Dave G
Well-Known Member
I agree and am a little confused by the long posts of Scripture with zero commentary to explain the position.
I know the position, David...intimately.
I could also write an essay on this, which many people here know that I love to write essays and have done so before.
I'll try to keep it as short as possible, but I feel that there are details that really need to be stated.
I grew up in "Fundamental Baptist" circles and was subject to their teachings for well over 25 years, from the age of 12 ( when I first believed on Christ during the preaching of God's word ) until I finally left them in 2007 at the age of 41.
The position is, that any passage that shows God speaking to men and making an appeal to their will...or commanding them in any way to seek Him, is automatically attached to the belief that man can actually do the things that God is commanding him to do.
In other words, God would not command a man to repent, for example, unless he was both capable and willing to do so.
Truth based on inference is therefore taken above what is based on declaration...at least in some cases.
Here's an example:
" as it is written, There is none righteous, no, not one:
11 there is none that understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God.
12 They are all gone out of the way, they are together become unprofitable; there is none that doeth good, no, not one." ( Romans 3:10-12 )
To me, this clearly describes man's heart condition before Him.
It is a clear-cut declaration...not an inference.
But many don't see this, or it gets dismissed in favor of other Scriptures which seem more important to them.
Anything that seems to show that a person can seek God and become righteous by doing it, takes center stage.
This is where the teaching of "Prevenient Grace" comes in.
It is reasoned that since God commands repentance, and since God would not hold anyone responsible to do something that was not within their power to do, then He must, by necessity, have made it possible for man to do so.
The problem is, Scripture never teaches "Prevenient Grace" and never has...it's inferred from certain passages, but not outright declared in any.
As I see it, this is what is at the heart of any discussion of "Calvinism" versus "Arminianism"...
The belief that God would not condemn someone for something they were unable to do.
To seek Him and to be reconciled to Him.
...and plenty of men are willing to do whatever it takes to get out of going to Hell.
They are willing to listen to just about anything, from anyone that has "the solution".
To me, the "free will gospel" is the perfect solution, and it's perfectly reasonable.
It presents a god that loves everyone ( John 3:16 ), is not willing that any man perish ( 2 Peter 3:9 ), wants all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth ( 1 Timothy 2:4 ) and has sent His Son to die for their sins ( 1 John 2:2 ).
All one need do is believe 1 Corinthians 15:1-7 and they are "in".
Believe and confess, and "really mean it" ( Romans 10:9-10 ).
The Holy Spirit then seals them ( Ephesians 1:13, many think that this verses shows regeneration, or being born again, and that it occurs after belief ) until the day of redemption, and God keeps them by His own power ( 1 Peter 1:5 ).
Anything in Scripture that travels outside of these passages ( and others of this type ) is either dismissed, or conditioned in favor of an outcome that supports the idea that any man can believe, and all they have to do is either "accept Christ" or reject Him.
Election gets conditioned in favor of man's will and God foreseeing a person's faith, and salvation is turned into a reward instead of a gift.
But these ramifications are not seriously considered, because this "gospel" is also very convincing.
It is believed by literally millions.
God choosing His children from the foundation of the world and casting those that are not His children, into well-deserved Hell fire for their unforgiven sins?
Very few believe that.
Yet, that is what Scripture, understood correctly and by the power of the Holy Ghost, actually teaches.
Best wishes to you, sir.
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