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To: drstevej; RnMomof7; Jean Chauvin; xzins; winstonchurchill; Revelation 911; The Grammarian
Gee, a Calvinist 'shilling' for another Calvinist, what a shock!

To repeat the immortal words of Hank Kerchief, 'I could care a fig what any of you think'

This is from New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, Vol. VII: Liutpra http://www.ccel.org/php/disp.php?authorID=schaff&bookID=encyc07&page=279&view=thml

4. As Theologian. As a theologian, Melanchthon did not show so much creative ability as a genius for collecting and systematizing the ideas of others, especially of Luther, for the purpose of instruction. He kept to the practical, and cared little for connection of the parts, so his Loci were in the form of isolated paragraphs. The fundamental difference between Luther and Melanchthon lies not so much in the latter's ethical conception, as in his humanistic mode of thought which formed the basis of his theology and made him ready not only to acknowledge moral and religious truths outside of Christianity, but also to bring Christian truth into closer contact with them, and thus to mediate between Christian revelation and ancient philosophy.

Melanchthon's views differed from Luther's only in some modifications of ideas. Melanchthon looked upon the law as not only the correlate of the Gospel, by which its effect of salvation is prepared, but as the unchangeable order of the spiritual world which has its basis in God himself. He furthermore reduced Luther's much richer view of redemption to that of legal satisfaction. He did not draw from the vein of mysticism running through Luther's theology, but emphasized the ethical and intellectual elements.

After giving up determinism and absolute predestination and ascribing to man a certain moral freedom, he tried to ascertain the share of free will in conversion, naming three causes as concurring in the work of conversion, the Word, the Spirit, and the human will, not passive, but resisting its own weakness. Since 1548 he used the definition of freedom formulated by Erasmus, "the capability of applying oneself to grace."(emphasis mine) He was certainly right in thinking it impossible to change one's character without surrender of the will; but by correlating the divine and the human will he lost sight of the fundamental religious experience that the desire and realization of good actions is a gift of divine grace. His definition of faith lacks the mystical depth of Luther.

In dividing faith into knowledge, assent, and trust, he made the participation of the heart subsequent to that of the intellect, and so gave rise to the view of the later orthodoxy that the establishment and acceptation of pure doctrine should precede the personal.

263 posted on 08/02/2002 6:27:26 PM PDT by fortheDeclaration
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To: fortheDeclaration
Melanchthon's views differed from Luther's only in some modifications of ideas.

Dec that was Luthers Foundation..so how can the author say he ONLY "modified " some ideas.

dec jean has closed you down..give it up

264 posted on 08/02/2002 11:03:14 PM PDT by RnMomof7
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