Naaaaaaank! There are a few Scriptures that disagree with you. II Tim 3:16 for one.:praying:
No one has ever been, nor ever will be ,saved short of the Gospel.
The Effects of Calvinism
Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by Salamander, Jun 19, 2006.
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True
Once dead, physical, then the judgement is exactly right, but you must remember that Jesus told them Lazarus would be raised again to show forth the power of God. -
True, all without exception must come to the Father thru the Son. So how was it that Moses or any other O.T. saint came to the Father? Maybe whatever the means or method of bringing the OT saints to the Father is the same means or method by which some may be brought to the Father without the Gospel? One thing I do know is that the blood of Christ is the ONLY means by which God's wrath can be abated and settled, and anyone that enters God eternal kingdom must be justified through His blood. What is your take on that, Pinoybaptist?
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Romans 11
hebrews 11 tells how people where saved before the cross.
People who were looking for the one who would crush the serpents head.
It is all about belief of the messenger sent by God.
They believed God and it was credited to Him as righteousness.
We are saved by looking back at the cross, they are saved by looking forward to it. There is no difference between those two.
How important is the messenger?
Ezekiel 3:
18"Suppose I say to a sinful person, 'You can be sure you will die.' And you do not warn him. You do not try to get him to change his evil ways in order to save his life. Then he will die because he has sinned. And I will hold you accountable for his death.
19"But suppose you do warn that sinful person. And he does not turn away from his sin or his evil ways. Then he will die because he has sinned. But you will have saved yourself.
20"Or suppose a godly person turns away from his godliness and does what is evil. And suppose I put something in his way that will trip him up. Then he will die. Since you did not warn him, he will die for his sin. The godly things he did will not be remembered. And I will hold you accountable for his death.
21"But suppose you do warn a godly person not to sin. And he does not sin. Then you can be sure that he will live because he listened to your warning. And you will have saved yourself."
Hebrews 11 I mean, if you read this earlier -
This is just a thought, and is Butler theology, with no specific scripture verse to back it up.
When we look back at the cross to the finished atoning work of Christ, and the OT saints looked forward to the promised Messiah, we must remember that in the mind of God, Christ's atoning work was as finished from the foundation of the world.
In human time, the OT saints had to wait for their redemption. But their redemption was already accomplished in a way. That's why God could impute righteousness to Abraham
If this is off base, I stand ready for correction. -
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Righteousness
The scripture clearly shows throughout scripture from the beginning to end that God imputed righteouseness because our belief in Him
#John 1:12
Yet to all who received him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God—
Romans 4:3
What does the Scripture say? "Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness."
Galatians 3:6
Consider Abraham: "He believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness."
1 Thessalonians 2:10
You are witnesses, and so is God, of how holy, righteous and blameless we were among you who believed.
James 2:23
And the scripture was fulfilled that says, "Abraham believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness," and he was called God's friend.
We all are headed for destruction for we are predestined by God before even the foundation of the world, by His very word. To be condemned because we have not believed. Not because you were not chosen, because you have not believed.
Believers have been predestined for salvation by God's very word, that whosoever belielieves shall(predestined) to be saved.
It doesn't say might or maybe but shall be saved.
Don't let men give you doubt. God loved the world, that means all of you that He sent His Son, that whosoever believes in Him shall be saved.
Jesus is the only one that can save you.
The chosen people of God was cut out for unbelief.
Don't be arrogant, but afraid. If God did not spare these natural branches He will not spare us either.
We are His messengers of hope, and the blood of these people are on our hands.
Paul knew this, you can tell by His life.
So many people just through out seeds hoping to get good soil, but end up like the parable.
You have to prepare the soil. Ask any gardener and farmer, what will happen if God alone did all the work in the field. -
2. If I stop witnessing to a person it has nothing to do with whether I think they are elect. How many times does this need to be said? Calvinists do not make the determination on who is elect. God does. If I stop witnessing it is usually because a person has told me they do not want to hear it or they are hostile towards the message of the cross. But even when I cannot witness, I can pray.
3. There are no negative effects of Calvinism that I can think of. I gave you my reasons for not witnessing above. -
So you think because they've become hostile that you are driving them away?
Let me ask, just how far past hell could you possibly drive them away?
I never have relinquished hope. I still witness to those who have cussed me threatened me and just brushed me off. Why, I even still witness to those who say they're "saved" but obviously they could not actually be saved or they make God a liar, and guess what?:praise: :Fish: :praise: He cannot lie! -
The righteousness imputed to Abraham is what allowed him into Paradise, as well as the rest of the First fruits.:praise: :Fish: :praise: -
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2. I have witnessed to several of my friends. I continue to pray for them and witness to them. I will continue to witness to them until they are either saved or dead, unless they simply tell me to go away and leave them alone. In that case I will pray for them. It is not up to me to determine who the elect are and are not. That is God's choice. It is up to me to obey my master, the Lord Jesus Christ, and proclaim the Word of God to all men. I will do so. God will reveal in his time who the elect are and who the elect are not.
3. Not for me.
Joseph Botwinick -
2. I never give up, but I do shut up and wait for God to open the door for a revisit. The fact that they may be elect gives me hope and the reason for never giving up. They may yet come to know the Lord, even on the death-bed. The fact that I don't know who is elect and who is not give me even more reason to witness without discrimination or fainting.
3. No. I can't think of anything in my belief system that has a negative effect on my witnessing. Calvinism does not cause people to refrain from witnessing. If there are Calvinists that don't believe in witnessing, they didn't get that from Calvinism, but from there own mind. -
I want to thank the posters in this thread. I have learned much, and it has been a pleasure to read something presented in a way that edifies rather than condemns.
I am not a Calvinist, and probably never will be, but I see that many of the preconceived notions I have held are not necessarily believed by all who consider themselves to be Calvinist.
We may well find that none of us are as correct or as incorrect as we think we are. -
Joseph Botwinick -
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1. The Bible tells us in Romans 1 the following:
From this passage, we see that God did indeed reveal himself to mankind through creation without the Gospel being preached.
also, the Bible tells us this:
In other words, in the Old Testament, before the Gospel was ever preached, God saved lost humanity. These Biblical passages seem to agree with Pinoy and NPetr.
2. Your conclusion is flawed as to the outcome of the Primitives being correct. We don't choose to or not to preach the Gospel based on the outcomes of our preaching. We do so because of our obedience to our Lord's commands:
The Great Commission
Acts 1:8
2 Timothy 4:1-5
Joseph Botwinick -
Joseph, you are right and thanks for the correction. What was I thinking? For some reason I regurgitated an old answer to the assertion that those who haven't heard the gospel preached cannot be condemned for unbelief. If that's true, let's don't preach it lest they reject it. I'll be fine as soon as the fever breaks!
I do agree that they are without excuse.
Now, let's chase this rabbit. I believe those folks will be judged, not on their rejection of Christ obviously, but on their failure to live up to their own moral code. He can't claim God is unfair because he made up his own code of right and wrong, and still couldn't keep it. Any thoughts. -
Tom,
Please forgive me, but I don't think I am following you. Could you please put your argument and question in dummy language so that someone like me can understand it?:)
Joseph Botwinick -
Joseph, I am speaking of the passages in Romans 1 and 2.
Romans 1 says people are without excuse because they can see the creation, which reveals God to them. So they are without excuse for rejecting God.
But they cannot be condemned for rejecting Jesus, of whom they have never heard. And they cannot be condemned by the Law, of which they had no knowledge. So how will they be judged? Since "they are a law unto themselves" (2:14), that is, they have their own moral code, or sense of right and wrong, that is the basis of their judgment. And since they cannot adhere perfectly to their own law, they will be condemned.
That's what I was trying to say in my earlier post, but it needed setting up better.
Tom
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