- Mar 18, 2004
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The early church fathers are not the be all and end all of what is or is not true Christian teaching. If total depravity was taught in the Bible and the early church fathers were discussing it, then one must acknowledge that there are certain ramifications of those teachings, and it appears that they were not willing to go there. There are many errors that were made in the teachings of what became the Catholic Church and that is why the Reformation was necessary and important.I did not move the goalposts. I’m making an important distinction. The Early Fathers certainly taught the human fall from sin, human weakness and sinfulness and the need for grace to be saved. No one denies that. But the specific doctrine of total depravity by the Reformers, that human nature is so corrupted by the fall that we are incapable to turn to God apart from irresistible grace, was not taught by the pre-Nicene Fathers.
This is not just my personal opinion. It’s in consensus with academic scholars. The Fathers quoted also strongly affirm human freedom which shows they did not hold the doctrine of total depravity.
Why is this so important? If the Early Fathers didn't hold the doctrine of total depravity (the way Reformers do), then most likely neither did Paul.
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