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Arminianism
Jacobus Arminius

Background
Protestantism
Reformation
Calvinist-Arminian Debate

People
Jacobus Arminius
Hugo Grotius
The Remonstrants
John Wesley

Doctrine
Total depravity
Prevenient grace
Substitutionary atonement
Unlimited atonement
Conditional election

Conditional preservation
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The term Conditional Preservation of the Saints is used to describe the belief that a Christian's salvation can be lost. Arminianism is a school of soteriological thought within Protestant Christianity based on the theological ideas of the Dutch Jacobus Arminius, the Latinized name of the Dutch Reformed theologian Jakob Harmenszoon (also known by the Anglicized Protestantism refers to the forms of Christian faith and practice that originated in the 16th century Protestant Reformation. The Protestant Reformation was a reform movement in Europe that began in 1517 though its roots lie further back in time Arminiusjpg|thumb|200px| Jacobus Arminius (1560-1609 who gave his name to Arminianism. Jacobus Arminius, the Latinized name of the Dutch Reformed theologian Jakob Harmenszoon (also known by the Anglicized Hugo Grotius or Huig de Groot, or Hugo de Groot; ( Delft, 10 April 1583 Rostock, 28 August 1645 Remonstrants, the name given to those Dutch Protestants who after the death of Arminius, maintained the views associated with his name and in 1610 presented to the John Wesley (ˈwɛslɪ ( – March 2, 1791) was an Anglican cleric and Christian theologian who was the founder of the (Evangelical Total depravity (also called total inability and total corruption) is a theological Doctrine that derives from the Augustinian concepts Prevenient grace is a Christian theological concept rooted in Augustinian theology and embraced primarily by Arminian Christians who are influenced by the Substitutionary atonement is a Doctrine in Christian theology which states that Jesus of Nazareth died &ndash intentionally and willingly &ndash Unlimited atonement (sometimes called general atonement or universal atonement) is the majority doctrine in Protestant Christianity that is normally In Christian theology, conditional election is the belief that God chooses for eternal salvation those who He foresees will have faith in Christ The term Conditional Preservation of the Saints is used to describe the belief that a Christian's salvation can be lost The central tenet holds that believers are preserved from all attempts to "snatch them from the Father's hand" but can willingly reject the Gospel after it has been accepted, thus being conditional on remaining faithful to Jesus.

Pastor and theologian David Pawson comments, "The Arminian position is accurately portrayed by someone throwing a lifeline to a drowning man and saying 'grab hold of this and keep holding on tightly until I pull you to safety. J David Pawson (born 1930 is a prominent contemporary Bible teacher and Christian Zionist based in Great Britain. ' I would maintain that no one rescued in this way would dream that he had saved himself or even made a 'contribution' which merited his rescue. He would be filled with gratitude towards his rescuer. "[1]

Contents

Historical background

Main article: History of Calvinist-Arminian Debate

Although the debate between Christian theologians has been raging since the days of Augustine and Pelagius before him, the battle lines were first clearly drawn with the issuance of the Five articles of Remonstrance and the rebutting Five points of Calvinism. Arminiusjpg|thumb|200px| Jacobus Arminius (1560-1609 who gave his name to Arminianism. Pelagius (ca 354 &ndash ca 420/440 was an ascetic monk who denied the doctrine of Original sin, later developed by Augustine of Hippo, and The Five Articles of Remonstrance were given by followers of Jacobus Arminius who ironically did not want to adopt Arminius' name instead choosing to call themselves the " Calvinism (sometimes called the Reformed tradition, the Reformed faith, or Reformed theology) is a theological system and an approach to the Article V of Remonstrance is summarized below:

"Those who are incorporated into Christ through faith have received power and victory over Satan and this world through the continual ministry of grace; and as such, all who cooperate with God's continual grace will not fall to any attempts of Satan to snatch them from His hand. Regarding the possibility of apostasy, we [the Remonstrants writers] cannot authoritatively teach this without further study of the Scripture. "[2]

The Remonstrants never completely affirmed the ability to lose one's salvation. Remonstrants, the name given to those Dutch Protestants who after the death of Arminius, maintained the views associated with his name and in 1610 presented to the Even Jacobus Arminius rarely brought up the doctrine (choosing instead to focus on conditional election, prevenient grace, and unlimited atonement) although he did briefly refer to the doctrine in his teachings, saying that the Bible allowed for the possibility of "some individuals through negligence to desert the commencement of their existence in Christ, to cleave again to the present world, to decline from the sound doctrine which was once delivered to them, to lose a good conscience, and to cause Divine grace to be ineffectual. Jacobus Arminius, the Latinized name of the Dutch Reformed theologian Jakob Harmenszoon (also known by the Anglicized In Christian theology, conditional election is the belief that God chooses for eternal salvation those who He foresees will have faith in Christ Prevenient grace is a Christian theological concept rooted in Augustinian theology and embraced primarily by Arminian Christians who are influenced by the Unlimited atonement (sometimes called general atonement or universal atonement) is the majority doctrine in Protestant Christianity that is normally "[3] In response to the Five Articles, the five points of Calvinism ("P" in the acronym TULIP) proclaimed the doctrine of Perseverance of the Saints. Perseverance of the saints is a controversial Christian teaching that none who are truly saved can be condemned for their Sins or finally fall away from the faith

John Wesley is quite possibly the most outspoken theological defender of a condition preservation in Protestant history. John Wesley (ˈwɛslɪ ( – March 2, 1791) was an Anglican cleric and Christian theologian who was the founder of the (Evangelical He criticized what he saw as the "insidious danger of false security and moral complacency,"[4] arguing with friend and comrade George Whitfield and publishing the periodical The Arminian, thus forever connecting the name of Arminius with the systems now known by his name. Early life He was born at the Bell Inn Southgate Street Gloucester, England. Wesley taught that it was possible for true believers refusing to walk in holiness to lose their salvation. [5]

Doctrine

The following doctrinal statements are made following the beliefs outlined by Stephen M. Ashby (advocating Reformed (Classical) Arminianism)[6] and Steven Harper (advocating Wesleyan Arminianism)[7] respectively in Four Views on Eternal Security (see Resources below)

Classical Arminian doctrine

Classical Arminian theology holds to a perspective that would include the key attributes below:

Wesleyan Arminian Doctrine

Wesleyan Arminian theology differs slightly in its understanding, disagreeing with the last two points above. The term Conditional Preservation of the Saints is used to describe the belief that a Christian's salvation can be lost Instead, Wesleyan Arminianism holds that:

It should be noted that the overwhelming majority of Arminians deny any accusations of "works-based salvation. " [8] See Criticisms and Responses for more information. The term Conditional Preservation of the Saints is used to describe the belief that a Christian's salvation can be lost

Biblical support

Below are some scriptures that are used to defend and challenge the doctrine of Conditional Perseverance. All Scriptures are NKJV unless otherwise cited.

Scriptures used to support

There are also a group of Scriptures that use the present participle of the word "believe", which some interpreters take to mean a continual, progressive nature. Thus, these verbs could be translated "is believing" or "is continuing to believe". [9] Below are some of these verses, commonly cited by proponents of Conditional Preservation. The present participle interpretation is noted in brackets.

Note that John 5:24 and John 10:27-28 above are also on the below list of Scriptures that must be reconciled with conditional preservation. Robert E. Picirilli explains the Arminian interpretation by comparing John 5:24 (". . . he who hears My word and believes. . . shall not come into judgement") and John 3:36 (". . . he who does not believe the Son shall not see life. . . ") as follows:

Grammatically, if the first means that the condition of the believer cannot be changed, then the second means that the condition of the unbeliever likewise cannot be changed. In fact, neither passage is even speaking to that issue. . . . Each promise applies with equal force to those who persist in the respective state described. [10]

Scriptures that must be reconciled

Opponents of conditional preservation cite a number of verses to support their case, including:

Comparisons to opposing doctrines

In Calvinist theology, perseverance of the saints is the logical culmination of the entire system, logically following the theory that if (a) believers are individually and unconditionally elected, if (b) grace is irresistible, and if (c) atonement is limited, then (a+b+c=d) perseverance is necessary. Calvinism (sometimes called the Reformed tradition, the Reformed faith, or Reformed theology) is a theological system and an approach to the Perseverance of the saints is a controversial Christian teaching that none who are truly saved can be condemned for their Sins or finally fall away from the faith Even Reformed Arminian Stephen Ashby graciously acknowledges that 5-point Calvinism is logically tight. [11] Nevertheless, Ashby - and all other Arminian theologians - disagree with the Calvinist' presuppositions (the 'ULI' in TULIP) and claim justification in their own logical system that holds conditional election, general atonement, and resistible grace to be more Biblically sound. In Christian theology, conditional election is the belief that God chooses for eternal salvation those who He foresees will have faith in Christ Unlimited atonement (sometimes called general atonement or universal atonement) is the majority doctrine in Protestant Christianity that is normally Prevenient grace is a Christian theological concept rooted in Augustinian theology and embraced primarily by Arminian Christians who are influenced by the [12]

From a practical perspective, traditional Calvinism (see Perseverance of the Saints - The Traditional Doctrine for the definition as it is referred to here) and Arminianism are very similar in their belief that only those Christians who persevere to the very end are glorified (receive eternal life). Perseverance of the saints is a controversial Christian teaching that none who are truly saved can be condemned for their Sins or finally fall away from the faith [13] The difference occurs in the labelling of those who showed outward signs of faith but fell away; traditional Calvinism believes that these were never recipients of saving grace and that they never possessed genuine faith. Arminians hold that preservation is conditional, and though faith was indeed genuine at one point, that person disqualified himself through a rejection of Jesus.

Conditional preservation is much more strongly opposed to the non-traditional, more moderate understanding of Calvinism (see Perseverance of the Saints - The Non-Traditional Doctrine). Perseverance of the saints is a controversial Christian teaching that none who are truly saved can be condemned for their Sins or finally fall away from the faith From the non-traditional paradigm (of which Martin Luther was a strong supporter), salvation is not contingent upon subsequent holiness; indeed one could deny Christ repeatedly and be sure of their eternal life. Martin Luther (November 10 1483 February 18 1546 was a German Monk, theologian, university professor Father of Protestantism, and church reformer Conditional preservation clearly contradicts this belief, both theologically and practically. [14]

Criticisms and responses

Many criticisms have been offered of Conditional Preservation of the Saints. The criticisms and responses below come from David Pawson's book Once Saved, Always Saved?[15]. Note that both the criticisms and responses are vast simplifications and are given here for clarification and reference, not purposes of debate.

Notes

  1. ^  Pawson, David Once Saved, Always Saved? A Study in Perseverance and Inheritance (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1996), Pg. 106
  2. ^  Arminian Articles: The Remonstrant Articles (Synod of Dordt, 1618-1619) Philip Schaff Bibliography Pages 545ff.
  3. ^  Arminius, James The Works of James Arminius, 3 vols. (Albany, Ore. : AGES Software, 1997) 1:229
  4. ^  Pawson Once Saved, Always Saved? Pg. 99-101
  5. ^  Ibid. , Pg. 121-124
  6. ^  Ibid. , Pg. 10-13, 103
  7. ^  Ibid. , Pg. 9-10
  8. ^  Ibid. , Pg 104-124
  9. ^  Harper, Steven (contributor) "Wesleyan Arminianism", Four Views on Eternal Security (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2002) Pg. 207ff
  10. ^  Ashby, Stephen M. (contributor) "Reformed Arminianism", Four Views on Eternal Security (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2002) Pg. 135ff
  11. ^  Ibid. , Pg. 156
  12. ^  Ibid. , Pg. 164
  13. ^  Picirilli, Robert Grace, Faith, Free Will: Contrasting Views of Salvation: Calvinism and Arminianism (Nashville: Randall House Publications, 2002) ISBN 0-89265-648-4

Resources

Multiple views

Arminian view

Traditional Calvinist view

Non-traditional Calvinist view

External links

See Perseverance of the Saints for a large list of external links from a variety of perspectives

Perseverance of the saints is a controversial Christian teaching that none who are truly saved can be condemned for their Sins or finally fall away from the faith
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