Enns claims to be a Calvinist but he is also a theological Progressive. He purports the Genesis myth theory.I may be wrong, but I think Enns is a Calvinist.
We could list non-traditional Calvinists like N.T. Wright and Karl Barth.
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Enns claims to be a Calvinist but he is also a theological Progressive. He purports the Genesis myth theory.I may be wrong, but I think Enns is a Calvinist.
We could list non-traditional Calvinists like N.T. Wright and Karl Barth.
So he's a non-traditional Calvinist (soteriologically he's a Calvinist but he departs from traditional belief in other areas)?Enns claims to be a Calvinist but he is also a theological Progressive. He purports the Genesis myth theory.
He holds the same viewpoint as CS lewis did then?Enns claims to be a Calvinist but he is also a theological Progressive. He purports the Genesis myth theory.
Depends on who you ask lolThanks for the feedback. Not many "household names" in the bunch, are there?
I’d say that C.S. Lewis, Gordon Fee, Adam Clarke, Thomas Helwys, John Wycliffe, Vincent Taylor, G.K. Chesterton, Søren Kierkegaard, and Richard Hays should be widely known.Thanks for the feedback. Not many "household names" in the bunch, are there?
Non-traditional would be putting it mildly. Research the Genesis myth controversy and you will know why I am not an Enns fan.So he's a non-traditional Calvinist (soteriologically he's a Calvinist but he departs from traditional belief in other areas)?
One big difference between the two is that Lewis never passed himself off as a theologian proper.He holds the same viewpoint as CS lewis did then?
I’d say that C.S. Lewis, Gordon Fee, Adam Clarke, Thomas Helwys, John Wycliffe, Vincent Taylor, G.K. Chesterton, Søren Kierkegaard, and Richard Hays should be widely known..
Yes, theological apologists.Lewis and Chesterton were not theologians; they were apologists.
You are mistaken. He was indeed an ardent Calvinist. Whitefield, William Jay and Spurgeon all regarded his commentary very highly as a fellow Calvinist.Mathew Henry and his commentary are not Calvinistic in soteriology. He was moderate Calvinist at most.
He was moderate Calvinist at most.
Rippon, Matthew Henry's view has been documented in recent scholarship:You are mistaken. He was indeed an ardent Calvinist.
I'm afraid I'm not impressed with either of those sources. The first link seems to think that anyone who is not John Gill must believe in General Redemption.Rippon, Matthew Henry's view has been documented in recent scholarship:
The Extent of the Atonement (Broadman & Holman, 2016)
The Gospel According to Matthew Henry, Matthew Henry Conference (2014)
What sources?I'm afraid I'm not impressed with either of those sources.
Without a doubt.Henry was a Calvinist.
Post #23.What sources?
Oops! Sorry! Post #33 by Jerome. He gave two links.