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قراءة كتاب The Doctrines of Predestination, Reprobation, and Election

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The Doctrines of Predestination, Reprobation, and Election

The Doctrines of Predestination, Reprobation, and Election

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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class="sc">he Calvinistic Doctrine of Reprobation stated.

CHAPTER II.

The Bible Usage of the Word Reprobation.

CHAPTER III.

Proof-Texts for Calvinistic Reprobation Examined.

CHAPTER IV.

Objections to Calvinistic Reprobation.

CHAPTER V.

Summary of the Bible Doctrine of Reprobation.


PART III.—ELECTION.

CHAPTER I.

Theories of Calvinistic Election.

CHAPTER II.

Calvinistic Election involves Positive Refusal to Provide Saving Grace for the Lost.

CHAPTER III.

Calvinistic Election considered in Reference to the Sovereignty of God.

CHAPTER IV.

Calvinistic Election Judged by the Reason.

CHAPTER V.

Bible Texts in Proof of Calvinistic Election Considered.

CHAPTER VI.

Objections to the Calvinistic Doctrine of Election.

CHAPTER VII.

The Scriptural View of Evangelical Election.

For God so loved the world that He gave His only beloved Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life.—Jesus.


I reject the Calvinistic doctrine of Predestination, not because it is incomprehensible, but because I think it irreconcilable with the justice and goodness of God.—Bishop Tomlin.

God our Saviour will have all men to be saved.—Paul.

THE DOCTRINES

OF

PREDESTINATION, REPROBATION, AND ELECTION.


INTRODUCTION.

Regarding the predestinarian controversy, it has been said, “Hardly one among the many Christian controversies has called forth a greater amount of subtlety and power, and not one so long and so persistently maintained its vitality. Within the twenty-five years which followed its first appearance upwards of thirty councils (one of them the General Council of Ephesus) were held for the purpose of this discussion. It lay at the bottom of all the intellectual activity of the conflicts in the Mediæval philosophic schools; and there is hardly a single subject which has come into discussion under so many different forms in modern controversy” (Ch. Encyc.)

Although the controversy between Pelagius and Augustine began in the fifth century, it is an interesting inquiry—What was the mind of the earlier Christian writers on the subject? Of course their opinion cannot settle the truth of the question in debate, but it has a very important bearing upon the subject. The late Dr. Eadie claimed the voice of antiquity for the system of the Confession of Faith. He says, “The doctrine of predestination was held in its leading element by the ancient Church, by the Roman Clement, Ignatius, Hermas, Justin Martyr, and Irenæus, before Augustine worked it into a system, and Jerome armed himself on its behalf” (Ec. Cyc.) This statement may be fairly questioned, and, we think, successfully challenged. Dr. Cunningham, in his Historical Theology, remarks, “The doctrine of Arminius can be traced back as far as the time of Alexandrinus, and seems to have been held by many of the Fathers of the third and fourth centuries.” He attributes this to the corrupting influence of Pagan philosophy (Hist. Theo., Vol. II., p. 374). This is not a direct contradiction to Eadie, but it shows that truth compelled this sturdy Calvinist to admit that non-Calvinistic views were held in the earlier and best period of the Church. The question, however, is one that must be decided by historical evidence, and not by authority. And what is that evidence? Mosheim, in writing of the founders of the English Church, says, “They wished to render their church as similar as possible to that which flourished in the early centuries, and that Church, as no one can deny, was an entire stranger to the Dordracene doctrines” Reid’s Mos., p. 821). The Synod of Dort met in a.d. 1618, and condemned the Arminian doctrine, and decided in favour of Calvinism; but, according to Mosheim, this system of Calvin was unknown to the early Church. Faber maintains the same. He says, “The scheme of interpretation now familiarly, though perhaps (if a scheme ought to be designated by the name of its original contriver) not quite correctly, styled Calvinism, may be readily traced back in the Latin and Western Church to the time of Augustine. But here we find ourselves completely at fault. Augustine, at the beginning of the fifth century, is the first ecclesiastical writer who annexes to the Scriptural terms ‘elect’ and

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