C
Contarini
Guest
What do you make of Aquinas’ argument, to which I linked?I don’t think you can say that the Elect and Reprobate aren’t “kinds” of men. In fact, from a truly Calvinist standpoint, there are truly only 2 “kinds” of men-- the Elect and the Reprobate. Whether you’re a policeman or a prostitute, the only thing that truly matters is if you’re Elect or Reprobate.
Unfortunately 1 Tim 2:3-4 doesn’t even use the word “kind of men” there, and it’s inserted in because the original text contradicts Calvinism. So it’s hard to interpret a word that doesn’t even exist in the text.
I disagree with it. But I would not call it incoherent.
To say that the only thing that matters is whether you are elect or reprobate is not to say that these are “kinds” of men in the sense intended by Aquinas and the Calvinists. As you say, this is an interpretive paraphrase, and thus those who came up with it can define it as they wish. You can argue that their paraphrase is unfounded and erroneous (I would agree), but not that it’s self-refuting.
Early Reformed theologians did flirt to some extent with what would later be called (by some ultra-Calvinist “Primitive Baptists”) a “two-seed” doctrine. The primary maintainer of this doctrine, Martin Borrhaus (also known as “Cellarius”) was widely condemned by mainstream Protestants as unorthodox. But early authors such as Zwingli and Bucer do seem to come close to his position. Even in Calvin you find the claim that the elect show some “sparks” of piety before their regeneration.
But the mainstream Augustinian view, which is on the while affirmed by Calvinists, is that election and reprobation exist in the eternal will and council of God and are not qualities that inhere in a person.
Edwin