Skandelon
<b>Moderator</b>
That is evident...1. All I have ever read of Hodge I read for my interaction in this thread.
Or to understand him apparently...I have no vested interest in him or in appearing to agree with him.
Do you mean the parts where I quote him over and over again verbatim saying the exact opposite of what you said?I simply have a high degree of reading comprehension, and I found he was saying something altogether different than your presentation of him.
R. Muller is highly respected among Calvinistic scholars...2. The Muller I've read and quoted is George Muller, and I am not acquainted any other. However, from what I've read of Calvin, I can say that your Muller is all wet.
Muller obtained his B.A. in History from Queens College, City University of New York in 1969, his M.Div. from Union Theological Seminary, New York in 1972, and his Ph.D. in Reformation studies from Duke University in 1976. He has taught at Fuller Theological Seminary (1980–1992), has been awarded a Mellon Post-Doctoral Research Grant and has held the Belle van Zuylenleerstoel at Utrecht University (1999). He has served on the editorial boards of Sixteenth Century Journal and Reformation and Renaissance Review. He currently serves as the P. J. Zondervan Professor of Historical Theology at the Calvin Theological Seminary in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
The fact that you not only dismiss his scholarship but the facts of his case with such a flippant response reveals more about you than anything else. It is sad, really.
Oh, well then maybe next time we can talk about the Lutheran view of the atonement?3. My theological views were not shaped by reading Calvin. The most influential men were Luther, Spurgeon and Henry. However, it was the systematic and devout study of the Scriptures that formed my view.