THE "FIVE POINTS" OF ARMINIANISM
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THE "FIVE POINTS" OF CALVINISM
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Free Will or Human
Ability
Although human nature was seriously
affected by the fall, man has not
been left in a state of total
spiritual helplessness. God
graciously enables every sinner to
repent and believe, but He does not
interfere with man's freedom. Each
sinner possesses a free will, and
his eternal destiny depends on how
he uses it. Man's freedom consists
of his ability to choose good over
evil in spiritual matters; his will
is not enslaved to his sinful
nature. The sinner has the power to
either cooperate with God's Spirit
and be regenerated or resist God's
grace and perish. The lost sinner
needs the Spirit's assistance, but
he does not have to be regenerated
by the Spirit before he can
believe, for faith is man's act and
precedes the new birth. Faith is
the sinner's gift to God; it is
man's contribution to salvation.
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Total Inability or Total
Depravity
Because of the fall, man is unable
of himself to savingly believe the
gospel. The sinner is dead, blind,
and deaf to the things of God; his
heart is deceitful and desperately
corrupt. His will is not free, it
is in bondage to his evil nature,
therefore, he will not —
indeed he cannot — choose
good over evil in the spiritual
realm. Consequently, it takes much
more than the Spirit's assistance
to bring a sinner to Christ —
it takes regeneration by which the
Spirit makes the sinner alive and
gives him a new nature. Faith is
not something man contributes to
salvation but is itself a part of
God's gift of salvation— it
is God's gift to the sinner, not
the sinner's gift to God.
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Conditional Election
God's choice of certain individuals
unto salvation before the
foundation of the world was based
upon His foreseeing that they would
respond to His call. He selected
only those whom He knew would of
themselves freely believe the
gospel. Election therefore was
determined by or conditioned upon
what man would do. The faith which
God foresaw and upon which He based
His choice was not given to the
sinner by God (it was not created
by the regenerating power of the
Holy Spirit) but resulted solely
from man's will. It was left
entirely up to man as to who would
believe and therefore as to who
would be elected unto salvation.
God chose those whom He knew would,
of their own free will, choose
Christ. Thus the sinner's choice of
Christ, not God's choice of the
sinner, is the ultimate cause of
salvation.
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Unconditional Election
God's choice of certain individuals
unto salvation before fore the
foundation of the world rested
solely in His own sovereign will.
His choice of particular sinners
was not based on any foreseen
response or obedience on their
part, such as faith, repentance,
etc. On the contrary, God gives
faith and repentance to each
individual whom He selected. These
acts are the result, not the cause
God's choice. Election therefore
was not determined by or
conditioned upon any virtuous
quality or act foreseen in man.
Those whom God sovereignly elected
He brings through the power of the
Spirit to a willing acceptance of
Christ. Thus God's choice of the
sinner, not the sinner's choice of
Christ, is the ultimate cause of
salvation.
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Universal Redemption or General
Atonement
Christ's redeeming work made it
possible for everyone to be saved
but did not actually secure the
salvation of anyone. Although
Christ died for all men and for
every man, only those who believe
on Him are saved. His death enabled
God to pardon sinners on the
condition that they believe, but it
did not actually put away anyone's
sins. Christ's redemption becomes
effective only if man chooses to
accept it.
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Particular Redemption or Limited
Atonement
Christ's redeeming work was
intended to save the elect only and
actually secured salvation for
them. His death was a
substitutionary endurance of the
penalty of sin in the place of
certain specified sinners. In
addition to putting away the sins
of His people, Christ's redemption
secured everything necessary for
their salvation, including faith
which unites them to Him. The gift
of faith is infallibly applied by
the Spirit to all for whom Christ
died, therefore guaranteeing their
salvation.
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The Holy Spirit Can Be
Effectually Resisted
The Spirit calls inwardly all those
who are called outwardly by the
gospel invitation; He does all that
He can to bring every sinner to
salvation. But inasmuch as man is
free, he can successfully resist
the Spirit's call. The Spirit
cannot regenerate the sinner until
he believes; faith (which is man's
contribution) precedes and makes
possible the new birth. Thus, man's
free will limits the Spirit in the
application of Christ's saving
work. The Holy Spirit can only draw
to Christ those who allow Him to
have His way with them. Until the
sinner responds, the Spirit cannot
give life. God's grace, therefore,
is not invincible; it can be, and
often is, resisted and thwarted by
man.
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The Efficacious Call of the
Spirit or Irresistible
Grace
In addition to the outward general
call to salvation which is made to
everyone who hears the gospel, the
Holy Spirit extends to the elect a
special inward call that inevitably
brings them to salvation. The
eternal call (which is made to all
without distinction) can be, and
often is, rejected; whereas the
internal call (which is made only
to the elect) cannot be rejected;
it always results in conversion. By
mean, of this special call the
Spirit irresistibly draws sinners
to Christ. He is not limited in His
work of applying salvation by
man's will, nor is He dependent
upon man's cooperation for success.
The Spirit graciously causes the
elect sinner to cooperate, to
believe, to repent. to come freely
and willingly to Christ. God',
grace. therefore, is invincible; it
never fails to result in the
salvation of those to whom it is
extended.
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Falling From Grace
Those who believe and are truly
saved can lose their salvation by
failing to keep up their faith.
etc.
All Arminian, have not been
agreed on this point; some have
held that believers are eternally
secure in Christ that once a
sinner is regenerated. he can
never be lost.
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Perseverance of the
Saints
All who are chosen by God, redeemed
by Christ, and given faith by the
Spirit are eternally saved. They
are kept in faith by the power of
Almighty God and thus persevere to
the end.
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According to Arminianism:
Salvation is accomplished through the
combined efforts of God (who
takes the initiative) and man
(who must respond)—man's
response being the determining
factor. God has provided salvation
for everyone, but His provision
becomes effective only for those who,
of their own free will, "choose" to
cooperate with Him and accept His
offer of grace. At the crucial point,
man's will plays a decisive role;
thus man, not God, determines who
will be the recipients of the gift of
salvation.
REJECTED
by the Synod of Dort
This was the system of thought
contained in the "Remonstrance"
(though the "five points" were not
originally arranged in this order).
It was submitted by the Arminians to
the Church of Holland in 1610 for
adoption but was rejected by the
Synod of Dort in 1619 on the ground
that it was unscriptural.
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According to Calvinism:
Salvation is accomplished by the
almighty power of the Triune God. The
Father chose a people, the Son died
for them, the Holy Spirit makes
Christ's death effective by bringing
the elect to faith and repentance,
thereby causing them to willingly
obey the gospel. The entire process
(election, redemption, regeneration)
is the work of God and is by grace
alone. Thus God, not man,
determines who will be the recipients
of the gift of salvation.
REAFFIRMED
by the Synod of Dort
This system of theology was
reaffirmed by the Synod of Dort in
1619 as the doctrine of salvation
contained in the Holy Scriptures. The
system was at that time formulated
into "five points" (in answer to the
five points submitted by the
Arminians) and has ever since been
known as "the five points of
Calvinism."
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