For Protestants: Do you believe in OSAS?

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It was troubling me that Catholics were unfairly lumping the Calvinists and Antinominists together. To make matter more complicateded Calvinists, who believe those two statements, sometimes don’t understand what the Catholics are implying and say “Yes, I believe in OSAS and it’s scriptural.” It’s perpetuating the whole issue by getting people to say they are Antinominists when they aren’t.
Don’t lump all Catholics together;)

Whenever I refer to OSAS, I will always assume that a person means it in the “persevere to the end or they were never saved to begin with”.

Just as it is a gross characterization that Catholics believe they cansin like hell every Friday night, go to confession Saturday every week, there are few people who profess OSAS mean an Antinominst view. And I have personally have yet to meet even one.
 
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Syele:
It was troubling me that Catholics were unfairly lumping the Calvinists and Antinominists together. To make matter more complicateded Calvinists, who believe those two statements, sometimes don’t understand what the Catholics are implying and say “Yes, I believe in OSAS and it’s scriptural.” It’s perpetuating the whole issue by getting people to say they are Antinominists when they aren’t.
Ahh, I understand; I thought there was something else that troubled you; that which troubles you is the reason I asked Manny to define what he meant by “OSAS” earlier in the thread—to head-off that misunderstanding. 🙂
 
Don’t lump all Catholics together;)

Whenever I refer to OSAS, I will always assume that a person means it in the “persevere to the end or they were never saved to begin with”.

Just as it is a gross characterization that Catholics believe they cansin like hell every Friday night, go to confession Saturday every week, there are few people who profess OSAS mean an Antinominst view. And I have personally have yet to meet even one.
Maria, You took that post out of context of the conversation I was having with Sandusky (see post #31 for the part where I clarified which Catholics I was reffering to). Besides wouldn’t you be troubled if you DID find Catholics behaving in a way like your example? I would hope you would!
 
** Antinomianism**

Well, I finally have a “name” to stick on my sister. 😃
She believes this and hasn’t set foot in any church in 25 years - at least!
She and her ex were once practicing Baptists. They gave so much money to Jerry Falwell and Jimmy Swaggart I could have cried.
Now she’s a “nothing” but totally believes she’s “saved” forever…even though she lived unmarried with someone for 12 of those 25 years and various other sins that I know of.
She has a mental block against The Catholic Church so we can’t even discuss religion. 😦
Maybe you could convince to go to a Baptist church? What has she said anything about this yet?
 
I find that on these boards, the Catholics referring to OSAS are exclusively referring to the antinomian version; for the most part, that is the only version with which they are concerned, and they will generally try to lump all protestants into antinomianism; IMO, **that is because Catholicism is arminian, **and one does not attack his own position; and, as can be seen in the definition given in my last post, the points of the classic calvinist view of “OSAS” are difficult to attack. 🙂
Catholics are not arminian. Arminian is a PROTESTANT belief, not a Catholic one. This is from wikipedia.
 
Don’t lump all Catholics together;)

Whenever I refer to OSAS, I will always assume that a person means it in the “persevere to the end or they were never saved to begin with”.

.
This is the form of OSAS that I was taught in church and normally the type that I am referring to when discussing OSAS.
 
Catholics are not arminian. Arminian is a PROTESTANT belief, not a Catholic one. This is from wikipedia.
Catholics could be molinist, which is similar to arminianism.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molinism. Catholics could also be Thomist, which is similar to Calvinism. ewtn.com/library/HOMELIBR/THOMISM.TXT
 
I find that on these boards, the Catholics referring to OSAS are exclusively referring to the antinomian version; for the most part, that is the only version with which they are concerned, and they will generally try to lump all protestants into antinomianism; IMO, that is because Catholicism is arminian, and one does not attack his own position; and, as can be seen in the definition given in my last post, the points of the classic calvinist view of “OSAS” are difficult to attack. 🙂
Nowadays, most Catholics probably are more of the Molinist school of thought than the Thomist school of thought. Molinists are closer to Arminians, and Thomists are closer to Calvinists. However, lumping in all Protestants with Antinominsim (a heresy anyway) is unfair and does not accurately represent Calvinism (or Arminianism).
 
originally posted by water
Maybe you could convince to go to a Baptist church? What has she said anything about this yet?
When she rails against The Catholic Church, I have said, then why don’t you go to a church you do believe?"
To which she has replied, “Well, I can’t go by myself!”. :rolleyes:

It’s all just excuses.
But, HEY! She’s guaranteed of Heaven anyway since she got herself “saved” many years ago, so it’s a moot point.
Some people, you just can’t reason with. 😦
 
Ahh!! Now I have to look things up to discuss this with you and maybe learn something new. Thanks a lot, Lake.😛
A while back, I read a book about St. Thomas Aquinas’ Summa Theologiae** that I borrowed from my parish library. Unfortunately, I do not remember the title or author. St. Thomas Aquinas’ influence on John Calvin was mentioned in the book.
 
A while back, I read a book about St. Thomas Aquinas’ Summa Theologiae that I borrowed from my parish library. Unfortunately, I do not remember the title or author. St. Thomas Aquinas’ influence on John Calvin was mentioned in the book.
I’d like to hear that name. I don’t think there’s much likelihood of direct influence–Calvin’s direct knowledge of any of the great scholastic theologians (after Peter Lombard) was pretty slim (a Catholic scholar, Alexandre Ganoczy, has shown that at the beginning of his theological career in 1536 Calvin’s knowledge of scholasticism seems to be limited to Gratian and Lombard), and given where he studied, if he did know one, it would be more likely to have been Scotus.

Insofar as there’s any influence, I would claim that it probably came through Martin Bucer, an older colleague of Calvin’s (and the subject of my dissertation) who was trained as a Thomist. There were other early Protestants of whom this was true–Peter Martyr Vermigli also worked with Calvin for a while, I believe, but later on and is less likely to have been a formative influence.

However, IMHO comparing Bucer with Calvin actually shows how un-Thomistic Calvin was. Bucer, for instance, had a very robust doctrine of predestination that was central to his theology (maybe even more so than for Calvin!), but he saw no contradiction between this and free will–like Augustine and Aquinas. Calvin’s willingness to deny free will outright (and then grudgingly admit that there was a “sort of free will” that didn’t really deserve the name) probably owes a lot to Luther and other early Protestants, but it may also derive from an imperfect understanding of what the medieval tradition as a whole had to say about free will.

The main link between Calvin and Aquinas is that they are both robustly Augustinian. But Aquinas is a sane, profound, philosophical Augustinian; Calvin is an eloquent barbarian.

Edwin
 
Rev from Apologetics forum seem to be for it… I wonder why hasn’t he debated…here…
 
Insofar as there’s any influence, I would claim that it probably came through Martin Bucer, an older colleague of Calvin’s (and the subject of my dissertation) who was trained as a Thomist.
Yes, Bucer was mentioned in the book I read.
However, IMHO comparing Bucer with Calvin actually shows how un-Thomistic Calvin was. Bucer, for instance, had a very robust doctrine of predestination that was central to his theology (maybe even more so than for Calvin!), but he saw no contradiction between this and free will–like Augustine and Aquinas. Calvin’s willingness to deny free will outright (and then grudgingly admit that there was a “sort of free will” that didn’t really deserve the name) probably owes a lot to Luther and other early Protestants, but it may also derive from an imperfect understanding of what the medieval tradition as a whole had to say about free will.
Luther would definitely be an influence too, as he was an Augustinian.
The main link between Calvin and Aquinas is that they are both robustly Augustinian. But Aquinas is a sane, profound, philosophical Augustinian; Calvin is an eloquent barbarian.
I agree with you here.
 
In fact i never heard of it in my church before either, till i came to this forum. OSAS is once saved, always saved doctrine which some denomination members believes in it.
 
Maria, You took that post out of context of the conversation I was having with Sandusky (see post #31 for the part where I clarified which Catholics I was reffering to). Besides wouldn’t you be troubled if you DID find Catholics behaving in a way like your example? I would hope you would!
My apologies Syele. For some reason, I thought I quoted Sandusky (post #29, the one that your post was a response to). I then was unable to view my post. I hope I would have caught the mistake.

I believe I ALSO quoted yours in order to use the terms you used correctly, but my reply was really meant for Sandusky. I got rid of the wrong post.

Again, my apologies.

And, yes, of course I would find it disturbing for a Catholic to act that way, just as disturbing as it would be for a OSAS person to see a professed believer to act contrary to the way someone who professes belief, but whose actions do not reflect that belief.
 
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MariaG:
My apologies Syele. For some reason, I thought I quoted Sandusky (post #29, the one that your post was a response to). I then was unable to view my post. I hope I would have caught the mistake.

I believe I ALSO quoted yours in order to use the terms you used correctly, but my reply was really meant for Sandusky. I got rid of the wrong post.

Again, my apologies.

And, yes, of course I would find it disturbing for a Catholic to act that way, just as disturbing as it would be for a OSAS person to see a professed believer to act contrary to the way someone who professes belief, but whose actions do not reflect that belief.
👍 oh it all makes sense now. I did think it was an odd response from you.
 
Once Saved Always Saved = Once you have been saved you will go to heaven no matter what when you die.
I was raised on this doctrine. I believed it as 100% truth until last April, when I began studying Catholicism. All Baptists I know and have ever met teach this doctrine. My entire families faith is partially based on it.
 
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