I'm hoping this will be a short one
.
I want to keep to "limited atonement" please. If pushed I would call myself, at the moment, a 4.5 calvanist.
Why is limited atonement important as a doctrine?
Surely the important thing is that our Lord's sacrifice is completely efficacious for the salvation of those who are saved?
Whether it's efficacy was/is potentially available for those who perish seems to me to be purely an academic point with no real implications for preaching the gospel and living the life?
This is my understanding of the doctrine:
[SIZE=+1]LIMITED ATONEMENT or Particular Redemption
[/SIZE]
This point says that while Christ's blood--indeed, His entire life, death, and resurrection--is infinitely INTENSIVE in saving power and thus unlimited in one sense, it is not infinitely EXTENSIVE and is thus limited, not universal, in the extent of its application; for while everyone CONDITIONALLY or "provisionally" shares in Christ's life, death, and resurrection (thus, if everyone believed, everyone would be joined or married to Christ), only members of Christ's body or bride or flock (ELECT believers) actually share in His blood.
So is this primarily to counter those who would say that non believers/unregenerated people can benefit (in what way?) from Christ's sacrifice??
><>
I want to keep to "limited atonement" please. If pushed I would call myself, at the moment, a 4.5 calvanist.
Why is limited atonement important as a doctrine?
Surely the important thing is that our Lord's sacrifice is completely efficacious for the salvation of those who are saved?
Whether it's efficacy was/is potentially available for those who perish seems to me to be purely an academic point with no real implications for preaching the gospel and living the life?
This is my understanding of the doctrine:
[SIZE=+1]LIMITED ATONEMENT or Particular Redemption
[/SIZE]
This point says that while Christ's blood--indeed, His entire life, death, and resurrection--is infinitely INTENSIVE in saving power and thus unlimited in one sense, it is not infinitely EXTENSIVE and is thus limited, not universal, in the extent of its application; for while everyone CONDITIONALLY or "provisionally" shares in Christ's life, death, and resurrection (thus, if everyone believed, everyone would be joined or married to Christ), only members of Christ's body or bride or flock (ELECT believers) actually share in His blood.
So is this primarily to counter those who would say that non believers/unregenerated people can benefit (in what way?) from Christ's sacrifice??
><>