John Mullally
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- Aug 5, 2020
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Calvinists describe a world where our fate has been sealed from the foundation of the world, either for good or for bad. Recalling his own conversion to Calvinism, Calvinist scholar R.C. Sproul comments:
“I no longer feared the demons of fatalism or the ugly thought that I was being reduced to a puppet. Now I rejoiced in a gracious Savior who alone was immortal, invisible, the only wise God.”
Perhaps some Calvinists no longer fear the “demons of fatalism” because they envision themselves as coming out on the winning end of a secret selection.
Here is a quote from John Calvin that supports their lack of assurance.I'm sure you're correct. But they have no assurance of that. if God wants them to have an outwardly faithful life, but at the end they apostatize, well, that's God's will for them, and they just have to accept it as the best for them to have wasted an entire life supposedly following Christ, only to lose it all at the last second of their life, and go to hell forever--all by God's decree. There's no place for faith in such a scheme.
“There is the general call, by which God invites all equally to himself through the outward preaching of the word – even those to whom he holds it out as a savour of death (2 Cor. 2:16), and as the occasion of severer condemnation. The other kind of call is special, which he deigns for the most part to give to the believer alone… Yet sometimes he also causes those whom he illumines only for a time to partake of it; then he justly forsakes them on account of their ungratefulness amd strikes them with even greater blindness.” (John Calvin, Institutes of Christian Religion, Book 3, Chapter 24, Paragraph 8)
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