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The Theological Aesthetics of Hans Urs von Balthasar
La Salle University ^ | Joel Garver

Posted on 08/10/2002 5:45:29 PM PDT by JMJ333

**Note: it is difficult to outline any summary of Balthasar's thought, especially given the sheer magnitude of the Trilogy (15 volumes, each of which is over--often well over--300 pages!), not to mention the many other works which serve to elucidate and expand the central themes of the Trilogy itself thus the following is a rather selective survey of the Balthasarian corpus some themes are entirely passed over and others receive only scant attention .

Let’s return, then, to the basic problem of being which Balthasar sees as fundamental to human thought and philosophy. In particular let’s consider the problem of the One and Many which he sees as solved only in the revelation of the Triune God in the person of Christ in whom the concrete and the universal are joined.

The Problem of Being

Balthasar outlines three basic approaches that non-Christian philosophies have taken to the problem of being. First, there is pagan polytheism. Balthasar sees polytheism as essentially mythical. Myth functions to bring the transcendent into contact with our concrete world, representing, therefore, the immanence of the divine within the world or of the general within the particular. But in doing this the transcendent is reduced to the finite and becomes subject to human manipulation through magic.

Christ alone is the true myth, affirming that God may indeed be known in and through the world (true immanence) and yet is also truly transcendent and utterly distinct from any created thing. The formulation of Chalcedon affirms this and furthermore t hat Christ is no mere particular but a unique totality expressed concretely.

Second, there is mystical monism. Balthasar sees the reaction against polytheism in systems which posit the existence of a Unity, a transcendent "One." A version of monism is that of Buddhism and eastern thought which see this world as esse ntially maya, an illusion, leading to suffering due the failure to fulfill illusory desire. Only by setting aside such false desire and this illusory world do we arrive at the real, at nirvana—that is, nothingness. Balthasar notes that thi s is unsatisfactory since it cannot account for the origin of the illusion or why it causes us to suffer or why we suffer if suffering itself is an illusion. Moreover, its way of "salvation" is merely a kind of spiritual euthanasia.

The other version of the One is that of neo-Platonism which follows the via negativa, ascending to God by setting aside this world and its categories. This too is unsatisfactory since in the movement of the Many into the One, we are left withou t explanation of why the Many have arisen. Also it denies its own starting point in this world in order to solve the problem of this world. We are left, therefore, with a reality that is ultimately impersonal.

Third, there is Hegelian dialectics. This too is problematic since it denies the true transcendence of God since God needs the universe in order to express Himself as truly God. If that is the case, however. then God is not God. Furthermore, in Hegelianism the individual is sublimated within the Absolute and any individuality that is possible is only by a relation to the Other, but a relation in which the Other is reduced to a means of self-realization rather than an end in itself. Finally, Hegel is cheap on human suffering and death, turning them into a mere speculative necessity for some kind of negativity within the self-realization of Absolute Spirit.

Thus the choices we are left with are atheism (in its Buddhist, Platonic, or Hegelian versions) or Christ. All of the atheisms are essentially world denying, seeking for a solution a transcendent Nothing. Even Marxism places salvation in an ever post poned future. But in Christ the various antinomies of non-Christian thought are resolved.

Christ is both the eternal Logos and the eternally elected Man. He is God in human flesh. And this reality finds its origin in the life of the Trinity in whom Father, Son, and Spirit have eternally existed. Thus Otherness and difference are not exclu ded from ultimate reality. Since the Father has eternally been with the Son, Otherness has positive value and is the condition of possibility for the creation of a world which is not merely a falling away from the One or an accident of primordial violence, but is truly real in itself. Nor is the world a necessary self-realization of God’s own Absolute Being, for the infinite "space" of love between the Father and Son is already filled by the Spirit and it is into this "space" that the world is inserted.

So it is this Triune God, revealed in Christ, that is the solution to the problem of being—being which is beautiful, good, and true.

A Preliminary Overview

With these points in mind we can turn to Balthasar’s main aesthetic contention—God is supreme Beauty, who dwells in inaccessible light and has revealed Himself, become visible, in the Person of His Son, Jesus Christ. It is of the essence of Christian faith to fix our eyes upon Jesus and in Him see the glory of the Father. Balthasar points to 1 John 1:1-2:

That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, concerning the Word of life, the Life made manifest and which we have seen and to which we bear witness and declare to you that eternal Life which was with the Father and was manifested to us…

Of course, this is for us, to a certain degree, metaphorical "sight" since the theological organ of perception is faith, not sight, and faith comes by hearing.

Along with Balthasar’s love of music and musical metaphors, this explains his emphasis on hearing the Word of God and perceiving His glory by the "eyes of faith." Faith, after all, involves surrender and hearing is the perceptual mode of surrender. S ight, on the other hand, involves dominance and distance. He writes:

The eye is the organ with which the world is possessed and dominated… Through the eye the world is our world, in which we are not lost; rather, it is subordinate to us as an immeasurable dwelling space with which we are familiar. The other side of this material function denotes distance, separateness…Hearing is a wholly different, almost opposite mode of the revelation of reality…It is not objects we hear—in the dark, when it is not possible to see—but their utterances and communications. Theref ore it is not we ourselves who determine on our part what is heard and place it before us as an object in order to turn our attention to it when it pleases us. That which is heard comes upon us without our being informed of its coming in advance. It lays hold of us without our being asked…The basic relationship between the one who hears and that which is heard is thus one of defenselessness on the one side and of communication on the other…The hearer belongs to the other and obeys him.

According Balthasar, despite the biblical emphasis on glory seen by the eyes of faith, the aesthetic dimension of theology has been gradually purged from western theology, both Protestant and Catholic. His seven-volume Herrlichkeit is an attemp t to compensate for that loss.

The first volume, Seeing the Form, defines the general scope, method, and purpose of the volumes and includes a general discussion of what Balthasar calls the "form" or "Gestalt" of the Lord Christ. Volumes two and three (which I will la rgely pass over here since they are nearly impossible to summarize) are the unfolding of historical examples of this aesthetic form as it is explicated by the early medievals (volume two: Studies in Theological Style: Clerical Styles) and by modern poets and lay thinkers (Lay Styles; a few of whom are not "lay" at all, but did lie outside of the mainstream of the Church). Included are folks such as Augustine, Pseudo-Dionysius, Anselm, Bonaventure (in volume two) and Dante, John of the Cross , Pascal, Hopkins, and others (in volume three). Volumes four and five undertake to examine the larger metaphysical context in which the form of Christ appeared (volume four: The Realm of Metaphysics in Antiquity) and in which it now cannot appear (volume five: The Realm of Metaphysics in the Modern Age). Some of his insights here have already been sketched in my earlier comments. Volumes six and seven deal with the theology of the Old and New Covenants, respectively, examining such issue s as their interrelation, how the New fulfills the Old, the glory of God in Old Covenant theophanies and the glory of Christ’s sufferings in the New Covenant.

Form and Faith

The fundamental idea of the aesthetics is relatively simple: in the Incarnation the very form (Gestalt) of God was definitively revealed providing a measure by which every other form is to be measured. This revelation, contrary to the practical elaboration of it in modern theology, is not merely a pointer to so mething beyond itself, but rather a manifestation of the form of Beauty itself in Christ.

But Balthasar’s aesthetics is not the subjectivism of 18th century aesthetic theory with its focus on the acts of perceiving that project one’s own interiority upon the object, leading to a beauty perceived within the self. Rather Balthasar ’s focus is on glory of the object itself apprehended by faith. For Balthasar the illumination that produces faith is itself an aesthetic act. The very object of faith itself—Jesus Christ—draws the beholder providing its own interior light. God Himself is the light by which we apprehend Him by faith.

Thus faith cannot be theorized in a narrowly intellectualistic or propositional fashion, simply as a "believing that" or as the acceptance of a set of facts. More so it involves a receptivity to the object of faith whereby one is so impressed b y it that faith necessarily ensues in obedience. Here Mary is the model in her "fiat" to God’s word—an active receptivity analogous to the receptivity of the womb.

This, in turn, raises questions as to the relation between faith and reason. Balthasar uses marital imagery, proposing that reason—womb-like—gives itself to faith to be made fruitful, not arguing itself into faith but allowing faith to come to fulfill ment within it. He rejects an apologetic approach that either, on one hand, appeals to the objectivity of historical events as pointers to divine realities or, on the other, maintains a fideistic approach that begins with human subjectivity. He writes:

For [apologetics] the heart of the matter should be the question: "How does God’s revelation confront man in history? How is it perceived?" But under the influence of a modern rationalistic concept of science, the question shifted ever more from its pr oper center to the margin, to be restated in this manner: "Here we encounter a man who claims to be God, and who, on the basis of this claim, demands that we should believe many truths he utters which cannot be verified by reason. What basis acceptable to reason can we give to his authoritative claims?" Anyone asking the question in this way has really already forfeited an answer, because he is at once enmeshed in an insoluble dilemma…Christ cannot be considered one "sign" among others…the dimmest idea of what a form is should serve as a warming against such leveling.

Jesus is the objective manifestation of God but reason, on its own, cannot see this, according to Baltahsar. God’s grace is necessary and by it reason is drawn into faith wherein it can see what is objectively there to be seen—that is, the revelation of God. Seeing and believing are complementary.

To put it another way, reason is necessary to seeing, but for the revelation to be truly seen, the revelation itself must enlighten the viewer to itself by grace. So faith is not merely subjective since it is not the believer who makes a leap, but ins tead it is the object of faith that draws the believer to Himself by His form of beauty.

According to Balthasar the experience of faith and the assurance or certainty of salvation (especially as that was posed by Luther) are closely related. While faith is something that is experienced, it is not the experience of faith itself in an intro spective and experiential fashion that gives assurance. Rather by faith we know Christ and the power of His resurrection and press on to the goal—it is in the receptive movement of faith towards its object that assurance is possessed, but this is a moveme nt that turns away from the self, towards Christ, and is grasped by Him.

Another emphasis of Balthasar is the materiality of Christian faith. It is not a pure mysticism or non-physical thing since God is revealed in the cosmos and, ultimately, in the Incarnation. He even maintains that in the eschaton the Beatific Vision will be mediated through the humanity of Christ. Moreover, while our awareness of God in the creation has been marred by sin, in Christ it is possible to begin to restore the materiality of God’s presence. This is seen foremost in the actions of the sacr aments by which Christ makes Himself present, in a sexuality that is transformed from egoistic self-gratification into self-offering love, and in the self-sacrificial love for the neighbor in deeds of service.

It follows from Balthasar’s emphasis on the materiality of faith that the mystical contemplation of God (the awareness of His presence) is inextricably tied to a life of activity. It must leave behind any world-denying Platonistic notions in favor a G od who is active in history culminating in the paschal mystery of Christ. So Bultmann’s demythologization is a gnostic attempt separate faith from history which ends up positing a transcendence that reintroduces the very mythological assumptions that the Incarnation had put to rest.

Balthasar goes on to examine the specific form that the beautiful revelation of God takes in Christ. Jesus demands faith in Himself as the historical form of the eternal God, who in His divinity has universal significance and who, in His humanity, is conditioned by historical contingency. Nevertheless, Christ is the express image of the Father, revealing the very form of the Trinitarian life of God in contrast to all religions which posit God as a formless One.

The work of Christ, says Balthasar, is the living exegesis of the Father since Christ’s existence as Son consists in His obedience at every moment actualizing the immediate will of the Father. Moreover, Christ draws us into this work by union with Him . He writes:

By his prayer and his suffering the Son brings his disciples—and through them, all mankind—into the interior space of the Trinity.

This form of God, though within time and history, is the utterly unique measure of relationship between God and man. Yet merely empirical and purportedly neutral scientific methods, with their suspension of judgment, cannot see this form for what it i s. That is only possible with the eyes of faith and an openness to the obedience the form demands from faith.

Old and New Covenant

In the final two volumes of the aesthetics Balthasar examines the definitive revelation of beauty—the glory of God revealed in Christ—as that is authoritatively given to us in the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments. The work of God as Creator is fulfilled in the work of God as Redeemer and so it is the creation itself which becomes of the means of God’s redemptive revelation. Human language, thought, actions, and the like are the very forms of God’s sel f-expression to us and so the form of revelation and the act of revelation are not to be separated.

According to Balthasar the Hebrew Scriptures in themselves are a puzzle, a promise pointing to a future that has not yet arrived. It is only in the light of the revelation in Christ that the OT makes sense. He writes:

The essential point is that Israel as a whole and existentially is an image and figure which cannot interpret itself.

The Old Testament poses the following problem: on one hand, God, who is faithful to His Word, the very Word by which the world was made, has called a people to Himself by mighty acts manifesting His glory. On the other hand, how can God remain faithfu l to His word in light of His glorious holiness when His people keep breaking the covenant He has established?

This Old Testament covenantal dynamic is seen in the increasing participation of Israel in the sphere of divine holiness (e.g., consider the 70 elders in the Pentateuch in contrast to Zechariah’s vision of the outpoured Spirit). At the same time, howe ver, the mighty acts of God, the evidence of the presence of His glory, become increasingly less prominent and more concealed (e.g., consider the deliverance of Israel in the Exodus as opposed to that which God worked through Esther). God presents Himsel f as ever more incomprehensible, yet, paradoxically, Israel is never surer of her God than when she seems to be forsaken by Him in exile.

The Old Testament leaves off with a fragmentary picture without any form by which the fragments may be brought together. Only with the revelation of Christ is a form given by which the Old Testament may be understood. Balthasar writes:

The individual forms which Israel established in the course of her history converge together upon a point that remains open and that cannot be calculated ahead of time on their basis of their convergence or their mutual relationship, especially since t hey stand in opposition to one another so often.

The revelation of Christ, therefore, is a manifestation of God’s glory that can embrace even the seemingly contradictory fragments of the Old Testament and this glory was ultimately revealed in Christ’s obedience even unto death on a Cross, in the ingl orious form of a slave. The power of God was manifest in powerlessness. This revelation is totally unexpected, beyond what could possibly be imagined.

First, however, is Christ’s claim for Himself not as One who merely points to a way to God but who is Himself the Way. Jesus brings people to crisis by His authority, by forcing the issue of the people’s acceptance or rejection of Him. His pre sence and questions make others transparent to themselves for this is the presence of One who is transparent to Himself. Jesus is therefore announcing Himself as God’s definitive Word.

In contrast to His authority, however, Jesus is also the one who became poor for our sakes and this theme of poverty can be seen in relation to three areas: prayer, the Holy Spirit, and faith. In regard to prayer we see Jesus offering Himself up to th e Father in Gethsemane. But in the "Our Father" that is given to us to pray we also have a similar model of humility before God and complete reliance upon Him (consider the petitions).

Jesus is also supremely gifted with the Spirit by whom He was conceived, who descended upon His in baptism, and so on. Yet Jesus not so much possesses the Spirit, but rather yields completely to the Spirit to be possessed by Him—from being driv en into the desert of temptation to finally offering Himself to God upon the cross through the eternal Spirit (Heb 9:14). By this total surrender to the Spirit He is able to give that same Spirit to us.

Balthasar, interestingly, also presents Jesus as a Man of faith—one who surrenders Himself to God in trusting perseverance, not by His own initiative, but in response to the prior faithfulness of the Father who, in grace, had chosen Him. Thereby Jesus is the "pioneer and perfecter of faith" (Heb 12:2), fulfilling the faith of Abraham even to the faithful obedience of the Cross, where, forsaken of God, He could only live by faith and not by sight. Jesus, therefore, is not merely a model of faith, but by our Baptism we are engrafted into the very faithfulness of Christ—Jesus believes in us so that we too believe and, in the work of faith, like Him, surrender ourselves to the Father.

Above all, however, it is the Johannine vision of Christ that most intrigues Balthasar: "And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, full of grace and truth; we have beheld his glory, the glory of the Only Begotten of the Father" (John 1:14). But fo r John, the cross and the glorification of Christ are inseparable realities—coming from the Father, the Son’s whole life is one of glorifying the Father through obedience moving relentlessly toward his "hour" of glorification in powerlessness upon the Cross.

It is in the formless, the deformity (Ungestalt), of the Cross that the very form of God’s glory (Ubergestalt) is revealed as the boundless, self-giving love that characterizes the very life of the Trinity. This form of glory unseats all worldly aesthetics and all classical notions of beauty as proportion and harmony, making way for a new theological understanding of beauty in the Trinitarian dynamic of cruciform love seen by the eyes of faith. And that is the fundamental point that Bal thasar expresses in his aesthetics.


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To: Wrigley; Some hope remaining.
There's your chace to be a goddess.

I am considering it..it is the best offer I have had all week...Hope is a nice guy..could it be a marriage made in heaven???Hey ya never know:>)

121 posted on 08/14/2002 1:49:05 PM PDT by RnMomof7
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To: RnMomof7; Wrigley
There's your chace to be a goddess.

Do I remember correctly that you're a single guy, Wrigley? If so, let me give you a tip. Never say or even imply to any female that she's not already a goddess. On the other hand if you're married, never say or imply that any woman besides your wife is a goddess.

There, I think that about covers it.

122 posted on 08/14/2002 2:06:59 PM PDT by Some hope remaining.
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To: Grig
And who they also know make a point of not going on the offensive against their faith like they do.

Well, I think there is something to be said about the point of view that our very existence can be viewed as being "on the offensive" when we acknowledge that there would be no need for a restoration if there hadn't been an apostasy first. But, by the same token, the fact that Baptists differ from Calvinists in some way ought to be an offensive message from each faction to the other that they believe the other faction is wrong in some way.

123 posted on 08/14/2002 2:15:29 PM PDT by CubicleGuy
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To: Some hope remaining.
Thank you for the compliment. I try to be intellectually honest in these debates and if someone can use logic to contradict a position I might hold, I think I am willing to reconsider my previous decision based on new information.

Having read the actual original statement (translated to English) of faith from the Arminians, I am hard pressed to understand why some Calvinists are so upset.

I find it entirely consistent to belief that God has predestined the history of mankind as far as His ultimate purpose goes and yet believe that God has generally given man a free will that allows a man to accept or reject the Gospel.

That said, I also think God had/has predestined specific individuals to further His will and plan for mankind. A perfect example of this would be Saul/Paul. It just seems too much of a stretch when some Calvinists to extrapolate such a specific direct intervention from God in the case of Saul/Paul to mean that God predestined each person to either Salvation or eternal damnation every individual. Without a real choice, how can there be real Love between man and God?

In a bit of a sense the Mormon belief that God intended for Adam to sin is not completely dissimilar to the extreme Calvinistic belief of predestination as it relates to the salvation/eternal damnation of each person. If one believes that God predestined each person to either Heaven or Hell, it should not be difficult to believe that God intended for Adam to sin, but you will have a hard time finding a Calvinist who would go that far.

I think a flaw that some Calvinists have is their sometimes obsessiveness with exactly how and why a man accepts or rejects the Gospel message when the duty of Christians is simply to spread the Gospel, something on which those who are more of the Arminian end of the spectrum spend much more of their time.
124 posted on 08/14/2002 2:19:52 PM PDT by connectthedots
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To: Some hope remaining.
Thanks for the advice.
125 posted on 08/14/2002 2:29:38 PM PDT by Wrigley
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To: Some hope remaining.
Some Calvinists are very much blinded by their heritage in thinking that they are the only ones who possess the true knowledge of the Gospel. This even goes back to the Boers of South Africa who pretty much insisted that the Dutch translation was the one and only true version of the Bible. In a way, it wasn't much differnet than the nation of Israel believing they were the one and only chosen people of God, the difference being that prior to life of Christ, the Iraelites had a much better claim.

Personally, I prefer to be just known as a Christian; a person who has accepted Christ as his personal Savior, and to rely on the Bible as the operations manual for my life (not that I always succeed; it's that ongoing struggle with humility and some procrastination I still deal with primarily). I have enough trouble dealing with the plain and obvious to be too bothered by the minutia.
126 posted on 08/14/2002 2:32:28 PM PDT by connectthedots
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To: Some hope remaining.
Do I remember correctly that you're a single guy, Wrigley? If so, let me give you a tip. Never say or even imply to any female that she's not already a goddess. On the other hand if you're married, never say or imply that any woman besides your wife is a goddess.

:>)) Aint that the truth..but there are godesses and then there are godesses *grin*

still thinking about your proposal..

127 posted on 08/14/2002 2:33:38 PM PDT by RnMomof7
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To: CubicleGuy
And we say it often..
128 posted on 08/14/2002 2:36:34 PM PDT by RnMomof7
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To: Grig
There is a world of difference between demanding a sign as a substitute for faith, and asking God in humility for help because you do have faith.

I can't see the difference at all. It is specifically requested by your missionaries that the prospective convert pray and ask God for a sign -- a burning in the bosom -- anything -- for God to specifically confirm in their hearts that the Book of Mormon is true. This is even before the prospective convert has an opportunity to read the Book of Mormon.

They do not ask God to forgive them of their sins and receive Jesus as their personal Lord and Savior. They are not asked to hear the "gospel" repent and be saved. No they are asked to take the book of Mormon, and without so much as reading the introduction, to ask God to reveal to them the truth of the Book.

If that isn't asking for a sign, I don't know what is

129 posted on 08/14/2002 2:51:13 PM PDT by P-Marlowe
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To: Some hope remaining.
Calvinists too easily brush off questions about predestination/election; especially when you consider that Calvin was very reluctant to arrive at such a conclusion because it just did not seem just to him and he believed God to be a God of Justice. Calvin was not one to engage in open spirited debate; he was a bit of a tyrant. As such, he was not likely to have his opinions and conclusions challenged in real meaningful ways by those near to him. This isolation, I believe, eventually contributed to what I would consider some rather basic flaws in his theological construct.

TULIP is so constructed that most Calvinist will reradily state that all five points must be true or none of them can be true. If this were the case, the 'five points' are really only one point and therefore can there really be any difference between a one-point Calvinist and a five-point Calvinist?
130 posted on 08/14/2002 3:25:08 PM PDT by connectthedots
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To: connectthedots
Where did you get your assessment of Calvin's views, motives, etc? This sound like a Oliver Stone revision. Do you care to debate some of this?

--drstevej, the Amiable Amyraldian [4 point Calvinist]
131 posted on 08/14/2002 3:41:55 PM PDT by drstevej
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To: P-Marlowe
For one who claims to have once been LDS you show an astounding lack of correct information on some very basic things. Accepting Christ, having faith in Him and repenting of sins is clearly taught to be requirements for baptism. I don't care if you can't see any difference between sign seeking and exercising faith, I'm sure most people who seek signs can't see the difference either.
132 posted on 08/14/2002 4:37:01 PM PDT by Grig
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To: Grig; drstevej
For one who claims to have once been LDS you show an astounding lack of correct information on some very basic things

Can you guys ever argue without resorting to ad-hominem attacks?

BTW I see asking God for some kind of emotional confirmation of the "truth" of a book that you haven't even bothered to read is "seeking a sign."

Don't forget that you started this by accusing Dr. Steve and I" of seeking a sign, when all we were seeking was the truth.

133 posted on 08/14/2002 5:15:16 PM PDT by P-Marlowe
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To: JMJ333
bump for later
134 posted on 08/14/2002 5:16:07 PM PDT by independentmind
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To: drstevej
A four-point Calvinist? With which point do you disagree? Have you read Edwin Palmer's The Five Points of Calvinism? He would seem to assert that a four-point Calvinist is no Calvinist at all. :-)

As for Calvin's doubts about election/predestination, try Calvin's Institutes. I have read them, although I don't have a personal copy.

Heck, I'll debate just about anything.

135 posted on 08/14/2002 5:38:27 PM PDT by connectthedots
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To: Grig
Accepting Christ, having faith in Him and repenting of sins is clearly taught to be requirements for baptism.

I'd like to see this reconciled with the practice of baptism for the dead.

136 posted on 08/14/2002 5:40:32 PM PDT by connectthedots
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To: P-Marlowe
That's unfair. There you go using the 'logic card' again. You are so mean! :-)
137 posted on 08/14/2002 5:42:47 PM PDT by connectthedots
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To: connectthedots
I'd like to see this reconciled with the practice of baptism for the dead.

What, in your opinion, happens to a person when they die? Do they simply cease to exist, or does the spirit continue to live in another dimension somehow, just separated from the physical body?

138 posted on 08/14/2002 5:46:24 PM PDT by CubicleGuy
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To: independentmind
Bump back, but the thread has changed on a different course as the article. The article is very Catholic in nature. I hope you enjoy it.
139 posted on 08/14/2002 5:48:00 PM PDT by JMJ333
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To: CubicleGuy
It is my opinion that a man that is presented with the Gospel message and has not accepted the gift of Salvation at the time of death; that person does not go to heaven. As for those who have not been presented the Gospel message, I don't know; but baptism for the dead isn't the answer.
140 posted on 08/14/2002 5:58:22 PM PDT by connectthedots
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