Paul's Passing Thoughts

Simply Stated: Why is Calvinism a False Gospel?

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on November 24, 2013

Simply stated, Calvinism is a false gospel because it denies that salvation is a onetime event in the life of the believer. In other words, when a person believes in Christ, all of their sins are not forgiven once and for all time. The sins we commit in our Christian life go against our just standing, so we must continually revisit the same gospel that saved us in order to maintain our just standing. This is a problem because we have to do something to keep our just standing. The Reformers taught that salvation as a onetime finished work is a false gospel.

In our present day which is experiencing a resurgence of the original Reformation gospel, we assume that the mantra, “We must preach the gospel to ourselves everyday” is just a popular opinion about the best way to grow spiritually in our Christian life. Not so. The revisiting every day of the same gospel that saved us is necessary to maintain our just standing before God. “The same gospel that saved us also sanctifies us” is another popular mantra that is deceptive; a re-visitation of gospel is a must for keeping ourselves saved according to the Reformation gospel.

This is why the Reformers redefined the biblical new birth. Instead of the new birth being a onetime event in the life of the believer, making us a new creature, they made the new birth a continual rebirth experience only needed to maintain our salvation. Another way this could be stated follows: a perpetual re-salvation experience. Contemporary Reformed theologians call this “mortification and vivification” in their systematic theology.

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Why Calvinism is the Antithesis of Love: free-writing notes from the TTANC 2 project.

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on November 18, 2013

Volume 2 coverA Primer for Coming Chapters

We will see in chapter five and following that the Reformers made Plato’s trinity the Christian gospel in regard to the redemption obtained by Christ’s death, burial, and resurrection. They also narrowed the definition of the gospel to encompass the works of Christ only. Normally, among theologians, the word “gospel” is used generically while discussing different subjects like bibliology and soteriology, but the Reformers narrowed the meaning to primarily pertain to the works of Christ. Furthermore, in the same way that Plato’s trinity of the good, true, and beautiful forms are REALIY itself, the Reformer’s made Christ to be the total sum of reality.[42]

Therefore, Christ is the personification of the true forms. In the same way that Plato’s true forms cannot be known empirically, as we shall see, the Reformers, and especially the New Calvinists, teach that Christ cannot be known by the study of biblical precepts. This idea evokes contemporary truisms like, “He’s a person, not a precept.” Hence, the “person” of Christ is beyond knowing. We can only EXPERIENCE Christ subjectively, but we can’t really know Him factually and truthfully. In the same way, Plato’s just artisan can only experience the wellbeing of his just soul and the unity of a just society. The personhood of Christ is merely an idiom for Plato’s true forms.

IF we trust something completely outside of us to know what Christ has done, and not anything we do (which would require knowledge), we can experience the wellbeing of a unified soul and a unified group, or community. All of this inspires the contemporary Calvinist truisms of our day like, “Not my doing, but Christ’s doing and dying.” In order to understand this, you must connect DOING with KNOWLEDGE. We can’t do anything to please God because that assumes the knowledge and ability to do it. If we claim to know Christ in a factual way, and believe we can please Him with our works based on accrued knowledge, individual lives and society will be thrown into chaos because individual opinions and life experiences rule the day, not to mention selfishness that disregards the value of others. Individuals must find happiness in their group role, and leave knowledge to something completely outside of themselves—they must trust and obey the philosopher kings. If they don’t, personal and societal chaos will result.

Christ himself is reality. The gospel is reality. His redemptive acts are reality itself, and there is no other reality. In the same way that the just artisan only needs to know that he cannot know, and that he must trust truth completely outside of himself, the just Christian is defined as such by the Reformers. Plato’s “justice” is the “just” in Calvin’s “justification.” The producer is totally depraved; ie, the “T” in T.U.L.I.P.

The New Birth of Salvation

This will necessarily demand a conversation about the new birth.

“You must be born again.”

~ Christ

The concept of the new birth empowers the individual. The new birth may look to mentors and teachers to be a better individual, but ultimately rejects the philosopher king as mediator between the individual and Christ. This also includes a conversation about individual culpability. The born again individual believes they will be directly accountable to Christ for individual gifts granted by Him and knowable knowledge about God’s kingdom. The concept of being judged by the following standard alone; i.e., obedience to Reformed philosopher kings, is rejected out of hand.

A Smoking Gun: Mortification and Vivification

This brings to bear a significant smoking gun that, in and of itself, proves the theses of this book. The Reformers made a metaphysical reality, the new birth of salvation, a mere experience of Plato’s true forms of the good and beautiful. New Calvinists even have a name for it: mortification and vivification. That term is a staple maxim of their systematic theology that speaks to the very roots of Reformed theology. Mortification and vivification does not merely expose Calvinism as an emperor with no clothing, it’s a colonoscopy. It changes the onetime event of the salvific new creation of the individual into a perpetual new birth experience only. The person was never transformed by the Holy Spirit, but only experienced a new birth.

Consequently, the goal of the “Christian” is to empty self (mortification) for the benefit of the group which results in the reward of the vivification experience, or “joy.” Hence, the “Christian” life is an ever deepening realization of our depravity resulting in an ever-deepening ongoing joy experience. Again, this makes Calvinism the antithesis of the Bible’s definition of love which does not “rejoice in evil.” But in the case of Calvinism, focusing on individual depravity results in a deeper and deeper joy that was experienced during our initial salvation. Calvinists state this plainly:

1. Progressive sanctification has two parts: mortification and vivification, “both of which happen to us by participation in Christ,” as Calvin notes….Subjectively experiencing this definitive reality signified and sealed to us in our baptism requires a daily dying and rising. That is what the Reformers meant by sanctification as a living out of our baptism….and this conversion yields lifelong mortification and vivification “again and again.” Yet it is critical to remind ourselves that in this daily human act of turning, we are always turning not only from sin but toward Christ rather than toward our own experience or piety.

2. The final characteristic and ultimate test of all genuine repentance is its continuation and growth throughout the believer’s life. Through the sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit, the God who begins a work of repentance in us will perfect it; He will see to it that it matures and deepens throughout our lives…Christians are scandalously referred to as “repenters” because an ever-deepening, ever-maturing repentance marks their lives…At conversion, a person begins to see God and himself as never before. The greater revelation of God’s holiness and righteousness leads to a greater revelation of self, which, in turn, results in a repentance or brokenness over sin.

Nevertheless, the believer is not left in despair, for he is also afforded a greater revelation of the grace of God in the face of Christ, which leads to joy unspeakable. The cycle simply repeats itself throughout the Christian life. As years pass, the Christian sees more of God and more of self, resulting in a greater and deeper brokenness. Yet, all the while, the Christian’s joy grows in equal measure because he is privy to greater and greater revelations of the love, grace and mercy of God in the person and work of Christ.

Not only this, but a great interchange occurs in that the Christian learns to rest less and less in his own performance and more and more in the perfect work of Christ. Thus, his joy is not only increased, but it also becomes more consistent and stable. He is left off putting confidence in the flesh, which is idolatry, and is resting in the virtue and merits of Christ, which is true Christian piety.

3. Now you ask: What then shall we do? Shall we go our way with indifference because we can do nothing but sin? I would reply: By no means. But, having heard this, fall down and pray for grace and place your hope in Christ in whom is our salvation, life, and resurrection. For this reason we are so instructed-for this reason the law makes us aware of sin so that, having recognized our sin, we may seek and receive grace… Nor does speaking in this manner give cause for despair, but for arousing the desire to humble oneself and seek the grace of Christ… Therefore one does not give cause for despair or death by telling a sick person about the danger of his illness, but, in effect, one urges him to seek a medical cure. To say that we are nothing and constantly sin when we do the best we can does not mean that we cause people to despair (unless we are fools); rather, we make them concerned about the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ.[43]

The Subjective EXPERIENCE

When New Calvinists, or for that matter run of the mill Calvinists speak of subjective justification, or the subjective experience of the gospel, or the power of the gospel being experienced subjectively, what are they talking about? Answer: in the same way that Plato believed the commoner can only experience shadows of reality; the Reformers believed that Christians can only experience reality subjectively. Remember what the definition of “subjectivism” is? It’s defined by our own biased opinions. It’s a distorted view of reality based on our own presuppositions. Yes, even when “objective gospel” is experienced subjectively, we have no certainty that it actually came from heaven, but it is certain that we will experience increased gospel joy if we profess to know nothing and affirm that we cannot do any properly informed good work. In the same way, the societal artisan finds happiness in Plato’s definition of justice. The subjective gospel is Plato’s shadowy experience of the true forms.

This is very important to chapter five. We will examine how Martin Luther developed a gospel method of interpreting reality for the commoner. A method of interpretation is a hermeneutic. Martin Luther developed a gospel hermeneutic for life. It is the exact same hermeneutic that prevails in the contemporary church. It is Luther’s hermeneutic, and has led to a wholesale denial of the new birth by outright confession at worst, and the way we function at best. In other words, the vast majority of Christians in our day deny the new birth outright, or unwittingly function that way while vehemently denying the guilt thereof. The mantra of the outright rejecter of the new birth is, “We must preach the gospel to ourselves every day.” The mantra of the unwitting participant is, “We are all just sinners saved by grace.”

The unfolding of this volume will reveal the philosophical highway from Plato to St. Augustine, then to Luther, and ending with John Calvin. Luther presented his gospel hermeneutic to the Augustinian order, and Calvin developed Luther’s hermeneutic into a full orbed philosophical statement for Western religious culture.

Endnotes

42. Paul M. Dohse: False Reformation: Four Tenets of Luther and Calvin’s Egregious False Gospel; TANC Publishing 2012, pp. 99,100. / Paul M. Dohse: The Emergent Postmodern Church and New Calvinism; TANC Publishing 2012, chapter 1, free ebook online source: http://wp.me/P3g0sn-D

43.1. Michael Horton: The Christian Faith: A Systematic Theology for Pilgrims On the Way; Systematic Heading – Mortification and Vivification,  pp. 661-663 [Calvin Inst. 3.3.2-9]).

2. Paul Washer: The Gospel Call and True Conversion; Reformed Heritage Books 2013. Part 1, Chapter 1, heading – The Essential Characteristics Of Genuine Repentance, subheading – Continuing and Deepening Work of Repentance.

3. Martin Luther: The Heidelberg Disputation; “Brother Martin Luther, Master of Sacred Theology, will preside, and Brother Leonhard Beyer, Master of Arts and Philosophy, will defend the following theses before the Augustinians of this renowned city of Heidelberg in the customary place, on April 26th 1518.” Thesis 16 and 17.

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Please Support Our Evangelistic Outreach to Calvinists

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on October 19, 2013

CP2013

On December 27-30, we will attend the Cross Conference in Louisville, Kentucky and reach out to the Calvinists there with the true gospel of Jesus Christ. We will be supplying many materials to them for free depending on the support we receive for this missionary endeavor.

We will engage Calvinists there and plead with them to repent of salvation by Christ plus antinomianism. If Christ keeps the law for us in sanctification, that means we have to believe that to remain saved. We will also address the belief that Christians need to receive a perpetual and ongoing salvific forgiveness for sins committed in sanctification, and if that is not received by “preaching the gospel to ourselves” we will lose our salvation.

Please pray for us. We will find many who are not aware of what Calvin really believed. Inquiries for more information should be sent to mail@ttanc.com. Donations can be sent to PO Box 583, Xenia, Ohio 45385. For PayPal, use the same email address.

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A non-profit LLC.

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Redemption: Another Choice between Calvinism and Biblicism; One? Or more Than One?

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on October 16, 2013

The choice between John Calvin’s gospel and the gospel described by a grammatical interpretation of the Bible is made up of multiple distinctives.

1. The standard for justification.

2. Infused grace.

3. Righteousness.

4. The role of law.

5. The number of judgments and resurrections.

6. The dichotomy of justification and sanctification.

7. Interpretation.

8. Total Depravity

9. Faith Alone

10. The law’s use.

11. New Birth

12. National Israel

13. Redemption

Number 13 is the subject of this post.

A review of 1-12 follows:

Reformed Bible
Justification Standard Perfect law-keeping. No law.
Infused Grace All righteousness remains outside of the believer. Righteousness within.
Righteousness Positionally only. Practically
The Role of the Law Doesn’t change for saved. Changes for saved.
Judgments / Resurrections One only. Multiple
Dichotomy Justification progresses by sanctification. Justification is finished; only sanctification progresses.
Interpretation Luther’s Theology of the Cross. Grammatical
Total Depravity Saved and Unsaved Neither
Faith Alone Both for justification and sanctification. Only justification.
Law’s Use To show evil and holiness only. Practical instruction for the Christian life.
New Birth Realm manifestation. New creaturehood.
National Israel No future. Future

 

The subject of redemption is another element of contradiction between what the Bible states grammatically and the Reformed method of interpretation. The word means, “The act of buying back.” It has also in it the thought of taking possession of that which has been bought. Since man’s condition never changes, and there is a vast metaphysical gulf between mankind and God according to Reformed thought, redemption is seen as taking place in the one great judgment where everyone’s just standing is determined (Calvin Institutes 3.25.9). Those who lived their Christian life by faith alone (the Reformed, “Christ 100% for us”) will be revealed as redeemed at that one last judgment which reveals those who are justified (the Reformed, “Already, not yet”). According to Reformed thought, if you persevere against the essence of all sin, which is, “trying to please God in your own efforts,” you will be granted eternal life and thereby revealed as one who has been purchased or “redeemed.”

However, since the Bible teaches that justification is a finished work, and righteousness is infused within the born-again Christian, the Bible teaches a separate redemption for the soul of the believer and the redemption of the mortal body. The soul is redeemed at salvation; the body is redeemed at resurrection.

Furthermore, there is redemption of national Israel, and a future redemption of creation. This is just another example of how all Reformed doctrine is crushed and found wanting by a single biblical elemental truth. Different redemptions take place at different times in history, and are not encompassed in one final event as proposed by Reformed thought (with the one exception of “already, not yet”).

The following treatise written by John Ritchie is helpful:

Redemption is the “act of buying back.” It has also in it the thought of taking possession of that which has been thus bought. There is a redemption by purchase, and also a redemption by power, spoken of in the Scriptures. There is a redemption which the believer has now, and there is a redemption that he hopes for, by-and-bye. It is needful to distinguish between these.

Man’s Need of Redemption.

Man is the slave of sin and Satan. In his fail, he surrendered himself into Satan’s hand. His inheritance, was lost with him. The world is claimed by Satan, and he rules it. He is the “prince of this world” (John 12:31). Man is a subject of his power (Acts 26:18) and must remain so until delivered by the power of God. He cannot redeem or deliver himself, nor can his fellow. “None of them can by any means redeem his brother, nor give to God a ransom for him” (Psa. 49:7). If deliverance comes, it must be from above. This is what the Gospel reveals. “Deliver him from going down to the pit: I have found a ransom” (Job 33:24) is the Word of the God of redemption. “He sent redemption unto His people” (Psa. 111:9). This redemption comes through Christ, as we read– “Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption” (I Cor. 1:30). He obtained “eternal redemption” (Heb. 9:12) for His people.

Redemption by Blood, and by Power.

The language of the Word concerning the believer is, “In whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace” (Eph. 1:7). Then, looking onward to the day of coming glory, when redemptive power shall be extended to his mortal body, and to creation, the word is— “In whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise, which is the earnest of our inheritance, until the redemption of the purchased possession” (Eph. 1:13-14). Then again, “Grieve not the holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption” (Eph. 4:30).

Redemption by blood was effected at the Cross. There the Lord Jesus “purchased with His own blood” (Acts 20:28) His people. Yea, more; He bought the field — the world, in which the treasure lay (see Matt. 13:44), and will yet take possession of it, set it in order, and rule it for God. But the time for this display of His redemptive power in the world has not yet come. He is now engaged in gathering His purchased treasure out of it. This He is doing by the Gospel. When a sinner believes the Gospel, his sins are forgiven, he is sealed by the Holy Spirit, and he waits for the day of full and final redemption.

Like a farmer who goes to the market to buy a flock of sheep, He purchases them, pays for them, and sets His mark upon them as His property. By-and-bye He returns, and takes the sheep that bear His mark out from the rest, and appropriates them to Himself.

These two aspects of redemption by blood and by power had their foreshadowing in the redemption of Israel. First, they were redeemed by the blood of the lamb from judgment, next by the arm of the Lord from Pharaoh. He “redeemed them from the hand of the enemy” (Psa. 106:10) to be unto Himself a peculiar treasure above all people: a people among whom He might dwell, and rule by His Word.

Kinsman, Redeemer, Avenger.

Under the law, a kinsman had a right to redeem (Lev. 25:25; Ruth 4:6-7). He might also avenge his brother’s blood (Joshua 20:5). The Hebrew word for Redeemer is also translated— “Kinsman” and “Avenger”; it has in it the threefold significance of Kinsman, Redeemer, Avenger. We have in the Lord Jesus all these three characters sustained. He is at once our Kinsman, Redeemer, and Avenger. He became our Kinsman by His incarnation. So we read, “Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same” (Heb. 2:14). Being “made in the likeness of men” (Phil. 2:7), His humanity was sinless, He had no share in man’s fallen nature, He was not at a distance from God as others were by nature. We must jealously guard against the thought that such things were associated with His manhood. But in all respects — sin excepted — He was a man. Thus He became our kinsman. But this of itself did not deliver. It is a fundamental error to say — as some have said — that in becoming man Christ linked Himself with our race, and thus elevated and dignified man as such. The Scriptures teach the reverse. Man’s nature has not been elevated since the day of his fall, nor will it ever be. He murdered Christ. He can only enter God’s Kingdom by being born again. The Lord became Kinsman in order that He might become Redeemer. He took flesh and blood in order that He might enter into man’s responsibilities, and discharge them by death. By death redemption was secured. The redemption of His people and the redemption of His inheritance were both secured by the Cross. By death He also became the Avenger. He destroyed the power of Satan, He bruised the serpent’s head, and, in virtue of His triumph over the enemy there, His people shall yet, in a day to come, see Satan bruised beneath their feet also (Rom. 16:20).

These three aspects of the work of Christ are all given in Heb. 2:14-15. Redemption by blood is past at the Cross: it never will be repeated; but redemption by power will go on until all that Christ has purchased shall be possessed and restored to God.

Redemption from the Curse.

“Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us” (Gal.3:13). The curse is the penalty of sin: it must have come upon us; but One was found who willingly died in our stead. Now all who believe are free. As we sing—

“Believing, we rejoice

To see the curse removed;

We bless the Lamb with cheerful voice,

And sing redeeming love.”

Redeemed From All Iniquity.

“Who gave Himself for us, that He might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto Himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works” (Titus 2:14). This is redemption from sin’s power. The people of the Lord are a purchased and a purified people. They are redeemed from lawlessness and set apart to God, to be of service to Him and for Him among men.

Not long ago, a Christian farmer was showing me over his fields waving with yellow grain. Not many years before, that same ground was over-run with whin, and yielded nothing. It passed into other hands, and the new owner began at once to reclaim his possession. Skill and labour were brought to bear, on the wild, uncared-for soil; it was first “purified,” then sown, and now it yields a good return to its owner. The redeemed on earth “are God’s husbandry” (I Cor. 3:9).

On them He is bestowing His grace, His discipline, and His care, with the object of having them a people zealous of good works, such as He has ordained for them to walk in (Eph. 2:10).

Redemption of the Body.

There is a redemption yet to come. “Waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body” (Rom. 8:23). The body has not yet been delivered from that condition into which the fall has brought it. It has changed owners (see 1 Cor. 6:20), its members are no longer the weapons of sin, but now instruments of righteousness unto God (Rom. 6:13). It is still “our vile body” (Phil. 3:21), and must either be “dissolved” — as it is in those who have fallen asleep — or “changed” — as it will be in those who are “alive and remain” unto the coming of the Lord. In both, the body shall be fashioned anew, “like unto His glorious body” (Phil. 3:21), in that day when redemptive power shall be put forth on the bodies of the saints. For this we wait.

Creation Redeemed.

There is also the “redemption of the purchased possession” (Eph. 1:14). Creation has long been subject to the bondage of corruption. The ground has been under the curse for man’s sake. It has long groaned and travailed in pain under its burden, but a day will come when it too shall be delivered and become a sharer of “glorious liberty of the children of God” (Rom. 8:21). Then a new Heaven and a new earth, wherein righteousness dwells, shall shine forth, and all trace of sin and its fruit shall be done away. Everything in that new creation shall stand in the power of redemption, and not like the first creation, in the goodness of the creature. Thus God shall receive back unto Himself, through Christ and His redemption, the glory lost by sin, and fill His Heaven with a ransomed throng, who, looking on the Redeeming Lamb “in the midst of the throne,” shall ascribe to Him the honour and the praise. “Thou art worthy … for Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by Thy blood” (Rev. 5:9).

(Copied by Stephen Ross for WholesomeWords.org from Foundation Truths of the Gospel by John Ritchie. 2nd ed. Kilmarnock: Office of “The Believer’s Magazine,” [1904]).

The following chart below illustrates these points further:

Redemption Chart

Note: I am not going to interject the development of another point in my schedule right now, but be advised that Calvin made a really, really big deal of whether or not our redeemed bodies will be new ones or renovated ones (CI 3.25.7). He called the notion that our bodies will be new rather than renovated, “monstrous.” This always puzzled me, but I now suspect it was a big deal to Calvin because of the subject’s ramifications in regard to the different redemptions at different times.

paul

New Calvinism’s Contribution to the Church: it Reveals What Calvin Really Believed

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on August 24, 2013

ppt-jpeg4“A question we often hear is, ‘What is the difference between an Old Calvinist and a New Calvinist?’ The answer: maybe the music style and dress code, but that’s about it, Old Calvinists that don’t know what Calvin really believed about soteriology notwithstanding.…. This is the one area where New Calvinists can recommend themselves: they have a firm handle on Calvinology.”

Once upon a time, there was a family in Christianville that was highly respected among all of the town’s people. They owned the town’s water purification plant and purified the town’s water with a formula that had been in their family for centuries.

Then a distant relative of the family moved into town. He was obviously a fellow of the baser sort. “Well, every family has a black sheep” the town’s people reasoned. But then they found out this relative had also purified water in other towns with the same family formula resulting in the death of thousands. Apparently, for the first few years, the formula appears to improve the health of people, but ill effects follow in the long term.

The prestigious family objected and insisted that the family member had tampered with the original formula. What will Christianville do now?

No doubt, New Calvinism must be exposed and stopped, but its unwitting service to the church should not go unmentioned: it has exposed the original family formula, the same formula that evangelicals have fustigated the Catholic Church for over the years. For some reason, we are willing to buy into the idea that three Catholics founded an anti-Catholic movement and never stopped being Catholics. Truly, our Enlightenment forefathers would be ashamed of us for believing such.

Supposedly, the “Reformers” modified the original formula enough to bring life out of death. Now there is debate between the New Calvinists and the Old Calvinists in regard to the originality of that formula. Old Calvinists say the New Calvinists modified the formula. That’s not the case. A question we often hear is, “What is the difference between an Old Calvinist and a New Calvinist?” The answer: maybe the music style and dress code, but that’s about it, Old Calvinists that don’t know what Calvin really believed about soteriology notwithstanding. This is the one area where New Calvinists can recommend themselves: they have a firm handle on Calvinology.

Old Calvinists are obviously very threatened by what the New Calvinists have brought to light. Those who proudly label themselves with something that they misunderstood to begin with fall significantly short of being impressive. But their dilemma is understandable to a point. The Reformers interpreted all reality through Martin Luther’s Theology of the Cross. This seeks to use the Bible as a tool for gospel contemplationism only. The sole purpose of the Bible is to show us our sin (mortification), and God’s holiness, leading to a gospel visitation afresh (vivification). The Bible aids us in perpetual rebirth experiences. This is known as the Redemptive Historical use of the Bible.

But that is not the normative in regard to how people interpret literature or reality. Naturally, we interpret literature grammatically. Intuitively, we are exegetical beings. The way words are arranged in a sentence interprets our realty. Until Adam named the animals, they had no part in reality. You say, “Yes they did, even though they were unidentified, they were there—they had presence.” No, the word “unidentified” gives them their meaning in reality. Words interpret our reality. In the Redemptive Historical construct, all the words in the Bible must serve to show us our need to be saved perpetually—those words must continually show us our ruined state so that we can experience salvation (vivification) rather than being a participant in it via sanctification. That would be works salvation according to the Reformers.

To simplify this, it is fair to say that the Reformers brought an Eastern way of interpreting reality into the Western religious world. So, as Christians throughout the centuries read their Bibles, they are/were naturally drawn away from the original Reformed epistemology. The New Calvinists basically rediscovered the original epistemology of the Reformers. Their interpretive construct is critical for living by faith alone in sanctification as a way to maintain justification.

The proof in the pudding is interaction with Old Calvinists who scoff at the idea that New Calvinism is the same thing as their vaunted Reformed heritage. I cite here a debate I recently had with Calvinistic pastor Bret L. McAtee on a social network. The debate represents something that the laity must overcome in regard to seeking out truth and standing for it: academic antagonism. This is a Reformed mainstay. Much of the populous is eliminated from the debate because of a standard set up by the Reformers themselves. This was borrowed from the Eastern concept of social caste. The Reformers established a whole other standard of truth through councils, creeds, and catechisms attended by, “Divines.” Notably, those who drafted the Westminster Confession of Faith are known as the “Westminster Divines.” This is no more or no less than the Hindu Sage. True, Hinduism looks inward to interpret reality beyond the five senses while Reformed theology looks outward. But both interpret reality through an anti-grammatical construct. New Calvinists state implicitly that a literal, grammatical interpretation must bow to the redemptive interpretive process and its mortification /vivification experience.

Point being, throughout my debate with Pastor Bret L. MacAtee, he resorts to this, you’re a peasant and I am a sage communication technique.  He also tried to use the Reformed debate technique of assumptive metaphysics. What’s that? That is the assumption that the reality established by the Reformers is truth because they state it so. And this has worked well. Most Christians associate truth with “orthodoxy.” Orthodoxy is a truth established by men. The Reformers play word games here by calling documents such as the Westminster Confession, “subordinate truth,” but that is disingenuous. In fact, those who reject orthodoxy are referred to as “heterodox,” and as we shall see, MacAtee makes that synonymous with rejecting the gospel itself. Part and parcel with debating a Calvinist is their attempt to set the metaphysical parameters of the debate. I did not allow this to happen.

Let’s review these important points: a debate with a Calvinist will always involve academic antagonism and metaphysical assumption.

Note: Posts on social internet threads don’t always appear in the intended order because of varied response times to particular points. Also, it was a lengthy thread, and only the posts that articulate my summation here are included, and in the order that best clarifies the points that are being made.

McAtee  got the ball rolling by using academic antagonism right out of the gate:

BM: And that New Calvinism is authentic Calvinism is a howler of a statement.

PD: Bret, It’s a “howler” because you get your information from men. I get my information from 6 years of research on the Reformation and the Calvin institutes. You are clueless.

BM: LOL … Your indicting the wrong Chap Paul. Want to compare our reading over the years in Calvin and Calvin studies?

You’d lose.

And … I’ve read your books as well.

Those well versed in Reformed theology need not bow to this antagonism. We are in the truth business and are not bound by the musings of men. One must bring the debate to one or more subjects where Calvinism is vulnerable; in this case, progressive justification:

PD: Oh, so you believe in Progressive Justification?

BM: Nope … I believe in eternal justification, objective justification and then subjective justification … rightly explained and understood.

PD: “Nope”? Really? So tell me what book and chapter in the Calvin Institutes where Calvin talks about Progressive Justification.

PD: You there Brett?

BM: Yes yes Paul … I’ve read your open letter. An open letter that suggests you don’t know what you’re talking about and are a theological novice.

Two things here. First, his description of what he believes about justification is in fact New Calvinism to a “T.” New Calvinists, like Calvin, believed that grace remains completely outside of the believer and is only objective truth outside of us. Justification during our Christian life continues and is experienced subjectively. “Eternal justification” could refer to election or final justification which he seems to have left out. Nevertheless, note his description in relationship to the New Calvinist mantras, the centrality of the objective gospel outside of us and the subjective power of the objective gospel. The illustration below shows the kinship between New Calvinism and what McAtee stated:

Reformed Chain 2

One Achilles’ heel for Calvinists is while denying that they believe in progressive justification, the title of book three and the fourteenth chapter of the Calvin Institutes is, “The Beginning of Justification. In What Sense Progressive.” This is what I was trying to get McAtee to explain. He once again resorted to academic antagonism by calling me a “theological novice” while this is one of several questions that he wouldn’t answer.

PD: So, when Calvin said that justification is progressive, he really didn’t mean that justification is progressive. Is that what you are saying?

BM: I’m saying you don’t know the difference between progressive and perpetual.

PD: Both move forward in time.

PD: No? Am I missing the definition in its “gospel context”?

PD: Both move forward in time—yes or no big guy.

This is the whole motif that Calvinists are on some higher plane of understanding to the point where what seems obvious to the peasantry really isn’t realty. Hence, “progressive” and “perpetual” are supposedly different concepts that the common man is unable to understand. Again, I ignored the academic antagonism and asked him if both words have the idea of moving forward in time. He wouldn’t answer the question; instead, he posed a question based on Reformed pseudo-church history:

BM: Only an idiot could believe that Cardinal Sadolet and Rome hated Calvin because he agreed with them on Justification.

This response combines academic antagonism and metaphysical assumption. The assumption is that, according to the Reformed motif, there was a great gulf in the view on justification between Rome and the Reformers, and the only reason Rome hated the Reformers is because of their diametrically opposed views on justification. This is not reality at all for a couple of reasons. First, Calvin got his theology from St. Augustine who is a celebrated spiritual hero in the Catholic Church till this day. Secondly, Augustine, Luther, nor Calvin ever renounced their own membership in the Catholic Church. Here is how I sated it further along in the debate:

PD: Bret, let me also say that a cursory observation of church history shows that Augustine, Calvin, and Luther never left the Catholic Church. Yet, you are incredulous that their take on justification would be basically the same. So is it, A. You just don’t know any better, or B. You know, but you are deliberately keeping your flock dumbed down? Augustine was a die-hard Catholic till the end while Calvin cites him more than 400 times in the Institutes. And the idea that they had the same basic approach to justification as Rome is an over the top idea?

McAtee continued to bear down with heavy doses of academic antagonism and metaphysical assumptions with this statement:

BM: Like all idiots you are reading Calvin through a keyhole and then reinterpreting him through the Keyhole instead of letting his whole corpus of thought inform you. You are an example of someone that got in way over his head into areas he was not yet ready to think about. You may yet return to Biblical Christianity Paul and leave your heterodox ways and thinking.

Please remember at this point that he refused to answer the simplest of questions: did Calvin mean progressive by “progressive,” and does both perpetual and progressive have the idea of moving forward in time? Instead, he suggests that all of Calvin’s massive literary droning would have to be read and studied to properly understand what Calvin meant by the very use of specific words. Of course, that is a ridiculous notion, but not a rare argument among the Reformed. The same argument is often used to defend John Piper who has also written a huge mass of literary droning. Note also that my “heterodox” (other than orthodoxy) is likened to a departure from “Biblical Christianity.”  The mode of operation is to demean and argue from a reality that results in the desired outcome.

McAtee then introduces another Reformed technique of debate that we will call, drowning by orthodoxy. He then began to copy and paste a mass of Reformed orthodoxy that would take two days to read. The assumption is that I am not familiar with what he pasted into the stream. It assumes the response, “Oh my! I don’t understand any of this deep orthodoxy! And there is so much of it! Hark, I know nothing! What to do? His mind is so far above me!” Actually, I am very familiar with the information posted, especially his references to articles in the Trinity Review. Ironically, if that is a strong enough word, the founder of the Trinity Review bought into New Calvinism during the 90’s. I stated the following later in the thread:

PD: Furthermore Bret, you said you read my book, but yet you quote John W. Robbins’ Trinity Review above to make your point. As clearly documented in my book on pages 63-65, I show that Robbins bought into the Forum’s teachings via the SDA theologian Robert Brinsmead in 1995. As you know, New Calvinism came out of the Forum and Graeme Goldsworthy is popular in the movement till this day. Robbins reprinted Brinsmead’s magnum opus on justification in the Trinity Review, yet, you cite The Trinity Review as proof that Calvinists are not New Calvinists. Now if anything is funny, that is.

One of his several references to the Trinity Review follows:

The Trinity Foundation – Calvin on the “Pernicious Hypocrisy” of Justification by Faith and Works

http://www.trinityfoundation.org

That some serious slippage has occurred away from the classical Protestant doctrine of justification sola fide has been well documented in many religious publications. Certain teachers – Douglas Wilson.

Furthermore, his excerpts copied and pasted from the Calvin Institutes contained things like the following:

…a great part of mankind imagine that righteousness is composed of faith and works [but according to Philippians 3:8-9] a man who wishes to obtain Christ’s righteousness must abandon his own righteousness…. From this it follows that so long as any particle of works-righteousness remains some occasion for boasting remains with us [Institutes, 3.11.13].

This is yet another technique used by Calvinists to confuse those who are trying to nail their false doctrine by making distinctions between justification and sanctification—they continually refer back to justification and Sola Fide. Any attempt to make theological distinctions between the two is answered with more and more Reformed sanctification by justification orthodoxy.  Even his Institute pasting was in context of what the Trinity Review said about it. This elicited the following responses from me:

PD: Brett, smothering me in all of this orthodox propaganda isn’t answering my question. Have you read CI 3.14 on what Calvin said about progressive justification or not? Why are you citing other people? I asked you as someone who says he reads the CI. You deny that your information comes from men, and then you cite a bunch of men. I want to know your specific evaluation of CI 3.14

[Note: all of his citations avoided the aforementioned title of CI 3.14 which resulted in the following reply: “I’m citing Calvin Paul. Read the quotes from the Institutes. You can’t make CI 3.14 disagree with the rest of what Calvin said on the subject. Good grief man … this is elementary hermeneutics” ( i.e., progressive doesn’t mean “progressive” because of other things Calvin wrote)].

PD: Right, he is applying justification truth to sanctification, so what’s your point?

PD: No Bret, I am not confused by your discussion of sanctification in a justification way.

I will shortly pause here and introduce yet another debate tactic of the Calvinist: the divine unction by a philosopher king declaring me to be unregenerate. Simply pronouncing a curse on your opponent has to be the quintessential easy button:

O Foolish Dohse … who has bewitched you?

Like all good Calvinists, McAtee believes in Calvin’s “power of the keys” that gives Reformed elders the power to loose or bind sin on earth. I have received several veiled threats by Reformed elders to bind my sin on earth. Some not so veiled.

McAtee’s comment about “elementary hermeneutics” was also addressed:

PD: “Elementary hermeneutics” ? Which hermeneutic? You act like there is only one.

BM: I’m talking about the place of Hermeneutics in interpreting literature. You’re hermeneutic on Calvin sucks.

PD: Redemptive or Grammatical Bret? Which one?

BM: Paul … I’m not talking about hermeneutics in terms of reading Scripture. I’m talking about hermeneutics in terms of reading Calvin which should be Historical Grammatical.

Here, McAtee seems to infer that there is a different hermeneutic for interpreting literature, and a different hermeneutic for interpreting the Bible. I will let that statement stand on its own and move on to the part of the debate where McAfee concedes that perpetual forgiveness, the same kind of forgiveness that saved us, needs continued application in the church:

PD: (Quoting BM) “Do you really want to advance the idea that Calvin and Rome agreed on Justification? Is that really your position Paul?” (Answer) Both held to a linear gospel which is progressive justification. They disagreed on how to get from justification to glorification.

But when it gets right down to it, BOTH by ecclesiastical absolution. Citations from CI available upon request.

BM: LOL!

PM: Bret, may I list the very fair questions you have not answered yet?

BM: Paul … purple.

BM: Paul … should I post again the very fair quotes from Calvin’s own pen indicating that he did not believe in progressive justification and so did not believe that one had to be sanctified before one could be justified?

PD: Of course not, he believed sanctification was progressive justification. But here is the better question: Why did he believe a justifying forgiveness of sins needed to be continually sought IN the church?

After all of his vehement denial that Calvin believed in a progressive justification, he begins to concede that a perpetual forgiveness for sin in the church for the purpose of keeping us justified is needed:

BM: “Not by righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us”; that being justified by his grace, we might become the heirs of everlasting life, (2Ti 1: 9; Tit 3: 4, 5). By this confession we strip man of every particle of righteous, until by mere mercy he is regenerated unto the hope of eternal life, since it is not true to say we are justified by grace, if works contribute in any degree to our justification. The apostle undoubtedly had not forgotten himself in declaring that justification is gratuitous, seeing he argues in another place, that if works are of any avail, “grace is no more grace,”

(Rom 11: 6). And what else does our Lord mean, when he declares, “I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance?” (Mat 9: 13). If sinners alone are admitted, why do we seek admission by means of fictitious righteousness?

BM: Why do we expect corn plants to be irrigated outside a corn field?

PD: So, the point you are making here agrees with Calvin in context of sanctification. Justification must continually be sought in sanctification to retain a just standing before God.

BM: Section 11. In addition to the two former arguments, a third adduced against the Sophists, to show that whatever be the works of the regenerate, they are justified solely by faith and the free imputation of Christ’s righteousness….[Finally, BM quotes from the infamous 14th chapter of book three from the Institutes. Curiously, he only cites the section. Calvin’s point in sections 9-11 (BM’s long copy and paste is omitted here) is that Christians are not capable of doing any meritorious work before God. Therefore, they need “perpetual reconciliation” in the church. BM cites theses sections from the Calvin Institutes to make the very point that he denied throughout the whole debate].

PM: Bret, why did Calvin believe that a justifying forgiveness had to be continually sought in the church?

BM:  The Church is the body of Christ where Christ is proclaimed. Where else would one go to be reminded that they are forgiven? [Do Christians need to be “reminded” that they have been forgiven? Peter said that we only forget that we are forgiven when we fail to ADD works to our faith (2PET 1:5-11)].

PD: Bret, he wasn’t talking about being “reminded” he was talking about perpetual “reconciliation.”

PD: What does “reconciliation” mean Bret?

PD: Do we need continual reconciliation?

BM: Paul … does Christ ever live to intercede for us?

Why?

PD: So, you are saying that is to keep us justified?

BM: Are you saying that we could be justified without His ongoing Intercession? Could we be justified by a Christ who was not at the right hand of the Father as our continual advocate? If Justification is merely in the death of Christ then there was no reason for Him to have been resurrected, ascended and set apart for the continual Priestly work of Intercession.

PD: Then why did Calvin teach that we have to continually seek that forgiveness in the church? If Christ is doing all of the work in heaven?

BM: Why do we expect corn plants to be irrigated outside a corn field?

[Note: We have to keep ourselves justified by staying in the cornfield of justification. He is conceding what he denied throughout the whole debate].

BM: The Church is the body of Christ. The minister the voice of Christ pronouncing the reminder of sins forgiven.

[Note: We have to be continually reminded that we are forgiven in order to stay justified].

PD: So, there is a continued need for forgiveness of sins to remain justified?

BM: Ask Jesus,

5 Then he poured water into a basin and began to wash the disciples’ feet and to wipe them with the towel that was wrapped around him. 6 He came to Simon Peter, who said to him, “Lord, do you wash my feet?” 7 Jesus answered him, “What I am doing you do not understand now, but afterward you will understand.” 8 Peter said to him, “You shall never wash my feet.” Jesus answered him, “If I do not wash you, you have no share with me.” 9 Simon Peter said to him, “Lord, not my feet only but also my hands and my head!” 10 Jesus said to him, “The one who has bathed does not need to wash, except for his feet, but is completely clean.

PD: You make my point for me. Calvin clearly said the whole washing of the body is continually needed.

PD: Jesus said it isn’t needed, Calvin said it is. That is, “the washing” which Calvin called “ablution.”

McAtee unwittingly cited John 13:5-10 in an effort to make his point. Jesus’ point in the passage is that once a person is washed (justified: 1COR 6:11) they are clean and have no further need of washing. There is a need to seek forgiveness for daily sin that disrupts our family relationship with God. That is probably what Christ is talking about in regard to the washing of feet. I would probably include 1John 1:9 here as well. This is further seen in what Christ told the woman at the well. When one drinks the water of salvation, they will never thirst again. In other words, there is no need for a perpetual returning to the well of salvation/justification.

paul