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Calvinism and Evangelism
Coffee Swirls ^ | 06 Feb 2007 | Doug McHone

Posted on 08/21/2008 1:45:32 PM PDT by Gamecock

Imagine, if you will, that you are a missionary. You have taken the classes you will need to get around in this new country. You know the common language well enough. You understand the customs and are confidant you won’t make a scene your first day on the ground. There has been very little progress made in this locale, and that is why you were sent. It is your first missionary assignment, and you hope that God will use you to do great things among the people.

You are in a high place. The top of a building, or maybe a helicopter. You look down and see an ocean of humanity. From your classwork, you know that the crowd below you is not one that will be conducive to the gospel. Perhaps the country already has an established religion. Maybe atheism is the state sponsored religion. Either way, the reports show that less than one percent of the population is Christian. You’re still wet behind the ears and all of your ideas of building a church and waiting for the people to pack in to hear your masterfully orchestrated messages are beginning to fizzle.

What do you do? You despair of even making a dent for the gospel, let alone sparking a revival!

This is a makeshift scenario that has been met by many missionaries in the past. If you allow for the details of the setting to be adjusted, I would guess that most missionaries have faced a situation where there seems to be so much work to be done among a people who are so tuned out to the gospel that it seems pointless. That is where theology must come in. You must make a stand somewhere, and that stand can be made on your efforts or on the power of God to transform the sinner.

John 10:16 And I have other sheep that are not of this fold. I must bring them also, and they will listen to my voice. So there will be one flock, one shepherd.

This is where Calvinism meets evangelism. Many have said that the two are at odds with one another, but that is not so. Calvinism will change the way you evangelize, but it will not keep you from reaching out to the lost. What it does do is affect our message, our methods and our motivations.

A Calvinist will not tell the unregenerate man that God loves him and has a wonderful plan for his life. It is not our place to give any man a false sense of security through a narcissistic message, no matter how well the lost man responds to such a message. If it is true that the heart is deceitful above all things, the Calvinist cannot, in good conscience, preach a gospel that speaks only to a deceitful heart. It is not our place to declare anyone righteous to any degree before God. That is the work of the Holy Spirit, who convicts men of their sin and who drives them to the cross. This work is accomplished through the word of God, empowered by the spirit of God.

Our methods can take on similar forms as the world around us, and that is often to our discredit. But consider this, you won’t find many Calvinist bumper stickers on the road today. That is because we have seen too many examples of flash advertising that cheapens the name of Christ and because we have no desire to boast of our salvation. “Try Jesus” one sticker reads, as if Jesus offered test drives. “Wise men still seek Him” is another. Funny, I thought we had it on apostolic authority that nobody seeks after God. “God said it. I believe it. That settles it.” As if nothing is settled until you agree with what God said? The God of the Bible is replaced in the American psyche with an image of a detached Santa Claus, who really really really wants to give you a pony this Christmas. Assuming you’ve been good, of course.

Back up for a moment to the missionary example I gave earlier. A young missionary with high aspirations may wonder how he is supposed to reach all of these people. Why, they have supporters back home who expect results if their investment is to continue. You can look over the sea of faces and despair over how to go about winning this crowd to Christ or you can back up for a moment and remember that it is not your job to win anyone to Christ. Not a single person. When you go out into the field, your job is to preach the gospel to whoever will listen. That’s it. Sure, you may help in a hospital setting or some other pursuit, but your primary mission is to spread the gospel.

You will never know who is of the elect and who is not until God reveals them to you as new brothers and sisters in Christ, and you will rejoice all the more as a witness to a miracle no less incredible than the raising of Lazarus from the dead. And even if God grants you no converts, you can rest assured that God is using you to plant seeds. Another may come to water. But it is always God who gives the growth.

Calvinists are planters and waterers. We are not ones to try and take on the role of God by forcing growth where there is no growth. There are people who will accept the gospel and people who will reject the gospel. Whether the gospel is accepted or rejected, we strive for that gospel to be proclaimed in all of its truth. If we are to be messengers of the king, how can we be good and faithful servants if we do not proclaim the message we have been given?


TOPICS: Apologetics; General Discusssion; Theology
KEYWORDS: arminianism; arminians; calvinism; evangelism; methodism; wesley
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To: xzins

As God knows everything then I’m sure He does. The issue is what do I know. According to Calvinism none of us know for sure. Calvin himself said that a reprobate can act as the select do. He talks of temporary faith and other nonsense. This makes God out to be a liar. Forcing untrue feelings on His creation in order to deceive them. A clear contradiction to Titus 1:2.


21 posted on 08/21/2008 3:00:12 PM PDT by Patrick1
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To: Patrick1

When did God know that you would be saved and that Huxley would be lost, before He created or only after He created?


22 posted on 08/21/2008 3:06:47 PM PDT by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain -- Those denying the War was Necessary Do NOT Support the Troops!)
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To: Patrick1
As God knows everything then I’m sure He does.

God is omniscient. God is omnipotent. But I would ask the question, "Can God do anything? Answer: No.

23 posted on 08/21/2008 3:09:20 PM PDT by Texas Songwriter
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To: xzins

Probably at the exact second He knew Paul would write this.

“For when we were still without strength, in due time Christ died for the ungodly” (Rom. 5:6, NKJV).


24 posted on 08/21/2008 3:10:27 PM PDT by Patrick1
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To: Texas Songwriter

I agree. For example He can’t lie.


25 posted on 08/21/2008 3:13:40 PM PDT by Patrick1
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To: Patrick1

He can do nothing which is contradictory to His nature. He cannot lie. He cannot tempt. He cannot be unjust. It has always been an enigma to me that Calvinists say God has directed his chosen to go to a group of people and lie to them...ie....to say If you believe in the finished work of Jesus Christ on the cross, His death, burial, and ressurection, that you will be saved,...knowing Calvinism teaches that they, if not the elect, will never, can never be save. Why would God order us, “Thou shalt no lie.” and then tell Calvinists to lie to those reprobated unto damnation, for all eternity, for His good pleasure...I think that is the statement of the Pope of Genieva.


26 posted on 08/21/2008 3:19:28 PM PDT by Texas Songwriter
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To: r9etb

My, a little thin-skinned, aren’t we?


27 posted on 08/21/2008 3:29:02 PM PDT by Dan Middleton
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To: Patrick1
I agree. For example He can’t lie.

True. But then, why would He?

28 posted on 08/21/2008 3:34:12 PM PDT by yankeedame ("Oh, I can take it but I'd much rather dish it out.")
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To: Gamecock
But still an Arminian who believed God is sitting in Heaven wringing His hands hoping that some will choose Christ, but not daring to intervene.

According to the Calvinists, God isn't wringing His hands over anything. It's all a done deal, and a large part of humanity will eventually join that great fry cook down below. There is no choice, they were born for that fate. Or isn't that so?

29 posted on 08/21/2008 4:06:35 PM PDT by xJones
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To: Dan Middleton
My, a little thin-skinned, aren’t we?

No, not really -- the comparison was just so apt I had to make it.

30 posted on 08/21/2008 4:12:20 PM PDT by r9etb
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To: Patrick1
If you are a Calvinist you need no training or support. God has already decided. The Calvinist missionaries main job seems to be to drive around the countryside and yell JESUS!

LOL! Preach the gospel unto all the world, even though you have to put up with all those vulgar unelected that think they're saved according to the gospel.

Once in a while you might get lucky and find one of the real elect. You'll know because they'll immediately start telling you that they're elected and everybody else isn't!

31 posted on 08/21/2008 4:17:58 PM PDT by xJones
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To: xJones; Gamecock
Your entire charge seems predicated on the notion we deserve otherwise. Do you honestly affirm that you or I deserve anything good from the hand of God. Oh, what a merciful and faithful Father He is, that we are not utterly consumed in His just wrath!

Yes, it is settled in God's mind. But what is that to us, seeing that we cannot know His hidden will? Is it not an encouragement to the missionary, moreover, that He has his elect out there, that fields are white for harvest, and that what lies ahead has been planned from eternity? Seems like a cause for optimism, not pessimism.

32 posted on 08/21/2008 4:20:28 PM PDT by Lexinom
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To: Gamecock; All
That is the work of the Holy Spirit, who convicts men of their sin and who drives them to the cross.

Actually, according to Calivinism, God doesn't convict anyone for their sins; He predestined them to sin and hell before the world existed, before they even had a chance to sin! LOL!

33 posted on 08/21/2008 4:33:24 PM PDT by kosta50 (Eastern Orthodoxy is pure Christianity)
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To: xJones
According to the Calvinists, God isn't wringing His hands over anything. It's all a done deal, and a large part of humanity will eventually join that great fry cook down below. There is no choice, they were born for that fate. Or isn't that so?

Yup, that's Calvinism for you.

34 posted on 08/21/2008 4:36:28 PM PDT by kosta50 (Eastern Orthodoxy is pure Christianity)
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To: Lexinom
Oh, what a merciful and faithful Father He is, that we are not utterly consumed in His just wrath!

I think far more highly of God than you, because I trust His word.

"The Bible does not say For God so loved the elect, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life." And so when I read "God is not willing that any should perish" in II Peter 3:9, I take it to mean that, quite literally, God does not want anyone going to hell.

Every verse Calvinists use in their arguments is that God is promising ONLY their self-described 'elect'.

35 posted on 08/21/2008 4:40:16 PM PDT by xJones
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To: xJones

While the descriptions Gamecock & Lexinom gave are dealing with the comfort and confidence that we can have in an all-wise, all knowing, transcendent God of Heaven and Earth, you seem to argue “free will” is kinder.

Please notice, if the incorrect statement “God has done all He can, now it is up to us.” is true, it is a monstrous portrayal of God. Why doesn’t He write in letters 10,000 feet high across the sky, “Wake up people!” Are you telling us He has done ALL that He possibly could? All? If He has, then He hasn’t worked very hard at convincing the stubborn, ignorant millions that love darkness.

Stand back for a minute and ask yourself if you really think the Bible is portraying a God that doesn’t control every minute detail of every situation? Is there a maverick molecule out there? That makes your softened heart even a greater miracle than you thought, if He made the change while you were at war with Him. And the same goes for those He is leaving to the hardness of their hearts. “You will say to me then, How can He still blame us, for who can resist His will?” Rom. 9.

Who are you to answer back to God, o man?


36 posted on 08/21/2008 4:55:02 PM PDT by Dutchboy88
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To: xJones
Yes, and furthermore, in Ezekiel 33:10 we read:

Say unto them, [As] I live, saith the Lord GOD, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked; but that the wicked turn from his way and live: turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways; for why will ye die, O house of Israel?

So you see that no one is arguing that God takes pleasure in the death of the wicked, yet he hates the worker of iniquity who turns not. Yet God cannot deny Himself and His attributes. He is just. He is merciful. He is holy. How can His justice be reconiciled with his mercy?

If He were to send His Son to die for sin with the hypothetical possibility, according to free-will reasoning, that not a single person would be saved, then of what value is such an ineffectual atonement?

No, my friend, it is God who saves; nothing is too hard for Him.

As far as election, it is a repugnant notion to the natural man, yes, ingrained as we are with the original sin of pride ("You will be like God, knowing good from evil.").

There's that one, little tiny piece that we don't want to give to God. We don't trust Him when it comes to our eternal destiny. We think we know better. My friend, do not trust your deceitful heart. Consider the brevity of man's days, how he is like a mist (Ps. 144). Put your trust in Jesus, as your heavenly shepherd! Ask Him to conquer your proud heart and till the hard soil, to keep you from the sin of the Pharisees (Is. 58:3). He is faithful and true!

37 posted on 08/21/2008 5:07:42 PM PDT by Lexinom
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To: Patrick1
I consider Wesley more of a Methodist

He was an Anglican.

38 posted on 08/21/2008 5:11:23 PM PDT by PAR35
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To: Dutchboy88
While the descriptions Gamecock & Lexinom gave are dealing with the comfort and confidence that we can have in an all-wise, all knowing, transcendent God of Heaven and Earth, you seem to argue “free will” is kinder.

Read the thread, the 'comfort and confidence' is only meant for the elect. John Calvin, the former lawyer and excellent legalist said it was His choice. The Calvinists have ignored all the scriptures that support free will which offers everyone to have the choice of accepting or rejecting salvation from Jesus as according to the Bible.

Who are you to answer back to God, o man?

The same way I do everyday with prayer and supplications. How do you answer back to God? Like a good Calvinist Pharisee that knows the letter of the law but not the Spirit? Jesus knew your kind, and He didn't like them.

39 posted on 08/21/2008 5:13:47 PM PDT by xJones
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To: Lexinom
I live, saith the Lord GOD, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked; but that the wicked turn from his way and live: turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways; for why will ye die, O house of Israel?

I think you just shot yourself in your Calvinist foot; in this verse God gives them free will, they have a choice. Their fate is not already ordained, they have a free will choice.

40 posted on 08/21/2008 5:17:38 PM PDT by xJones
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