Hi Gene;
You amaze me you even try to take what other's say and twist it to your own logic. I never said that Calvinist have a Logic of any worth. I only acknowledge that this is what they think they have. Actually your logic deny's the clear teaching of God's word and You strain that of what Calvinism actually is for your own purposes. Even Calvin would disagree with you.
:rolleyes:
I have shown you, but you're to blinded to see it :D
May God open your eyes;
Mike
John 10:15 and the Atonement
Discussion in '2004 Archive' started by Southern, Nov 4, 2004.
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GENEMBRIDGES,
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Bob,
I am trying to show that Jesus clearly said that some were "NOT" of His sheep (vs. 26), after He said that He lays down His life for the "sheep" (Vs. 15). Let me ask this question:
Did Jesus lay His life down for those in verse 26?
In conclusion, I would just like to say that Jesus clearly showed that He had a particular people (sheep) in mind when laying down His life and then told some that they were not part of this group (the sheep). This is in direct contradiction to your view of scripture.
In Christ... -
GeneMBridges,
However, Sins do have Consequences. For example if you have sexual intercourse with a person who is HIV positive, the consequence is that you too, will become HIV positive! If you sin by violating natural law in the sense of driving a car too fast around a curve, the consequence is you will leave the road. So far you are still OK, but when your careening car slams into that rock mountain at a high rate of speed, you receive the consequence of your sin. In neither of those examples of the result of sin, is Jesus exacting a penalty against you, you are just receiving the natural result of sin.
Yes, you will sin, but if you confess your sins,he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from All unrighteousness. Forgiveness comes after confession.
Atonement is NOT forgiveness of sins. Just as in our penal system Pardon does not convey forgiveness, neither does atonement which is pardon from the death penalty afford any forgiveness. Atonement removed the penalty. If you acknowledge your sins, and confess your sins, then you receive forgiveness for the sins you commit.
The bottom line is this, Atonement clears the way for man to have everlasting life through faith in Jesus. Belief in, that is, FAITH in God is the condition of human spirit that receives God's attention, and He saves ALL who have faith in him.
Faith alone saves, while we are under God's grace. -
I view Arminianism as a kind of 2.5 pt Calvinism so it is difficult to contrast your views with what I am saying as distinctly as I can with 4 and 5pt Calvinism.
So we are in agreement there.
This is in fact the focus of my particular denomination.
Christ states emphatically to people before the cross "your sins ARE forgiven" - and He was right.
Further we have Moses and Elijah fully glorified, fully forgiven, fully in harmony with God in Matt 17 "mount of transfiguration" before the Cross.
There are ample texts in Heb 11 and in the OT and all through the Gospels pre-cross SHOWING that forgiveness, new birth, Gospel living was fully in play before the cross. There is no escaping it.
The external work of Christ's role as High Priest and application of the Atoning Sacrifice on the individual level illustrates the Gospel - and solves the very real problem for the saints God describes in Daniel 7 - but it is not "the moment of forgiveness" for the saint.
Each saint (OT or NT) experiences real forgiveness when they repent and yield to the New Birth - the saving drawing of God the Holy Spirit.
Your payment vs application model is perfect for the Lev 16 doctrine on atonement vs atoning sacrifice.
(It is difficult for me to argue with 3 pt Calvinists)
In Christ,
Bob -
But if you look at the entire process of Atonenment - (as God Himself describes it in Lev 16) then you see that it INCLUDES the act of the sinner in repenting for sins and in claiming the blood of Christ. When the process is complete - nothing remains to be done.
The problem you are facing is that Calvinists typically use the term atonement while ignoring what God has said about it.
In Christ,
Bob -
Yes, you will sin, but if you confess your sins,he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from All unrighteousness. Forgiveness comes after confession.
Atonement is NOT forgiveness of sins. Just as in our penal system Pardon does not convey forgiveness, neither does atonement which is pardon from the death penalty afford any forgiveness. Atonement removed the penalty. If you acknowledge your sins, and confess your sins, then you receive forgiveness for the sins you commit.
The bottom line is this, Atonement clears the way for man to have everlasting life through faith in Jesus. Belief in, that is, FAITH in God is the condition of human spirit that receives God's attention, and He saves ALL who have faith in him.
Faith alone saves, while we are under God's grace. </font>[/QUOTE]Wes, Scripture says that Jesus IS the atoning sacrifice for our sins. It teaches the atonement is actual, not potential. THAT'S THE LINGUISTIC CONSTRUCT OF THE TEXT. Did Jesus pay for our sins Himself or not? If you have to add faith to it, you add value to the atonement, Wes. Do you understand what the difference is between a potential atonement and an actual atonement?
You say unbelief is a choice. Yes it is. Nobody says it isn't. It is a sin not to believe. God says we are commanded to believe in Jesus. To fail to do so is sin. Did you fail geometry in high school? A =B; B=C. therefore A=C. Scripture teaches that unbelief is disobedience, they are even the same word. Unbelief is a sin. You have yet to show one Scripture that says that unbelief is NOT a sin. Hebrews 3 even speaks of an evil heart of unbelief. If unbelief is morally neutral, then how can talk about an evil unbelieving heart? No, unbelief is not morally neutral. Moreover, if unbelieving is morally neutral, so is believing, and Scripture overwhelming teaches that believing is not morally neutral.
The ONLY way your scenario works is if one of two things is true:
A. Jesus did not pay our sin of unbelief.
or
B. Unbelief is a morally neutral act.
If it is morally neutral, that contradicts 1 John 3 and Heb.3 as well as Romans. Again, WHATEVER is not of faith is sin. Unbelief, I would think, falls into the "whatever" category. (How odd that those that would say hat "whosoever," "all," and "world" always mean everybody without exception, suddenly start making exceptions about ""whatever" is not of faith being unbelief...this is a major inconsistency). Unbelief IS disobedience WES. THEY ARE THE SAME WORD IN GREEK. YOU HAVE YET TO DEAL WITH THIS EXEGETICALLY. Show us EXEGETICALLY that unbelief is NOT a sin. I have shown you exegetically that it is a sin.
Nobody says that justification is not by faith. However, it is untrue that man himself musters it of his own accord. Again, Ephesians 2 clearly teaches that salvation is by grace alone through faith alone, but that there is no faith apart from grace, which is a gift of God. Salvation is not synergistic or we have something about which we can boast.
Why do some people have faith and others not, Wes? -
Take a look here:
http://www.the-highway.com/articleJuly02.html -
But if you look at the entire process of Atonenment - (as God Himself describes it in Lev 16) then you see that it INCLUDES the act of the sinner in repenting for sins and in claiming the blood of Christ. When the process is complete - nothing remains to be done.
The problem you are facing is that Calvinists typically use the term atonement while ignoring what God has said about it.
In Christ,
Bob </font>[/QUOTE]You're ignoring that the people did no work contributing to their atonement.
Nobody denies that repentance is involved. Repentance and faith go hand in hand and on them justification is dependent. Nobody denies that. The atonement makes the ground for it. That's the issue. You're confusing the atonement with justification.
Calvinists do not deny that a person must repent and believe or believe and repent (there is no real logical order there, because the two are considered to be hand-in-hand). Calvinists do not deny that justification is by faith.
The atonement is the GROUND of justification, it is by faith in Christ and His work that we are saved. Do we believe on our own accord from our own resources and abilities or not?
The core teaching is that justification IS conditional and that God Himself causes us to fulfill the condition. Election is not justification. Election is unconditional on our part, it is grounded in God and God alone. In a sense it is conditional on faith, but we teach that that faith, if it is considered a condition of election is provided for us by God's supernatural action in our hearts. He sees to it that the condition is fulfilled. He does this for each and every individual Christian.
That is what regeneration is about. It fulfills the "can" part of John 6:44 as a result of the giving and drawing in the same chapter. We then believe and repent or repent and believe, whichever order they go, and we are justified.
We are all united around justification by faith. You say it is by grace through faith. We say it is by grace alone through faith alone and that the atonement is actual and not potential. It can only be potential if unbelief is not a sin or if unbelief is a sin not paid for in the atonement. Even the dispensational view of the atonement is an actual atonement. They say, however, it does not cover the sin of unbelief. That's a major problem, because it contradicts the teaching that Jesus paid for ALL our sins and there is nothing contextual anywhere that indicates that unbelief is not a sin or it is exempted from the atonement if it is. Thus, you end up with an actual ineffective atonement, which is an oxymoron or with double jeopardy, meaning God sends people to hell for unbelief when Jesus paid for it. That means you need to find support in Scripture that supports the idea of God exacting double jeopardy. -
Hi Gene,
I've already read Helm on Kendall. I read it again just now to honor your request and to see if my evalution of Helm's critique has changed.
It hasn't. Helm is not assessing the material accurately. He does not quote from the commentaries. He does not engage Kendall's critique of Calvin. He does not site a single quote from Calvin that proves his point that Calvin did not maintain a distinction between the atoning sacrifice for all and the application of the benefits of the atoning sacrifice for the elect.
It was disturbing to read. Helm approached the writings of Calvin to prove his own viewpoint and he failed.
I would encourage everyone to read the sources for yourself and to come to your own conclusions. It is just too easy to take someone else's word for it and be mislead.
I double checked Kendall's footnotes on Calvin and found him to be quoting accurately and in context. In reading Helm's critique, the quotes he sited were often contradicting the point he was trying to make.
It is true, if you spend time with the original, you can spot the counterfeit when you come accross it. In this case, you can spot the misuse of quotes when you come accross them.
A very poor effort by Helm. -
Jesus said that He did not lay down His life for certain individuals. Is there a difference between Him "laying His life down for" and "dying for" somebody?
If so, please explain how.
In Christ -
On the subject of Lev 16 and the entire process of Atonement - vs the Atoning Sacrifice.
Lev 16 is the service performed at the end of the year for the final disposition of sin for the entire year. All the sins commited by all the people for the entire year - confessed and brought in via the animal sacrifices - reach final disposition in that year-ending ceremony.
Forgiveness was achieved at the time of repentance and confession and the animal sacrifice at that time testifies to that fact. But the final disposition of sin in the ceremony of Atonement at the end of the year - is still needed according to God's Word.
The Calvinist model seeks to stand the Lev 16 instruction by God on its head.
However - my argument is that God is right even in this case.
You are confusing the entire process of atonement with the Atoning Sacrifice made by Christ.
Full Atonement takes place even later. At the end of that sacrificial year AFTER all the animal sacrifices, confession, repentance and returning to God for the year had been completed.
The problem 4 and 5 pt Calvinists have with Justification is of the form "IF He forgives us our sins and cleanses us from all unrighteousness - he is faithful and just to cause us to repent from our sins"
http://www.baptistboard.com/ubb/ultimatebb.php/topic/35/1207/2.html#000016
In Christ,
Bob -
What is future is the Atonement process completed as Christ completes it in his role has High priest doing exactly what HE said He would do in His own illusrtation given in Lev 16 explaining the atonement process not just the Atoning Sacrifice.
Calvinists can't help but ignore the atonement - cling only to the Atoning Sacrifice and then call that -- the entire Atonement process.
Hence their mistake.
In Christ,
Bob -
Bob,
Jesus said that He did not lay down His life for certain individuals. Is there a difference between Him "laying His life down for" and "dying for" somebody?
If so, please explain how.
In Christ -
GeneBridges,
The truth is that not all that can be said about 'belief' and 'unbelief' is contained in the scriptures. For example the scriptures do not say exactly what belief is! Yes, they elude to it, but do not describe the truth essence of belief. Nor does it speak of the true essence of unbelief.
Your premise that there is a scenario in which God allows unbelievers to go to hell for a sin which Jesus paid, is completely bogus, and is not supportable in scripture. No one goes to hell for sin, sin has been atoned, ONCE-for-ALL. People go to hell because they lack Faith in God! NOT because they SIN!
As has been pointed out, we are commanded to believe. If we choose to not believe, we are not guilty of the sin of unbelief, we are guilty of the sin of disobeying the command to believe.
I am deeply saddened to hear that you are afflicted by HIV. But I will not apologize for speaking the truth! By the way, I have diebetes so we are both under a death penalty! But it is only the means by which my spirit gets set free from the flesh to be present with my Lord and Savior, Jesus, the Christ!
One's MORALITY is controlled by what one chooses to believe!
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Do you have a quote of Him saying "I do NOT lay down my life for YOU" to somebody?
No?
I thought not.
Where Calvinism lacks a text - it simply makes one up and pretends that it is in the Bible. It is the circular argument of first editing scripture and then pretending that one's inserted verbage were actually found in scripture.
As it is - we do have the superset and subset idea for Christ said in John 6 that He in fact lays down his life for the SUPERSET - WORLD and also in John 10 for the SUBSET within that superset - "my sheep".
But nowhere does He say "I did NOT lay down my life for you" to anyone or OF anyone. But that is a pretty simple thing for Calvinism to "make up" is it not?
In Christ,
Bob -
Bob,
Your interpretation flies in the face of John 10!
Notice that Jesus "did" say, despite your objection to the contrary, that He some of those that were listening to Him were not of His "sheep" (Jn. 10:26)that He laid His life down for.
If you will go to the I John 2:2 forum, you will see that the verses you mentioned that speak of the "world" are in line and consistant with my interpreation with John 10, but you on the other hand must insist that Jesus did in fact lay His life down for those that are not His sheep when He said the complete opposite.
Bob, Please explain in your next post how Jesus could tell some that they were not of the group that He just said He laid His life down for.
In Christ... -
Jesus said some people were not his sheep. That was never disputed. That the fact that there are saints and sinners - the saved and the lost in every age has never been in doubt.
What has been exposed is your claim that Christ ever said "I only laid down my life for My sheep - not the World and certainly not the Whole World".
Get it? You have no text to back up the salient point of your claim.
That is a huge problem for most - but not always a big obstacle for Calvinism.
I don't doubt that there is some way to edit the text so that it can say what you need - but as it reads today -- the superset and the subset are clear. "HE is the atoning sacrifice for our sins AND NOT FOR OUR SINS ONLY but for those of the WHOLE WORLD".
Hard to miss (under normal circumstances).
You needed a text to say "I ONLY laid down my life for my sheep" -- see?
In Christ,
Bob -
Bob,
First of all, please go to I John 2:2 and provide information for your interpretation. You keep bringing it up as if it proved anything about John 10. If you go to the forum you will notice that it is consistent with my interpretation here.
In your post you admitted that Jesus said that some were not of His "sheep", the same group He just said He laid His life down for. I don't have to "make" the text say anything, it is obvious that you can see it too, you just dont accept the only conclusion of this... Particular Redemption.
In Conclusion, Jesus told us who He laid His life down for (the Sheep) and then told some of those same people listening to Him that they were not of His "sheep"! You may not like this, but as long as Jesus teaches it, it does not matter. Im sure anyone can see that this is devastating to all forms or Arminianism on the atonement.
In Christ... -
You keep making the point that there are some people who are not saint "not His sheep".
That is not under debate - so it is insteresting that you continue to make the point.
You fail to make the point "those who are today not saints - never will be saints".
You fail to make the point "Christ ONLY died for OUR SINS (the saints) and NOT the sins of "THE WHOLE WORLD" -- yet your argument desperately "needs" you to find such a text.
By contrast I "actually HAVE" the text that says that Christ died NOT ONLY for the saints sins - the church's sins - the people of God's sins - but ALSO the "SINS of the WHOLE WORLD" 1John 2:2.
Though the text "says that" you seem to be unhappy with it.
I understand why you need to find that text confusing to continue to support your argument so far - I just don't see how it actually "is" as confusing as you need it to be.
In Christ,
Bob
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