Z Man
New member
Re: anti-Calvinism does not = biblical apostasy
Re: anti-Calvinism does not = biblical apostasy
There is no age of accountability because man has no accountability of their salvation! It's all God's work.
But that's a whole nother topic...
:think:
...the death of Christ did not actually save anybody; it only made all men savable. It did not actually remove God's punitive wrath from anyone, but instead created a place where people could come and find mercy -- IF they could accomplish their own new birth and bring themselves to faith without the irresistible grace of God.
If God did do such a thing, than why do some believe and some don't? You said:
Man’s faith in God as a human response to the call of salvation is not a work
and you're exaclty right about that. However, if that call was given to all men, and only some take the initiative of their own will to respond, then it becomes a work, not a gift.
Which is a gift:
1) Bill Gates offers everyone in the world $1 million dollars IF they believe and confess that he is the richest man alive.
or
2) Bill Gates offers you $1 million dollars, which you hastily take because you are in a lot of debt. Because of his generous offer, you believe that he is the richest man alive.
In scenario #1 you get a million dollars IF you accomplish a certain task. In scenario #2 you are given a million dollars freely.
:think:
Re: anti-Calvinism does not = biblical apostasy
I agree. :thumb:Originally posted by 1Way
All - One interesting idea is that in Adam, all fell, thus EVERY human needs to be saved in order to get right with God, but, anyone who goes to hell, does so because of their own sins, not Adam's, because Christ brought redemption to the world just as much as Adam brought sin and death to the world.
I don't believe their is such a thing. Just the name of it itself suggest the fact that we are accountable for our own salvation, which is just not the case.I think that the age of accountability is a serious factor,
There is no age of accountability because man has no accountability of their salvation! It's all God's work.
But that's a whole nother topic...
And I agree. But where we part ways is in believing how that grace is applied to a person's life. Is it through some act of goodness on our part, or an act of mercy on God's part? I, of course, believe in the latter. Saving grace through faith is a gift from God.I believe that no man, apart from God’s aid, is righteous enough for eternal life, we all need God’s grace to become accepted by God.
:think:
I was not implying that Armenians, or Open Theists, or whatever you wanna be called, believe that they can be saved apart from God's work at the cross. I was simply making the point that you guys believe there is more to it than just the cross. That Christ's work on the cross did not grant us saving grace, but rather it only allowed men to be saved through their own obediance. You guys believe that:But all in all, godrulz is right and Z Man was wrong for suggesting that we open theists promote a means of salvation that is in any way apart from the finished work at the cross.
...the death of Christ did not actually save anybody; it only made all men savable. It did not actually remove God's punitive wrath from anyone, but instead created a place where people could come and find mercy -- IF they could accomplish their own new birth and bring themselves to faith without the irresistible grace of God.
Of course not. That's called irresistable grace.Man’s faith in God as a human response to the call of salvation is not a work...
To believe that God grants faith to every individual is not biblical at all. I could list many scripture references that prove my point if you'd like....and faith is a gift of God, God gives everyone coming into this world the light of revelation of Himself, even the invisible attributes of God are CLEARLY seen, so everyone has God’s clear “light revealing” aid before they ever respond to God, EVERYONE.
If God did do such a thing, than why do some believe and some don't? You said:
Man’s faith in God as a human response to the call of salvation is not a work
and you're exaclty right about that. However, if that call was given to all men, and only some take the initiative of their own will to respond, then it becomes a work, not a gift.
Which is a gift:
1) Bill Gates offers everyone in the world $1 million dollars IF they believe and confess that he is the richest man alive.
or
2) Bill Gates offers you $1 million dollars, which you hastily take because you are in a lot of debt. Because of his generous offer, you believe that he is the richest man alive.
In scenario #1 you get a million dollars IF you accomplish a certain task. In scenario #2 you are given a million dollars freely.
:think:
What do you think Christ did for your salvation?Another way of saying that, is that rejecting “Calvinism’s individual predestination scheme” does not whatsoever imply that we add to what Christ did for our salvation, that is blasphemous and we simply do not do that.
No one said it was.An anit-Calvinist position, is not an anti-Christ position.