Paul's Passing Thoughts

Why Christians Can’t See the Total Absurdity of Total Depravity

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on July 25, 2012

“One can clearly see here where Powlison wants to take the plain sense of Scripture and apply the Socratic dialectic; ie, start asking questions about the obvious because truth couldn’t be that easy, and if it is, any Spirit indwelled Christian can do truth at home which is a huge problem for the philosopher kings. Empirical Objectivism puts the power of understanding in the hands of the common people. It is enemy number one for the Platonic New Calvinists.”

1. Background: No New Arrogance Under the Sun

This whole philosopher king idea is really getting traction in my mind and begs for a discussion on Calvin’s total depravity.  As I read more and more Socrates and Plato, I keep looking at the cover of the book to make sure it wasn’t really written by some New Calvinist: “Er, did I pick up the wrong book from the stack?” Socrates didn’t like to be questioned with challenging questions. Most of his dialogue was through questions because he believed that was how truth was rediscovered in the mind—through interpretive questions. Socrates didn’t mind inquisitive questions, they were efficacious to the process, but challenging questions in regard to his positions offended him. He had a specific response when he was challenged accordingly: he would sarcastically reverse the roles of teacher and student, and ask questions as the student while making the student the teacher. Sometimes he was very subtle about it to the point that the student was not aware it was going on; apparently, to amuse the gods.

2. Background: No New Interpretation Methods Under The Sun

Before we get to our subject of total depravity, I might mention that this exact same interpretive dialogue schema to determine truth is used by such New Calvinists like Paul David Tripp to discover what our heart idols are. He got the idea from mystic heretic David Powlison who dubs the method, “x-ray questions.” Much of “How People Change” is devoted to this Socratic method. It is also an important part of Neuro Linguistic Programming (used by motivational speaker Tony Robbins) which is a practical modeling application of Neuropsychology (Ed Welch of Powlison’s CCEF holds a Ph.D. in Neuropsychology). Socratism is also the bases of many schools of thought in psychotherapy—especially that of Carl Rogers. As an unbeliever, I was counseled by a Rogerian psychologist and the dialogue was very much like what it would have been with Socrates and one of his students 2500 years ago. This is known as the Socratic dialectic.

3. Background: No New Need For CONTROL Under The Sun

Socrates, and his understudy Plato, taught the governing/aristocratic philosophical class of Athens Greece which was only 10% of the population. Some historians estimate the slave class in that culture as being around 90% of the population. So, the last thing you want is 90% of the population thinking for themselves and coming up with their own ideas. Ideas have a lot of power, and people are inclined to act on them if they think their ideas are really good, or true. Unfortunately, this is the effect that the rulers of Athens were afraid Socrates would have on their society, so they executed him when he refused to go into exile. In case you are curious, executions during that time were boring—they merely brought a cup of Kool-Aid to your jail cell and you drank it.

Later, when Plato founded the first institution of learning in western culture, the Academy in Athens, he made it clear that the philosopher kings were the only ones who had knowledge, and that they should rule over the masses. This was much more acceptable than what Socrates claimed—that the ruling class didn’t know anything because they thought they did. Leveling the playing field to those who simply admit that truth is not definitive, while dissing the ruling class for not knowing anything, was just really a bad idea. There was no middle class to buffer the tipping of the scales.

3A: The Doctrine of Incompetence Necessary for Control

And like the true God, truth was a trinity: beautiful; good; true. However, to claim to know everything about truth would be the same as knowing everything about God. Both Plato and Socrates taught that truth was subjective at best and unknowable in the worst case:

I know not how I may seem to others, but to myself I am but a small child wandering upon the vast shores of knowledge, every now and then finding a small bright pebble to content myself with.

I’m trying to think, don’t confuse me with facts [thinking leads to truth apart from observable criteria].

How can you prove whether at this moment we are sleeping, and all our thoughts are a dream; or whether we are awake, and talking to one another in the waking state?

What truth that the philosopher kings can muster up is societies best shot. Overall, Plato believed that man was inept and should be ruled by philosopher kings who are a little better off because they at least know that truth can’t be known, and if we can ascertain truth at all—it’s not through what can be experienced through the five senses. That leaves the subjective intuition of the mind that is helped in the process (as much as it is one) through the Socratic dialectic. Later, Augustine took these concepts and integrated them with theology. One result of this integration was the idea that man is totally depraved. And that includes saved men as well. Now, by contrast, Plato and Socrates believed man, given a crystal ball, would always choose what’s best, and that his downfall was IGNORANCE (Plato: “Ignorance, the root and stem of every evil.”).  Whether a man was good or evil was irrelevant to their school of thought. BUT, the crux of the issue was transferred: the inability/incompetence of man.

3B: Intuitive Subjectivism Verses Empirical Objectivism   

Why do the saints of our day buy into such doctrines as total depravity when Scripture plainly teaches otherwise? Because a literal interpretation of Scripture is the same as trying to obtain truth through what can be observed—that’s why. To the Platonist, the idea that objective truth can be obtained at all, much less by evaluating the verbs, nouns, subjects, direct objects, etc. in a sentence, is absurd, and will incite sneers every time. And, this same idea can be found throughout New Calvinist teachings in this present day. In the book, How People Change, Paul David Tripp decries a literal interpretation of biblical imperatives that should rather be seen in their “gospel context.” Even in regard to following the biblical imperative to change our thinking (in the same book), Tripp objects by complaining that Jesus comes to us as a person, not a “cognitive concept” that we apply to our lives as a “formula.” Today’s Reformed philosopher kings have access to the higher knowledge of seeing the gospel and the personhood of Jesus in every verse.

Obviously, this can’t be done empirically if the subject of the verse is not the gospel; unless of course, you are gifted with the correct Reformed metaphysics. Coming to conclusions by Interpreting verbs, nouns etc. are merely Platonist shadows of the real form and not the true reality. New Calvinist Paul Washer has complained that evangelicals propagate a reductionist gospel when the truth is supposedly that the gospel is eternal and unknowable. It’s all the same basic philosophy dressed up in biblical terminology.

Incredibly, this very same contention can be seen in David Powlison’s complaints about Jay Adams in our very day. While lecturing at the church of Reformed heretic John Piper, Powlison stated the following:

 I think there’s been a huge growth in the movement in the understanding of the human heart, which is really a way of saying of the vertical dimension.  And I had an interesting conversation with Jay Adams, probably 20 years ago when I said, why don’t you deal with the inner man?  Where’s the conscience?  Where’s the desires?  Where’s the fears?  Where’s the hopes?  Why don’t you talk about those organizing, motivating patterns?

And his answer was actually quite interesting. He said, “when I started biblical counseling, I read every book I could from psychologists, liberals, liberal mainline pastoral theologians. There weren’t any conservatives to speak of who talked about counseling.  And they all seemed so speculative about the area of motivation.  I didn’t want to speculate, and so I didn’t want to say what I wasn’t sure was so.

One thing I knew, obviously there’s things going on inside people.  What’s going on inside and what comes out are clearly connected cause it’s a whole person, so I focused on what I could see.”

In other words, Adams was asserting that since behavior is connected to the heart and motivations anyway, why not focus on what can be objectively observed and apply empirical biblical solutions? The invisible interworking’s of the heart is subjective at best, and risky in regard to being used to help people. Adams wanted to be sure of what he was telling people in regard to solutions for their life problems. But if you believe that objective truth is unknowable anyway, and man’s best hope is the new experimental drug that may or may not help because truth is so far above our knowing (but Plato’s “bright pebble[s]” can be found now and then) then you must find truth beyond observing how the nouns and verbs of Scripture work together empirically to an objective conclusion with solutions following.

So, Powlison answers the Adams’ approach by asserting that the verbs of Scripture have a deeper meaning than what appears objectively. Pretty clever: don’t discount verbs, but add the idea that verbs are also intuitive for the purposes of deeper knowledge:

And that notion that the active verbs with respect to God can do multiple duty for us, they not only call us to faith and love and refuge and hope, but they can turn on their heads and they become questions, what am I hoping in, where am I taking refuge, what am I loving that is not God, that that’s actually a hugely significant component, both of self-knowledge and then of repentance as well.

Emphasis on the positive side of the heart is the whole relationship with God.  And I do think that’s a way where, in the first generation, it looks pretty behavioral, and the whole vividness of relationship with God.

One can clearly see here where Powlison wants to take the plain sense of Scripture and apply the Socratic dialectic; ie, start asking questions about the obvious because truth couldn’t be that easy, and if it is, any Spirit indwelled Christian can do truth at home which is a huge problem for the philosopher kings. Empirical Objectivism puts the power of understanding in the hands of the common people. It is enemy number one for the Platonic New Calvinists.

The proof is in the pudding. I have written extensively on the long, long, long list of New Calvinist ideas that blatantly contradict the plain sense of Scripture. How can they get away with this? And why do they do it? Well, first, because what can be plainly observed are shadows of real truth which must be obtained by loftier methods beyond empirical observation. Secondly, the philosopher kings are the supposed experts on that. It harkens back to the famous Jack Hyles quote: “Now shut your Bibles and listen to me.” Rather than to immediately drag this man from the pulpit and toss him into the street, why did the 10,000 plus in attendance that morning obey him without a whimper or batting of the eye?

Because he was a philosopher king—that’s why.

Interpreting  “Total Depravity” at Home

But if one does interpret the Bible literally, and if God does speak to us individually through his word, the folly of total depravity is plainly seen. In fact, if Christians do have the freedom to interpret the Bible for themselves, a child can even see the foolishness of this concept. First, we only need to observe 2 Peter 2:7,8;

and if he rescued Lot, a righteous man, who was distressed by the filthy lives of lawless men (for that righteous man, living among them day after day, was tormented in his righteous soul by the lawless deeds he saw and heard)—if this is so, then the Lord knows how to rescue godly men from trials and to hold the unrighteous for the day of judgment, while continuing their punishment.

Peter calls Lot (not exactly the brightest bulb in the Christian bunch ) “righteous.” Not, “totally depraved.” If God wants to put forth the idea that Christians are totally depraved, many passages like this would only cause confusion. “But Paul, that’s talking about positional righteousness, not the actual righteousness of the person.” Oh really? The passage states that it was Lot’s righteous “soul” that was “vexed.” And how do you vex something that is already totally vexed? Nevertheless, we can also add the Apostle Paul’s commentary on the Christian’s righteousness and ability:

I myself am convinced, my brothers, that you yourselves are full of goodness, complete in knowledge and competent to instruct one another (Romans 15:14).

In case there is any question that Paul is not talking about us specifically and not just an attribute that we have in Christ alone, he doubles the personal pronoun for emphasis: “you yourselves.” In a further attempt to show that Christians are totally depraved and no different than unbelievers, Calvinists make the law the standard for justification. A New Calvinist recently challenged my contention that Christians do not sin as a lifestyle, and therefore shouldn’t be referred to as “sinners.” He challenged my contention with their classic rhetorical question that supposedly ends the argument: “Did you sin today?” Hence, if we sinned once, we are guilty of breaking the whole law (James 2:20 [a justification verse not applicable to sanctification]) which supposedly  =’s total depravity.

But the law is no longer a standard by which Christians are judged; so therefore, the repentance is even different—it is a washing of the feet rather than a washing of the whole body (see John, chapter 13). Because we have the seed of God within us and this treasure in earthen vessels, we do sin, but not habitually because we are born again and the power of habitual sin is broken. The law is a standard for our kingdom living, but not our just standing—the whole book of 1John is about this and Romans references the same tenets throughout. Because Reformed theology starts with Platonist assumptions about truth and man’s relationship to it—they must rewrite Scripture in totality to make it work which necessarily dismisses a literal interpretation of the grammatical sort.

And I contend that the unregenerate are not even totally depraved. Romans, chapter 2 makes it clear that all people born into the world have the law of God written on their hearts and a conscience that mediates between their actions/thinking and the natural law of God. This, in my mind, thoroughly explains why unsaved people do good things, and pass judgment on what is “natural/good” and “unnatural/evil.” In most cases, extreme behavior (especially unnatural) is attributed to the mind being “ill.” “But Paul, Isaiah said that all of the righteous works of man are as filthy rags to him.” Right, when they are for the purpose of earning favor with God for salvation, or in other cases, hypocritical. I once knew a serial adulterer who volunteered at the community soup kitchen that fed the poor. Does God see that good work as filthy? Of course. But does He look upon the work of a person, who without thinking (because of the law written upon his/her heart), throws themself in front of a car that is about to run over a mother and her baby in the same way? I doubt it. Will that act earn heaven? No. But is the act filthy in God’s eyes? Hardly.

Furthermore, throughout the Scriptures, we learn that there are different degrees of punishment in hell. For the Reformed mind, that’s gotta hurt. That means that the unregenerate, in the negative sense, are given some merit for not being as depraved as they could be. Therefore, the life of an unbeliever does contain merit—not for salvation, but for responding positively to God’s natural law. In fact, at times, the unsaved put Christians to shame in regard to this because as a man thinks in his heart—so is he, and many Christians have been taught that they are totally depraved. This is one of the very reasons that the world is often not endeared to Christianity: it’s a contradiction to the natural law within unbelievers.

Moreover, we see further contradictions in Christ’s account of Lazarus and the rich man in Luke, chapter 16. What did the condemned man have to gain by exhorting Abraham to warn his living brethren about his eternal demise lest they end up the same way? I’m sorry, but how can this not be seen as a selfless exhortation for the benefit of others? Total depravity? How?

But there is a warning in this for the Reformed as well. Abraham told the rich man that if they would not listen to the Scriptures, neither would they listen to one who had been raised from the dead. So, does that mean to merely “listen” to a gospel story? Or, other biblical truth as well? Does the Bible use a myriad of other truths about God to lead others to the gospel, or just the gospel story itself? And who are the approved narrators? Is the true gospel a gospel story about a call to believe and contemplate the gospel only? Is that a true gospel? The Reformed philosopher kings of our day assure us that they know the answers to these questions, and to just trust them as God’s anointed.

No thanks, Christ told me to “consider carefully what you hear.” And sorry, I think “you” means, “me” as in, Paul Dohse. Plato said, “Those who tell the stories rule society.” And in our day, those who make the whole Bible a gospel story are ruling the church. Well, not in my house.

As for me and my house, we will heed our Lord’s advice and consider carefully what we hear. No matter who is telling the story, and we will pay closer attention in alarm to those looking for deeper meaning in simple verbs.

paul

21 Responses

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  1. Argo's avatar Argo said, on July 27, 2012 at 9:27 AM

    Are their Christian bullies?

    Exhibit A: the need for Paul’s site
    Exhibit B: the need for John Immel’s site “Spiritualtyranny.com”
    Exhibit C: the need for SGMRefuge and SGMSurvivors
    Exhibit E: the need for 2 Peter (sure they were false teachers, but claimed to be “Christian” I’m sure)
    Exhibit F: Brent Detwiler’s thousand pages of extremely damning documentation regarding apostolic abuses in SGM, especially CJ Mahaney’s blackmail of Larry Tomczak (sp?).

    How do you deal with them?

    Read the Bible, specifically the parts where Paul and Peter address false teachers and their accusers. Read the Gospels and how Jesus responded to the Pharisees. Read the blogs I mentioned above. Speak in love, gentleness and humility, but do not be afraid to offend the neo-Calvinist very delicate sensitivities…they are not used to the idiots in the pews challenging their “superior:” wisdom and “sound” doctrine.

    And finally…NEVER concede their premises. You are NOT totally depraved. Election as they define it is NOT “clear” from Scripture. And you are NOT bound by their authority. And they CANNOT declare you out of the Kingdom. Scare tactics, twisted doctrine, cries of gossip and slander, and appeals to their “divinely ordained” authority are all they have.

    Pray, trust God, as for wisdom, be strong, trust your reason and your mind, call it as you see it…your ability to call a spade a spade is a gift from God. Use it.

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  2. Argo's avatar Argo said, on July 27, 2012 at 9:29 AM

    Ha! I forgot D! LOL! Well…I guess enthusiasm sometimes obscures stuff. Er…like the alphabet. LOL!

    Anybody recommend a book for me about this…maybe “Proofreading for Dummies?” :-)))))))

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    • Paul M. Dohse Sr.'s avatar paulspassingthoughts said, on July 27, 2012 at 10:01 AM

      Argy,
      Go to clearcreekcchapel.org and download the sermon by Dr. Devon Berry on “How to listen to a Sermon.” That’s the NC line on interpretation; ie, elders have to interpret it for you as well as other shocking assertions.

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  3. Argo's avatar Argo said, on July 27, 2012 at 1:46 PM

    Hi Paul,

    I checked that site out. Yes…this is just like what we were taught at SGM (right down to the hyper-application of tonal affect and cadence). Disturbing. I listened to a sermon called, I think, “Why people believe.” Needless to say, it was a teaching on “election”, disguised as objective exegesis. He used the passage of Scripture where Jesus says, “You do not believe because you are not part of my flock.”

    Here is my response. I’m so sorry….I just couldn’t help myself. The interpretations are just SO illogical that I could not resist, even if no one reads it, LOL:

    Belief implies an understanding between TRUTH and FALLACY. In short, belief involves acceptance of a premise to the exclusion of another. That is, belief involves a choice of one thing over another. If belief is not a choice, then there is no belief…for one simply cannot believe in something when they are unable to grasp any alternative. A person is not “elected” to believe…no, they are programmed to think only one way.

    The very fact that Jesus uses the word “believe” in any context implies an assumption of the rational capacity of the audience. This means that He cannot be speaking of “election” in the Calvinist sense when He uses this word. Such as, “You do not believe because you are not part of my flock.”
    Calvinists imply that this IS the doctrine of election (they always interpret these passages by the preconceived premise, that is, Jesus is ALWAYS speaking doctrinally of election…which is poorly thought out, and which is why opponents to Calvinism should never concede the premise; you need to point out that they are merely interpreting by ASSUMPTION; and this is as interpretively bad and as subjective as it gets). But how can that be the case when the word “believe” is used, which implies, as I explained, rational choice, not preordaining? Jesus would have said, if He were truly speaking of Unconditional Election/Inability, “You think this way, because you are not part of my flock; and the flock thinks this way. You do not accept because you cannot recognize anything other than what my Father has programmed you to recognize.”

    Now, that would have made a little more sense…but only a little, because even then a logical struggle still exists because anytime you use words like “accept” (“believe” and “choose”, etc.), you are implying that the audience has the capacity to make rational choice, and to do that, one must be able to define both what they ARE accepting and what they ARE NOT. The doctrine of election as the Calvinists teach it, precludes this entirely. The fact that you cannot choose salvation, or not, and that God has to pluck you from the ether and bind you to one destiny or another, apart from YOU in ANY cognitive capacity, means that you can only THINK one way…your thinking is utterly one dimensional. This means that you cannot even recognize that there is any other possible way of understanding or grasping what your senses feed your brain.

    Now, inevitably the Calvinist apologist will argue that one can surely SEE or RECOGNIZE this or that, but only ever DESIRE one thing according to his “sinful nature” (the argument of choice is ultimately really the argument of desire…no one is saying that people can choose anything they wish, but that they can in fact DESIRE anything they wish, thus can cognitively CHOOSE it, in spite of their incapacity to actually bring it to pass in their own strength…that is, one can desire salvation, but not save themselves, obviously). Then this is, by definition, NOT seeing. For if you could see it, then you could define it, and by defining it then you could reasonably argue that, contrary to what the Calvinists say, there could be a circumstance in which you would desire it, and thus, cognitively CHOOSE it.

    The Calvinist apologist might counter by pointing out that SEEING and DEFINING does not imply correct UNDERSTANDING (knowing “truth”), and that you can never desire to seek to understand (truth) and THAT is why some must be “elected” and some not. But then we would reply by saying that the onus is on man, then, to recognize that he may not, in fact, be properly understanding the something he is seeing, and thus, before making a decision on what he will or will not desire or choose, must seek to truly understand it, so that he can make a rational choice on what is truth. If a man refuses to seek to understand, then that is still his rational choice, and the choice to desire or not desire and thus choose the something is still up to man’s rational mind. If a man decides to understand, and does, and then makes a choice for that thing based upon a desire to do so, then the choice is once again up to man’s rational mind.

    If the Calvinist says that God does not give that some CAN desire to truly understand and that that is why they are unable to choose Christ, then all they’ve done is add one more qualification, or dimension, to “election”. If God grants a man desire to understand and he does, and chooses that which he formerly did not understand, then the man is STILL making a rational choice. If the man is given a desire to understand and does not act upon it, then it is AGAIN man making his rational choice.

    Now, if God gives man a desire to understand and thus choose that thing, because the choice is irresistible, because man’s desire in this case REALLY equals God compelling (whereby “understanding” is just an irresistible compulsion in disguise), then it has nothing to do with man’s choice at all, it is simply predestination and man cannot, then, by definition believe or not..in which case, for the Bible to use the word “believe” or “belief” is hypocritical and deceptive. Obviously, we’d all accept that to accuse the Savior of that is heretical. Therefore, when he says “you do not believe”, He is by definition implying rational CHOICE on the part of the audience.

    I’ve said it before and I will say it again, we cannot have it both ways. Either man can choose, or man cannot. Either man is rational, or he is not. There is NO mystery. There is only reason, period. Thus, those passages where Calvinists read into them the “doctrine of election”, are passages that they are most certainly interpreting wrong. And the real question we should be asking ourselves is not: Why does the Bible say that we are “elected” and yet must choose? No, it should be: Why are they interpreting the passages wrong?

    As far as I can tell, there are only two reasons, and each one is arguably as bad as the other:

    1. For control, in service to personal power and gain.
    2. They are ignorant of proper understanding of the Faith.

    The concept of election makes the mind of man no better than that of the animals. That is what it and its father “total depravity” are built to do. Election is not a mystery at all; it is a logical fallacy, and therefore, should not be accepted as any kind of doctrine to be practically applied.

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    • Paul M. Dohse Sr.'s avatar paulspassingthoughts said, on July 27, 2012 at 2:25 PM

      Argy,

      You have to read “How to listen to a Sermon” by that gang. Too outrageous–way stranger than fiction.

      Like

  4. Argo's avatar Argo said, on July 27, 2012 at 3:08 PM

    Hi Paul,
    Yes…that is next on my list. I couldn’t resist listening to the other one when I saw the title. I knew it was going to be rich.

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  5. lydiasellerofpurple@yahoo.com's avatar lydiasellerofpurple@yahoo.com said, on July 28, 2012 at 1:00 AM

    Argo, Try SBCToday.com.

    http://sbctoday.com/2012/05/30/an-introduction-to-%e2%80%9ca-statement-of-the-traditional-southern-baptist-understanding-of-god%e2%80%99s-plan-of-salvation%e2%80%9d/

    This is the post that caused a firestorm in the SBC and it is still going on. There are over 900 comments. Guess which ones are Calvinists. :p) There are more posts after this on each of their statements. The Cals are flipping out that they dare post their beliefs and are determined to prove they are wrong but most of their arguments are ad homenim.

    This is the statement that Al Mohler responded that many of the signers he knows do not really believe what they signed. He also said the statement leans toward semi Pelagianism which was declared heresy by the church centuries ago.

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  6. Argo's avatar Argo said, on July 28, 2012 at 10:21 AM

    Hi Lydia,

    Thanks for directing me to that link. I applaud the the SBs for that statement. That took a lot of courage, especially when you consider that they, like you and I, can always expect the predictable firestorm of rage and threats and accusations that always seem to ensue when you challenge Calvinist claims to having the monopoly on “sound” doctrine and orthodoxy.

    I love the “can’t we all just get along” attitude of the neo-Calvinist posters. It just solidifies my belief that they really do not understand the gravity of their theological premises. What they cannot seem to grasp is that by preaching Calvinism, what they are doing is changing the fundamental NATURE of God. Calvinism is nothing more than an elevation of elders over God when you boil it all down…the necessity of God to “elect” in order to accomplish His purpose, and the need for “elders” (pastors? Elders?…whatever name-of-the-month they are using this week) to stand in the stead and declare who is giving “evidence” of elect…er, salvation, and who is not. They cannot see that by “election”, they make the Cross of Christ of less effect than the Fall. At’s root, Calvinism is a doctrine intended to control bodies and minds by the select few “philosopher kings”. Those who oppose Calvinists (BTW, I refuse to cop to the idea that just because one believes that [gasp!] a person can actually BELIEVE the GOSPEL when they hear it, of their own free and rational mind…I know…SOOOOO scandalous…that they are “Arminian” by default, but even if…whatev, doesn’t change the fact that Calvinists misrepresent the gospel of Christ) understand that this infringes on the true sovereignty of God…which is ironic, I know, given that the Calvinists are all about “sovereign grace”.

    It is necessary for the SBC to distance themselves from this sect in order that they may preach the Gospel with the intention of saving every soul, as Christ commanded. By definition, Calvinists cannot have this fundamental motivation, therefore, it is hard to see how and why the “free will-ists” should be expected to “get along”. We all know that the dirty little secret is that when Calvinists demand that we “get along for the good of the gospel”, what they mean is an unequivocal acceptance of their theology and a surrendering of the ownership of oneself to the duly, divinely ordained “pastor” or “elder” (read, mystic despot…enough with the euphemisms).

    Thanks again, Lydia!

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