Byblos wrote:RickD wrote:Byblos, I know you don't believe in the TULIP view of depravity. So, how do you answer your own question?
so now tell me, why is it that some cooperate with God's free gift and are saved, and yet others do not cooperate with God's free gift and remain reprobate? What is this secret power inherent in the ones that do believe that somehow is lacking in the ones that don't?
This is one of those conundrums I have for which I have no answer Rick. I don't believe in TD simply because I defer to the wisdom of my Church on the matter, it is as simple as that. But if you ask me if I find merit in it, the answer is a resounding YES. The way I see it there are only 2 positions, TD on one side and semi-paleagianism on the other, there is no in between. If you're not with one you're with the other.
To be honest this is sort of the direction my argument is meant to head toward. Maybe not strictly speaking, but it seems to me as if you can roughly divide things into two general camps. How exactly you should label them I don't know for sure, but that's the general direction I was heading for. I'm sure that the vast majority of Calvinists (who are usually a good deal more aggressive than I am) wouldn't give two hoots about what distinctions you could make.
Jac3510 wrote:narnia4 wrote:Now we're getting somewhere. I think this is close to the nature of total depravity. But the scenario you set up is off. The reprobate does things that, were he saved, might be considered good, but are in fact tainted by sin. An unsaved person may not murder his boss, but that may only be because he doesn't want to get caught, or simply because he was raised that way. It might be "good" in one sense, but in a more serious sense everything he does is tainted by sin. And I alluded to this when I wrote about the nature of sin and how that seems to be close to the heart of the disagreement.
I just don't see how this helps the Calvinist, though.
I hope I don't miss something by cutting down points but I want to limit down the length of my reply somehow. To use the example I quoted earlier, a glass with a couple drops of poison mixed in. The whole glass (with whatever liquid it is, wine/water doesn't matter) isn't poison, but the entire glass it tainted.
But you brought up a point that makes it more clear, namely that rejecting Jesus is a sin. Man in his sinful state rejects God, he wants nothing to do with him. Because our actions are not of God,
that taints every action. Now on a superficial level that seems to go against my argument, but I don't think it does. Regardless I think we may be able to mostly come to an agreement on what the important difference here actually is so the question becomes academic.
Jac3510 wrote:
Moreover, I think this gets at an even deeper issue of what it means to be human. Whether intentional or not, I think the T in the TULIP actually denies mankind their humanity. The moment you say, "the human nature is necessarily sinful (in the Calvinistic sense)," what you are saying is that sin is an essential property of the human nature. There's no way around that. That's what necessary means in this context--that thanks to the fall, human nature is such that it is now essentially sinful. But that means that anyone who can choose not to sin has a different sort of nature (namely, one to which sinfulness is accidental rather than essential). But in that case, both people cannot be said to be human! For if you change something's essential properties, you change what it is. Now, we know that Christ never sinned, so that means that either Christ is truly human and that we are not truly human (since Christ's nature is not essentially sinful whereas ours is), or it means that we are truly human but that Christ is not truly human. Both consequences seem, to me, absolutely absurd, for in either case, Christ is not as we are and therefore cannot be our mediator.
I don't mind arguments against TD being presented for two reasons. First I allowed for it in my opening post. Second, I would
much rather that someone actually present an argument rather than question beg and say that TD is false because its false and position x is true, and just leave it at that. That's happened before in discussions that I've had.
But I'm not going to commit myself to the scenario you presented, I feel as if there may be important distinctions (at least semantically) that some Calvinists would make. Unfortunately I can't put my finger right on it off the top of my head, but I guess that's what I get for being an amateur at present.
Actually, I will for a moment assume that your scenario is exactly correct. If what you present here is actually a problem, then I don't know see how it isn't a problem for every other position. The minute that you say that man has a sinful nature and that sin is a practical reality, the way I see it you're confronted with the
exact same issue. Of course there is the obvious difference as well, that Christ was fully God.