Regarding Roses Theology compared to Reformed Theology...
Bulldog said:
With the exception of your intepretation of the verses in R and O, what of this do you think contradicts Calvinism?
If you back track through this thread, you will find my post, "'Perseverance' is not the same as 'Sealed.'" That leaves only the first "S" and the "E" to be compared to the five points of Calvinism (although I've touched on the differences of all points already to some degree).
But again, for benefit of your question here, when I say we are "separated by sin", I am saying that that separation from God IS spiritual death. Death IS "separation." Physical death is the separation of our soul from our body, and spiritual death is the separation of our soul from God. This is contrasted from calvinism in that calvinism teaches that spiritual death is defined as our soul being absolutely unable to make any move whatsoever in the direction of God, even to believe.
Roses' death is man on one side of a great divide, unable to get over to God's side in any way of his own accord -- God must cross it to rescue him. That IS spiritual death. Not that the man's soul is unable to believe or call or feel or hear. In Roses Theology, the Holy Spirit first crosses the divide, and tells a man he is separated from God by the sin, makes the man feel the guilt of that sin, and shows the man the expanse of the separation. He tells the man he is spiritually dead, makes him vividly aware of that death. Then God calls across the divide, "Seek me, hear me, come to me..." And the man, if he heeds the Holy Spirit and the call, answers, "I can't! Help me!" If a man does that, God Himself crosses the divide, and brings that man over to his side. God saves that man from that death. God saves, on condition of a man simply hearing, believing, and calling. Who does God call to himself? All men. Who does he save? All who call upon him.
Reformed death is man lying in a morgue, unable to hear, move, breath, see, or feel. God must re-animate that man, breath life into him, make him stand up, give him life, birth him again spiritually, and give him the gift of faith so that that man can -- and WILL -- call on God. Who does God give life to? Whoever he chooses. Who does he save? Whoever he chose. Who remains dead? Whoever was not picked. Who burns in hell for eternity? The unpicked. How are they able to experience that burning? I don't know... one would think their souls, being dead, wouldn't feel a thing. But apparently, they are guilty, and so are resurrected unto a second death, which God, in his infinite mercy, love, and wisdom, decrees they endure. Why didn't he just pick everyone? "Who are you to talk back to God?"
That is not my God.
As for the Roses' "E" -- Elect to good works -- that is different from calvinism in simply this: God chooses all, collectively as a group, who are in Christ, to do good works. To perform a task. To have a position of service. In calvinism, "Elect" means to have been chosen to be saved.
Not at all the same. That is why I say, "drop the TULIP, and start smelling the ROSES." They are as different as, well, roses and tulips.
Jeffrey A