Originally posted by TomVols:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />I never heard that Calvinism is a worldview. Please, explain what you mean by this.
The Biblical framework that constitutes Calvinism is a worldview in that it provides a grid through which one filters the experiences of life and the observations made. For instance, if I believe in the doctrine of total depravity, that affects how I see people, their struggles, their spiritual condition, etc. I do not merely see humans as pretty good folks who just need a little polishing here or there. I see them as people in need of redemption. That is but one example. Make sense?</font>[/QUOTE]Calvinism is a Theocentric worldview. It recognizes (in the current words of S.C. Chapman)
God is God and I am not. It understands that all of God's revelation is about God and not about us, and his eternal purpose is
to glorify himself and not us. We are the beneficiaries of his own self-glorification by being redeemed by the great Redeemer, so all honor and glory go to him and we have nothing to brag about on our own.
Salvation is by God's grace, through his gift of faith to the elect, and not a faith we self-generate. God is holy and righteous and above the judgments of man, how man thinks God should be or act.
God's ultimate glorification comes when every knee bows and every mouth confesses that Jesus Christ is Lord. Even the damned will do this, as they will be unable at last to deny the sovereignty and glory of God in Christ Jesus.