SavedByGrace
Well-Known Member
Finney was a heretic
you mean Finney is in hell?
Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
Finney was a heretic
Notice, SBG, that different bibles translate the Greek differently but all convey the same thought. Your comment to Van was unwarranted an you should apologize.
@SavedByGrace likes to show off his ability to copy and paste Greek text to this site. It's very impressive. Never mind that it's 'Greek' to most of us, he just wants us to know that he can do that.
he just wants us to know that he can do that
when YOU know Greek grammar for YOUSELF, come on here and post!
read #140 and apologise to me!
Read this and don't expect me to apologize for pointing out something I think you need to hear.
you are just RUDE and ARROGANT!. The Church sadly has many like you!
Don't be so arrogant. It just shows that you are insecure.
dude, why don't you prove that I am wrong then? IF you can! There are many instances that the Bible translations get it WRONG!
'RUDE' often gets it's point across when other avenues fail.
Not, Barth did not teach universalism (although anti-Barth folk often used that claim). There were good things.....and bad things....about his theology. NT Wright did question the traditional Calvinistic view of Justification. Some of his points are good, but he did not provide an adequate solution.Barth seemed to teach Universalism though, Tillich more new age then christian, and NT Wright right on resurrection of Christ, dead wrong on Pauline Justification!
all you and Van and Silverhair need do, is to PROVE what I have said in #147, and the Bible versions in #140, to be wrong!
The term "Reformed" seems to be being devalued these days.Barth seemed to teach Universalism though, Tillich more new age then christian, and NT Wright right on resurrection of Christ, dead wrong on Pauline Justification!
Karl Barth was Reformed. Barth was the leading Reformed theologian to combat the liberalism of his day. So was Charles Finney and John Darby. At the start Dispensationalism was primarily in Reformed circles.The term "Reformed" seems to be being devalued these days.
I find it hard to believe that any Reformed scholar would call Karl Barth "Reformed" although he is enjoying a bit of a revival today. While he was living, Cornelius van Til called him out. Here is a critique of his (Barth's) theology in the Reformed Forum. Read the next article as well as the one I've linked:
The Essential Van Til – The Absolutely Other
Also, Barth's view of Scripture marks him out as less than orthodox, which is why he is usually classified as neo-orthodox.
Here is something by Don Carson in What Should Evangelicals Make of Karl Barth?
Barth says many things that shows him affirming the truthfulness of Scripture, the reliability of Scripture, the authority of Scripture and if you take those things at face value, without reference to anything else that he says, then it is easy to imagine that he is essentially an evangelical in the history and tradition of the whole mainstream of the church. But he really isn’t. Part of it is because when he talks about inspiration and the truthfulness of Scripture, he wants to integrate both how God gave the Scripture, as Scripture, and how that Scripture is received by human beings, which requires the Spirit’s work in us to illumine us. He puts all those things together in one package and refuses to separate them.
By contrast Calvin separates them so that he insists that the Scripture is true and given by the Spirit of God even if nobody accepts it. Whereas they are so tied together in Barth’s thinking that he is uncomfortable talking about the truthfulness and reliability and Spirit inspiration of Scripture simply as Scripture without integrating it, as well, into the need for that Scripture to be accepted and received as it is the Word of God by virtue of the Spirit’s work within us to see that it is the Word of God.
And that has led many Christians trying to formulate Barth’s view as something like: The Scripture becomes the Word of God when it is received. Well, that is not quite what Barth says, but I understand why they want to say things like that. Moreover, there are a few passages — I listed some of them in the FAQ section of the book of Scripture — where Barth does say explicitly that there are concrete errors in Scripture. So on both of these fronts he is really different from the mainstream of the Church of Jesus Christ across the ages in affirming the truthfulness, reliability and inerrancy of Scripture.
Now I don't agree with everything Don Carson says, but Barth's understanding of Scripture makes me doubt if he was evangelical, let alone Reformed. Having said that, he did a great job in the early 20th Century debunking liberal theology.
Yes Owen and the other Puritans always put scripture first but if you notice in the middle of the quote he did not despise those who looked to other teachers and read their material as wellNot really. Since we introduced Owen it is only fitting to understand from Owen how he would have his words taken.
I suspect most of us consider what other people have said. God gives teachers to local churches for a purpose (to teach).Yes Owen and the other Puritans always put scripture first but if you notice in the middle of the quote he did not despise those who looked to other teachers and read their material as well