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from free-will to sovereign grace... a bad thing?

Discussion in 'Pastoral Ministries' started by j_barner2000, Oct 25, 2008.

  1. Dr. Bob

    Dr. Bob Administrator
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    I wonder how much my works must be involved in my salvation??

    Does God save me or do I have a role?

    Obviously, I believe God's grace saves me and thus anything smacking of works (denying monergism ALONE) is anathema to me.
     
  2. Rippon

    Rippon Well-Known Member
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    WD,said "I really don't see a difference." Don't you think these kind of statements are too me-centered?It's rather obvious.
     
  3. Amy.G

    Amy.G New Member

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    Are you saying that those who don't believe in monergism are accursed?
     
  4. webdog

    webdog Active Member
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    Not when one realizes it is God that reaches out first.
     
  5. webdog

    webdog Active Member
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    Denying monergism ALONE does not equate to works based salvation, nor are works involved in salvation. That is a strawman.
     
  6. webdog

    webdog Active Member
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    He has basically questioned the salvation of those who don't agree with him. It is nothing new, though.
     
  7. TomVols

    TomVols New Member

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    Pastoral ministry is definitely theological. However, the BB administration does not want theological discussions outside the theological discussion area.

    I want to allow lattitude here because this started as being a way of integrating this theological struggle into pastoral life. Let's keep it there. Otherwise, we'll have KJVO in here, dispensationalism, etc.

    Fair enough?
     
  8. Tom Butler

    Tom Butler New Member

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    jbarner, I went back to the OP to refresh my memory. You mentioned that your move toward Calvinism had caused some "small" issues. Could you be more specific? Are you talking about a small number of people who've expressed concern? Could you evaluate the intensity of concern? How long has this transition been known to your congregation?

    I raise these questions because the conventional wisdom is that Calvinism divides churches which are not majority Reformed. I doubt if this is universally true.

    Reaction in my own church has been mixed over the years. I know of at least three previous pastors who were Calvinists. There were no problems.

    I remember many years ago, I taught a Sunday evening Bible study from a Calvinist perspective. The wife of the interim pastor told her husband, who proceeded to correct me from the pulpit. But nothing further came of it. That was 30 years ago.

    Currently, I would say that the majority of people in my church are non-Calvinist. The current pastor is not a Calvinist, as best I can determine. I count about a half-dozen who are avowed Calvinists. That includes the Choir Director (me), three deacons (including the chairman--me), and four who are currently teaching or have been teaching.

    My guess is that individual churches react differently to this situation, and we ought to be careful not to characterize it as a universal problem.
     
  9. Tom Butler

    Tom Butler New Member

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    j_barner, a couple more questions, please.

    How did your congregation find out that you were making the transition to Calvinism? Did you tell them straight out? Did you start preaching Calvinism? Did your preaching change enough that your congregation noticed it?

    I'm just curious as to how you told of your journey. One thing I have learned is that when one discovers the Doctrines of Grace, he wants to tell everybody he runs into. This can be off-putting. I'd like to hear you flesh out details or your journey, how you informed your congregation, and how you reacted when the light went on in your mind.
     
  10. Jerome

    Jerome Well-Known Member
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    You may find help on the Founders site. Ernest C. Reisinger has these gems of wisdom for turning a Baptist church Reformed:

    Establish spiritual credibility in the church before making your move.
    Don't tackle the whole church, first just initiate a select group of men into the doctrines of grace; they will back you up later.
    Avoid using the terms Calvinism, Reformed, etc. from the pulpit.
    Introduce a carefully screened book table.
    Stand behind old Calvinist creeds, etc, culled from your church's archives.
     
  11. TomVols

    TomVols New Member

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    Ascol has spoken beautifully on this, too. Was it he who said to always keep two churches in your mind - the one you have now and the one you want it to be, and keep in mind the distance between the two, that it wasn't created overnight, and it won't be bridged overnight either. If he didn't say it, credit me with it :thumbs: Also, keep in mind that there are some things that you just have to work around (For instance, I've found many Reformed men who had problems with the "invitation / altar call" just had to work with it and straighten it out as best as possible. Some churches would rather burn their Bibles than get rid of the requisite stanzas of Just As I Am that concludes every service.)
     
  12. Tom Butler

    Tom Butler New Member

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    TomVols, one of the Calvinist pastors I mentioned in an earlier post continued to give an invitation. But he framed it in much different language, basically inviting those to come forward who wished to publicly declare their salvation, or move their membership.

    Enquirers who came were asked to stay after church or leave the auditorium with a counselor.

    Nothinig long and drawn out, no begging, pleading or cajoling. No response? One verse and gone.
     
  13. j_barner2000

    j_barner2000 Member

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    Of course, as I preached some members noticed that the " I or me centered " mentality in slvation issues changed to "Him and His" which is where it belongs.

    The issue arrose because I have become involved with the reformation society in this area. Another pastor in the area became aware of this and of the fact that I don't do the big alter calls (haven't done one in my pastoral ministry, because I can do a better job counselling at a table than in front of the whole congregation.) and my use of a modern translation which is his really big problem with me.

    He called me a Calvinist and that is where the issue began. Members of both churches know each other and some of his comments have been heard by my members and commented upon.

    I have spoken with the church board and they were aware that I leaned toward sovsreign grace when I was called. ( I can't claim the title of Calvinist as I don't believe the doctrine began with him but came from God Himself.) I just preach His word without pressing my own agenda but His Biblical passages, and the results are there. We are growing in His grace, love, in knowlege and number. God is blessing our church and that is through His power and in obedience to Him.
     
  14. Tom Butler

    Tom Butler New Member

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    Thank you for your testimony. You mentioned altar calls. One night, my daughter, who belonged to another Baptist church, came to my church (where she grew up). When my Calvinist pastor closed the service without giving an invitation, she got upset.

    "Daddy," she said, "how are people going to get saved if you don't give an invitation?"

    Now, there's a teachable moment.

    But I fear that her question reflects the mindset of non-Cals.

    The answer I gave her is the one a Romanian pastor gave me when I asked him why Romanian Baptists do not give invitations after their two-hour-plus services.

    He said, "we have found that when the Spirit of God stirs someone's heart, it is not necessary for us to create an atmosphere in which He can work. The Holy Spirit is sovereign. When he stirs a heart, it will respond. We cannot keep those people away." This pastor was not a Calvinist.

    Even though I embraced the Doctrines of Grace in the early 1970s, it was not until 20 years later that I began to re-evaluate all that we Baptists do and say in presenting the gospel. It changed the very language and terminology I use. When one measures things against the Word of God, we'll junk a lot of what we do and say.
     
  15. j_barner2000

    j_barner2000 Member

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    Brother Tom,
    thank you that is a great answer for a teachable moment.

    My father who lives down in Cadiz, btw, I guess he would be your neighbor and noticed I don't do the alter call. He asked me why I passed on the oppprtunity to see folks saved... I told him that alter calls are contrived moments and if God chooses to lead someone to answer one, then it is only to encourage that preacher or some such stuff. I did not want to get into the I got saved/ God saved me discussion. He believes that God waits hoping we will let Him save us. Sometimes it is easier letting the Bible speak to doctrine than it is to argue it by my own limited skills of argumentation.

    .....rabbit trail..... (that is why I don't post much here. No matter how well I may know the information, arguing it is just a bore. I'd rather study it and use the arguments as study fodder for Bible study on Wed nights.) .....oh sorry, I will continue to teach His Word and let Him instruct, reprove and encourage us as mo man is able....
     
  16. webdog

    webdog Active Member
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    Contrived moment? Who are you to discourage or question the means God uses to bring sinners to Himself? What a pompous attitude to take!
    Those of you who allow your soteriology dictate how you do the Great Commission have a flawed view of God's sovereignty. Inviting someone to give their life to Christ is never a "contrived moment" regardless of what reformer has told you such. God did the very same thing..."I have put before you life and death, choose life that you may live". This is what an altar call is.
     
  17. Havensdad

    Havensdad New Member

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    I do altar calls (of a sort) when I preach, and I am very much reformed, soteriologically. I think the "method" is what is important. While I agree there is nothing wrong with giving altar calls, I DO think that the moody music, and "tactics" (such as counselors in the pews coming forward to "get the flow going"), are unbiblical, and in the case of the latter, sneaky and contrived.
     
  18. j_barner2000

    j_barner2000 Member

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    perhaps this is a terminology thing.... Alter call to me is begging someone to come up... ""We are going to sing this song as many times as it takes because I know that someone needs to come forward" etc. this I dont do. My uncle used to do it and it usually followed the " just raise your hand and it will be between you, meand God..." Then he coerced those that did to come forward. Left me with a bad taste....

    I do do invitation however. this is when I tell people that this last song is a time to come forward to share testimony, present for membership.... but if they dont come I end at the end of the song. If someone seemed to be struggling, I will visit with them in a more comfortable place and time.

    So I may have a tainted view of the term altar call vs invitation, which I view as 2 different things.
     
  19. Jerome

    Jerome Well-Known Member
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    Charles Spurgeon, Lectures to My Students:

    "In our Master's name we must give the invitation, crying, "Whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely." Do not be deterred from this, my brethren, by those ultra-Calvinistic theologians who say, ''You may instruct and warn the ungodly, but you must not invite or entreat them."


    "...those who never exhort sinners are seldom winners of souls to any great extent, but they maintain their churches by converts from other systems. I have even heard them say, "Oh, yes, the Methodists and Revivalists are beating the hedges, but we shall catch many of the birds." If I harbored such a mean thought I should be ashamed to express it. A system which cannot touch the outside world, but must leave arousing and converting work to others, whom it judges to be unsound, writes its own condemnation."
     
  20. Havensdad

    Havensdad New Member

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    Spurgeon's idea of an altar call was not what we see in most churches today. I think J Barner's post above says much. Spurgeon would have fainted at what we see in some "churches" today, and the tactics they use to get "numbers"
     
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