Omniscience means fatalism.

Grosnick Marowbe

New member
Hall of Fame
Does this mean you are going to stop with the Calvinist comments and address the scriptures and my points? If so, I can stop calling you a Pelagian. If not, I can point to the founder of your theology...Pelagius. It's your call.

It seems to me you're being disruptive, making false accusations, and looking for trouble.
 

Rosenritter

New member
As far as I see it, your theology is Pelagian. Thus, I label you as such. Prove me wrong.

You didn't learn at all, did you? Define your term first. Here, I'll provide another example:

troll2
trōl/
noun
noun: troll; plural noun: trolls
1.
  • a person who makes a deliberately offensive or provocative online post.
    • informal
      a deliberately offensive or provocative online posting.
As far as we can see, you are a troll, thus we label you as such. Prove us wrong.
 

BoyStan

New member
Philosophical musings, such as theological fatalism, are the wiles of the Devil.
Scripture clearly teaches that God is omniscient and man is still responsible and punishable for his sin.
There is no escaping the truth of God through philosophical theories.
 

MennoSota

New member
You didn't learn at all, did you? Define your term first. Here, I'll provide another example:

troll2
trōl/
noun
noun: troll; plural noun: trolls
1.
  • a person who makes a deliberately offensive or provocative online post.
    • informal
      a deliberately offensive or provocative online posting.
As far as we can see, you are a troll, thus we label you as such. Prove us wrong.
That makes you a Yooper. [emoji56]
Your basic premise fits with Pelagius. That's for you to live with.
 

Grosnick Marowbe

New member
Hall of Fame
You didn't learn at all, did you? Define your term first. Here, I'll provide another example:

troll2
trōl/
noun
noun: troll; plural noun: trolls
1.
  • a person who makes a deliberately offensive or provocative online post.
    • informal
      a deliberately offensive or provocative online posting.
As far as we can see, you are a troll, thus we label you as such. Prove us wrong.

Yep. He fits the description.
 

Clete

Truth Smacker
Silver Subscriber
I believe that Calvinism seeks to change the character of the 'God of the Bible.' During WW2 there was a man by the name of Josef Mengele He was an SS officer and physician at Auschwitz concentration camp. He was also a member of the team of doctors who selected victims to be killed in the gas chambers. Arrivals deemed able to work were admitted into the camp, and those deemed unfit for labor were immediately killed in the gas chambers. He would 'choose' who would die and who would live as they got off the trains that transferred them to Auschwitz.

There are similarities between Mengele and the Calvinist's view of God. The Calvinist's believe God chose who He would save and who He would send into eternal damnation. (Lake of Fire.) They believe He chose the 'Elect' and the damned before the foundation of the world based upon His Sovereign Will. Calvinists do not believe that humanity has a free-will of its own. I wonder if your average Calvinist would tend to believe that Satan and his fallen angels had a free-will of their own or were they chosen to rebel against God?

Acts 18:6 states: "And when they opposed themselves, and blasphemed, he shook his raiment, and said unto them, Your blood be upon your own heads; I am clean: from henceforth I will go unto the Gentiles." The 'Gospel' was first taken to the Jews. Acts 13:46 "Then Paul and Barnabas waxed bold, and said, It was necessary that the word of God should first have been spoken to you: but seeing ye put it from you, and judge yourselves unworthy of everlasting life, lo, we turn to the Gentiles." According to these two Scripture verses, the Apostle Paul became agitated that the Jews rejected the Gospel and he made a decision to henceforth, deliver the Gospel to the Gentiles.

Why did the Apostle Paul become so upset with the Jews and make the decision to henceforth, deliver the Gospel to the Gentiles? Why would Paul become so upset by the rejection of the Gospel by the Jews? After all, according to the Calvinists, it was God Himself who chose from the foundation of the world who would be saved and who would be damned. Paul was privy to the Will of God, he had the indwelling of the Holy Spirit and if the 'Jewish listeners' chose to reject the Gospel, why did Paul get so upset? In order to be a Calvinist follower one accepts that:

1) Humanity has no free-will of its own.
2) God in His sovereign Will decided before the foundation of the world, who would be saved and who would be damned to eternal punishment/suffering.
3) Christ only died for the sins of the 'Elect.'
4) Basically, the Gospel is only preached so the 'Elect' will respond with the faith that God gave them in the first place.
5) Even if the 'non-elect' hear the Gospel, they're unable to believe because God didn't give them the 'gift' of faith.

I believe the Calvinists change the CHARACTER of the God of the Bible and twist His character to fit their 'false doctrine and misinterpretation of Bible Scriptures.' I also believe that Satan, most likely is behind this and other 'false doctrines, beliefs, cults, etc. John Calvin himself was an evil/wicked man who is responsible for the deaths of over 50 people who disagreed with his false doctrine. I believe that Calvinism is more dangerous than Mormonism and other false doctrines/cults, because, it can be made to represent the truth by misinterpretation of Scripture, etc.


Their version of God is even worse than Josef Mengele! Josef had a reason why he chose one to die and another to live. It was a horrible, unjust and evil reason but it was a reason. Josef didn't just go around town arbitrarily picking people to send to the gas chamber. Oh no! They had to have been prisoners who were delivered to him - mostly Jews. And then once they were delivered he still didn't pick in an arbitrary fashion, there were criteria that were either met or not and it was on that basis that he made his decisions.

As disgustingly evil as that was, imagine if he had simply chosen to kill people or allow them to live by pure arbitrary whim, as the Calvinists claim God did. Not only that but it could be argued that the gas chamber was a mercy in comparison to the lingering death that awaited those who were selected to live. Calvin's God sends people to a permanent, eternally torturous existence for no reason whatsoever.

Additionally, they believe that Josef Mengele did precisely as God commanded that he would do before the creation of the world! In effect, Mengele's actions were merely a subset and inevitable result of God's own actions.

“God is moved to mercy for no other reason but that he wills to be merciful.” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion, Book 3, Chapter 22, Paragraph 8)

“… predestination to glory is the cause of predestination to grace, rather than the converse.” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion, Book 3, Chapter 22, Paragraph 9)

“Therefore, those whom God passes over, he condemns; and this he does for no other reason than that he wills to exclude them from the inheritance which he predestines for his own children.” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christia/n Religion, Book 3, Chapter 23, Paragraph 1)

“We cannot assign any reason for his bestowing mercy on his people, but just as it so pleases him, neither can we have any reason for his reprobating others but his will.” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion, Book 3, Chapter 22, Paragraph 11)

“But since he foresees future events only by reason of the fact that he decreed that they take place, they vainly raise a quarrel over foreknowledge, when it is clear that all things take place rather by his determination and bidding.” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion, Book 3, Chapter 23, Paragraph 6)

“The devil, and the whole train of the ungodly, are in all directions, held in by the hand of God as with a bridle, so that they can neither conceive any mischief, nor plan what they have conceived, nor how muchsoever they may have planned, move a single finger to perpetrate, unless in so far as he permits, nay unless in so far as he commands, that they are not only bound by his fetters but are even forced to do him service” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion, Book 1, Chapter 17, Paragraph 11)​

The 'Gospel of the grace of God' is available to anyone who hears the Gospel and places ALL of their 'free-will choice' to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and His death on the cross for their sins and His subsequent resurrection.
Amen!

I would ask any Calvinist this question: If someone places all their faith in Christ, but totally rejects Calvinism and believes it's a 'false doctrine' are they saved, in your opinion? I know enough about Calvinism to realize what your answer may be. Answer if you wish?

There are many Calvinists who believe that Calvinist doctrine it the Gospel itself and that a rejection of it is a rejection of God's only plan of salvation. Others (most) not so much. Most people who identify as Calvinist think that the TULIP is 99.999% of what the doctrine teaches and give no thought to the implications.

Clete
 

Clete

Truth Smacker
Silver Subscriber
Does this mean you are going to stop with the Calvinist comments and address the scriptures and my points? If so, I can stop calling you a Pelagian. If not, I can point to the founder of your theology...Pelagius. It's your call.

Are you denying that you're a Calvinist?
 

MennoSota

New member
Are you denying that you're a Calvinist?
I have never been to a church of Calvin. I have never read more than a few quotes attributed to Calvin. I have read the Bible and believe what it says. You and others tend to call it Calvinist rather than call it scriptural or biblical.
So, I am not following Calvin, thus I can say I am not a Calvinist. But, it seems that Calvin may have observed similarly to me.
This seems to be similar to you and Pelagius.
 

Grosnick Marowbe

New member
Hall of Fame
Their version of God is even worse than Josef Mengele! Josef had a reason why he chose one to die and another to live. It was a horrible, unjust and evil reason but it was a reason. Josef didn't just go around town arbitrarily picking people to send to the gas chamber. Oh no! They had to have been prisoners who were delivered to him - mostly Jews. And then once they were delivered he still didn't pick in an arbitrary fashion, there were criteria that were either met or not and it was on that basis that he made his decisions.

As disgustingly evil as that was, imagine if he had simply chosen to kill people or allow them to live by pure arbitrary whim, as the Calvinists claim God did. Not only that but it could be argued that the gas chamber was a mercy in comparison to the lingering death that awaited those who were selected to live. Calvin's God sends people to a permanent, eternally torturous existence for no reason whatsoever.

Additionally, they believe that Josef Mengele did precisely as God commanded that he would do before the creation of the world! In effect, Mengele's actions were merely a subset and inevitable result of God's own actions.

“God is moved to mercy for no other reason but that he wills to be merciful.” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion, Book 3, Chapter 22, Paragraph 8)

“… predestination to glory is the cause of predestination to grace, rather than the converse.” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion, Book 3, Chapter 22, Paragraph 9)

“Therefore, those whom God passes over, he condemns; and this he does for no other reason than that he wills to exclude them from the inheritance which he predestines for his own children.” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christia/n Religion, Book 3, Chapter 23, Paragraph 1)

“We cannot assign any reason for his bestowing mercy on his people, but just as it so pleases him, neither can we have any reason for his reprobating others but his will.” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion, Book 3, Chapter 22, Paragraph 11)

“But since he foresees future events only by reason of the fact that he decreed that they take place, they vainly raise a quarrel over foreknowledge, when it is clear that all things take place rather by his determination and bidding.” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion, Book 3, Chapter 23, Paragraph 6)

“The devil, and the whole train of the ungodly, are in all directions, held in by the hand of God as with a bridle, so that they can neither conceive any mischief, nor plan what they have conceived, nor how muchsoever they may have planned, move a single finger to perpetrate, unless in so far as he permits, nay unless in so far as he commands, that they are not only bound by his fetters but are even forced to do him service” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion, Book 1, Chapter 17, Paragraph 11)​


Amen!



There are many Calvinists who believe that Calvinist doctrine it the Gospel itself and that a rejection of it is a rejection of God's only plan of salvation. Others (most) not so much. Most people who identify as Calvinist think that the TULIP is 99.999% of what the doctrine teaches and give no thought to the implications.

Clete

Good post. Calvinism is a horrendous distortion of the 'character of God' and His written Word.
 

Ask Mr. Religion

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I have never been to a church of Calvin. I have never read more than a few quotes attributed to Calvin. I have read the Bible and believe what it says. You and others tend to call it Calvinist rather than call it scriptural or biblical.
So, I am not following Calvin, thus I can say I am not a Calvinist. But, it seems that Calvin may have observed similarly to me.
This seems to be similar to you and Pelagius.

Labels help move a discussion forward. Those that claim to be not able to be labeled usually misunderstand the issue.

Unfortunately, the label "Calvinist" is used by the misinformed to imply a follower of Calvin, assuming Calvin is one's regula fidei. If they would take the time to actually think, these same persons tossing about the label would no doubt take issue with being called "Enyartists" "Boydists" "Pinnockists" (open theists), or even "Paulists" (so-called grace gospelites as they define the term), and so on. Obviously, none of these men are one's regula fidei, but these vitriolic label tossers often just like poisoning the well, adopting genetic fallacies, and being seen.

The history of the church is such that there is really no one who can escape some sort of theological label of a sort. There really is nothing new under the sun. So be it. In theological discussions, these categories help to define presuppositions and eliminate the need for explanations that actually go without saying to the theologically informed.

Making plaintive and strident claims to the effect "I cannot be labeled" is but self-righteousness and ignorance of church history. It only feeds one's humanistic sense of individuality and autonomy. In fact, most of these sorts will quickly claim to have no man-made creed, rather just the Bible, as if what they just said is not actually a creed—Just Me and My Bible—made by, er, a man.

Nonsense then abounds:
https://www.gty.org/library/blog/B120919
https://www.ligonier.org/learn/articles/teachable-spirit/

Lastly, and for the record, the credit for the label "Calvinist" was first assigned by the Lutherans. You know, those folks who agreed with what Luther had to say, particularly as it relates to the Lord's Supper.

AMR
 

MennoSota

New member
Well stated, AMR.
Labels help move a discussion forward. Those that claim to be not able to be labeled usually misunderstand the issue.

Unfortunately, the label "Calvinist" is used by the misinformed to imply a follower of Calvin, assuming Calvin is one's regula fidei. If they would take the time to actually think, these same persons tossing about the label would no doubt take issue with being called "Enyartists" "Boydists" "Pinnockists" (open theists), or even "Paulists" (so-called grace gospelites as they define the term), and so on. Obviously, none of these men are one's regula fidei, but these vitriolic label tossers often just like poisoning the well, adopting genetic fallacies, and being seen.

The history of the church is such that there is really no one who can escape some sort of theological label of a sort. There really is nothing new under the sun. So be it. In theological discussions, these categories help to define presuppositions and eliminate the need for explanations that actually go without saying to the theologically informed.

Making plaintive and strident claims to the effect "I cannot be labeled" is but self-righteousness and ignorance of church history. It only feeds one's humanistic sense of individuality and autonomy. In fact, most of these sorts will quickly claim to have no man-made creed, rather just the Bible, as if what they just said is not actually a creed—Just Me and My Bible—made by, er, a man.

Nonsense then abounds:
https://www.gty.org/library/blog/B120919
https://www.ligonier.org/learn/articles/teachable-spirit/

Lastly, and for the record, the credit for the label "Calvinist" was first assigned by the Lutherans. You know, those folks who agreed with what Luther had to say, particularly as it relates to the Lord's Supper.

AMR
 

Derf

Well-known member

Rosenritter

New member
There was a very good response to the not at the dinner table article:
It's pretty easy to win an ideological fight when your opponent is filled with straw.

Or if you persecute them to extinction.

If we can veer back to the subject of prayer, I think we would be more instructed if we paid attention to how Christ prayed.

As Jesus instructed us and showed by example, we ask for his will to be done, but we also pray that if possible that his will might change.

What he didn't do is tell us to pray as if God would overwrite someone's heart, and he didn't tell us that it was merely for our own benefit of acceptance of the inevitable will of God.

All of these arguments I see (had read) from Calvinists arguing that non-Calvinists pray as Calvinists seem to be in ignorance of how other people pray. Yes, I have prayed for the conversion of loved ones, and I know that God does not overrule their will if it is against him. I can ask for them to be led knowing that they may not follow. I myself can lead by example and to win by my good conduct all the while knowing that this is not the ultimate deciding factor.

So besides the argument that "all non-Calvinists pray as Calvinists" (which is frankly wrong) that argument also ignores how God's saints (and even Jesus himself) prayed from scripture.
 

Ask Mr. Religion

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There was a very good response to the not at the dinner table article:
It's pretty easy to win an ideological fight when your opponent is filled with straw.
Heh.

Why not take the time to write down your prayers in detail and examine them?

I would like to see the prayers of the anti-Calvinists on all various and sundry things. Each and every one of them. I suspect that if one would actually take the effort to provide a private record of one's prayers, one would find much of what has been claimed in the articles you readily assume are but straw men. After all lex orandi lex credendi. ;) Unfortunately, few are willing to subject themselves to painful scrutiny, preferring instead to live a life of cognitive dissonance contrasted by what they say in public and what they do in private.

So, yes, as you demonstrate, it is easy to wave off a counter view with some few words soaked in the usual dismissals. Yet, that does not make a defeater for what has been previously proffered.

AMR
 

Rosenritter

New member
Heh.

Why not take the time to write down your prayers in detail and examine them?

I would like to see the prayers of the anti-Calvinists on all various and sundry things. Each and every one of them. I suspect that if one would actually take the effort to provide a private record of one's prayers, one would find much of what has been claimed in the articles you readily assume are but straw men. After all lex orandi lex credendi. ;) Unfortunately, few are willing to subject themselves to painful scrutiny, preferring instead to live a life of cognitive dissonance contrasted by what they say in public and what they do in private.

So, yes, as you demonstrate, it is easy to wave off a counter view with some few words soaked in the usual dismissals. Yet, that does not make a defeater for what has been previously proffered.

AMR

How am I to write down all my prayers if we are (attempting to be) in a constant state and attitude of prayer? "Pray always" we are told, and as Jesus himself said, we know that God hears our thoughts always. I've given an example above of how I have prayed for a loved one. I know that God can alter the world around us, perform miracles at the microbiological level where we might never notice, help guide us with a thought or an idea in our mind through the Holy Spirit, and he can stop the mouths of lions or place blindness in the minds of enemies.

Yet even if he were to cause an enemy to act favorably towards us, if he were to force them against their heart, this is a temporary thing that reflects God's will, and not their own. Conversion is ultimately the measure of if a person is converted, if they are actually changed. Picking up the rebellious sinner with a whirlwind and depositing them in the belly of a fish may force that person into a location, but if that person was led by the Holy Spirit (and one of his) such a measure would have been unnecessary. God could confuse their mind by the Spirit and force them into that location by other means of course, but again, they would be being forced rather than willingly led.

With the example (from that second article you gave) there may indeed be ignorant (or self-contradicting) anti-Calvinists but as Derf was pointing out, this can only be used as an example for contrast, and cannot be fairly used as a straw-man representative of the whole.

By the way, on topic, a loved one was baptized into the body of Christ yesterday. It was something I have prayed for and hoped towards for years, and it was not as a Calvinist.
 

Clete

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Silver Subscriber
I have never been to a church of Calvin. I have never read more than a few quotes attributed to Calvin. I have read the Bible and believe what it says. You and others tend to call it Calvinist rather than call it scriptural or biblical.
So, I am not following Calvin, thus I can say I am not a Calvinist. But, it seems that Calvin may have observed similarly to me.
This seems to be similar to you and Pelagius.

You're a liar!

What do you think, that I'm stupid?

Welcome to my ignore list.
 

Clete

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Silver Subscriber
Good post. Calvinism is a horrendous distortion of the 'character of God' and His written Word.

Indeed! In fact, I'd say that this is the central argument against it and any doctrine that makes similar claims about God.

Either God is good or Calvinistic doctrines are true, not both. They are truly mutually exclusive concepts.

When pinned down, the Calvinist (or Augustinian or whatever you want to call it) will admit that the term "good", as in morally good, does not apply to God in the same sense that it applies in any other context and that it is arbitrarily defined by God and was not defined by Him the way it is for any reason other than that's just what God decided to do. In other words, Calvinists and others who believe in Calvinistic doctrines trade in God's righteousness for their idea of divine sovereignty.

In fact, what they are actually guilty of is what is called a stolen concept fallacy. The stolen concept fallacy occurs when someone accepts or uses a concept while at the same time denying other concepts upon which the concept that they accept is rationally dependent. A good example of a stolen concept fallacy is when the liberal college professor tells his students that, "All private property is theft.". He is undercutting the concept of private property while up holding the concept of theft. But theft has no meaning if there is no private property. Similarly, the Augustinian (Reformed or otherwise) shouts from the roof tops that God is just while believing that everything that happens does so at His arbitrary whim. All the while ignoring the fact that the concept of justice presupposes that one is NOT arbitrary. That's what the term means! Their solution is to redefine the terms that get in their way, which almost always ends up causing them to mean their opposite. Justice means arbitrary, Love means impassibility, "Now I know" means "I not only knew it I predestined it", etc. etc. That and they also compartmentalize the issues, never dealing with them together or even mentioning them in the same paragraph amongst themselves or in their own minds.

Clete
 

MennoSota

New member
You're a liar!

What do you think, that I'm stupid?

Welcome to my ignore list.
Hallelujah!
Funny how people don't like the label when it falls on them.
Scripture teaches God's choosing, election and predestination. You don't need to read anything by Calvin to see this truth.
I am reminded of a spoken word artist who goes by the stage name, Propaganda, who said he was telling his pastor/uncle about what he was reading in scripture and the uncle said..."You're a Calvinist." Propaganda responded by saying, "I don't know about that, but this is what I read in the Bible." He had no idea he was speaking like a Reformed Christian.
By the way, I highly recommend Propaganda's music. It will test you social comfort zone and force you to evaluate your theology.
 

Rosenritter

New member
I have never been to a church of Calvin. I have never read more than a few quotes attributed to Calvin. I have read the Bible and believe what it says. You and others tend to call it Calvinist rather than call it scriptural or biblical.
So, I am not following Calvin, thus I can say I am not a Calvinist. But, it seems that Calvin may have observed similarly to me.
This seems to be similar to you and Pelagius.

You're a liar!

What do you think, that I'm stupid?

Welcome to my ignore list.

Whether or not Mennosota thinks you are stupid is a different matter, but if Mennosota thinks he is telling the truth (and is not) then that would be properly addressed as "deluded" rather than "liar" at least in this instance.

He may deserve to be put on an ignore list, but I think he is not intentionally being dishonest with that above statement.
 
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