TC,
I posited this on another thread but wanted to pass it by you. I was comparing the Calvinist notion of salvation to the experience of a dog who is taken home by a new master from the animal shelter. Surely this is the same paradigm as Calvinist salvation, no?
1) The dog doesn't choose the master -- the master chooses the dog.
2) It's likely that, at the shelter, all dogs look pretty much alike and the same lack of information cannot influence the prospective owner as to the "merits" of one over another.
3) The dog is "irresistibly drawn" into the relationship. And he doesn't understand how his new master picked him.
4) The dog relies on his master for everything -- "It is all of my master," it thinks. I provide nothing to this relationship except great "tail wags" (worship).
5) Well, I can also do what I am trained to do and can be held responsible to do so "on cue" (LS, discipleship).
6) It's truly a "dog's life!" I wish others could join me here but it would do no good to convince other dogs what a great life I have if my master hasn't "picked" them. Oh, well.
Break it down for me, TC. Do you see any difference between Calvinism's sotierology and a dog's?
skypair