DaveXR650
Well-Known Member
You are right. I think Calvinistic confessions are well done, yet I have to admit that most of the interactions in scripture would seem to lose a lot of their meaning if you frame them in such a way that the men cannot rationally interact in a meaningful way with truth.I think you touched on where many of us seem to part ways.
My perspective is that the natural man can’t respond positively to the Gospel because they won’t. It requires God’s grace to first free them from a nature that will always prioritize their sinful desires above everything else.
Plus, I read enough primary source Calvinist Puritan sermons and teachings to know that they themselves seemed to have no problem addressing men as truly able and responsible to respond.
"Salvation is ready brought to your door; and the Savior stands, knocks, and calls that you would open to him, that he might bring it in to you. There remains nothing but your consent. All the difficulty now remaining is with your own heart." That's Jonathan Edwards.
But here again, "all the difficulty now remaining is with your own heart", your own free will. Edwards said that we can fully understand the proposals of the gospel, and even desire to avoid Hell. What we tend not to do on our own is to see the value of Christ and his salvation and to actually "see" as it were the wickedness of our sin. Maybe we over think it. But I think the LBCF does a reasonable job of explaining it.