G
Gottle_of_Geer
Guest
Neither the Calvinist version of OSAS nor the antinomian version of OSAS is reasonable. The Calvinist version of OSAS is outrageous blasphemy that accuses God of being the source and cause of all evil. The antinomian version of OSAS teaches that Christians can commit any sin they feel like committing with the assurace that they can never be damned. Could anything be more unreasonable than either of these two variations of OSAS?
Calvin also wrote that Christians could be damned by losing their faith, so one could make a case that Calvin never believed in OSAS. But Calvin was a poor theologian, and he wrote many contradictory things, and one can take the babblings of Calvin and make a case for OSAS if one desires. Who really knows what Calvin believed? It is a moot point, and the topic of the thread is not what Calvin believed, it is a thread about the heresy of OSAS, and there definitely is a version of this heresy that one can rightly label “Calvinist”.
If one takes the writings of John Calvin and combines that with the Protestant belief in the private interpretation of scripture, what results is a potent combination for the creation of heresy. All Calvinists are heretics, of course, but Calvinists embrace a very broad spectrum of heresy. On the one end of the spectrum are the more reasonable Calvinists that have preserved much of their Catholic heritage in matters of doctrine. On the other end of the spectrum are “Calvinists” that are far more closely related to the Gnostic Docetists in their doctrine than they are to Christians in their doctrine.
But sonseeker is asserting that angels and men do not have free will, and that there is no possibility for either angels or men to be disobedient to God’s will. Sonseeker is saying that God is indeed the Author of evil. And sonseeker is hardly the only Calvinist that I have ever debated that maintains the position that created beings are incapable of being disobedient to the will of God. So again, it is really a moot point about what Calvin may or may not have believed - what we are discussing is what a particular group of self identified “Calvinists” believe about their version of OSAS.
I had no idea we were arguing with a particular Calvinist group - I went by the name of the thread (which I *have *read, BTW) This certainly puts things in a new light: thanks
I had better argue with sonseeker - I’ll get back to you. After all, we get more than enough distortion of our Faith ourselves