Aug 25 2009

Review: Pillars of Theology: Calvin

Category: Book Review, TheologyPolycarp @ 10:24 am
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Product Description
Abingdon Pillars of Theology is a series for the college and seminary classroom designed to help students grasp the basic and necessary facts, influence, and significance of major theologians. Written by noted scholars, these books outline the context, methodology, organizing principles, primary contributions, and key writings of people who have shaped theology as we know it today. John Calvin (1509-1564) continues to be read and discussed because he illumines our human experience. Although inseparable from his context, Calvin’s theology speaks for itself, thus identifying ways Calvin remains a living voice for those who struggle with the  meaning of Christian faith.

  • Paperback: 85 pages
  • Publisher: Abingdon Press (August 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0687659132
  • ISBN-13: 978-0687659135
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 5.9 x 0.3 inches

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Jul 14 2009

Am I that Depraved that I am a Calvinist?

Category: Other PostsPolycarp @ 10:45 pm

c-testThis is the second day, the second quiz, that has slightly alluded to the fact that I may have Calvinistic tendencies.

Personally, I was rather hoping for something like what Doug Chaplin or Michael Whitenton, who fared much better than I. Of course, I am taking it like golf – the lower the number, the better.

I must pray, as I recieved the same score as Dr. West. Perhaps a public fast for my soul is required?

If you feel that you must, you can take the quiz here, but be warned, the results could be dangerous yomental well being.

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Jan 30 2009

Calminians – Is there a middle ground?

Category: DoctrinePolycarp @ 10:20 am

At the Society of Evangelical Arminians, the blogger asks us to name that theological position,

God created humankind to be in His image, and thus, humanity was created perfect. But, when Adam and Eve fell, them and all of their descendants became so entrenched in sin that it became impossible for them to accomplish any true good. Their hearts became devoted to evil. But God, in His mercy did not want humanity to fully suffer from its sin. So, He provided for each human an amount of grace to prevent them from reaping the full measure of their sin. God also wanted to redeem humanity. So, He sent His Son, Jesus Christ, so that whoever would have faith in Him would be redeemed by the cross. But, because of humanity’s depraved state, no one can generate such faith. Therefore, God provides sufficient grace, so that whoever comes to have faith in Christ alone does so by that grace of God.

I would say Arminians, of course, while others might say Calvinism. The blogger, Martin Glynn, goes on to show that in the grand scheme of things, Arminianism and Calvinism are separated by a very thin wall. Not sure I would agree with him on that.

I am essentially an Arminian, believing that every person has the free will to choose to follow God – yet I find that the grace of God must act as a preceeding agent, the call, to the person before they can respond. We cannot do good – holy and righteous – things on our own.

For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh) nothing good dwells; for to will is present with me, but how to perform what is good I do not find. (Romans 7:18 NKJV)

We cannot come to God unless He first calls, but I believe that everyone will have that chance – not just a select few. For me, when I see the words ‘election’ and predestined, I think of the Church.

For whom He foreknew, He also predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be the firstborn among many brethren. Moreover whom He predestined, these He also called; whom He called, these He also justified; and whom He justified, these He also glorified. (Romans 8:29-30 NKJV)

What do you think?

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Jan 07 2009

Augustine, Calvin and Barth on the Day of Judgment

Category: Other Posts, TheologyPolycarp @ 12:09 am

Augustine, Calvin and Barth find themselves waiting outside the throne room on the Day of Judgment. Augustine goes in first, and after half an hour comes out and says to the others: ‘It was wonderful! I had all the mysteries of sin, grace and salvation explained to me!’

Next, Calvin goes in, comes out an hour later and says to the others: ‘It was wonderful! I had all the mysteries of election, predestination and divine sovereignty explained to me!’

Finally, Barth goes in. After two hours, God comes out and says to the others: ‘I’ve still got no idea what he is talking about!’

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Nov 01 2008

John Chrysostom on the Issues in this Election

Category: Church Fathers, John Chrysostom, QuotesPolycarp @ 6:15 pm

Let us hearken, as many as are to receive Christ: for it is possible to receive Him even now. Let us hearken, and emulate, and receive Him with as great zeal; for indeed, when you receive a poor man who is hungry and naked, you have received and cherished Him. – St. John Chrysostom, Homily on Matthew 8

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Oct 24 2008

Public Discourse – When is it Acceptable for a ''Pro-Life'' Voter to Vote for a ''Pro-Choice'' Candidate?, by Gerard V. Bradley

Category: Abortion, Religious NewsPolycarp @ 5:15 pm

Gerard Bradley, Professor of Law at the University of Notre Dame Law School, has an essay online today entitled When Is It Acceptable for a ”Pro-Life” Voter to Vote for a ”Pro-Choice” Candidate?

Excerpts:

It won’t do to say that one is “pro-life” because one views abortion with profound misgivings, or because one regrets that so many abortions occur and that the law should work to make it more rare, or because abortion is, in some sense, wrong and evil. Abortion is all these things. But abortion is much more than all these things. In an abortion someone who has the same right not to be killed that everyone else has, is killed. So abortion isn’t just an unfortunate event, but it is morally wrong because it deprives a human person of his right to life-and thus we need to enact laws that protect the right to life for all people. This is the “pro-life” position I have in mind in asking under what circumstances is the “pro-life” voter morally justified in voting for a “pro-choice” candidate…

Argument 1: “Attack the Root Cause of Abortion”

This argument proposes to leave the unjust legal structure about abortion in place until some distant future time when, it is hoped, abortions will be so rare that prohibiting them will make sense. This argument proposes to now seek a reduction in the number of abortions performed annually, from the present 1.2 million to some lower number. The argument proposes to accomplish the reduction by attacking what are said to be abortion’s “root causes,” mainly, a widespread lack of proper health care and income supports. These proposals include better pre-natal maternal care, better pediatric care, and more income supplements for the poor. The moral question is whether this proposal is fair to the unborn? And that entails applying the Golden Rule.

To do that we must take a different example of the same basic proposal, an example which substitutes a different set of people called upon to pay the price of doing nothing to legally restrict a certain class of deadly assaults. Take the example of domestic violence. Suppose that approximately 1.2 million American women are killed each year by domestic violence. Suppose further that a Presidential candidate said the following: “Friends, I think we must stop wasting resources prosecuting domestic violence. Let us get the law out of the picture. Maybe someday we could arrest men who kill women at home. But that day is not today, for anyone can see that arrests and convictions have not slowed the rate of domestic violence very much at all. Besides, we are talking about private family matters where people make hard choices. Let us instead join together and attack the root causes of domestic violence, causes which have to do with ignorance and poverty. I propose therefore to give angry men jobs and money to attend anger management classes. And I think we should start teaching all of America’ children early on that every man and woman deserves to be treated well.”

Anyone who refuses to vote for this candidate but who would vote for a “pro-choice” candidate is, at least presumptively, guilty of failure to apply the Golden Rule.

Argument 2: “He’s Better on Other Issues”

Some people who describe themselves as “pro-life” support “pro-choice” candidates without placing any faith in the reduce-the incidence-of-abortion idea. These people instead maintain that the “pro-choice” politician’s positions on other issues, such as the environment, taxes, education, are so far superior to those of a “pro-life” alternative, that voting for the “pro-choice” politician–notwithstanding the harm his abortion policies would do–is the right thing. These people often say that the virtues of his other positions supply a “proportionate” reason for voting for a “pro-choice” candidate.

The question which these people must ask themselves is this: Would they vote for a “pro-choice” candidate on the strength of his preference for more government-provided health care than his rival proposes in his comparable plan, if doing so exposed their children to mortal danger? Suppose the candidate’s commitment to a policy of “choice” referred, not to so many tiny and invisible people, but instead to hundreds of thousands of immigrants, or to the same number of prisoners or mentally handicapped or physically infirm people. Would they still support that candidate, even if his policies on energy, taxes, and employment were superior to his rival’s?

A vote for a candidate who favors “pro-choice” policies on abortion by someone who does not answer the preceding questions “yes” does not, I think, satisfy the Golden Rule.

Argument 3: “Women’s Equality”

“For two decades of economic and social developments people have organized intimate relationships and made choices that define their views of themselves and their places in society, in reliance on the availability of abortion in the event that contraception should fail. The ability of women to participate equally in the economic and social life of the Nation has been facilitated by their control of their reproductive lives.”

This cluster of assertions by three members of the Supreme Court in the 1992 Planned Parenthood v. Casey decision tracks quite closely a very widespread conviction cited in support of “pro-choice” candidates. The central claim is that laws guaranteeing “choice” about abortion are instrumentally indispensable to women’s equality. Now, I do not think for a moment that the claim is true. But for this analysis I shall grant the claim, and then apply the Golden Rule to test the justice of the position articulated.

There is no need to imagine cognate claims, to which we must hypothetically apply the Golden Rule. History and current affairs supply countless examples of societies where some of its members have obtained equality for themselves by exploiting others of its members. Sometimes the numerator (those who gain) is larger than the denominator (those who suffer). Sometimes it is the other way around. In either event the basic moral question is the same. And there is little mystery about what just about everyone would say in response.

So, was it just for Spanish colonizers in the sixteenth century to obtain the satisfactions of life in Central America–where the price was paid in blood by immiserated Amerindians? Was it fair for English men and women three centuries later to enjoy the fruits of pastoral life–brought to them on the backs of dead Irishmen? A century-and-a-half ago the Supreme Court “facilitated”-indeed, helped to preserve-the equality of all white people. But does anyone today defend Dred Scott as a moral beacon?

If the answer to these questions is “no,” then one who takes the Golden Rule to be a principle of justice cannot vote for a “pro-choice” candidate on the strength of what the Casey Court proclaimed. And if the voter tempted to vote “pro-choice” refuses to apply the Golden Rule–as I have done here–than he is refusing to seek and to do justice.

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Oct 23 2008

The ElijahList – It's all up to Ohio! (Yes, they have no clue)

Category: Joel's Army, Religious NewsPolycarp @ 10:10 am

I wonder if they realize that Ohio is no longer the epicenter of the election? Virginia anyone?

via The ElijahList – Prophetic Words and Prophecies

Lori Willmann:
“Wake Up Call to Ohio! A Swing State in the Elections”

Dear Watchman and Reformers,

We want to send this out to you today as we are in the midst of the Days of Awe to sound the trumpet and the WAKE UP CALL to OHIO! This is an “ALL HANDS ON DECK” call to the WALL of INTERCESSION as perhaps never before to STAND and FIGHT FOR THE FUTURE OF THIS NATION!

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Sep 05 2008

I was a Community Organizer

Category: Debate/DiscussionPolycarp @ 5:37 pm

This is the issue with politics in the States…too many people could care less about the rest of us. I was a Community Organizer for 3 years with a labor organization for Coal Miners – United Mine Workers of America. I spent over 3 years traveling the rural areas of West Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana and Illinois. I have been in the cities and on the farms, up the hollers, and down the roads of this states talking with workers, wifes, children, coal miners, retirees, union members, anti-union workers, pro-union workers, pastors, ministers, atheists, and most of all, have a conversation with myself.

I have criticized both sides in the American election for president – both Barack Obama and John McCain. I was not writing when Joe Biden ignored the widow from the Sago Mine disaster during last years AFL-CIO’s Presidential Debate. Had I been, I would have taken him to task for his lack of respect for a woman who had lost her husband on the front lines of labor providing not only for his family but in a larger sense, this country. (Coal provides over 50% of the electrical power for this country). I still have some hard feelings for this man – when one person is not worth 5 minutes to answer a question, then you, as a politician aren’t worth my vote.

Therefore, furthermore, and so that brings us to Gov. Palin’s comments about Community Organizers. On my shoulders I have the weight of more than 20,000 people. Each day I went to work believing that the days actions would benefit each and every one of those union members and workers that were attempting to seek a better way to organize. No, it was not running a small town, but it was executive experience like none other. I met a wide range of people who I took with me, many still remaining with me to this day. A good community organizer has a heart filled with compassion and a determination to seek justice, to walk humbly before the Lord our God. A good community organizer will attend local community meetings, learn the area, learn the people. A good community organizer will exhaust him or herself in fighting for others, for good causes, when those people have been beaten to a bloody pulp.

The Good Community Organizer gave His life for those that He brought justice to.

From Jonathan Martin’s Politico blog:

“Mrs. Palin needs to be reminded that Jesus Christ was a community organizer and Pontius Pilate was a governor .”

I don’t endorse any politic views of either the link above or below, but I stress to my readers, a community organizer is something more valuable than you realize.

Community Organizers Fight Back « Community Organizers Fight Back.

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Aug 09 2008

McCain Web Ad Is Accused Of Linking Obama to Antichrist

Category: Other PostsPolycarp @ 11:45 am

Is this what religion and the Christian faith is supposed to be used for? Fear and coercion in a Presidential election? This is why the Church should stay out of the political process. Let’s use the Gospel for souls, not votes. Of course, people will actually associate Obama with the Antichrist because of some reason they believe that the Antichrist will be American and a Democrat.

Religion News (RSS): McCain Web Ad Is Accused Of Linking Obama to Antichrist.

An Internet ad launched last week by the McCain presidential campaign has attracted more than one million hits by appearing to mock Barack Obama for presenting himself as a kind of prophetic figure.

The ad has also generated criticism from Democrats and religious scholars who see a hidden message linking Sen. Obama to the apocalyptic Biblical figure of the antichrist.

The spot, called “The One,” opens with the line: “It shall be known that in 2008 the world will be blessed.” Images follow of Moses parting the Red Sea and Sen. Obama telling a crowd, “We are the change we’ve been waiting for.”

Brian Rogers, a spokesman for John McCain’s campaign, said the spot reflects only that Sen. Obama sometimes “gets carried away” when he speaks, and points out “his many audacious statements.”

“It’s a light-hearted ad that pokes fun at him,” Mr. Rogers said.

The Obama campaign declined to comment. Earlier this summer, when asked about similar concerns circulating in Appalachian Ohio, David Wilhelm, former chairman of the Democratic National Committee, said the Obama campaign has no option but to confront voters’ concerns head on.

“You let people know what makes you tick and what your values and proposals are,” said Mr. Wilhelm. “Ultimately, they will make decisions that will reflect their economic interests and their sense of values.”

The End Times, a New Testament reference to the period surrounding the return of Christ, were popularized in recent years by the “Left Behind” series of books that sold more than 63 million copies. The Rev. Tim LaHaye, co-author of the series, said in an interview that he recognized allusions to his work in the ad but comparisons between Sen. Obama and the antichrist are incorrect.

“The antichrist isn’t going to be an American, so it can’t possibly be Obama. The Bible makes it clear he will be from an obscure place, like Romania,” the 82-year-old author said.

The ad has provoked a growing debate on the Internet over whether it is playing with apocalyptic themes. Those ideas are chiefly shared by fundamentalist Protestants and some other evangelical Christians. Among their expectations: the ascension of a false prophet, a one-world government and the Second Coming of Jesus Christ.

Critiques of the ad started surfacing earlier this week when Eric Sapp, a Democratic operative, circulated the first of two memos pointing out images that he believed linked Sen. Obama to the antichrist.

“Short of 666, they used every single symbol of the antichrist in this ad,” said Mr. Sapp, who advises Democrats on reaching out to faith communities. “There are way too many things to just be coincidence.”

McCain campaign staffers have taken to calling Sen. Obama “The One” in reference to what they see as his self-aggrandizing speaking style.

The ad, which was produced by the McCain campaign’s in-house ad staff, named Foxhole Productions, was posted last Friday. Its reach, along with a McCain television spot featuring Britney Spears and Paris Hilton, has been significantly amplified by the Internet and television.

Erik Potholm, a Republican consultant whose firm produced the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth attacks on John Kerry, said that echo is part of Sen. McCain’s strategy. “The first rule of advertising is getting people to watch it,” Mr. Potholm said.

In some swing states with concentrated pockets of fundamentalists and evangelical Christians, like Ohio, Pennsylvania, Colorado and Virginia, the ads could have particular impact. Suggestions that Sen. Obama is the antichrist have been circulating for months in Bible-study meetings in towns like Chillicothe, Ohio, where congregants compare his remarks and his biography with verses from the Bible.

Stewart Hoover, director of the Center for Media, Religion and Culture at the University of Colorado at Boulder, said the references to the antichrist in the McCain ad were “not all that subtle” for anyone familiar with “apocalyptic popular culture.” Some images in the ad very closely resemble the cover art and type font used in the latest “Left Behind” novel. The title of the ad, “The One,” also echoes the series; the antichrist figure in the books, Nicolae Carpathia, sets up “the One World Religion.”

“For people who want a reason to be skeptical of Obama, this might nail it down,” Mr. Hoover said. He said he doubted the ad would influence those genuinely on the fence.

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Jul 01 2008

Obama Reaches out to Evangelicals

Category: Other PostsPolycarp @ 11:45 am

Here is an article on MSNBC.

I am opposed to congregations getting involved with politics on any level and indeed, people who use the name of Christ to get involved as well. What worries me is that the Constitution provides for a clear separation of Church and State, and while people bemoan and wail if the State was to encroach on the Church, they seem willing to allow the Church to encroach on the State.

In the past 2 elections, the Republicans have co-opted the ‘religious right’ while demonizing the ‘religious left’. Suddenly, the volcano of evangelical political power that had been building since the last 70’s, ebbing in the Reagan years, and again coming to the national scene with the election of the Clinton-Gore ticket, erupted when the evangelicals played an important part, even providing the deciding factor, in a presidential race. It was built with Dobson, Falwell, Robertson, and Kennedy, among others, writing books, building colleges, networks of media outlets, and disciples that promoted all things right-wing. The evangelical agenda explored to new heights, believe it or not, when congregations of various denominations all participated in the 40 Days of Purpose Driven Life programs. Suddenly, denominations were united on a different level and it was proved that pastors would yield their pulpits to an outside voice if that voice was backed by a furor from the public.

In 2004, in the midst of the campaign, I was taking a political science class at a university. The professor, a strong liberal, taught a class of 90% liberal democrats. Then there was the lone Republican and me. No one believed that the Evangelicals could vote for the Republicans again, because of the war, but when I begin to put it in terms of American support for Israel, it became clear that many evangelicals would vote for Bush because they saw the Iraqi war in eschatological terms. (Think LeHaye’s awful series, Left Behind).

Now, we see a mad rush by both candidates to reach out to Evangelicals, the religious center to right. The problem that I see, is that congregations, and the Church, should not be involved in politics. Paul told Timothy not to be entangled in the affairs of this world, and yet we see so many trying to sway politics. Can you really imagine Paul waging a campaign for a Roman Senator? Our mission on this planet is not to change the planet, or to pass laws, govern nations, or to enforce the morality of Christianity on the populace. Instead, we are told to reach the people, speak the truth, preach the word. We are to be soul winners, not political campaigners.

And may God have mercy on those that use the pulpit to campaign for any particular political party. Is it not the same as using the name of God to murder people? (Crusades, Iraqi War) How many things have been done in the name of God and Christ? For centuries, Rome maintained a nominal control over western Europe, while the great Seljuq Dynasty maintained control over a good deal fo the Middle East, reaching into Asia. Both seats of power ruled in the name of their God and both forced people to do things for religious reasons. Why? Because some thought it best to use the things that should be reserved for God for the things of this world.

I am not suggesting that either Senators McCain or Obama will attempt to ignite a new theocracy, but the picture is still startling. Why must you court the religious right? (Or religious left for that matter) Why should a presidential candidate court the pro-Israel lobby? Remember the young shepherd boy, David. who was tending sheep while the great king was in trouble with the Lord. Or even the twelve year old Jesus, who was about His Father’s business while the Jews planned a rebellion. His Father’s business, as we know, was to preach repentance.

We need to be about our Father’s business, if indeed God is our Father. If you live in the United States, then vote the issues that matter to you. Search the issues in the bible and see where it ranks with God. Abortion? Justice? Environment? War? Defense? So many issues that matter to Americans, but do what matters to God? Don’t confuse the two. (And don’t confuse this country with some divinely establish nation that is the sole greatest country on earth).

Take this also into account. In 2000 and 2004 the Evangelical leaders said some awful things about God (God is pro-war, Falwell) and drug His name into the basest mud. They drug Him out and had Him endorse George W. Bush as a Christian candidate. They made it the eleventh commandment to vote Republican. All on the promise that George Bush would end abortion. Yet, nothing.

Remember, Christ said to render to Caesar what is Caesar’s and God what is God’s and politics is too unholy to be from God.

I would ask the candidates to stop these silly appeals to envangelicals and instead focus on real issues. Leave the things of God up to God, and God alone.

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