those of the Reformed persuasion.
Apparently you did not even read my comments in the whole thread. You completely misunderstand my position.
Having said that, I'll believe that these young Calvinists are not out to take over our churches, but are ready to follow the Great Commission, when I see some of them come on out to the mission field and start churches.
This is a term used by some to describe IFB people who are extreme in their beliefs, Ruckmanites and the like.I'm a newbie.....what is the so-called IFBx crowd? Defectors perhaps?
Amen. When the pastor of the IFB who was leaving asked me to fill in, we had a long conversation about doctrine. One should not "sneak in unaware" to any church they know disagrees with their theology. It's unjust.
"To many men it might well seem that the Word of God had become petrified, for they receive it as a hard, lifeless creed, a stone upon which to sharpen the daggers of controversy, a stumbling-block for young beginners, a millstone with which to break opponents' heads, after the manner experienced by Abimelech at Thebez. A man must have a stout digestion to feed upon some men's theology—no sap, no sweetness, no life, but all stern accuracy and fleshless definition. Proclaimed without tenderness and argued without affection, the gospel from such men rather resembles a missile from a catapult than bread from a Father's table. Teeth are needlessly broken over the grit of systematic theology, while souls are famishing. To turn stones into bread was a temptation of our Master; but how many of His servants yield readily to the far worse temptation to turn bread into stone! Go thy way, metaphysical divine, to the stone-yard, and break granite for McAdam, but stand not in the way of loving spirits who would feed the family of God with living bread. The inspired Word is to us spirit and life, and we cannot afford to have it hardened into a huge monolith or a spiritual Stonehenge--sublime but cold, majestic but lifeless; far rather would we have it as our own household book, our bosom companion, the poor man's counselor and friend."
---Charles Spurgeon, Feathers for Arrows