01 June 2005

Quick-and-Dirty Calvinism

Bashing Calvinism is the latest fad in blogdom. My turn.

Three years ago Rob Schläpfer had the best Reformed website and book business bar none. It was the place to go if you were looking for material responding to Dave Hunt. Schläpfer's online magazine, Antithesis, was the best-looking and most consistently interesting website I knew—and it was thoroughly Calvinistic.

Michael Spencer, aka the Internet Monk, runs one of the most successful group blogs around. It's a lively theological discussion cast as a virtual tavern. The iMonk gained fame earlier this year by "outing" Joel Osteen's frivolous non-gospel. One of the iMonk's famous early blog entries was titled "Why Calvinism Is Cool." Judging from the network of links, the iMonk's group blog, The Boar's Head Tavern (BHT), has attracted a lot of Calvinist readers.

But last year with little warning, Schläpfer renounced all things Reformed and started giving rave reviews to almost every postmodern oddity and "emergent church" manual that the evangelical publishing houses could crank out. With a bit of fanfare, Schläpfer's mail-order company dropped some of the best Reformed books from their line. Meanwhile, Schläpfer was posting some fiery blasts both publicly and privately against Calvinists and Calvinism. (Some of them—including one sent to me personally—were pretty much in the spirit of Mark 14:71.)

Recently, the iMonk followed suit with a controversial essay, "I'm Not Like You . . . (Calvinists especially)." He closed it with a paragraph that began, "I am not like you. Every day I wander further from the safety of Calvinism into the wideness of God's mercy." Although the text is still in the process of deconstruction at the BHT, it seems like the iMonk and his drinking buddies have decided postmodernism is a lot cooler than Calvinism.

Schläpfer and the iMonk are by no means alone. More serious Calvinist leaders, including John Armstrong and Andrew Sandlin are saying similar things, albeit usually with just a smidge more subtlety.

Jumping off the Calvinist bandwagon and lobbing rotten eggs at the attitudes and culture of "Reformed" folk is clearly le dernier cri in the blogosphere and beyond.

Before we vivisect these gentlemen and their views (something I may eventually want to devote some bloggage to), I think it would be helpful to ponder why Calvinism, which seemed to be the flavor of the month not so long ago, has suddenly become so odious to so many of its one-time friends.

I have to say with all candor that I can somewhat understand the feelings expressed by some of Calvinism's recent critics. Sniff around some of the Calvinist forums on the Internet and it won't be long before you begin to think something is rotten in Geneva.

But I hasten to add that I don't think the problem really lies in Geneva, or in historic Calvinism, or in any of the classic Reformed creeds. I especially don't think the stench arises from any problem with Calvinism per se. In my judgment, the problem is a fairly recent down n' dirty version of callow Calvinism that has flourished chiefly on the Internet and has been made possible only by the new media.

Internet Calvinism and historic Calvinism sometimes have little in common. Consider:

  1. Fanaticism. The strains of hyper-Calvinism that are flourishing today are more harsh and more hyper than any of the historic hyper-Calvinists ever thought about being.

    If you doubt this, check Marc Carpenter's infamous website and read his ridiculous "Heterodoxy Hall of Shame." Carpenter is so hyper-Calvinistic that he has even labeled Calvin a hell-bound heretic for not being Calvinistic enough! He damns Spurgeon, Iain Murray, and even Gordon Clark (whom no one during his lifetime ever accused of not being Calvinistic enough).

    There are some well-trafficked discussion forums out there that look like they're having a contest to see who can be most extreme in their condemnations of Arminianism or most overblown in their affirmation of über-high Calvinism.

    There is a radical extremism among hypers on the Internet that is utterly unheard of even in the darkest corners of hyper-Calvinist history. At least the early hypers like Huntington and Gill had some profitable things to say when they exegeted Scripture.

  2. Non-evangelism. Among more mainstream Calvinists, there are certainly some outstanding men who are earnestly evangelistic (Piper, MacArthur, and even Sproul). But it would be stretching things more than a little bit to insist that modern Calvinism as a movement is known by its passion for evangelism. Where are the Calvinist evangelists? I can think of only one outstanding example: John Blanchard. (There are surely more, but at the moment I can't think of any other famous Calvinists now living who have devoted their ministries primarily to evangelism).

    Of course, I fully realize that the Arminian caricature of historic Calvinism as anti-evangelistic is a total lie. But one could hardly argue that evangelism is a key feature of modern Calvinism. Neither the writings we produce nor the conferences we hold focus much on evangelism.

  3. Polemicism. Today's rank-and-file Calvinists are more in the mold of Pink, Boettner, and J.I. Packer than they are like Spurgeon or Whitefield. In other words, modern Calvinism is producing mostly students and polemicists, not evangelists and preachers. That's because Internet Calvinism is simply too academic and theoretical and not concerned enough with doing, as opposed to hearing, the Word (James 1:22). To a large degree, I think that's what the medium itself encourages.

  4. Anti-intellectualism. This may sound like a contradiction of my previous point, but both tendencies contribute to the superficiality of Internet Calvinism. Want a sample? I recently received an e-mail inquiry that is all too typical of what I have observed for years among Internet Calvinists. Someone whom I do not know and whose name I will not divulge wrote me to ask:
    Can you explain in one paragraph or less how to make sense of the distinction you make between the "decretive" and "preceptive" aspects of God's will? Please don't give me a reading list of books and articles. One paragraph. One sentence if you can do it. Because the whole idea seems loony to me. So far, no one has been able to describe it in a way that makes any sense. I don't have time to read 10 volumes of dead guys' reflections in Puritan prose. And don't refer me to Piper's article on the subject. It's too long and convoluted. I just want a short answer.

    Right. The quick and dirty approach to untangling the mysteries of the universe. And every forum on the Internet, it seems, has at least one or two freshly-enlightened, beardless Calvinists who are convinced that their understanding of everything suddenly became perfect when they embraced the sovereignty of God. Some of them imagine that whatever difficulties they still can't explain can be easily solved by simply moving to a more extreme position.

The upsurge of Calvinism on the Internet in the 1990s seems to have spawned a large and unprecedented movement of jejune Calvinists who wear arrogance as if it were the team uniform. That kind of hotshot, shoot-from-the-hip Calvinism is ugly. I don't blame anyone for being appalled by it. I'm worried about those who think it's a good thing.

Obviously those criticisms are mostly generalizations, and they don't necessarily apply to every Calvinist on the Internet. But (and here's the hard part) I'm willing to admit that there have been times when every one of those criticisms could be legitimately applied to something I wrote or posted to a public forum somewhere. I'll especially confess to my shame that I'm too much of a polemicist and not enough of an evangelist.

Historic Calvinism is not supposed to be that way. Yes, Calvinism is virile; it's relentless when it comes to truth; and it's not always easy to swallow. But it is full of truths that should humble us and fill us with compassion rather than swagger and conceit. The best Calvinism has always been fervently evangelistic, large-hearted, benevolent, merciful, and forgiving. After all, that's what the doctrines of grace are supposed to be all about.

Until we get back there, some of the lumps the Reformed movement is currently taking are well-deserved.

And meanwhile, my advice to young Calvinists is to learn your theology from the historic mainstream Calvinist authors, not from blogs and discussion forums on the Internet. Some of the forums may be helpful in pointing you to more important resources. But if you think of them as a surrogate for seminary, you're probably going to become an ugly Calvinist—and if you get hit in the face with a rotten egg, you probably deserve it.


108 comments:

Tim Challies said...

Amen! It has long since been clear that the worst testament to Calvinism is a lot of the people on the Net who loudly proclaim themselves to be Calvinists. Of course the same is true of Christians in general.

Greg Linscott said...

Well Said, Phil! Well Said!

Thomas Pryde said...

Right on...I have a great deal of affinity with Calvinism, though many do not include those like me in "the camp." (Amyraldian) I certainly have much less of an affinity with Arminianism. As a pastor, I have seen this "dirty" Calvinism IRL as well.

jmark said...

A contender for "Best Blog Post of the Season"

Thanks

Mark said...

Very nice essay, it's refreshing to read a defense of Calvinism in the blogosphere.

Travis Prinzi said...

As one of iMonk's "drinking buddies," I'd say it is indeed ugly Calvinism I don't like. My final paper for my M.A. in theology is contra emergent and pro-reformed.

Solid post, Phil, except for the broad stroke of "the BHT guys are pomo now." Might be better to read the BHT as some folks tossing around ideas rather than a doctrinal dissertation on calvinism and postmodernism.

KP said...

Excellent post, Phil! Thanks. I especially appreciate your alerting us to how this medium can encourage self-deceit that substitutes theorizing about biblical truth for embodying it.

Scott Aniol said...

This reminds me of guys during my college days who said they were Calvinists just because it was controversial at the time. There was no actual substance to what they beleived. They just said they believed in Calvinism, election, limited atonement, etc. In reality they were just controversial Arminians!

c.t. said...

I think you give too little attention to this part of the subject:

"Yes, Calvinism is virile; it's relentless when it comes to truth; and it's not always easy to swallow."

Evangelism, Calvinist style, is virile and unapologetically a deliverance of hard truth. I know I was evangelized in this way. It seemed harsh at the time, but the seed gets planted and in my case it took root and grew in time.

The people you mention who have turned away from Calvinism were never "there" to begin with. They seek what comforts their carnal mind and what makes them popular in taverns and what not.

Let's also state something important: a Calvinist IS evangelizing just in the act of presenting the hard truth of the Word of God, either in writing or in word. Obviously some do it better than others (some also have more understanding of it than others), but evangelization is not only something that people with ministries and special tax status do. Individuals evangelize the faith every day, everywhere, in many ways. And Calvinists, if they are real Calvinists, are the most successful of all because we present the hard truth boldly and God's elect will hear it when it's presented that way.

Calvinists are good eveangelists because we know that our job is to proclaim boldly the hard truths of the Word of God and if God's elect hear it then it will have effect. We don't go about evangelizing like we are trying to convince or beg people to do something they would rather not do. We have no motivation or need to soft pedal or water down anything. We cast the seed and it takes root in soil it is meant to take root in.

We know that though we can plant the seed, only God can make it grow. Our job is to make the message known to God's elect (by making it known to anybody and everybody) throughout the world.

Habitans in Sicco said...

Travis: "Broad stroke"? "BHT guys are pomo now"?

Apparently you didn't read the same article I did. I was surprised at how generous his comments were about the BHT, especially compared to your blog's recent (but now conspicuously missing) comments about him after his review of NT Wright.

Maybe you guys are just sore because he listed you as "irritating."

Frank Martens said...

Uhhh I have a question (as I raise my hand :)...

And I quote Phil: "Today's rank-and-file Calvinists are more in the mold of Pink, Boettner, and J.I. Packer than they are like Spurgeon or Whitefield".

So, are you suggesting not to read books by A.W. Pink and J.I. Packer? Are they really that off base?

I've never read any of their books, I've heard a lot of good about their material. And the reason I ask, is because my sister is just now reading one of Packer's books, of which I was considering reading after she's done. However, I'd hate to waste my time on nonsense.

Thanks

Kurt N. said...

Actually, "Sicco", we're working as hard as we can to make it into the 'Appalling' category. Gotta set goals, y'know.

Also, the NT Wright was removed following correspondence between Mr. Spencer and Mr. Johnson. It wasn't some big secret.

c.t. said...

Frank, I think Phil was making a distinction between polemical types and evangelists types regarding those names. I would be very surprised if Phil Johnson was saying that Packer or Boettner were not worth reading. In Pink's case he has been associated with some elements of hyper-Calvinism, yet having said that he is a very sound writer as well.

In fact, J. I. Packer is not even what one might call a hardcore Reformed - or Calvinist - type (I mean, he's an Anglican afterall). He is VERY MUCH worth reading. His Concise Theology is brilliant; his book on the Puritans is extremely interesting (A Quest for Godliness), and his classic, Knowing God, is a...classic. Boettner's Reformed Doctrine of Predestination is so valuable a intro to Calvinism, and so classic at this point, that it is probably getting to the point where it is more admired than read (I admit I've only read parts of it).

Don't forget Calvin's Institutes of the Christian Religion as well. Reading the actual thing by the guy actually named Calvin is an eye-opener.

Paul said...

As I understand, he means that modern calvinists tend to have their heads in books almost exclusivley... he's lamenting the fact that most calvinists nowadays are theologians rather than evangelists, and that there should be more evangelist calvinists than there are... I may be wrong though...

I only know Packer and Piper's books well, but they're excellent in my opinion...

Good post.

Steve McCoy said...

Phil, didn't take you long to figure out how to write way-too-long blog posts. :) Good to have you blogging, and I like the design.

FX Turk said...

Phil --

I keep reading this post from you and I think I am missing the point. Are you saying that non-evangelism, polemicism and anti-intellectualism are the reasons why guys like Schlapfer and iMonk are now angry at "reformed" advocates of a lot of stripes?

I think the problem is much worse than that in the specific cases you have mentioned -- and I say that because of the targets that these fellows and the blog-which-names-itself-in-Latin are not the hypercalvinists, not the Marc Carpenters, not the hacks who start threads entitled "I Hate Arminianism" but are men like yourself, and James White, and David King, and Eric Svendsen, who are not guilty of the sins you list, but are only guilty of challenging the off-the-beaten-path views of those who became turned off.

Your laundry list of "calvinist" sins are completely fair -- and there are plenty of examples of these kinds of Christian quackery (I may in fact be one myself). But to list them as you have here in a way which seems to mitigate some of the actions of the people who you list as being turned off of Calvinism/Reformed theology is less than convincing.

It's a strong stand for something, which is a good way to start a blog. It may be a demonstration of grace on your part, and God bless you for that. But at the same time, I think it does not look closely enough at the "reaction" to "calvinist" errors or those who have been willing to "address" them publicly.

Habitans in Sicco said...

Centuri0n: "I think it does not look closely enough at the 'reaction' to 'calvinist' errors or those who have been willing to 'address' them publicly."

I wouldn't worry. He did say he plans to devote some bloggage to the vivisection of these characters. Judging from the kinds of remarks Phil regularly posts in his annotated bookmarks, I'll be surprised if he lets anyone off the hook.

c.t. said...

What centuriOn said. I think in my perhaps too long comments above I was trying to get at the same thing. The Discerning Reader guy and the iMonk types really don't like people like James White, and even the softer-toned Steven Hays types (both linked on Phil's blog), i.e. people who understand Calvinism and articulate it clearly and boldly. Calvinism is the Gospel, let's not be afraid to say that if we see it. And when the Gospel is proclaimed it convicts and stings and is hard truth. The carnal mind and man don't like the pure Gospel message.

Tim Enloe said...

Frank (centuriOn), you are quite correct to observe that the targets of certain forms of criticism of Internet Calvinism (in the persons of the defenders you name) are not the weirdos like Carpenter, but some of the ones that Mr. Johnson lists in his positive category. Nevertheless, you know good and well that the arguments made against those gentlemen are precisely that THEY are the ones who are off the beaten path of the best of the Reformation.

Kurt N. said...

Calvinism is the Gospel

So...if you had had an hour to share with a group of unsaved people the Gospel of Christ, would you use time to go into the 5 Points?

pastorshaun said...

Reminds me of a story Jack Miller once told about a group of charismatics who were staying with him. During their stay they noticed Calvin's Commentaries on the shelf and began to read. Their response was telling. This Calvin is so different than the Calvin everyone talks about. He's so gracious and pastoral.

Amen! Thank you, Phil, for taking us back to the "first things".

Juice said...

I'm greatly offended by this post! How dare you! How dare you group all of us "beardless Calvinists" as "unevangelical"!

I have not been gifted by God with the ability to grow a beard (and yes, I'm 30 years old), and your shot at us beardless Calvinists hurts deep in my heart. I look at people like you and Douglas Wilson and I realized I can never be the men that you all are.

:-) :-)

Justin Crandall

Jim V. said...

Looks good! Heard about your blog from Eric Svendsen's and James White's blogs. Look forward to checking it out from time to time.

Denny Burk said...

Double up, AMEN!

"Lord, make me an evangelist, and make me fruitful for your glory."

Thanks for the great word, Phil.

Sincerely,
Denny Burk

John said...

Though he may not be everyone's cup of tea, another Calvinist who's known for evangelism is D. James Kennedy.

Evangelism Explosion is used in something like 200 countries and is at the center of his ministry.

It's a little more pat and decisionalistic than I'd prefer, but on the other hand (to paraphrase D.L. Moody), I like the way he's evangelizing better than the way most other people are not doing it.

FX Turk said...

To Phil Johnson specifically, I apologize that this is where Tim has decided that he can answer for what he thinks he's trying to do. I have written letters to him at communio in the past and have gotten varying levels of communication back from him.

Tim --

(1) It's disengenuous at best to use Phil's blog comments to broad-brush a retort that you will not answer in specific when questioned.

(2) Your opinion that calling Rome a church without the Gospel is "off the beaten path" is simply wrong. Even Charles Hodge in defending the acceptance of Roman Catholics with valid Christian baptisms does so (a) from a paedobaptist view of the sacrament as it applies to individuals in relationship to the visible church, and (b) from a clear statement that the formal teaching of Rome is out of bounds -- "as a papal body, she is not a church; i.e., her popery and all her corruptions are anti-christian and apostate".

(3) You posted this article at communio on 3/28:

http://www.communiosanctorum.com/?p=18

In it, you cited William Whitaker as saying, "we allow that it is a highly convenient way of finding the true sense of scripture, for devout and learned men to assemble, examine the cause diligently, and investigate the truth; yet with this proviso, that they govern their decision wholly by the scriptures." That's fair enough.

Your comment on this statement was:
{quote}
I am not sure that any Bible-loving Christian (and is there any other kind of Christian?) could have any sort of problem with Whitaker’s “proviso”, for unless one holds that all of divine revelation is not contained in the Scriptures (whether 66 or 73 books is, at this point, irrelevant), then it follows that the Scriptures must be the final verification of anything in the Christian religion since they are the very voice of God Himself.
{/quote}

The problem, of course, is that the Roman Catholic specifically denies this -- in the CCC, and in Trent (and I know naming Trent will be equated with intellectual violence). They do not deny that the Bible is the "voice of God" but, as Whitaker says, "that they govern their decision wholly by the scriptures."

Moreover, Whitaker is also known for a little essay called “THE ROMAN PONTIFF IS THAT ANTICHRIST whose presence scripture prophesied”, 1582. It's quite a read, and in it whatever “proviso” Whitaker was setting forth, it was not in pursuit of “communion sanctorum” with Rome: he thought that anyone who did not flee Roman authority would be subject to “eternal perdition”.

Thus my question: on what basis do you think you can use Whitaker's words in Disputations on Holy Scripture to support communio sanctorum with Rome when Whitaker himself expressly denies that such a thing is possible?

You might have something to say about (1) and (2), but (3) is the direct question and it would be interesting to see how you work that one out.

And completely on a different subject, my calendar says you are going to be married in about 3 weeks, and I hope the preparations are going well. Your success lies there in simply getting out of the way.

FX Turk said...

Burttd:

You are right that, literally speaking, Calvinism is not the Gospel. And frankly I like your summary of the Gospel inspite of its 5-unpointedness.

However, which other descriptions of the Gospel are better in the long run for the church as a whole, the local church in particular, and the believer himself? I can't speak for the rest of the commentators here, but I was convicted by inches to Calvinism before I could tell you that there were 5 points, and every step of the way was a painful stripping off of my self-centeredness in relation to God. Being a Calvinist has made me a better father and husband and church member and employee and employer. (and some {though few in number, and identified as "persons of interest" by local authorities} might say it has made me a better apologist and evangelist and teacher for our local church)

So no: Calvinism is not actually the Gospel. But when you compare it to the other choices, it's got game.

Kurt N. said...

burttd: That is the problem. The Gospel is the proclamation of Christ's death for our sins and His resurrection, and the call to faith in Him. Calvinism says *how* that works behind the scenes. Calvinism is the theological analysis of the Gospel - it is NOT the Gospel itself.

Preach it, man.

Aaron S said...

"Within the Reformed world, a phrase which more of us should be aware of is 'cage stage.' Whenever someone comes into new-found truth (and this often happens with those first coming to embrace Reformed theology), the phrase refers to that period of time where the new (and usually young) convert should be locked up in a cage. That period of time is usually about two years. Of course, there are some pitiful cases that should never be let out, and there are many more evangellyfish who do not ever need to be locked up. But cage stagers, however many of them there are, can do a lot of damage. Ironically, they do much to make the theology they profess to love obnoxious to outsiders. Paul did teach, unambiguously, the doctrine of election. But he also told the Colossians, as the elect of God, to put on tender mercies." -Douglas Wilson, "Hither and Yon"

http://www.tulipedia.org/The_Dangerous_Pursuit_of_Reformed_Theology

c.t. said...

"So...if you had had an hour to share with a group of unsaved people the Gospel of Christ, would you use time to go into the 5 Points?"

This was directed at me, so... To be honest, for me Calvinist understanding gives you the foundationa to evangelize effectively, but doctrine itself is rarely a part of a person's effectual calling (or regeneration). I mean, I experienced regeneration before knowing any true Biblical doctrine at all in a systematic theology sense. It was effected by hearing the plain Word of God read to me, by myself making the effort to read the Word of God complete, and, earlier to all that, by a bold and sharp rebuke I got from a suprising source when I made fun of some Christians once. (The rebuke was "Jesus saves", which is rather pointed and on-the-mark theology.)

But as a Calvinist, when I evangelize the faith, I find that the the basic "reorientating" that the five points force in you enable me to explain the Gospel to people in terms of vanity, worldly pride, and self-will vs. being God centered and acting from God's will. For me this is an effective way to present the Gospel to the kind of people I know in my life. But Calvinism also makes the evangelizing effective in that we don't beg people or try to convince by watering things down or compromising Biblical doctrine so as not to "offend" people's sensibilities. We are evangelizing God's elect. We can't know who they are, but we know the the pure Word of God and its message will connect with God's elect, if not immediately then in time. That is a Calvinist approach, and it is effective.

Mickey Sheu said...

Hello,

thanks for a good post. Just to let you know I've linked it.

c.t. said...

"Perhaps what is not liked about them [White and Hays] is the fact that Calvinism seems to be the only thing they talk about, and the only thing said is how wrong you are if you do not agree with them. The idea that every conversation with every other believer has to be about Calvinism has gotten old for some of us who still consider ourselves Calvinist..."

This was directed at me, so... Do you think you'd have gotten anything different from John Bunyan or John Owen or Jonathan Edwards or Calvin himself? I mean, I sense in your complaint some fake drama. I really don't think you are 'tired' of hearing a guy who is an apologist always talking about Calvinism. Anyway it's a strange request to ask a Calvinist to maybe sprinkle in a little postmodernism or neo-orthodox 'understanding' into the mix.

Anyway, I never get tired of hearing people talk about Calvinism, especially if they are on-the-mark with it. Because it is BIBLICAL DOCTRINE.

When I said Calvinism is the Gospel obviously this is what I meant. Arminianism is not the Gospel, RCism is not the Gospel, JWism is not the Gospel, Mormonism is not the Gospel. Calvinism IS the Gospel.

I said: "The carnal mind and man don't like the pure Gospel message."

You responded: "True. But it irks me how some Calvinists seem to revel in the scandal, and want to even add to it!"

There is law in the Gospel, and the Gospel is supposed to convict! I don't care if when I boldly and clearly state the truth that 'some people' get turned off. That is part of what the Word of God is supposed to do. The Word of God, when proclaimed boldly and accurately (here is where Calvinism comes in) is lively and CUTS. It is not called a sword, a two-edged sword, for nothing!

I say: offend people! If it is the plain, pure Gospel that is doing it then so be it!

Those very offended people, anyway, might just be elect of God who are being delivered the pure, unwatered-down Word of God for the first time in their lives, and it will have effect in them in time!

That is what being bold about preaching the Word is all about. You don't worry about offending people. You are doing them NO FAVORS by not giving them the straight truth to begin with...

c.t. said...

"Some calvinists seem to enjoy giving offense, instead of wishing those who do reject the Gospel could be saved."

Look at the above that you wrote and how you totally didn't grasp what was said. Giving offense IS INEVITABLE when you are preaching the pure Biblical message. BUT-- those who take offense could very well be elect of God! Just because people kick and scream (or pout and whine) or whatever when they hear the pure Gospel message for the first time doesn't mean it doesn't - or won't - have effect in them.

It is common human nature that we are usually fighting something most strongly just as we are closest to connecting with it. But the point it you have to preach the hard truth to have this effect. Giving people comfortable, compromised mush is doing them no favors.

You have a fundamental nonunderstanding of what evangelizing is about (and what the Gospel is, i.e. it convicts and is supposed to. There is LAW in the Gospel as much as there is law in the Old Testament. It's suppose to cut you and convict you. The Gospel doctrine of hell (from Jesus' own mouth) is supposed to upset you and outrage you and everything else. But if it is given to you uncompromised it is a seed that will potentially take root and grow in time.)

Julianne said...

whooo hooo....glad to see this post. I'd read you, but I won't be near a computer for three months. Keep this up. With 40-50 commenters to each post, you're going to have to keep writing...
Soli Deo Gloria!

Peace,

Julianne

Mark said...

Phil,

Great looking blog! I look forward to reading it. Hope to see you on another cruise one day.

God bless,
Mark

lycaphim said...

Yes, I agree! Thankfully my Calvinistic training comes from Monergism.com :-p

Ian Dunn said...

Micheal's response.

Mike Morrell said...

As a former PCA-man myself, I jumped off the capital "R" Reformed bandwagon five years ago, but I have looked back.

Your suprisingly generous and informative entry surveys many of the feelings I've had; but I'd like to add one: Calvinists are frequently cold at best and mean at worst.

But, I have to say that I've begun to expeirence some Calvinist healing (not to be confused with sexual healing) at churches that are involved in both Reformed and Emerging conversations--places like Mars Hill in Seattle and All Souls PCA in my very own Atlanta.

And of course as you know, Reformed Baptists make more sense then Presbyterians anyway--folks like John Piper and Jon Zens. All this, and my best friend continues to be a PCA-Calvinist and an accomplished musician, too boot.

So, all of these places and people will continue to hold hallowed spots on my alternative Christian web portal. I, for my part, hold onto a pared-down Calvinism affirming God's sovereignty and our chosen-ness in Christ; but its probably too warm and fuzzy for you.

Michael Spencer said...

it seems like the iMonk and his drinking buddies have decided postmodernism is a lot cooler than Calvinism.

I am sorry to have to point this out, but Mr. Johnson has seriously misrepresented me.

There is not one post, nor one sentence on the internet, on any essay or in any statement I have ever made anywhere, that indicates I have rejected Calvinism to embrace postmodernism.

In fact, saying that I have embraced postmodernism is patently untrue. I have repeatedly stated that I do not understand, nor do I embrace, whatever the Christian Pomo movement is supposed to be about.

I made my position very clear in a post Mr. Johnson did not read. Read "The Imonk and Calvinsim Q&A" at internetmonk.com

Out of 30 BHT posters, perhaps Mr. Johnson can tell me who, other than Kent Runge, has identified themselves as postmodernists? I can tell him at least a dozen who disavow it, and most of us are just trying to figure out what the term means.

I've long ago lost any hope that any one of the truly reformed sheriffs care about what I've actually said, but I've told the truth on this one. I have NOT embraced postmodernism.

TO the guy who said I removed a post as a cover up: The post was removed after a personal apology and exchange of letters.

-Michael Spencer

Nutriaboy said...

Good to see you on the blog barometer Phil! :)

Anonymous said...

Nicely siad Phil I'm going to bookmark this blog.

Mark said...

Joey Calvin (Spencer),

Phil didn't say that you literally claimed to reject Calvinism and embrace post-modernism. I believe he is saying that your position has shifted or is shifting from Calvinism to post-modernism. Though, maybe I am wrong.

Mark

Fred Butler said...

I am not totally convinced that we can lay all the blame for a Calvinistic exodus at the feet of wild-eyed, internet fanatics.
I am still scratching my head over Rob's Howard Hughes like meltdown, but I watched the iMonk's train start to derail sometime ago. I can still recall one article he wrote lampooning the Answers in Genesis crowd for reading the Bible wrong and then attempted to argue that Genesis does not really mean what it says. I have read other articles by Spencer addressing different subjects in which he will say the same thing about reading the Bible in other areas. I figure once a person begins to fiddle around with the authoritative infalliblity of God's Word, especially its sufficiency, his or her hermeneutics will become a cage for any foul theological bird.

Fred

Michael Spencer said...

I'm a postmodern apostate because I don't agree with Ken Hamm and Kent Hovind's reading of Genesis? Wow. Now that clears things up.

OK, but I think we're gonna need a bigger room for this party, and it's going to include some people you people think are on your team.

Momo said...

Hey Phil, I posted a response in my blog. I would value your thoughts . . .

http://howlingcoyote.blogspot.com/2005/06/predestination-and-evangelism.html

I'm sorry if you have to copy and paste the link. I'm still learning html.

Momo said...

Let's try that again: http://howlingcoyote.blogspot.com/

c.t. said...

iMonk, it's like this: if you want to identify yourself as Calvinist or Reformed when you express neo-orthodox and postmodern sympathies then people who are actually Calvinist and Reformed are going to call you on it. Now I know you've already disavowed the Calvinist label, but you are still calling yourself Reformed. You're like the Reformed Catholics, you don't want to give up the light of the Sun altogether, but you want to reflect it like a moon, dully and distortedly. Of course Calvinists will call you on it.

As for 'who is a true Calvinist', start with the five solas, move to the five points, and perhaps separate the men from the boys (or fakes) by seeing who represents in their walk and talk and writings a true valuation for the Word of God as the very 'Word' of the Living God. It's rather easy to discern in people. When you exibit an easy, juvenile giddiness in mocking people who value the Word of God as being the very Word of God, and you easily mock people who are bold in claiming to hold to something called Truth, or who - gasp - take doctrine that represents Biblical Truth seriously then you expose yourself. So be it, just don't call yourself what you're obviously not.

Currently there are many people and groups and movements that want the legitimacy that the names Calvin and Reformed give, but they want it as a false front merely to garner attention or for worse motives, i.e. to distort Biblical doctrine and mislead.

They all engage in the same persecution complex when confronted. It's a pillar of postmodern and liberal thought that it is unlawful to confront a postmodernist or liberal, especially as they're just going about attacking foundations and distorting history, and engaging in good propaganda for their cause. How dare anyone confront them.

Momo said...

Hey bobryan, I'm sure the people in hell feel a little bit better knowning that God loves them anyway, in spite of his just wrath being poured out on them. That's what hell is - justice, in spite of your attempts to portray it otherwise by picturing 7-year-old girls being cast in there.

Thanks for showing us the other extreme of what Phil was talking about - mean-spirited, cold-blooded, free willies.

Touche.

c.t. said...

bobryan,

Here is a good, basic Calvinist saying for you to chew on:

"There will be nobody in hell who doesn't want to be there."

Period.

(For explanation see Edwin Palmer - Five Points of Calvinism; or see C. S. Lewis as he wrote on this very theme alot in many of his writings.)

What you are doing, Bob, is you are justifying your desire to maintain a man-centered view and control (rather than conforming to a God centered view) by claiming to be 'more loving' and 'more wise' than God Himself. This is a trait of the unregenerate, but not all is lost: just read the Word of God...humbly. Regeneration is effected when it is by the Word and the Spirit. God knows what is in your heart.

Wilkins said...

what i don't get is the assumption that postmodernism is bad... or wrong. so many are quite gifted at throwing stones at it, yes, but i'm not sure they know much about what they're attacking.

as i understand it, postmodernism rests on the linguistic arguments of poststructuralism (viz Ferdinand de Saussure and Derrida's take on him). instead of just rallying against postmodernism, let's have some of you propose an alternative linguistic theory (or point me to the authors who have done so: you can email me at stephen.wilkins@gmail.com).

ciao,
s

Kurt N. said...

scottj23
At the BHT, we provide an explanation of who we dub to be the "truly reformed" if you click on the banner. The link is here.

The tavern exists primarily for her patrons. We closed down comments because of an unacceptable signal to noise ratio. Honest, thoughtful feedback is something that was lost in the process and we regret it.

As a young Christian though, if our discussions are causing you to stumble, take the much proffered advice and stick to other sites.

Travis Prinzi said...

I think it's shocking that people honestly think they can determine the motives (want to be successful as a writer, hate-filled, angry, etc.) of a person who you only know through a few things he or she chooses to write on a computer.

You seem to be quite mixed up and quite possibly not even know what you do believe.

I won't speak for anyone else, but as a BHT guy, let me say this - I am sometimes quite mixed up and not sure what I believe. So I keep clinging to Christ as He is revealed in the Scriptures and trusting that, through solid study, discussion, and community, I'll learn better. Is that ok? Is it alright to be mixed up and unsure sometimes? Or do I have to sit in the corner and wait till I've got all the fine points of theology worked out? Can I ask hard questions? Raise difficult objections? Or is that too much of a threat? Here's a shocker, Reformed folks (and remember, I am one) - we're humans and we're all mixed up. Let's all take a deep breath and learn from each other.

c.t. said...

An open challenge:
I defy anyone in here to give a definitive explanation of what postmodernism is. And you aren't allowed to say "relativism" or "nihilism", because if it were exactly those things then a new label wouldn't be necessary. The word "postmodernism" is falling into the same category as "liberal." People have no idea what it means, but if you are one, its bad.


Disingenously sceptical epistemology and a palette of sophistical rhetorical conceits used in the ancient dragon's service to sow confusion, challenge reality, defile language (usually always accompanied with spontaneously appearing legal codes to coerce and enforce the new dictates) and deny the existence of objective Truth. All generally to promote 'liberal' goals, i.e. what the devil wants.

c.t. said...

Steve Wilkins writes:

instead of just rallying against postmodernism, let's have some of you propose an alternative linguistic theory

McGuffey's Eclectic Readers

c.t. said...

bobryan, personally I don't want to debate you because you don't appear to have even a passing understanding of Reformed theology.

Just entertain the thought that if Calvinism was as empty as you are so motivated to explain it to be you wouldn't be railing against it so. It comes down to being man-centered vs. being God centered. Your raging is the raging of your self-will and vanity and worldly pride against the hard truths and pure Gospel message of the Word of God. You demand that God and His Plan conform to your demands.

I would just say: first, make an effort to understand that which you currently so rail against (for instance you have no understanding of how Calvinists view free will); and second, ponder and try to see the difference in being conformed to God's Word and will vs. demanding that God's Word and will conform to your carnal, vain demands.

Michael Spencer said...

Well Caroline Trace....Imagine meeting you here!

Friar Rick said...

BobRyan - [Does Calvinism have "no defense at all"??]

LOL

I'll gladly defend Calvinism any day. Your caricature of it and misunderstandings are another matter.

Everyone who goes to hell goes there as a consequence of his own free will. As was said earlier, they want to be there.

My seven-year-old daughter (I do have one) won't be there.

Again, everyone who goes to hell is guilty and willing. Hell is justice. Deal with it.

c.t. said...

James Spurgeon, it's a profound statement to meditate upon, that there is nobody in hell who doesn't want to be there. I came across the statement first in Edwin Palmers book on the five points of Calvinism, but then found out that it was a favorite subject of C. S. Lewis (Lewis is actually brilliant on the subject). I have an anthology of Lewis passages on various topics (the Quotable Lewis), one being hell, and he wrote on this subject of man wanting to be in hell, and the psychology of it, and how people use the doctrine of hell as an accusation against God and so on, in his letters and various famous books. I think it's a good, pithy antidote to cut through some of the more common misconceptions of Calvinist (Biblical) theology. I'll type out one of the quotes.

Friar Rick said...

I would love to see the Lewis quotes! Get a blog and copy & paste them there (or something).

c.t. said...

"A man can't be taken to hell, or sent to hell: you can only get there on your own steam." - C. S. Lewis, the Dark Tower and Other Stories

"We must picture Hell as a state where everyone is perpetually concerned about his own dignity and advancement, where everyone has a grievance, and where everyone lives the deadly serious passions of envy, self-importance, and resentment." - Screwtape Letters

Look at this brilliant observation from The Great Divorce:

"What some people say on earth is that the final loss of one soul gives the lie to all the joy of those who are saved...."

"That sounds very merciful: but see what lurks behind it...."

"The demand of the loveless and the self-imprisoned that they should be allowed to blackmail the universe: that till they consent to be happy (on their own terms) no one else shall taste joy: that theirs should be the final power; that Hell should be able to veto Heaven."

bobryan, this last quote describes what you've been doing...

Wilkins said...

xeno,

i can understand why my original question piqued you so: fundamentalists are so busy denouncing postmodernism that they've never bothered to read Derrida or any of the others, and so they can't be expected to have written any alternatives to Derrida's use of Saussure--they haven't even read Saussure.

and when a book of quotations makes one an instant expert on Lewis... oh geeze, this is what we've come to? Lewis, who also said that one of the chief reasons for the decline of the 20th century mind was women's emancipation (didn't find that one in your lovely quote book, eh?)...

Lewis is grand, surely, but let's not have him bandied about to settle a disagreement. it's lewd.

anyway, my original question was sincere--i am, in fact, always looking for good book recommendations, though i can see i'm not going to get any from you. i'm sure the loss is mine.

but if anyone else has any reading recommendations that attempt to show precisely why poststructuralism has it wrong, please let me know.

love, everyone
s

c.t. said...

Carnal Christian, I gave you a book recommendation for linguistic theory to put up against your Derrida and Sass...Saus...(you know): McGuffey's Eclectic Readers.

Did you totally miss that?

(OK, I like grail literature. I like classical historians. Epic poetry. Books with mysterious authorship I tend to be drawn towards. I like books written around the time of the American Revolution, Gibbon, Adam Smith, Montequieu...a little later but similar von Clausewitz... Novels? I am one of the 6 people currently alive who has read War and Peace complete. Derrida? Does a long initiation into Nietzsche count at all? Why do you need a linguistic theory anyway? Didn't humans get by without one of those fairly well for most of history?)

wmrharris said...

To all the storm and noise,let me add the one other defect of too many claiming Calvin's mantle: a want of sanctification. Our words too often betray that we are far from God.

(The all too smug reliance on the doctrine of total depravity only serves to demonstrate the indifference to a real reformation of one's life.)

After all, when theology turns us away from a proper reform of the spirit, that theology can scarcely be accounted true; it's all leaves, not fruit.

c.t. said...

Carnal, if you havn't skipped out (or if you're back from the Starbucks) here's something (re your request) to knaw on.

Don't neglect the conclusion.

fickett said...

Well said. I too have noticed a drift from those who used to be solid. I was most distressed by the recent changes in the iMonk, and his move toward Rome.

Rand said...

It truly is a sad thing... the calvinist knows that God will save HIS PEOPLE from their sins by the foolishness of PREACHING, and yet, so few actually PREACH.

This is a grievous sin.

Take care,

Momo said...

Dearest BobRyan,
I have dealt with your type of misrepresentations so many times that I've lost count.

Why are you so angry?

You wrote: [Your blinders-on-can't-think-about response does not form a compelling defense of Calvinism. It just proves how unprepared Calvinists are to deal with the fate of the lost as a close family member.]

-sigh-

Tell me this. I pastor a church. I have four children and a wife. I am preaching in a Bible conference tonight. I am trying to get a book published. I am trying to get into seminary. I am trying to keep up with two blogs and a web-site.

On the other hand, your mind is obviously made up and you alos quite obviously have a chip on your shoulder and want a fight.

Tell me, what makes you worth my time?

When I see your objections my mind automatically registers, 'been there-done that'.

If you don't care to learn the actual truth, then feel free to keep believing your caricature of it. Okay?

1 Cor. 14:38 (KJV)
But if any man be ignorant, let him be ignorant.

c.t. said...

If it helps, bobryan, most Calvinists come to a point where they recognize - just as Calvin presents it in his Institutes - that the Bible presents mysteries, or leaves things where they reside at a ceiling of mystery beyond which the Bible deems it fit we don't need to be told.

The Bible wants you to get the hard message and to get you to get above your vain thinking and carnal demands that God and His plan be like YOU deem it should be. But there are obviously aspects involved in it all that are wild cards as, for instance, time. God acts from eternity. He is not constrained by time as we perceive time. God can act in the life of all his creation anytime anywhere. What that means for the individual destination of each soul we can't know, but God is not unfair or unjust, and there will be nobody in in hell who doesn't want to be there. (Hell itself, as Calvin himself states, is described figuratively in Scripture, yet it's not a good place because it involves the wrath of God.) God chooses from eternity. 'Before the foundations of the Earth' is just to say eternity.

Now, this is not Biblical, and the Bible, for good reason, doesn't get into issues of God's time vs. man's time; the Bible makes demands and one is that you meet God's Word at its level and not demand that it conform down to your level. This is what the Doctrines of Grace do when you understand them and accept them. It is Biblical doctrine.

God's wisdom is foolishness to man.

If you are evangelizing the faith, in any way you can manage (however the Holy Spirit gives you the ability to contribute to that), you are doing God's work.

David said...

Yeah, Dr. White still won't let me outta my cage!!!

Phil Johnson said...

Rob Schläpfer:

If you can actually document where anything I have ever said about you is a "fiction," I'll change it immediately and issue you an apology.

I've made that offer before. It still stands. I have what I believe is a complete record of all my correspondence with you. I'd be happy to share it with you if you need it to jog your memory.

Michael Spencer said...

Phil,

You've stated to me in correspondence that what you've said about me was your conclusion upon reading my work.

I've said to you that I NEVER, EVER, ANYWHERE said I was deserting Calvinism for postmodernism, that I have stated clearly in an IM post why I do not call myself a Calvinist, and that I am a Reformation Christian who rejects postmodernism as a theology (whatever that means.)

Now you are telling Rob that you made a similar conclusion about him based on book selections and (excuse the pomo lingo) the conversation going on in his newsletter, which included all types of Reformation Christians.

Why can't you admit that when certain parties wandered out of the back yard into the neighbor's yard, you- like a good big brother- quickly drew worst case scenario conclusions. And you have resorted to the current whipping boy of conservative evangelicals- "Postmodernism"- to spank our little heinies (sp)?

Both Rob and I were motivated away from identifying ourselves as Calvinists/Reformed by the BEHAVIOR of those with that label. NEITHER one of us ever embraced postmodernism. We may have conversed with it, but we never embraced it....and you now know this.

Dealing with the fact that your high profile blog has now announced to the world that I've gone pomo has not been fun, but I think it needs to clearly be said: YOUR EVIDENCE FOR ALL THIS WAS PALTRY. It was a reaction from the Calvinistic blogosphere- which you describe quite well- that has thrown Rob and me into the "Pomo" camps, when neither one of us is going there.

I may have whined and Rob may have cussed, but neither of us deserted Calvinism for Postmodernism.

I tell you, Phil, if everyone who questions Calvinist behavior or likes N.T. Wright is pomo, you're gonna need a bigger blog.

I love and respect you as a brother, but this has been a wrong that ought to be righted.

Michael Spencer, aka Internet Monk

Phil Johnson said...

Michael and Rob:

If you guys really want to pursue this conversation, I'm certainly willing. But both of you have indicated in the past that you wanted me to drop it.

I object to your portrayal of me as a self-appointed "sheriff" who came after you while you were simply minding your own business.

Both of you criticized my views on "the New Perspective" before I ever said a word either publicly or privately to anyone about your views. (Monk, you came after me on your blog in a way that seemed designed mainly to mock and humiliate me.)

So don't try to make it look like I came out of nowhere with a club in my hand, smoke belching from my throat and nostrils and fire in my eyes, just looking for innocent, childlike NT Wright aficionados who were minding their own business—and cold-cocked you.

Monk, you ought to be keenly aware of all this, because I wrote you a lengthy letter about it after reading your remarks about me. Although I asked you—and you agreed—to post my letter at your blog, you have apparently removed every record of that exchange from the archives. I still have copies of your original post and my reply, and I will happily post them here if you really want the facts of how our dispute arose to be a matter for further discussion.

Rob, I also have a private e-mail from you, dated 15 July 2004 in which you said (among other things):

I am officially leaving completely the larger world of Reformed Theology. I disown it. Period. (Emphasis yours.)

Then you added: "You can publish that."

I've never published it verbatim until now, but if you now are going to claim that I have misrepresented you by saying that you have turned against Reformed theology, your own words are a witness against you. If you're continually going to say I have been unkind or ungracious to you, I'll be quite happy to publish the full record of our correspondence (your expletives deleted). Unless you are prepared to give me permission to do that, don't accuse me of misrepresenting you, and stop accusing me of dealing with you ungraciously. You have made a great show of "apologizing" to people for your past conduct and pleading for loving behavior from others, but as far as I can determine, you have never personally apologized to any of the people who were on the receiving end of your obscenity-laden diatribes.

As I said in my list of rules, I don't want to get into a mud-wrestling match here in the comments section of my own blog. You can criticize my views all you like, and I'll let you have your say unmolested. But don't abuse the privilege by lobbing mudballs at my character. Unless you are truly willing to talk these things through in pursuit of real resolution, you both ought to do what you have asked me to do, and drop it.

In all sincerity, if you honestly feel you can demonstrate that I've wronged you, I want to right the wrong. But so far, aside from using my blog as a vehicle to accuse me publicly, neither of you has seemed to want to pursue resolution of your differences with me through a candid, honorable, serious conversation. If you're willing to do that, let's. You both know very well that I will, because I have made every effort to dialogue graciously and amiably with you in the past. I don't think I have ever deliberately said an unkind word to either of you.

Michael Spencer said...

The reason you can't find those posts is simple: The BHT archives are only available for 30 days. The tech guys have automated the BHT to move posts older than 30 days to the BHT archive, a separate blog. The sheer size of the BHT prevents decent searching. Almost 30,000 posts.

I'm not sure what we are "resolving" here. I never left Calvinism to embrace Postmodernism, except in the opinion of two Reformed Baptists. I simply am not going to let this comment thread go on endlessly without saying that every 50 posts or so.

I'm not criticizing your views except as they include me. (Duh) As to BHT posts about your assessment of N.T. Wright, I don't see what they possibly have to do with this discussion other than as some attempt to justify your posting about me and I've already said that one blog deserves another. But that has nothing to do with the fact that I have never, ever, anywhere said I was leaving Calvinism for postmodernism.

This isn't a big personal deal. I haven't called you any names or questioned your integrity or sincerity. It's just that since I'm not dead yet, I'm going to speak to the truth. I have issues with Calvinism. Embracing postmodernism isn't one of them.

Phil Johnson said...

Monk:

Fair enough. Let me also repeat what I have already said to you and to everyone else who has complained that I'm "misrepresenting" you: I never SAID you left Calvinism and declared yourself a pomo. What I said was (and I quote):

"Although the text is still in the process of deconstruction at the BHT, it seems like the iMonk and his drinking buddies have decided postmodernism is a lot cooler than Calvinism" (emphasis added).

It does seem that way to me. Still.

I get it that you don't want to label yourself "postmodern." Most postmodernists reject labels of every kind, so that's not as helpful as what you write in determining how "postmodern" you really are. And I do actually read what you guys post.

(I'm also pretty sure there are a lot more than two of us who think it seems like you guys are way too enthralled with postmodern ways of thinking.)

As you know, I offered to post a statement acknowledging that you reject the label I have applied to you, but you asked me to drop it. You said you wanted the conversation to end. But then when you saw Rob posting here, you joined the dogpile. Hence, my previous post did not come out of a contextual void, and you know it.

Finally, if you still really feel your complaint about being misrepresented has any legitimacy, you ought to consider something I said to you once before, which you passed over in your reply:

I am not what you and others at the BHT continually claim I am, either. You have repeatedly characterized me as a self-appointed "sheriff" of what's "truly Reformed." In reality, though I'm a Particular Baptist by conviction, I am certainly not of the "Reformed" or Sabbatarian variety. I'm "Calvinistic" only in the sense of my soteriology. I might occasionally call myself "Reformed" in that sense, which I fully recognize is not the technical sense of the term. But I am definitely not "truly Reformed" and have never claimed that I am. Yet I'm constantly characterized by you (and others) at the BHT as someone who pretends to be not only TR, but also a "sheriff" of the TR perspective.

So you and I both apparently see ourselves differently from the way we are viewed by each other. So what? I accept that you disagree with me. Who knows? We might both be wrong.

Every 75 comments or so, I'm going to feel compelled to point those things out, too. OK?

c.t. said...

IMONK WROTE:
But that has nothing to do with the fact that I have never, ever, anywhere said I was leaving Calvinism for postmodernism.

PHILL WROTE:
I get it that you don't want to label yourself "postmodern." Most postmodernists reject labels of every kind, so that's not as helpful as what you write in determining how "postmodern" you really are.


Wasn't it Emerson who said (paraphrase) what you are screams so loud you don't have to tell me what you are.

Your last post on the Boar's Head Tavern (as I write this), iMonk includes this:

Saying a verse is "out of context" doesn't mean the verse is being inappropriately used. I believe that Jesus bought into the worldview of his day, and turned it upside down regularly. I am personally convinced that everything we see about Jesus leads us to the conclusion that the work of the Holy Spirit in the church (the application of Jesus and his message) leads to a position where gender is not an issue in cultures where gender equality is practiced. IOWs, I think if Jesus were here today, his movement would be radically egalitarian, and I think its a major failure not to go there as a church. But we live in times of cultural transition, and I work in a culture that rejects egalitarianism. That's OK. I respect it. It's not a fightin' issue. As I said, I think one's community of faith does a lot to bring the Word off the page and into real life.

This is very postmoderny (even in terminology).

Now, the next step in this dance is someone stating that he's just writing in a virtual tavern and who cares what he writes or if he is or isn't a Calvinist or if he is flirting or having an actual affair with postmodernism?

My response to that is this: Phil Johnson is 'seen' as a standard-bearer for Calvinist, Reformed Theology whether he likes it or not simply because non-sacramentalist Calvinists are 'seen' to be more on-the-mark than any other Calvinists. This is just 'seen' by those with either good will towards Calvinism and by those with bad will towards Calvinism. People 'know' that Calvinists who hold to Calvin's sacramental distinctives are not as bold and on-the-mark as Calvinist who recognize that regeneration is effected by the Word and the Spirit and that that is central to the Gospel message and to the Faith in doctrine and practice.

In a similar way the iMonk draws an audience (of scrutiny, in his case) because he represents a 'type' in the current environment (kind of like a cartoon character with exagerrated features) and thus is interesting to observe. Simple as that.

Bill said...

I am not disillusioned with the soverignty of God or the concept of His soverign grace. If you insist on measuring me on the artifical scale of the "5 Points", mark me down as "4.95". a position I take to deliberitly irritate 5.0's as well as 1.0's.

I am disillusioned with a "Calvinism" and "Reformed theology" that makes Puritan writings and the Reformed confessions equal in authority with Scripture Itself, and that contrary to the express statement of those confessions. (...and I know that not all who call themselves Reformed are guilty of that..)

Real truth sanctifies which means that we should expect to see in someone who claims to have "truth" the fruit of the Spirit as outlined in Galations.. If I don't see the fruit of the Spirit in your life, why should I be so quick to embrace your understanding of "truth"?

I'm disillusioned with a "Calvinism" that does not have with it the fruit of the Spirit as outlined in Galations. I Cor. 13 makes clear that kind of "Calvinism," is a "sophia" bereft of agape and as such, is of no profit...

And don't brush me off by saying I was "never really there" as a Calvinist.... Who gave any of you papel authority to pontificate on who "was there" and who "was not"? The only basis for that kind of assumption of authority on your part is sheer arrogance. Bah! Humbug!

God is greater then all of the puny little boxes, Calvinist or otherwise, that we try to put Him in.

c.t. said...

billygoat and rob,

This:

Real truth sanctifies which means that we should expect to see in someone who claims to have "truth" the fruit of the Spirit as outlined in Galations.. If I don't see the fruit of the Spirit in your life, why should I be so quick to embrace your understanding of "truth"?

is juvenile. Judging doctrine by the actions of humans is about as empty as it gets. Why not judge Calvinism by the history of the Geneva-educated preachers and Puritans and all that was accomplished by Calvinism in history in the dynamic republics that Calvinism engendered and the freedom and discovery and invention and creativity and spreading of the Word of God and being the light of the world that Calvinism so obviously manifested (and still manifests in myriad ways that are not currently seen because they are like the very ground you stand on and air you breathe these days, i.e. such as the role America plays in the world for being an insurer of freedom and for fighting tyranny as she has the last 80 years continuing today)? I mean, if your standard is to judge doctrine by how its adherents behave and what they accomplish, etc.? I.e., if you are going to go that route why pass over such exceptional history and behaviour in the history of humanity on this planet?

You rather sound like atheists (not that I'm saying you're atheists, but follow my point) I often run into who are always *looking* for reasons to not like something or not believe something. When you are doing that then making human behaviour your standard will always give you an endless supply of justification for being critical of something. There is a foundational bad will in the statement quoted above towards what you are purporting to assess in some objective way.

c.t. said...

I neglected to put an 'anyway' in the above post. Basically my point is if you ARE, afterall, going to judge Calvinism by the actions of humans why not judge by all the positives Calvinism has done in the world and in individuals and populations?

But the main point is, the standard for Biblical doctrine should be is it true?

c.t. said...

bobryan, you're just going to have to see it how you see it and continue to scratch your head when you hear or read how Calvinists see it.

(You really, really, though, need to just entertain the possibility that you don't yet have a grasp on that which you are criticizing so lustily...)

Also, you have to at some point come to terms with original sin.

Also, the suffering you describe parents feeling for having a child that is lost is often experienced by parents in this life. It happens. And it often happens no matter what the parents do. (I refer to rebellious children who often show pure hatred towards their parents, irrationally, and are lost to a bad end no matter how much love and effort the parents put in to try to save the child. There is an analogy here.) There is no reason to think that such experience will be a part of the experience of the new heavens and the new earth. Afterall, Saddam Hussein has/had a mother...

And, again, go see how now you are a poisonous snake to God (without being washed in the blood of Christ)...

c.t. said...

OK, Rob. You've obviously discovered the liberal's pleasure in defending clean water and not-killing-people.

You also don't value Calvinist doctrine and obviously don't consider it to be Biblical doctrine itself. Welcome to the majority.

I don't have your freedom of choice. I have to hold to the truth of the Gospel of Christ having been convicted by it and been made able to see it...

Momo said...

Dearest BobRyan,
Would it make you feel better if we got into a cyber slugfest? You seem so full of anger? Who made you angry? And shouldn't love for truth cause you to at least not caricature my position in a mean way?

Grace,
JTS

Momo said...

The thing is, Xenophone, bobryan's anger is not about sovereign grace, it is about someone's children going to hell. His problem is with hell, not election.

Bobryan himself believes that some people's children are going to hell (Maybe his own?)
He also believes that they are going there because they are sinners and deserve it and because they never turned to Christ for mercy - just like we do.
He, too, believes that for whatever reason, God did nothing to violate their free will decision, though he could have, and if he would have then perhaps those children would have been saved.

BobRyan believes the same thing we do about it, he just somehow thinks that election robs those individuals in hell of their responsibility or that hell is unjust.

c.t. said...

bobryan, your ignorance of Calvinism has become officially annoying (to me, for what that's worth). Calvinsim is not fatalism. This is your main cluelessness. Read Calvin, maybe, on election. Read Boettner. Read any of (now) several hundred very good sources to learn what Calvinism is and isn't. MAKE SOME EFFORT. You're beating on a strawman tied to a canard.

At least admit to yourself that of all the Calvinists that have existed in history they weren't Calvinists because they didn't have the understanding of one Bob Ryan. Scale, sir. Get a grasp of it.

And because you've taken my statement that nobody is in hell who doesn't want to be there as 'softening' my Calvinism, let me give you another good Calvinist saying: If God deems me unworthy of His Kingdom I ACCEPT THAT.

Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him. - Job

c.t. said...

Mr. Spurgeon is right. You just hate the fact of hell and - though you don't seem to recognize it - the fact of original sin.

You also don't recognize that every human being has all the knowledge of God and their situation that they need to convict them written in their heart. Your innocent daughter you so rapturize about is in fact a wicked, unrepentant witch.

You are basically projecting your hatred of God onto Calvinists, because Calvinists actually accept and believe and praise what God Has revealed in His Word.

c.t. said...

Bob Ryan is an example of why I suspect there are different orders of Christians in Heaven. The way he rails against Calvinists is similar to the say liberals rail against conservatives, with the same cluelessness involved such as in not being able to grasp the various anti-intuitive ways free markets work, or that people are inherently bad and thus that we need police forces and militaries.

The Kingdom of God is a kingdom, afterall, and kingdoms have hierarchy. God's Kingdom will have a natural hierarchy with no fakes or imposters existing at levels they don't belong (i.e. it won't be like what happens in the fallen world here).

So when the Bible says avoid vain arguments with people who deny truth over and over it is saying, recognize hierarchy and chain-of-command and don't waste your effort with a person who is railing at things that exist at a level he is not at.

Bob Ryan is a private continually railing at officers every chance he gets. (And remember, in God's Kingdom in Heaven privates are deservedly privates and officers are deservedly officers; it is what you have in you that puts you there, and makes you move up if you deserve to move up.)

Arminians, God bless them, are privates; and Calvinists are officers. (Again, in the Kingdom of Heaven where privates and officers are what they are because of what is in them, not like in this fallen world where people can reside at levels that don't necessarily correspond with what they have in them and deserve.)

Kurt N. said...

Oh, xenophon doesn't joke. :)

Ask her about her "evangelism by taunting and belittling" methodology.

Y'all think I'm joking, but I'm not.

c.t. said...

Well, it's not like I didn't say that in the context of a longish comment. Go back and actually read the comment, then read the thread it is a part of. If you tend to be on bobryan's side your mocking of what I wrote is understandable.

Try to see what you've done is you've read something that is new to you (yet is Biblical), and you kneejerk mocked it.

Paul himself talks of degree of being and degree of reward in heaven, or the Kingdom of Heaven.

To apply scale to some of the more thorny Biblical issues can let in light.

Perhaps you'd rather I'd said that Arminians are in hell?

Your response and the joining in of the BHT person is disappointing.

Anyway, get use to hierarchy in God's Kingdom. A kingdom is not a democracy. With this mocking tone of yours I suppose you might be in for a rude suprise.

c.t. said...

And for the record because Calvinists actually recognize the sovereignty of God and give God all the glory I don't see it as strange that God would recognize that in terms of reward and just in terms of being.

Notice also twice - twice for emphasis - I dinstinguished hierarchy in God's Kingdom from hierarchy in this fallen world, yet neither of those intentional parts of my comment connected with the above mocking readers.

So be it.

c.t. said...

It's a simile (or metaphor if I left out a 'like' or similar word). Or analogy, if you prefer.

The subject was 'chain-of-command' hence the military terminology.

Jesus uses chain-of-command to describe faith (with the incident with the centurion). It's a deep and foundational subject in God's revelation...

c.t. said...

By Protestant lights there are no infallible interpretations of Scripture.

Calvinists believe that the Bible is straightforward and self-interpreting on all matters of importance.

Calvinism as a theological system is a fallible construction that attempts make sense of the biblical data.

Calvinism is systematic theology derived from Biblical theology (as opposed, to, say, systematic theology that is based on the philosophical categories of, for instance, Aristotle. The Reformation was a return to the Bible and deriving doctrine from the Bible alone.

As such I don't see how one can say that "Calvinism is the Gospel" without any kind of attenuation such as "as best as we understand it."

Any theology (especially new, or seemingly new doctrines or takes on doctrine) needs to be checked by and held to the Standard and Authority of the Word of God itself. This requires effort, though, just as it requires effort to learn Calvinist doctrine (i.e. Biblical doctrine) to begin with. Calvinists don't expect anyone to believe anything without seeing it themselves in the Word of God. Look at what has been produced over the centuries by Reformed, Calvinist theologians and writers. Calvinists aim to educate not dictate.

Since Calvinism is a fallible theological construction there is no good reason to think that it could not be revised and altered in the future because we found out that we were in error in our understanding of the biblical data.

These challenges are made all the time, and it provides opportunity to go back into the Bible and actually see what the Biblical foundations that our doctrine are set on. The fact is, though, theologians tend to be a sharp group, as human groups go, the mischievous ones attempt to push bad doctrine in ways that will get by everybody, and the regenerate theologians are not only sharp but have the Holy Spirit and the discernment that comes with that to see what is happening, but to be savvy enough to question themselves and their doctrine as well. But, as they say, there are no new heresies, and just as that is true apostolic Biblical doctrine is what it is, and once it was recovered by the reformers from the darkness the RCC had buried it under, and once it was put into systematic and confessional form by the great theologians of that day, and as that doctrine has been vetted by Time and has held up over time to much sharp criticism and attacks you have to realize that God didn't make his Revelation a hall of mirrors and it can rather plainly be seen and grasped, and the 'pure theology', as Refomred theology has been called, is that Revelation.

Go ahead and look into N. T. Wright and others who are similar in currently attempting to reformulate or 'correct' Reformed doctrine, it will be an education for you. It is not hard to see, though, just where they veer off the path of the straight and narrow, and it has already been written out and exposed. But, make the effort to see for yourself...

Andrew C. Bain said...

Hi Phil,

You accuse Marc Carpenter of fanaticism, as well as being "harsh", and "ridiculous".

Perhaps you find the following logic harsh:

(1) Arminianism is a false gospel.

(2) All who believe a false gospel are unregenerate.

(3) Therefore all Arminians are unregenerate.

Can't handle that truth Phil? Well, Arminians assert that their "christ" died for everyone, including those who end up in hell. They believe that Christ is not the difference between salvation and damnation -- since they think many for whom he died end up in hell -- but man determines his eternity. They hate John 6, 10 and 17 (and the rest of the Bible) which unequivocally teach that Christ laid done His life only for the elect. So, Arminians are deceieved, but what about the truth? Well, for anyone interested, I'd like to briefly outline what the gospel is. This will not be internet "Calvinism"; this is the gospel which all Christians assent to.

The gospel may be best answered with a couple of questions. Firstly, what do we mean when we say Christ "died for" someone? If by "died for," we mean that Christ suffered the penalty due for their sins (including the sin imputed to them from Adam), then would we not conclude that this person is forgiven, and the Father was satisfied with Christ's vicarious suffering for that person? After all, if Christ was made a curse and made sin on the cross for someone, that work must be 100% sufficient to save that person from hell. Otherwise, you are forced to say that a sinner must add to the work of Christ to be saved, if Christ's death alone does not save. But the Bible says "it is finished", the work is complete. God says that the death of Christ justifies and saves from wrath (Romans 3:24; see also 5:9) reconciles to God (Romans 5:10; see also 2 Corinthians 5:18-19; Colossians 1:21) and justifies from all things (Acts 13:39). That's the atonement-side of the gospel in brief. For the righteousness-side, read Romans 3,5,10 and Galatians. Christ is the "end of the Law for righteousness", and by the "obedience of One many will be made righteous". This righteousness (Christ's obedience to the Law) is imputed (charged to the account) of an elect sinner when the Holy Spirit causes them to assent to these propositions of the gospel. At this point in time, God declares this person righteous (justified) by Christ's righteousness (now in their account). Indeed, they are justified from all things, and fully persuaded (no doubt whatsoever, because God has told them in the Bible) that they are elect. All those ordained to eternal life believed; so if you believe, you are elect. And this is not internet "Calvinism", this is the gospel. Repent and believe it Phil!

My second point, or rather, rhetorical question, is -- are those who end up in hell "justified", "saved", and "reconciled"? No. So Arminians who believe that some blood-bought people are in hell, do not understand the atonement (the heart of the gospel). Arminians do not believe in the Just God and Savior of the Bible. They are rank Atheists.

"The one believing in the Son of God has the witness in himself.
The one not believing God has
made Him a LIAR,
because he has not believed in the witness which God has
witnessed concerning His Son." (1 John 5:10 LITV)

Andrew C. Bain
Sydney, Australia
http://www.Godnoliar.com

c.t. said...

The Bible wants you to know all you can bring to God are your sins and that when you are saved it is not something you have 'done' nor is it something you can do.

From God's point-of-view, which is not constrained by time as we perceive time, what is going on we can't know about. We do know God's attributes as they are self-revealed in His Revelation, and so we know God is long-suffering and good and just.

But when we affect to be more wise and more good and more just than God it is a possible sign of an unregenerate heart (I say possible because a person may just be yet in a juvenile state regarding their understanding).

It is off-the-mark to bring the doctrine of predestination down to the level of the carnal mind and the carnal heart. What is required of you is to realize your state of being dead in sin and helpless to do anything to effect your own regeneration.

You can read the Word of God, you can pray, to can show interest in God, you can love God, but ultimately though you can do all these things you can't regenerate yourself. You just have to realize that. Until you do you will be in the power of your vanity, worldly pride, and self-will (and hence do things such as affect to be wiser and more good and more just than God Himself).

Read the Word of God, read it complete, read it dedicatedly, read it humbly, and wait on the Lord. Faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word of God (Romans). And, draw nigh to God and God will draw nigh to you (James).

dogpreacher said...

1 John 2:19 may come into play here. I say this because, I can not imagine it possible to deny these doctrines, and instead, promote doctrines that take glory from God, and heap them on man, if you had ever once truly understood these matters.
dogpreacher

BluesMan said...

Though I must admit to being a non-seminarian and have not sat under seminary teaching like some of my brothers here, I am just a simple old teacher but I must admit that I am also very reformed in my teaching and my beliefs. With that said, I would like to agree with Phil regarding evangelism.

My friends, and even some of my family question my beliefs in reformed theology, and one of their first comments that comes forth is that I do not believe in evangelism. To which I usually respond, "Excuse me?" I affirm evangelism, and not only do I affirm it, I teach it.

Yes, God does the drawing, and yes God does the saving, but that DOES NOT excuses us from telling!

Jesus said; "Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age."

The great commission is true today as it was then. Paul stated, "For since in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom did not come to know God, God was well-pleased through the foolishness of the message preached to save those who believe. - 1 Cor 1:21

Do I believe that that reformed movement has somewhat become tame regarding evangelism? Yes.

I for one believe strongly that we have a mandate to preach the gospel of Christ to all men and leave the results to God. That is what is so beautiful to me, I am just obedient and he produces. It is not spit and polished sermons I give or my well thought out teaching that impresses people, it is the simple words that are used by God the Holy Spirit to convict the hearts of men of their sin and their need of a Redeemer. When God saves … well Paul said it better than I, “ For I am confident of this very thing, that He who began a good work in you will perfect it until the day of Christ Jesus. Philippians 1:6

Soli Deo Gloria - Glory to God alone

God Bless:
BluesMan

Iconoclast said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Jeremy Felden said...

Mssr. Carpenter,

We have the ability to post the link without posting the entire article, no? Don't you have your own website?

Where does "Outside the Camp" come from? Leviticus 24:14? Or Deuteronomy 23:12? Sounds a little strange and theonomous either way.

Rick said...

What a relief to hear that other's were thinking what i have really struggled with. I love the doctrines of grace, i just find that those who hold them are hard to be around.

Z-Boy said...

Great article. I have been a Christian for 20 years, and just now beginning to even attempt to understand Calvinism in a positive way. It is very enlightening, but often hard to find positive influences or encouraging influences.

I am a youth pastor at a nondenominational (but really a Church of Christ) church, that is as far from calvinism as you could get. There is really no one that I know who thinks along these lines, so I carefully step into the waters of the internet for advice, and often it is brash and uncaring.

This article was encouraging that I won't become like many of the folks who post on the internet.

This article is a couple years old, so who knows if it will ever be comented on again.

Test All Things said...

www.testallthings.wordpress.com

Noble Institute said...

Excellent post. I believe Joshua Harris' term Humble Orthodoxy" goes to the point well. As John Piper has said often, if we cannot weep for the lost as we speak of these doctrines we have missed (or lost) the Spirit of these doctrines of grace. Thanks for your much needed rebukes and cautions. As for reformed evangelists, I am trying to do something about that with my sons, Alex & Brett Harris and their work on The Rebelution website for teens.

Unknown said...

I know this was posted two years ago, but this is wonderful, Phil.

Bryan Lindley said...

Two and a half years later and still praiseworthy! It would benefit many seminarians (and their respective churches) to make this blog post required reading during the first and last semesters - and each one in between.

Bill Hamilton said...

I thankfully became a Calvinist back in 1983 under R.C. Sproul's teaching, so I join Phil in encouraging the Internet Calvinist's to go more to the source!

I'm also highly evangelistic, delving into - heaven forbid - street preaching! There's just something about holding the truth up publicly while trusting that a sovereign God will apply it where He sees fit! To join the ranks of a George Whitefield - that's where we can KNOW we have bought the whole Calvinism package - is a privilege, not to mention a rush! Check out what two of our Reformed brothers are doing in this regard at: http://reformedevangelist.com/

And don't forget that God has predestined some to salvation, while predestining the means of getting the message to them: you and me!

If you are truly Calvinist, you WILL feel compelled to reach the lost - not primarily because they're lost, but because God is worthy of being proclaimed in all His glory. Think about it!

Anonymous said...

WHAT Y'ALL THINK OF THIS:

http://repentcanada.blogspot.com/2008/02/calvinism-v-arminianism.html

M. A. Armstrong said...

Phil, this has been a great read. I agree that there are many "Calvinists" online who are definitely very harsh and seem to only want to talk about Calvinism. There isn't a real concern for lost souls with many. I'm pretty sure everyone's heard of Mr. Andrew C Bain of Australia. He attacks mostly all of today's Calvinistic teachers.

I would like to add Paul Washer's name to the mix as preachers whose life has been dedicated to evangelism. Though he doesn't hold to the label of being a Calvinist, he is certainly Calvinistic in his soteriology and his preaching.

I believe God is in the process of cultivating young, Calvinistic minds to preach His gospel to the world with all sincerity and vigor. While there is much Hyper-Calvinism floating around, I am beginning to see what looks in small part like a reformation. Lord knows we need it.

Thanks again for this insightful blog.

Jnorm said...

Interesting post. It's good to see an honest calvinist.





JNORM888

Penn Tomassetti said...

There are so many good comments on this post. I don't have time to read each one, so in my own response to this post (late as it may be), I want to say:

There are sincere, humble, and loving calvinists evangelizing earnestly, meeting all types of people daily and sharing the best news in the world with poor sinners who don't think they need it. These evangelistic calvinists just prefer to stay away from all the bad stuff you mentioned in this post, so they get no publicity. They have certainly acted in some of the ways you exposed, yet they are broken over their sins, and continually look to Christ for the cleansing of His blood. They live upon the Living One, and call out to Him constantly for the sake of those who are not saved. Usually these types of "calvinists" are simply broken people who have been given eyes to see the glory of Christ, and that salvation is all of the free grace of God, and not at all by the merit of the church they are affiliated with.

I like your blog, keep up the good teaching, exhorting and correcting by grace :)

Penn Tomassetti said...

Oh, and I'll add (if anyone reads this):

How many of those who agree with your post will be weeping for souls today or tomorrow? I'm sure you have plenty of Spurgeon quotes that would call men's hearts, and not just their heads to seek help for the lost, but I am already convicted by what both you and myself are saying.

Grace to you.