Tag Archives: common grace

Flotsam & Jetsam from the Slow Shipwreck of Calvinistic Soteriology on Account of Neglecting the Premial Atonement in Heaven

Occasionally sprawling, not seldom convoluted, excruciatingly tedious, yet often extraordinally innovative, seclect elaborations of the Atonement such as those of Hugo Grotius, John Owen, William Pynchon, John McLeod Campbell, Robert C. Moberly, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Leon Morris, René Girard, H. D. McDonald, John Stott, I. Howard Marshall, Fleming Rutledge, Eleonore Stump, N. T. Wright, William Lane Craig, Adonis Vidu, Michael Gorman, David Brondos, Greg Boyd, Hans Boersma, Douglas Campbell, Darrin Snyder Belousek, Mako Nagasawa, and W. Ross Hastings, hailing from widely disparate standpoints and Christian traditions, all alike manifest obliviousness to the inextricable roles of Christ’s resurrection, ascension, and enthronement WITHIN THE INTEGRAL PROCESS OF GOD’S PREMIAL JUSTICE CULMINATING IN THE PROTECTIVE COVER (“ATONEMENT”) CHRIST OFFERED EXCLUSIVELY AT GOD’S THRONE IN HEAVEN, followed by the outpouring of the promised award of Holy Spirit and Christ’s continual intercession thereafter. And that’s despite the sterling advances of many of these authors in multiple respects. I find this state of affairs almost heartbreaking, especially in view of the visibly and increasingly deleterious societal consequences of this “little” perennial oversight by “us Christians (all!).” The inevitable side-effect and byproduct of thus shunting around these vitally essential components is the palpable sense of ill-satisfaction that proliferates via compulsive but needless over-qualifying, over-elaboration, and over-defensiveness—in effect, “multiplying words without knowledge.” [3/13/11; 4/10-12/24]

A telling example of the burgeoning excesses that can spawn from just one prominent sectarian tradition of theologizing is the following ample tally of historically scattered and systematically superfluous flotsam & jetsam that has accumulated over five centuries from the slow-motion deterioration and imminent shipwreck of Calvinistic soteriology in particular, including both its own due property as well as outlying spinoffs by way of inevitable counteractions and overreactions. It should be disturbing to “true believers” that none of the following phrases or technical terms is to be found, as such, in Scripture itself, unless by way of unwarranted imposition and even outright mistranslation from the original, a practice regrettably becoming more common among scholars now that such error has become increasingly and calmly assured of widespread acceptance without risk of contradiction. (Accordingly, some or parts of the following might have been placed in quotes, but where to stop? That said, I shall spare you the technicality.)

acceptilation

active righteousness/obedience [vs. passive righteousness/obedience] of Christ

Amyraldianism

antinomianism

common grace [vs. special grace]

divine decrees

divine sovereignty [vs. human freewill]

double/triple imputation

double jeopardy (of the reprobate)

double predestination

effectual calling

equal ultimacy

eternal conscious punishment (of human beings)

eternal security

external call [vs. internal call]

fideism

freewill (hunan) [vs. divine sovereignty]

God’s reconciliation to man

governmental theory of atonement

hypothetical/conditional universalism

impetration vs. application

imputation of Adam’s sin to his descendants (from Augustine)

imputation of Christ’s righteousness to believers/the elect

imputation of sin(s) to Christ

infralapsarianism

internal call [vs. external call]

irresistible grace

justification vs. sanctification

legalism

limited atonement

monergism [vs. synergism]

order of decrees

ordo salutis

original sin (reprising Augustine)

passive righteousness/obedience [vs. active righteousness/obedience] of Christ

payment for (debt of) sin(s)

penal satisfaction

penal substitution

perfectionism

predestination

perseverance of the saints

preterition

prevenient/preventive/preceding grace

rectoral theory of atonement

reprobation (decree of…)

sanctification vs. justification

secret regeneration

sovereign grace

sovereignty of God

special call [vs. universal call]

special grace [vs. common grace]

spiritual death (being dead in sin)

sublapsarianism

suffering of Christ in hell

supralapsarianism

synergism [vs. monergism]

total depravity

unconditional election

universal call [vs. special call]

universalism

The foregoing litany comprises, one and all, artificial byproducts of a toxic (if well-meaning) theology industry: plastic pollution. These irreversibly degrading plastic components cannot be rendered non-toxic and will inevitably spread within the environmental footprint of any church that tolerates their use. We must pursue the difficult task of disemploying them and getting comfortable with the crisp, spare, consistent terminology of apostolic formulation inspired by the Spirit of wholesomeness. Isn’t it about time to take out the trash, provided we can somehow dispose of it where it’s not liable to re-enter the safe places of the church and surrounding environment to recontaminate them, perhaps with yet more inveigling iterations? [3/13/11; 4/9-12/24]

The curious fact that an extremely low percentage of relatives, friends, pastors, scholars, authors, and other Christian leaders to whom I have communicated the premial approach to the Atonement, even on multiple occasions, have ever responded, and that even those who have replied were mostly non-enthusiastic, rather curt, and certainly non-committal (although curiously, somewhat fewer in number being overtly opposed or hostile to the message), and, finally, that after several years I can still count on one hand those who seem to have warmed up to it, and on the other hand those who did not maintain objections to it—all suggest the unusually captivating grip of the penal hypothesis concerning atonement on a worldwide scale (my contacts span the globe).

Clearly. I have not yet communicated…clearly! Or the Holy Spirit, whose message I firmly believe this to be, has not yet deemed it quite ready to endorse. Now, I’m not whining, but what sober, plausible reasons might be advanced to account for this odd circumstance (well, of course, aside from my own delaying to submit it for publication in normal book fashion)? [3/14/11; 4/10-12/24]

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Filed under Biblical patterns of word usage, Calvinism, justification, perseverance of the saints, predestination, Protestant Reformation, sanctification, The Atonement, the obedience of Christ

New-Testament and early-Christian alternatives to select features of Augustinian and Calvinistic soteriology

There’s no such thing as “the sovereignty of God,” there’s simply GOD, Whose Kingdom transcends the limitations of exclusively deterministic causality, and Whose Son He appointed Sovereign of all creation.

There’s no such thing as divine “predestination,” there’s simply a divine destiny, and it’s conditional on our reception, by faith, of the regenerative power of the Gospel report about Jesus Christ.

There’s no such thing as “original sin,” there’s simply sin, and it’s neither inherited nor imputed to successive generations, although its effects do proliferate diverse evils throughout the world and through time.

There’s no such thing as “total depravity,” there’s simply physical depravity, but it cannot nullify the power of the Gospel record about Jesus to engender faith within the hearts of its sinful hearers.

There’s no such thing as “unconditional election,” there’s simply election, and it’s entirely conditional on human faith, which perfectly comports with divine grace and is caused by hearing the Gospel narrative concerning God’s Elect One, the Lord Jesus, if not sinfully resisted.

There’s no such thing as “limited atonement,” there’s simply atonement, and it equates to indemnification from sin on behalf of the whole human world without exception, accessible by faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.

There’s no such thing as “irresistible grace,” there’s simply grace, and it’s just as resistible as the Holy Spirit and Word of God are.

There’s no such thing as “sovereign grace,” there’s simply grace, which is endlessly available to all who simply believe, and only so long as they believe, the explanation of the Gospel about the Sovereign Lord Jesus.

There’s no such thing as “common grace” or “special grace,” there’s simply grace, and it’s exclusively experiencable by voluntary faith in the Gospel account about Christ the Savior, if we don’t harden our hearts against it. The creation is sustained by, and hence testifies eloquently to, God’s love and goodness and faithfulness, which we enjoy in common with all our fellow mortal sinners regardless of faith in Christ.

There’s no such thing as “perseverance of the saints,” there’s simply perseverance, which is sustained by the faith-generating power of the Gospel story of Jesus, which brings, in turn, the sanctifying indwelling of the Holy Spirit.

There’s no such thing as “eternal conscious punishment” for disbelieving human beings, there’s simply eternal punishment, which amounts to final extermination of both body and soul in a lake of fire (gehenna). (Satan and his sinning messengers, however, do suffer agelong conscious torment.)

Every qualifier is a minimizer, a limiter, an impoverisher. Let’s be done once and for all with Calvinistic soteriology, along with its varied toxic fragments within other Protestant traditions, and which radically debases so many essential concepts of Holy Scripture. [2/6/11;10/9-10/23]

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Filed under Calvinism, divine election, hamartiology, original sin, perseverance of the saints, predestination, Protestant Reformation, regeneration, The Atonement

The ancient sacrifices were SUBSTITUTES for the coming Lamb of God

The ancient sacrificial victims of the Old Covenant were actual substitutes for the coming Lamb of God.  That is to say, they did stand in for Jesus and experience in a shadowy way what he experienced—a bloody death as “flawless” offerings to God, depicting even the “ransom price” extorted by Satan (“Azazel”?).  The engineering behind this mechanism was its function to trigger God’s unsuspectedly capacious justice which, in the consummating scenario at the garden tomb, assured that “death itself would start working backwards” (à la C. S. Lewis, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe), and superabundant life would start flowing from under God’s throne as recompense to the Messiah on our behalf.  But there is nothing substitutionary about this operation (and, indeed, it is not merely mechanistic, as my terminology might suggest).  Rather, it was mediatory, for Jesus channeled this agelong life to us, allowing us (privileging us, inviting us, motivating us with worthy incentives, yet not coercing us) to participate in the vast spoils of his victory over Satan and his demonic invaders and body snatchers.

The cost was his suffering of radically unjust abuse in view of what his entire life/soul (“blood“) had become worth to God because of his radically faithful obedience to the righteousness of the Covenant.

Yet there is a further cost.  It is the one his sacrifice and his Father’s just overcompensation made possible, namely, our own faith-obedience, enduring to the end of whatever trials may be appointed for us.  WE HAVE TO MAKE IT TO THE FINISH LINE!  The Consoler, the Promise of the Father, even as It supplied Jesus with all the mighty power to endure in irreprehensible behavior through every moment of his 33-year ordeal, especially after his Immersion for expanded ministry, likewise supplies us with divine power to endure all the trials of our walk of faithfulness.  JESUS WON THIS FOR US, NOT AS OUR “SUBSTITUTE” BUT AS OUR HEAD.  HE IS OUR FORERUNNER, C.E.O. OF A NEW MANKIND, THE LAST ADAM, PROGENITOR, BY HIS SPIRIT, OF A WHOLE NEW RACE OF RULERS OVER THE WORKS OF HIS FATHER’S HANDS!  MESSIAH IS ADAM’S REPLACEMENT IN TOTO.  It is not befitting to call him a “substitute” in view of what the Old Testament taught about ersatz animal substitutes.  [6/30/07]

To dishonor and minimize the distinctly human contribution of faith to our salvation is to dehumanize God’s highest workmanship!  This Calvin did, following Augustine.  To a lesser extend Luther, likewise treading in Augustine’s footprints, did the same (especially in The Bondage of the Will).  The early Christian authors knew nothing of such an extreme.  They had a high regard for the God-given integrity of human sovereignty and authority over the desiring , deciding, and choosing faculties of human nature, created good from God’s own hand, though, indeed, ill-directed by deteriorating flesh and blood.  To these weakened faculties God addresses His enlivening Explanation and beckons faith alone, which brings the Spirit.  [7/01/07]

The inverse error of the penal wrath of God allegedly falling on His faithful Son is, more aptly, the “common grace” of God bestowed on faithless sinners.  Both are pernicious falsehoods with no solid grounding in wholesome Scripture at all.  This twin twisting of key biblical terms has wreaked double-barreled devastation on both the ethical behavior and the proclamatory discourse of those who have accepted the perversion.  [7/01/07]

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