Y
Yelsew
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If you are not writing what I quoted then who is using your login name?Originally posted by Primitive Baptist:
Yelsew,
You have no idea what I believe nor what the Scriptures say.![]()
Do you deny YOU said those things?
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If you are not writing what I quoted then who is using your login name?Originally posted by Primitive Baptist:
Yelsew,
You have no idea what I believe nor what the Scriptures say.![]()
I have not read much of Gill but if this is typical, I will not add him to my library. This is not even sensical. A payment made in the past can anticipate and be sufficient for costs drawn in the future. But it can no more pay for those things before they happen than it can to rise and fly. This is a man desparate to hold a position, not to do justice to the text of Scripture. I cannot see any verse of Scripture that even intimates such. It is clear that we are justified by our faith. Until that faith is exercised there can be no justification, no matter how great the payment available.Originally posted by Primitive Baptist:
such that believe the doctrines of the imputation of sin to Christ, and of his satisfaction for it, ought never to make this objection; and if they do, they ought to be fully content with the answer." -John Gill, D.D.
If by unconditional election you mean God has chosen in his sovereignty to extend grace to undeserving sinners, then yes that is a clear statement. If you mean by UE the Calvinistic explanation of how and why that takes place, you are defining UE within a system.Unconditional election is a clear statement, clearly defined by God. Total depravity is clearly defined by God. These are not issues about interpretation of texts but rather clear. I do not see how there can be any honest denial of this.
You are forced to say this b/c to say otherwise would affirm my arguments from the beginning. I have never read a Calvinist who denies Calvinism is a theological system. By its very definition, it is a theology.Yes and no. It is a system in that it is supported by texts that are not sequential. It is not a system in that it takes a lot of difficult gymnastics to see it. It is clearly there to the unbiased.
In Calvinism, the Scriptures support the system. Maybe we should go back to a basic understanding of systematic theology.We are not interpreting texts in light of a system, but rather in light of Scripture. The clear texts provide a basis for interpretation of the less clear text. That is not a system per se, to me anyway.
I have never suggested two texts can contradict one another. I have suggested there is a mystery element within soteriology that is not as clearly defined as Calvinism suggests. When one is "working thru the issues" they are operating from a certain theological perspective, therefore they are interpreting each text thru that grid.It does with mine though. When you talk of calvinists who want to interpret texts in light of a system (which I would certainly term differently), the alternative is contradictions. That type of approach is inconsistent with Scripture. When we look at two texts, we know they cannot contradict. Therefore they have different referents, different audiences, different meanings, etc. We must work through these issues. That is not systematization, IMO. That is Bible study.
Can you understand the true meaning of the Gettysburg Address without having a basic understanding of Lincoln and why he wrote the document?How so??? That does not make sense to me. The Scripture is what we are looking at. Not the man. I don't care about Calvin. I do care about Scripture. My point is that Calvin is another man, just like any other. His formulation of the ideas does not mean that the ideas are his. The ideas are solidly supported in Scripture.
I have never suggested theology is bad. I simply recognize it for what it is ... a human effort to explain divine truth. For that reason, it has limits. I have a Master's Degree in Systematic Theology. I am not disparaging it. But it must be held in its proper light.I would certainly not disparage it the way you seem to have. I understand the limits of systematization, but coming to the text of Scripture and taking the face value statements and relating them to one another is not systematization per se, in the negative sense that you and others seem to use the word.
According to your own perspective and theological bias.Because the truths known as "Calvinism" are what the Bible teaches.
Not arguing that. I simply love for Calvinists to try and build their system with the words of Jesus (since it is the "clear" teaching of Scripture that every "unbiased" person should be able to see).All of Scripture is the teaching of Jesus. There is no legitimate dichotomy between the words of Jesus and the words of Scripture. They carry equal authority and are equally true.
What I mean is that Scripture says election is individual (of a person) and unconditional (based on nothing outside of God). That is not a "system;" that is Scripture. How or why is not addressed in UE to my knowledge.Originally posted by SBCbyGRACE:
If by unconditional election you mean God has chosen in his sovereignty to extend grace to undeserving sinners, then yes that is a clear statement. If you mean by UE the Calvinistic explanation of how and why that takes place, you are defining UE within a system.
The verses which I use to support TD clearly define how it occurs (i.e., came from Adam to everyone in Adam) and its deadening effects (deceit, hardened, blinded, unable, etc). I do not know what verses you would use to support it. I am not sure what is "systematic" about those verses.If by total depravity you mean all persons are sinners, that is clear. If by TD you mean the way Calvinism explains how that depravity occurs and the effects of it upon humans, you are defining it within a system.
To some degree, but only to some degree. The Scriptures gives us pretty clear descriptions of these things. Election happened before the foundation of hte world (not sure how to blame that on a system). The Scriptures describe that it elections brings results to the preaching of the gospel (Again, not sure how to blame that on a system). The Scriptures say that these things are for the glory of God (again, you guessed it ... not sure how to blame that on a system).The details of Calvin and his followers on how, why, and when that works out are human explanations of an infinite truth.
But you are using "system" in a sense that makes it appear to be something forced on teh Scriptures by external logic or reason. I completely reject that, as would every Calvinist I have read. That is the part of "system" that I am rejecting.You are forced to say this b/c to say otherwise would affirm my arguments from the beginning. I have never read a Calvinist who denies Calvinism is a theological system. By its very definition, it is a theology.
Perhaps some do. But the overwhelming amount of evidence in favor of a proposition does render clarity although there are some who are too biased to see it (for evidence, see Holocaust; OJ Simpson; etc.). It is clear to the unbiased that the Holocaust was real. There are some who deny it.A biased person says "it is clearly there to the unbiased"???
I wouldn't characterize it that way at all. Again, I reject your attempt to define "system" in the way that you have. I fully understand systematic theology. I fully reject your philosophical approach to it. The proper approach to systematic is a textual/exegetical approach. Not a philosophical one.In Calvinism, the Scriptures support the system. Maybe we should go back to a basic understanding of systematic theology.
Simply not true, apart from the normal hermeneutical spiral (see Osborne). All of us, to some degree, go through the spiral. But the determiner of which text is clearer is the weight of the Scripture and the clarity of the language. I cannot believe that this objection is coming up from you. Calvinists (at least of my stripe) interpret Scripture in light of Scripture, not in light of the system. The system is only a shorthand for the Scriptre that it is based on. I believe your thinking is backwards. You are convinced that we start with a system and then go to Scripture. That is flat wrong and I will join you in correcting anyone who does that. The proper approach is to start with Scripture. That is why I say that the proper systematic theology is a textual/exegetical theology, not a philosophical one. Many Calvinists do use a philosophical systematic. I reject that.The "clear texts" in Calvinism are not so clear in other systems & vice-versa. Who is the determiner of which text is "clearer"? Again the point is ... Calvinists must interpret texts in light of their system.
Sure ... so?? A Calvinist doesn't disagree with John 3:16. We believe that whoever believes will have eternal life. The fact is that John 3:16 does not stand alone. It is in teh context of John 3, in the larger context of John, and in the larger context of the NT and the Bible. We cannot simply pretend like the rest of Scripture does not exist.Would you say John 3.16 is a clear statement that if read alone at face value would not seem to suggest unconditional election?
If by this, you mean that we cannot fully put all the pieces together, I completely agree. But I disagree that we cannot put enough together to see what Scripture teaches.I have never suggested two texts can contradict one another. I have suggested there is a mystery element within soteriology that is not as clearly defined as Calvinism suggests. When one is "working thru the issues" they are operating from a certain theological perspective, therefore they are interpreting each text thru that grid.
BAd analogy because Calvinism is not tied to a historical context but rather to the Scriptures. We cannot understand Calvinism without understanding the Scripture. That is the analogy we should be making. Calvinism does not depend on Calvin but on the truth taught in Scripture. Perhaps you are under the impression that Calvinism started with Calvin. It certainly didn't.Can you understand the true meaning of the Gettysburg Address without having a basic understanding of Lincoln and why he wrote the document?
Not at all. My point was based on teh text of Scripture, not on perspectives or theological biases. There doesn't seem to much confusion in "he chose you from the beginning for salvation" or "He chose us in him before the foundation of the world." Those are categorical statements that don't leave a lot of clouds on the scene.According to your own perspective and theological bias.
Every word of Scripture is the word of Jesus. I am not sure how you make this dichotomy.Not arguing that. I simply love for Calvinists to try and build their system with the words of Jesus (since it is the "clear" teaching of Scripture that every "unbiased" person should be able to see).
I agree.MacArthur's words continue to ring true.
I am not sure what you are trying to say here. This doesn't prove that justification took place before faith. Romans 5:1 says that we are justified by faith. These texts completely support that.Originally posted by Primitive Baptist:
For if, WHEN WE WERE ENEMIES, we were RECONCILED to God BY THE DEATH OF HIS SON [objectively], much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by his life.
Much more then, being now [lit., having been] JUSTIFIED BY HIS BLOOD, we shall be saved from wrath through him.
Faith is ONLY receptive. It is not the righteousness by which we are justified. That is the blood essentially. Faith only receives and embraces it. I can prove that.
When was this done?
For when we were yet without strength, in due time Christ died for the ungodly.
Here is Mac's quote commenting on unconditional election:But what all calvinists have in common is Mac's second statement, that God unconditionally elects to salvation.
Pastor Larry if you cannot read the above quote from MacArthur and see that he is disagreeing with Calvin's concept of unconditional election and modifying the system (and MacArthur refers to Calvinism as a system of logic contra your statements in preceding posts), I think further discussion is pointless.Number two: God does choose us to be saved, Chosen in Him before the foundation of the world. Right? But Calvin got a little bit far out at this point with his logic. Jesus also said, Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out. Calvin couldn’t fit that too well into his logical system. But that’s just the point. That’s a tension, isn’t it? Those are two contradictory terms: God saves us, and yet we have to be involved. But we’re awful sinners, vile. We have no good thing in us. How can we be involved? That’s the marvelous paradox, the mystery of redemption. But Calvin was too hard, you see? He wanted to push too far.
Curious about those statements. The same could be said about the doctrine of the Trinity. The doctrine of the Trinity was basically systemized at the Council of Nicea in 325 and the Council of Chalcedon in 451. That however does not mean that the doctrine of the Trinity is not Biblical theology. Certaintly the doctrine is clearly taught in scripture long before Nicea or Chalcedon.Calvinism is not biblical theology. It is systematic theology. If you disagree, I would like for you to refer me to one informed Calvinists who defines Calvinism as biblical theology vs systematic.
Well, let's look at what Mac says:Originally posted by swaimj:
Pastor Larry if you cannot read the above quote from MacArthur and see that he is disagreeing with Calvin's concept of unconditional election and modifying the system (and MacArthur refers to Calvinism as a system of logic contra your statements in preceding posts), I think further discussion is pointless.
Read back what I said. My point is about philosophical systematic vs. an exegetical systematic.Originally posted by SBCbyGRACE:
Calvinism is not biblical theology. It is systematic theology. If you disagree, I would like for you to refer me to one informed Calvinists who defines Calvinism as biblical theology vs systematic.
In referring to soteriological calvinism, I think there is a weakness in using the term irresistable grace because it implies that grace can never be resisted. Calvinism obviously does not teach that. It teach an effectual call. I think there is a weakness in limited atonement, though one that is not easily solved. Scripture does declare a universal affect to the atonement. However, it also teaches an effectual nature of the atonement. We are told that some reject the Master who bought them (1 Peter 2), a verse that is too easily overlooked by strict adherents of LA.If you are not system bound, could you please articulate what you feel are the weaknesses of Calvinism? If it is not about the system (which I still maintain is somewhat naive in light of its history), then you must recognize weaknesses within the system itself (as MacArthur does). What are they?
I understand and agree for the most part though I do not place BT above ST properly done. You have an ST when you put the BT together, as is necessary to do. My objection is to the philosophical ST which relies more on logic and thought than on revelation.Originally posted by SBCbyGRACE:
1) I do not set systematics and biblical theology in tension. ST is the byproduct and application of proper BT. I have degrees in both fields, so I see the necessity of both. The two work hand-in-hand. However, ST is one step further removed from the revelation itself and therefore more susceptible to human error. Traditionally Calvinism falls within ST reaffirming my assertion that it is a human explanation of a divine work.
BT is the groundwork for ST so it is a necessary prerequisite for doing proper theology. Whether it is more important or not is left for the individual to decide. I personally believe BT is the more important of the two disciplines, but I also recognize my bias.I understand and agree for the most part though I do not place BT above ST properly done. You have an ST when you put the BT together, as is necessary to do. My objection is to the philosophical ST which relies more on logic and thought than on revelation.
The MacArthur quote which started this thread is copyrighted 1980. The book you cite is copyrighted 1988. From that I have to conclude that MacArthur either contradicts himself(and as much as he writes and speaks, that would not be hard to do) or that he has changed his position(which is not a crime either).Can we put to rest the nonsense that MacArthur backs away from the truths affirmed in Calvinism?? Is there any debate about these quotes?? Are there more than one interpretation?? The evidence here shows that your assertion of "modifying Calvin's idea of unconditional election" is not consistent with what MacArthur affirms. He seems to have no problem with unconditional election.
No, the problem is not me and my desires. The problem is that MacArthur's two statements do not agree. But really Pastor Larry, I am not concerned about MacArthur that much. I'm pretty familiar with him and his ministry. I appreciate some aspects of it and I disagree with some of his practices, as I'm sure you do. I just can't figure out which MacArthur you agree with, the 1980 "leaky calvinist" one or the 1988 calvinist one?The problem is not in what MacArthur said in this statement. The problem seems that you want to accuse him of something that is not consistent with what he says elsewhere.
But since there is a free offer of grace, then perhaps the scriptures that are used to teach that God only chooses some and rejects others (not even wanting to save them) are being interpreted by the system, (which started with Augustine, not Calvin, and was probably unheard of before him). The tension is how God can be working it all out without scripting people to either accept Him or continue reject Him. There is not reason to try to go beyond that into a position that raises more questions or tensions.I think there are some apparent tensions in the biblical data that cannot be easily resolve by human mind. The free offer of the gospel is one that comes to mind. I preach to all understanding that God is ultimately working that out. I don't understand a number of things.
Huh?one of the problems with calvinists is that we don't present the gospel clearly enough for the non-elect to reject it.
Or perhaps your understanding is flawed. I have read and reread that quote trying to figure out what problem you are seeing. The fact is, that I don't see anything in there that I don't agree with and I don't see anything that most Calvinists would disagree with though they might word it differently. The only problem is to say "Calvin was too hard" because I am not sure that is what Calvin would say, though I haven't read him and don't really care. I can see that in speaking to some audiences, this type of approach would be entirely appropriate, where his other comments would be more precise. In both places, he affirms that God is sovereign and that man has a part. That is the central issue he is making in that little blurb you put forth and he makes it in both places.Originally posted by swaimj:
The MacArthur quote which started this thread is copyrighted 1980. The book you cite is copyrighted 1988. From that I have to conclude that MacArthur either contradicts himself(and as much as he writes and speaks, that would not be hard to do) or that he has changed his position(which is not a crime either).
I don't really care that much about him either. I have a few of his books and a couple of his commentaries. I enjoy hearing him most of the time. I don't agree with everything he does or says. But overall I have been blessed by him. As for which I agree with, since I don't see a great difference, I agree with both.But really Pastor Larry, I am not concerned about MacArthur that much. I'm pretty familiar with him and his ministry. I appreciate some aspects of it and I disagree with some of his practices, as I'm sure you do. I just can't figure out which MacArthur you agree with, the 1980 "leaky calvinist" one or the 1988 calvinist one?
Wrong ... because those verses are too explicit. But even here, notice have you have worded your statement in such a way to prejudice your conclusion. I totally reject that type of argumentation. It is useless and devoid of ethics. The position you have describe above is not mine. As for the historicity of Calvinism, its roots are found in Scripture, whether you agree with it or not.Originally posted by Eric B:
But since there is a free offer of grace, then perhaps the scriptures that are used to teach that God only chooses some and rejects others (not even wanting to save them) are being interpreted by the system, (which started with Augustine, not Calvin, and was probably unheard of before him).
Huh?</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr /> one of the problems with calvinists is that we don't present the gospel clearly enough for the non-elect to reject it.