And how does that differ from my position? "Sufficient for all, efficient only for believers."I don't agree with your post.
Simply put, Christ's payment for sin is available to all, but only credited to those who believe.
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And how does that differ from my position? "Sufficient for all, efficient only for believers."I don't agree with your post.
Simply put, Christ's payment for sin is available to all, but only credited to those who believe.
How? He died (in some capacity) for all, but especially (in a special capacity) for believers.Yes it could.
HankD
"World" does not always mean "every person without exception." That has already been demonstrated. How does God loving the world (of mankind, not the planet) negate the gospel as outlined in the Canons of Dort?And for a calvie, they *don't want* world to mean the whole world in John 3:16. They must fit (cram) every passage into their framework of tulip.
Your post just shows that Pink was correct. There is no effort to deal with what he actually writes.
But my purpose in quoting the extract was simply to show that kosmos does not always mean 'all the people in the world' which is what many Arminians tend to claim.
"World" does not always mean "every person without exception." That has already been demonstrated. How does God loving the world (of mankind, not the planet) negate the gospel as outlined in the Canons of Dort?
You did (sorta) by juxtapositioning Matthew 15:24 with John 18:20 thereby giving the impression that "world" in terms of the evangelism of Jesus and the apostles meant Israel only ever.
which would then change the following passage for the apostle and disciples to stay in Israel.
Mark 16:15 And he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature.
Then we have a problem with :
Matthew 28:19 Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
Matthew 28:19 Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
ya, I know it doesn't say "world" but perhaps it defines it for John 3:16.
Pink qualifies this:I don't quite trust the judgment of Pink after I read some of his "gleanings from Paul." In the intro he says 2 absurd things...
1. There are no prayers in the book of Acts by the apostles
Well, if you can find any, please let me know. I will only note that the Lord Jesus Christ Himself prayed, "I pray not for the world, but for them which Thou hast given Me." 1 Timothy 2:1-2a is not a prayer.2. There are no prayers towards the "world."
Please yourself.I am throwing the bath water and baby out on this one.
The context will always determine the meaning.
The context will always determine the meaning.
I think you would do well to open a new thread on that."For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on him should not perish, but have eternal life."
Following Hodge's first rule of interpretation it would interesting to look into the immediate meanings of some other words in the passage.
I wouldn't disagree with you what you explicitly state, it's what is implied that we differ on.And how does that differ from my position? "Sufficient for all, efficient only for believers."
And just what do you think is implied? Nothing is implied. You may have inferred something that isn't there, but that is pretty common on this forum.I wouldn't disagree with you what you explicitly state, it's what is implied that we differ on.
That's ok though.
ACTS Chapter 4Pink qualifies this:
[The Apostles] are certainly shown to be men of prayer, as is seen by their own words: "But we will give ourselves continually to prayer and to the ministry of the word" (Acts 6:4). Again and again we behold them engaged in this holy exercise (Acts 9:40; 10:9; 20:36; 21:5; 28:8), yet we are not told what they said. The closest Luke comes to recording words clearly attributable to apostles is in Acts 8:14-15, but even here he merely gives us the quintessence of that for which Peter and John prayed. I regard the prayer of Acts 1:24 as that of the 120 disciples. The great, effectual prayer recorded in Acts 4:24-30 is not that of Peter and John but of the whole company (v.23) who had assembled to hear their report.
Pink may be entirely wrong- he certainly didn't get everything right- but would you like to give us a few of the Apostles' prayers found in Acts? I'd be most interested.
Well, if you can find any, please let me know. I will only note that the Lord Jesus Christ Himself prayed, "I pray not for the world, but for them which Thou hast given Me." 1 Timothy 2:1-2a is not a prayer.
Please yourself.
It's implied that for some they *were* ordained to never have it credited to their account. Forgive me if my inference was incorrect.And just what do you think is implied? Nothing is implied. You may have inferred something that isn't there, but that is pretty common on this forum.
Why is it that every time a General Redemptionist is backed into a corner they trot out the old Hyper-Calvinist "double predestination" saw and wave it like a battle flag?It's implied that for some they *were* ordained to never have it credited to their account. Forgive me if my inference was incorrect.
I think Pink's point is that it was those who heard Peter & John's report who prayed (vs.23-24). This may well have included the other apostles, but was not restricted to them.ACTS Chapter 4
24
I think you would do well to open a new thread on that.
It could have been written exactly as you wrote it.How? He died (in some capacity) for all, but especially (in a special capacity) for believers.
I wasn't saying they were ordained *to be lost*, i understand we all are lost and in need of the Good Shepherd Seeking and Saving us. I was putting the emphasis of what was being ordained was that some *were never/will never be chosen*.Why is it that every time a General Redemptionist is backed into a corner they trot out the old Hyper-Calvinist "double predestination" saw and wave it like a battle flag?
What is so hard to understand about the lost already being lost and do not have to be "ordained" to being lost. Are they being "ordained" to be loster than lost?