Posted on 03/23/2009 11:32:12 AM PDT by topcat54
Calvinism is back, so says David Van Biema in the March 22, 2009 issue of Time magazine. Calvinism is listed as one of 10 ideas changing the world Right now. Its third on the list. When most people hear the word Calvinism, they bite down only on the gristle of predestination and then spit out the whole piece of meat. There is much more to Calvinism that is obscured by the misapplied aversion to particular redemption. As a student at Reformed Theological Seminary in the 1970s, I was taught that certain cultural applications flowed from a consistent application of Calvinism. Calvinism is synonymous with a comprehensive biblical world-and-life view. Simply put, I was told that the Bible applies to every area of life. To be a Calvinist is to make biblical application to issues beyond personal salvation (Heb. 5:1114).
(Excerpt) Read more at americanvision.org ...
“Is this the same John Calvin that murdered Michael Servetus?”
The same way Bush “murdered” people on death row in Texas.
Calvin was never born again. He held to some of the tenets of the Catholic faith, one being infant baptism. God showed me that Calvinism is wrong and I will never accept it.
“He held to some of the tenets of the Catholic faith, one being infant baptism”
So did John Wesley, btw. How do you know if a person was born again? Its disgraceful that armchair theologians can write off people simply because they disagree with some nonessential doctrine. Calvin and other reformers literally put their lives on the line to help spread the gospel going against the powers that be in their time.
Thanks for posting. Calvinism is a very significant piece of my study of my own geneology.
mur·der (mûr'dər) (n) The unlawful killing of one human by another, especially with premeditated malice.
Since Servetus was not murdered by anyone, the answer is "no".
“Is this the same John Calvin that murdered Michael Servetus?”
No, John Calvin never murdered anyone.
“Why would anyone follow a murderer?”
Just curious, what do you do with all of Paul’s letters after you tear them out of your bible(s)?
Oh, or the books written by Moses?
Psalms by David?
Passages by Nebuchadnezzar?
The Catholic faith also teaches that Jesus was the eternal son of God, the savior of the world. Calvin taught that as well. Does that mean that everyone who holds anything in common with the Catholic faith cannot possibly be born again?
This is the catholic faith, which except a man believe faithfully he cannot be saved.
Amen Brother!!
It is a poverty of theological training that allows the inane speculations of "Left Behind" to proliferate. As Calvin intoned, "Let God be God and man be man."
Sorry.... That's just not good enough. So vague as to be useless.
Does "biblicism" mean that you believe nothing that you cannot find in Scripture?
Do you suggest, perhaps, that calculus or chemistry are not to be believed, because they're not in Scripture?
What does "belief" even mean, according to your definition of "biblicism?" Does it mean that you take Jesus literally when he describes Himself as "the gate" to the sheep fold? Does it mean that His parables mean exactly what they say -- even though Jesus said that He spoke in parables for the opposite reason: "This is why I speak to them in parables, because seeing they do not see, and hearing they do not hear, nor do they understand." (Matt. 13:13)
It's a nice slogan, Blogger, but it doesn't do much for you in real life -- I guarantee you that you don't live most of your life on the principle you just espoused.
Then what was your original objection again, since this post was about CalvinISM, not John Calvin per se?
Oh, I remember. You said:
The only ism I care about is biblicism. Beyond that, any of mans constructs is dung. If I find it in Scripture, I believe it.
CalvinISM is a construct of men, therefore it is dung. But you accept this dung.
Would you like a Mulligan?
HMMmmm...
It's kinda hard to say.
I do know that I'm not a Reformed Egyptian Anti-Calvinist.
I would actually have to STUDY something and COMPARE it to something else before I could make a JUDGEMENT call one way or the other.
AMEN!
The Catholic faith also teaches that Jesus was the eternal son of God, the savior of the world. Calvin taught that as well. Does that mean that everyone who holds anything in common with the Catholic faith cannot possibly be born again?This is the catholic faith, which except a man believe faithfully he cannot be saved.
< sarcasm>Tut tut tut. Don't you know there are good Christian people who don't accept all that Nicene/Athanasean/Apostles Creed stuff??? Boo to the evil Constantine! After all, the Trinity isn't a core doctrine to break fellowship over.< /sarcasm>
Hey, Elsie—thanks for the amen! I’m on my way out the door for a Bible study, but before I leave I wanted to say I like your tag line. :)
Calvinism is not a construct of man if it is found in Scripture. Calvin may have articulated Scripture when he put forth the TULIP. However, the doctrines can be found in Scripture and did not begin with John Calvin.
The initial article, as posted, was not solely about Calvinism. You know full well that you weren’t wanting a discussion on Calvinism, but were bating others regarding some other doctrinal beliefs that were not part of what most folks deem to be Calvinism.
How about this...if I find it in Scripture, I believe it. If it conflicts with Scripture, then I don’t. Better?
Also, don’t skip words when trying to articulate others views...I said “Beyond that”. I.E., beyond that which is biblical, man’s constructs are dung.
Slightly. The problem is, of course, that many times the judgment of whether or not something "conflicts with Scripture" is subject to interpretation -- necessarily so, because things we encounter in our daily lives have no direct counterpart in Scripture.
The question in that case is, do you believe your interpretation of Scripture? What if my interpretation differs from yours? Given that Scripture is not directly on-point in such cases, on what basis do we decide which interpretation, if any, is closest to true?
There are a number of practical difficulties with the principle of Sola Scriptura (which is the traditional term for what you've called "biblicism").
Theologian Bruce Metzger offers the following very interesting discussion on the problems inherent in taking the Bible literally (however you define the term); and he also refers to N. T. Wright's wonderful discussion, How Can the Bible Be Authoritative?
If the New Calvinism is going to have any staying power, it will have to abandon its pietistic streak, its amillennial eschatology...
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