It's effectual only for the elect, Matthew 1:21, 2 Timothy 2:10.
and the Elect are those whom God decided to save based upon SOLELY His Will and pleasure, not based upon us accepting jesus by our own "faith and free will?"
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It's effectual only for the elect, Matthew 1:21, 2 Timothy 2:10.
They're paid for, but the sinner is still in debt? Is God a thief?Question...
can they be paid for, but the person not receive benefit for their payment?
Of course the Gospel may be offered to all men. I have not read one person on this forum ever claiming otherwise. How on earth can we know who is elect and who isn't? Our job is to tell all men, "Repent and believe the good news!' (Mark 1:15).Then clearly it is you who is misreading Hodge, because it is abundantly clear that this statement is to address the genuine universal call of the gospel to both the elect and non-elect, as proven by this statement: "The righteousness of Christ being of infinite value or merit, and being in its nature precisely what all men need, may be offered to all men. It is thus offered to the elect and to the non-elect; and it is offered to both classes conditionally. That condition is a cordial acceptance of it as the only ground of justification."
I did not write, 'Just the elect,' as you very well know. This is what I wrote, in answer to a different part of the Hodge quote:-So, throughout this discourse Hodge is addressing "all men" to include "both classes," not just the elect as you wrongly answered.
Read Hodge again and try to understand. He says, 'That condition is a cordial acceptance of it as the only ground of justification.' Therefore he is not saying that all men receive anything but an offer. Only those who believe receive salvation. They are the ones for whom Christ died. They are the elect. Nothing that Hodge or I have written contradicts that. Nowhere does Hodge claim that atonement is provided for anyone but the elect. What he says is that atonement is provided for all who will come to Christ. As I said before, no one will come to Christ only to find that the grace has run out or the blood has lost its atoning quality. That really does seem to be what you're suggesting.I take "all men" to mean all men who will come to Christ in true repentance and faith. They alone receive salvation. They are the elect.
I have absolutely dealt with the Hodge quote. It is you who does not understand. I thought you said that you were once a Calvinist. I find that very hard to believe since you display no understanding of what true Calvinism is.You have not dealt with the substance of Hodge's quote. You have only restated your version of Calvinism's atonement all the while claiming Hodge doesn't say what he clearly says.
People who do not believe perish because they have no atonement for their sins. It is their sins, however, that actually send them to hell.They will perish for their unbelief, or their rejection of the truth. I've provided countless texts they say those very words verbatim.
I have absolutely dealt with the Hodge quote. It is you who does not understand. I thought you said that you were once a Calvinist. I find that very hard to believe since you display no understanding of what true Calvinism is.
Ok, we are both reasonable human beings. Lets stop accusing each other of not having the ability to understand. We may have differing views and perspectives, but let's not reduce our dialogue to that level of discourse. Agreed?Oh deary me! You still don't understand. :BangHead:
Brother, that was NOT the point I was attempting to make. I was showing that Hodge's passage had "all men" of "both classes" (the elect and non-elect) in view, while you attempted to take that one line to be in reference only to the elect. I know most mainstream Calvinists affirm the universal call of the gospel.Of course the Gospel may be offered to all men. I have not read one person on this forum ever claiming otherwise.
Yes, I do know, You said, "I take "all men" to mean all men who will come to Christ in true repentance and faith. They alone receive salvation. They are the elect."I did not write, 'Just the elect,' as you very well know.
Then can you explain what he specifically means by this:Nowhere does Hodge claim that atonement is provided for anyone but the elect. What he says is that atonement is provided for all who will come to Christ. As I said before, no one will come to Christ only to find that the grace has run out or the blood has lost its atoning quality.
Hebrews 4:11
“Let us labour therefore to enter into that rest, lest any man fall after the same example of unbelief.”
This is an instruction to Christians, to totally commit their lives to Christ, so that they can enter in to this rest.
If indeed God’s rest were salvation; The Bible would not be telling us to labor, to gain it.
14Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord:
15Looking diligently lest any man fail of the grace of God; lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble you, and thereby many be defiled;
16Lest there be any fornicator, or profane person, as Esau, who for one morsel of meat sold his birthright.
12Wherefore, my beloved, as ye have always obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling.
13For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure.
This will be my last post on this thread. I have answered each of your questions as clearly as I can on each of the parts of the Hodge quote you have highlighted. Instead of making a sensible comment on what I've written you simply highlight another section of the quote, as you have done again this time. I will answer you once more but then I'm through. I find answering the same question again and again stressful and irritating.Ok, we are both reasonable human beings. Lets stop accusing each other of not having the ability to understand. We may have differing views and perspectives, but let's not reduce our dialogue to that level of discourse. Agreed?
You are just fooling around here. Of course Hodge has "both classes" in view. He is saying that the Gospel is to be offered to both elect and non-elect, which is what I said he said. [I am not a great fan of the word offered in this connection- I would prefer preached or proclaimed- but since Hodge uses it I suppose it will do]Skandelon said:Martin Marprelate said:Of course the Gospel may be offered to all men. I have not read one person on this forum ever claiming otherwise.
Brother, that was NOT the point I was attempting to make. I was showing that Hodge's passage had "all men" of "both classes" (the elect and non-elect) in view, while you attempted to take that one line to be in reference only to the elect. I know most mainstream Calvinists affirm the universal call of the gospel.
Because "All men" who trust in Christ will be saved. That is what Hodge is saying and it's what I am saying. A man's warrant to come to Christ is not that he believes that he is elect. It is that he is a sinner and Christ came to save such and promises not to turn any that come to Him away. However, "All men" who come are elect because the natural man does not perceive the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishness to him.You said, "I take "all men" to mean all men who will come to Christ in true repentance and faith. They alone receive salvation. They are the elect."
How is different from, "just the elect?"
What is it here that is different to what I've already explained? Salvation is available to all who will come to Christ; every single person. How many more times do I have to say it? No one who comes to Christ will be turned away. However, 'There is none who understands; there is none who seeks after God. They have all turned aside.......There is no fear of God before their eyes.' That is what the Scripture says. Unless God provides a definite atonement for His elect, not one soul would be saved. What Hodge is saying is that no one should say, There is no salvation for this one or that one, because if they will come to Christ, they will find that salvation.Then can you explain what he specifically means by this:
"Every man is required to satisfy the demands of the law. No man is required to do either more or less. If those demands are satisfied by a representative or substitute, his work is equally available for all."
We both agree that Christ, the substitute, did satisfy those demands, right? And according to this quote his work in satisfying God's justice is equally available for all, right? If not, please explain what that means?
There is more to it than that, but atonement is certainly included. And there is atonement for EVERYONE who will come to Christ in true repentance and faith.When I hear "satisfy God's justice" I understand that as "atonement," but is that not the same for your view (or Hodge's view)?
Actually, I think what he is saying is that the offer of salvation through the gospel can be genuinely offered BECAUSE Christ's work has satisfied the demands of the law and "is equally available for all."What Hodge is saying is that no one should say, There is no salvation for this one or that one, because if they will come to Christ, they will find that salvation.
There is more to it than that, but atonement is certainly included. And there is atonement for EVERYONE who will come to Christ in true repentance and faith.
Dr Beman s second objection is, that the system he opposes destroys “all mercy in God the Father, in the salvation of sinners, because it represents God as. totally disinclined to the exercise of compassion, till every jot and tittle of the legal curse was inflicted. On the same principle, grace or pardon in the release of the sinner from future punishment, would be out o the question; for what grace, or pardon, or favour, can there be in the discharge of debtor, whose demand (debt?) has been cancelled to the uttermost farthing?” p. 122. This objection is the staple of his book. On p. 100, he represents us as teaching that “the Son of God endured the exact amount of suffering due on legal principle, to sinners.” On p. 107, he says, “The amount of Christ’s sufferings must consequently be the same as the aggregate sufferings included in the eternal condemnation of all those who are saved by his merit… The agonies which he suffered mere equal to the endless misery of all those who rill be saved by his interposition in their behalf.” On p. 146, he says, “If one soul were to be saved by the atonement, Christ must sustain an amount of suffering equal to that involved in the eternal condemnation of that one soul; and if. a thousand were to be saved a thousand times that mount, and in the same proportion for any greater number who are to be rescued from perdition and exalted to glory. To this scheme there are insurmountable objections.” True enough, but who hold that scheme? Dr Beman attributes it to all who believe in the atonement, and do not adopt his scheme; for he says there are but two. This doctrine, that the sufferings of Christ amounted to the aggregate sufferings of those who are to be saved, that he endured just so much for so many, is not found in any confession of the Protestant churches. nor in the writings of any standard theologian, nor in the recognised authorities of any church of which we have any knowledge. The whole objection is a gross and inexcusable misrepresentation. In a more moderate form it was brought forward by the Socinians, and repelled by the writers of that and subsequent ages. De Moor is generally recognised as the theologian of most authority among the churches of Holland, and Turrettin is admitted to be one of the strictest of the Geneva, school, and they both answer this calumny, by denying that, according to their doctrine, there is any necessity for the assumption that Christ’s sufferings were equal to the sufferings of all his people. Thus Turrettin, after quoting at length the objection from Socinus, answers it, first, by showing that the Scriptures teach that the one death of Christ mas a satisfaction or all; that as by the one sin of Adam, many mere made sinners, so by the, righteousness of Christ, many are made righteous. 2. By insisting on the distinction between pecuniary and penal satisfaction. A piece of money in the hand of a king is of no more value than in the hands of a peasant, but the life of a king is of more value than that of a peasant, and one commander is often exchanged for many soldiers. 3. He says the adversaries forget that Christ is God, and therefore, though his sufferings could not be infinite as they were endured by his finite nature, they were of infinite value in virtue of the infinite dignity of his person. Sin, he says, is an infinite evil, because committed against an infinite God, through the act of a finite nature. So the sufferings of Christ. though endured in his human nature, are of infinite value from the dignity of his person.
Dr Beman, under this head, frequently objects that we degrade the atonement into a mere commercial transaction, a payment of a debt, which, from the nature of the case, excludes the idea of free remission. Our first remark on this objection is, that the Scriptures use this same figure, and therefore it is right it should be used. When it is said, Christ purchased the church with his own blood, that we are redeemed not with corruptible things as silver and gold, but with the precious blood of Christ, such language means something. In every metaphor there is a point of comparison; the essential idea involved in the figure, must be found in subject to be illustrated. To purchase is to acquire, and to acquire, by giving or doing something which secures a title to the thing acquired. When it is said that Christ purchased the church, it is certainly meant that he acquired it, that it is his, and that by his death he has secured a title to it, founded in the justice and promise of God. This does not make redemption a commercial transaction, nor imply that there are not essential points of diversity between acquiring by money and acquiring by blood. Hence our second remark is, that if Dr Beman will take up any elementary work on theology, he will find the distinction between pecuniary and penal satisfaction clearly pointed out, and the satisfaction of Christ shown to be of the latter, and not of the former kind. I. In the one, the demand is upon the thing due; in the other case, it is upon the person of the Hence, 2. The creditor is bound to accept the payment of the debt, no matter when or by whom offered; whereas in the case of a crime or sin, the sovereign is bound neither to provide a substitute, nor to accept of one when offered. If he does either, it is s matter of grace. 3. Hence penal satisfaction does not ipso facto liberate; the acceptance is a matter of arrangement or covenant, and the terms of that covenant must depend on the mill of the parties. Dr Beman lapsed into an important truth when he said, “Christ suffered by covenant,” p. 98. What that covenant is, we learn from Scripture, and from the manner in which it is executed. The Bible teaches that, agreeably to that covenant, the merits of Christ do not avail to the benefit of his people immediately; his children remain under condemnation as well as others until they believe; and when they do believe, they receive but the first fruits of their inheritance, they are but imperfectly sanctified, and are still subject to many evils; but being in a justified state, their sufferings are chastisements and not punishments, that is, they are designed for their own improvement, and not to satisfy justice.
The satisfaction of Christ, therefore, being for sin and by suffering, is expressly and formally declared not to be of the nature of pecuniary satisfaction.
Charles Hodge, “The Orthodox Doctrine Regarding the Extent of the Atonement Vindicated,” (London: B. Groombridge & Sons, 1846), pp., 45-48.
This should help settle Mr. Charles Hodge view of whether he views atonement as being "Limited" or "Universal/General":
Thanks for the post Allan. I particularly think this part of the quote brings much clarity to our discussion:
"This doctrine, that the sufferings of Christ amounted to the aggregate sufferings of those who are to be saved, that he endured just so much for so many, is not found in any confession of the Protestant churches. nor in the writings of any standard theologian, nor in the recognised authorities of any church of which we have any knowledge. The whole objection is a gross and inexcusable misrepresentation."
Interesting indeed!
All I have to do is read the 1st line & Im stopping there. Obviously this is a bias & Im not interested in reading it....is that the best you guys can come up with?
Your concession to the fact that you disagree with Hodge only goes to prove the intent of this thread.That quote is false.
is that the best you guys can come up with?
Your concession to the fact that you disagree with Hodge only goes to prove the intent of this thread.
Thank you. :thumbsup:
Yet, you just admitted you disagreed with Hodge's direct quote, remember? Hmmm. :thumbsup:The intent of this thread is based upon your faulty understanding of Hodge
Yet, you just admitted you disagreed with Hodge's direct quote, remember? Hmmm. :thumbsup:
So, which is it? Do you disagree with Hodge or not?