poll

poll

  • yes

    Votes: 5 55.6%
  • no

    Votes: 4 44.4%

  • Total voters
    9

meshak

BANNED
Banned
"Can the Reformed Approach Lead Away from Biblical Christianity?"
Yes
No
Other


Can the "Reformed" Approach (eg. Calvinism, Evangelicalism, Presbyterianism, but not Lutheranism, Catholicism, or Orthodoxy) lead away from Biblical Christianity?

The Reformed movement was a "revolution" in an approach to Christianity and to the Bible. It used a naturalistic, materialistic version of "Reason" as a major tool to understand the Bible and downgraded the authority of Christian Tradition for doing so. Three specific cases where Calvinism used to Reason to go against the combined plain meaning of the Bible and Tradition were:
the Reformed that Christ is not specifically present in the Eucharistic food,
Calvin's view that the spiritual rock following the Israelites was itself neither a rock nor actually Christ, but a stream of water
Reformed principles against holy objects being used for miracleworking

This thread is not arguing that Calvinism openly teaches against the Nicene Creed or that Calvinists should not be considered "Christian". Rather, a review of these issues raises the question of whether the trajectory of Calvin's approach ultimately leads away from the fundamentals of Biblical Christianity as we know it.




http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?t=116545
 
Last edited:

KingdomRose

New member
"Can the Reformed Approach Lead Away from Biblical Christianity?"
Yes
No
Other


Can the "Reformed" Approach (eg. Calvinism, Evangelicalism, Presbyterianism, but not Lutheranism, Catholicism, or Orthodoxy) lead away from Biblical Christianity?

The Reformed movement was a "revolution" in an approach to Christianity and to the Bible. It used a naturalistic, materialistic version of "Reason" as a major tool to understand the Bible and downgraded the authority of Christian Tradition for doing so. Three specific cases where Calvinism used to Reason to go against the combined plain meaning of the Bible and Tradition were:
the Reformed that Christ is not specifically present in the Eucharistic food,
Calvin's view that the spiritual rock following the Israelites was itself neither a rock nor actually Christ, but a stream of water
Reformed principles against holy objects being used for miracleworking

This thread is not arguing that Calvinism openly teaches against the Nicene Creed or that Calvinists should not be considered "Christian". Rather, a review of these issues raises the question of whether the trajectory of Calvin's approach ultimately leads away from the fundamentals of Biblical Christianity as we know it.


http://www.theologyonline.com/forums...d.php?t=116545

I would vote yes.

I would say that all of the others you mentioned are also on the wrong trajectory.
 

rako

New member
Thanks for creating this poll, Meshak!

I started to go into this topic in more depth on this thread:
http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?t=116545


The issues that compose it are:


I. What was the broader social and philosophical background and context for Calvinism's appearance and its trajectory?

Question I is here: http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showpost.php?p=4628593&postcount=4

II.(A) What was the Reformed attitude to Scripture and Tradition, and did its downgrading of Tradition in effect cut the anchor loose from its theology?

II.(B) Instead of considering Tradition a crucial tool, did Calvin rely on modern Reason with a materialistic aspect?

III.(A) Did early Christian traditions teach that the Eucharist bread lacked Christ's body's presence? If not, did Calvin rely on materialistic reasoning to deny that presence?

III.(B) Could the Reformed view on the Eucharistic bread directly lead away from the Biblical Christian community and communion?

IV. Did Calvin use materialistic Reason to decide that the "spiritual rock" following the Israelites in 1 Corinthians 10 was not actually Christ or even a rock but a stream of water? Does this contradict Paul's view in the Bible?

V.(A) Did early Christian writings teach that holy peoples' bones, clothes, and shadow could not heal people? What is the Reformed basis for teaching that this is "superstition", other than materialistic Reason?

VI.(B) Could Reformed principles against relics' involvement in miracles lead away from the Bible's teachings on them?

VII. Could materialistic Reformed reasoning, illustrated by the three cases above, lead away from the fundamentals of Christianity as we understand it, such as Christ's supernatural Resurrection and Ascension?

VIII. Has this Reformed approach in fact led major scholars and Christian groups away from the fundamentals of Christianity?


I recommend discussing these one at a time. Currently I am on the last Question above that has a link below it.
 

Grosnick Marowbe

New member
Hall of Fame
"Can the Reformed Approach Lead Away from Biblical Christianity?"
Yes
No
Other


Can the "Reformed" Approach (eg. Calvinism, Evangelicalism, Presbyterianism, but not Lutheranism, Catholicism, or Orthodoxy) lead away from Biblical Christianity?

The Reformed movement was a "revolution" in an approach to Christianity and to the Bible. It used a naturalistic, materialistic version of "Reason" as a major tool to understand the Bible and downgraded the authority of Christian Tradition for doing so. Three specific cases where Calvinism used to Reason to go against the combined plain meaning of the Bible and Tradition were:
the Reformed that Christ is not specifically present in the Eucharistic food,
Calvin's view that the spiritual rock following the Israelites was itself neither a rock nor actually Christ, but a stream of water
Reformed principles against holy objects being used for miracleworking

This thread is not arguing that Calvinism openly teaches against the Nicene Creed or that Calvinists should not be considered "Christian". Rather, a review of these issues raises the question of whether the trajectory of Calvin's approach ultimately leads away from the fundamentals of Biblical Christianity as we know it.




http://www.theologyonline.com/forums/showthread.php?t=116545

Who wrote this post for you? Surely you didn't. How do you go from
broken English to a well written OP? You didn't write this obviously.
 

musterion

Well-known member
"Can the Reformed Approach Lead Away from Biblical Christianity?"
Yes
No
Other


Can the "Reformed" Approach (eg. Calvinism, Evangelicalism, Presbyterianism, but not Lutheranism, Catholicism, or Orthodoxy) lead away from Biblical Christianity?

The Reformed movement was a "revolution" in an approach to Christianity and to the Bible. It used a naturalistic, materialistic version of "Reason" as a major tool to understand the Bible and downgraded the authority of Christian Tradition for doing so. Three specific cases where Calvinism used to Reason to go against the combined plain meaning of the Bible and Tradition were:
the Reformed that Christ is not specifically present in the Eucharistic food,
Calvin's view that the spiritual rock following the Israelites was itself neither a rock nor actually Christ, but a stream of water
Reformed principles against holy objects being used for miracleworking

This thread is not arguing that Calvinism openly teaches against the Nicene Creed or that Calvinists should not be considered "Christian". Rather, a review of these issues raises the question of whether the trajectory of Calvin's approach ultimately leads away from the fundamentals of Biblical Christianity as we know it.

I wonder who typed all this up.
 

musterion

Well-known member
Who wrote this post for you? Surely you didn't. How do you go from
broken English to a well written OP? You didn't write this obviously.

"Trajectory."

Yeeeeeah.
dubious2.gif
 
Top