Salutations
I go to Freewill Baptist Church, which basically means I'm an Arminian baptist. As for a favorite verse, I don't have one but my favorite books are Job, the Gospel of John, and Romans. Probably my favorite chapters would be Romans 14, 2 and 9, and John 14 and 21.
As far as my testimony goes, I can't remember any discernible, single conversion experience. However, I did make a series of decisions and there was a point where I finally looked around and said to myself "I guess you really do believe and it's changed you". Maybe that realization itself was my conversion experience. Since then I've been an academic Christian, committed to publishing historical, theological, and philosophical articles for EPS and St. Anselm's. Probably my main contribution has been championing the concept of radical grace, and presenting Classical Arminianism in a manner that has gained it some more respect and clout in a primarily Calvinist/Augustinian academic society. |
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What are your views on Revelation and the Bible? Sacraments? What about the actual hazards of our time when referring to dismissal of Biblical attitudes towards sinning? Also, personal life! Are you striving to fullfill your quota of Genesis 1:22? Exodus 12:49 One law shall be to him that is homeborn, and unto the stranger that sojourneth among you. Yours in Christ, Elmer :bye: |
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What are your own personal beliefs concerning falling from grace? Do you believe that, once saved, a man may lose his way and be condemned to Hell? Also your beliefs concerning predestination seem to belie the concept of free will, which is crucial to Christians. What about that? Are you saved? Have you been washed in the blood, or are you another false, "intellectual Christian"?
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:huh: |
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"No man can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon." If it's no in the Bible, it's the teachings of Satan. |
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Mercy me, I didn't know there were any Calvinists in Armenia!
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I'm so confused. You're a Baptist, but you aren't?
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I have ruminated on both sides of this issue of the security of the believer. Peter gives a description of apostasy in his second epistle, warning against it. Yet at the same time one must wonder what it might mean to say that God's work of regeneration in a saved person isn't efficacious. However, I believe the impetus is on us to accept the whole of the Word and do our best to understand it while accepting it all. Hence my riding both sides of this fence throughout my career, ruminating as to whether or not Peter's warning is a hypothetical meant to deepen faith, or it is a dire warning against the reality of apostasy. After much time studying this issue I have come to the conclusion that Peter can't have been using a mere hypothetical. But that is merely one area of contention between Arminians and Calvinists, and there are numerous gradients in between. As for God allowing His desire to be resisted, it depends on the relationship model you see in the bible. Does He work through cause and effect, as one might work with a machine, directing all of our thoughts? Or does He work through influence and response, as one might work with in an "I and thou" relationship, with one who fully fits the description of "person". Considering such, Classical Arminianism as opposed to some of it's variants today, is in favor of conditional election, unconditional love, undecided on open theism (I am not personally in favor of it), and an influence and response relationship when it comes to preservation. In all of this God is still perfectly capable of accomplishing His decrees. Now to the rest of your questions: do you mean Revelation as in prophecy or are you referring to the book? When it comes to eschatology I am what you could call a Soft Preterist. As for prophecy, or the Bible, I believe the whole of it is inspired and that there are no manuscript issues that call doctrine into question. It is now an issue of translation and interpretation. On the issue of sacraments I mostly refer back to Romans 14 and Paul's admonishments to the Thessalonians, that such traditional rituals are for the benefit of man, to help him understand spiritual truths and to participate in spiritual processes. While it is good for us to participate in them, there is nothing inherent to the physical acts themselves that makes it a requirement. Otherwise Jesus would have been legalistic, instead of spiritual, about the Sabbath and would not have allowed His disciples to glean during the Sabbath. On the issue of sin I am sure that the Word is clear when it says that there is only one unpardonable sin: blaspheming the Holy Spirit. What's more, when the scriptures say that Jesus forgave all sin, there is no reason to diminish His accomplishment. Hence the unsaved are the people who reject His Holy Spirit, who blaspheme/deny (the meanings are basically identical) Him. As for the ethical instructions of the Word, I am committed to obeying them but not dependent on my own efforts to settle my soteriology. My obedience is for the pleasure of God and also for my own benefit, as God designed us and His ethical instructions are thus decreed for our benefit and closeness with Him. Now, from Mike Miller: Quote:
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Second Peter 2:20-22, & 1 20 For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they are again entangled therein, and overcome, the latter end is worse with them than the beginning. 21 For it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness, than, after they have known it, to turn from the holy commandment delivered unto them. 22 But it is happened unto them according to the true proverb, The dog is turned to his own vomit again; and the sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire. 1 But there were false prophets also among the people, even as there shall be false teachers among you, who privily shall bring in damnable heresies, even denying the Lord that bought them, and bring upon themselves swift destruction. |
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So...
You're a false Christian, right? |
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Friend, Mike Miller has already linked to materials showing you the error of your doctrine, and those materials contain abundant scriptural citations. I don't know what else to say.
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As for "extraneous verbiage", I find it humorous that that very expression itself uses vocabulary that not everyone will understand. Clear and specific vocabulary is necessary for precision in complicated discussion. |
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Stop trying to candy-coat Christ's innate fury, and maybe you'll actually save a few souls instead of effectively hurling them headlong into the lake of burning sulfur!! |
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I'm just trying to determine the nature of the god you worship. Exodus 34:14 "For thou shalt worship no other god: for the Lord, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God:" |
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