Theologica

a bible, theology, politics, news, networking, and discussion site

Some folk believe that God does not elect individuals for damnation but passes over them to elect other individuals. They might then defend their position by stating God didn't choose to damn them to hell, he allowed them to go in the direction they were already going (or some nuanced version of that).

Question 1: Is not-choosing these individuals, in this system, effectively choosing them for damnation?

Question 2: Why or why not?

Question 3: Does it matter?

Tags: double, predestination

Share

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

I'm not so sure. In this thread I did winnow down the ultimate end to damnation but I think Car and others have made a point of implying a holistic salvation in the negative. People, they would say, are damned because they are willfully against God. They're not only heading towards judgment, they are already under the wrath of God, they're bodies are in the grips of sin, their minds are in enmity against God and they're pulling the world down with them.

Salvation although it does include salvation from all those other things necessarily also includes the final eschatalogical salvation from wrath (if Hell is allowed to be the wrath of God for the sake of discussion). Election in this model would then be picking the individuals to be holistically saved (necessarily ultimately saved from Hell). Damnation then winds up being not only the ultimate end (hell) but the whole process that ultimately ends in hell or wrath or judgment.

So at this level the question, I think, becomes exceedingly poignant and in effect, my Possibility 3.

Karl St. said:
Rey Reynoso said:
Probably best to ask one of the Calvinist folks since I might misrepresent them. I thought Predestination was integral to their concept of election although predestination to salvation (vessels of mercy prepared beforehand) vs. predestination to damnation (with two models, one being focused on in this thread.

Thank you!
But what about the New Testament meaning of salvation, to be made whole, and not the concept of going to hell? Doesn't that make the whole discussion a wash? Kant wasn't in favor of predestination, Kierkegaard wasn't influenced by it and in his Fear and Trembling he pretty much throws the idea on its ear. It seems maintaining the doctrine of Election takes more effort and time than would be reasonably requested. It seems to me that the definition of salvation is opposed to the concept of Election as is currently outlined in this thread. What do you think?

Karl

Reply to This

I don't think it affects it very much. In this system no matter what, if God doesn't intercede then the people are still given over to wrath, even of the degenerative kinda. The person might be doing stuff within their framework as wrath but the only way out of it is by having God intercede somewhere and that (within this system) results in salvation from wrath (be it Ultimate or Mediate).

Basically what I'm saying damnation (wrath, judgment, blindness, spiritual death) is all part of the same group even in the present mediate sense because it never ends without God's intercession in which case it becomes Not-Wrath. Proponents of the system say it happened beforehand (in an elective sort of way) therefore even the downward spiral would have been effectively chosen (depending on which Possible structure you go with--unless this is like my Possibility 5 which is more like multiple worlds)

Karl St. said:
Interesting, I see.
Let's put a spin on it and see how it plays out. Let's take the concept of the wrath of God from Paul's writing in Romans chapter 1. The wrath of God is not in the form of a lightening bolt but in the form of permissiveness. God allows people to do their own thing, blindly not seeing what they are doing because they are in the grips of sin and self deception. If the wrath of God is in the form of permissiveness and not the lightening bolt, how does this affect the discussion?

Another part of the discussion needs some development; final judgment in light of justice. Liberals rightly can question this idea; 70 years of sin = eternal damnation? The balance of the scales of justice do not equal here. I think it would be good for a thorough analysis of the origin of the belief of damnation to be added to this discussion. I know that damnation is absent in thought through at least the inter-testamental period but I'm not sure how developed the thought was in 1st century Palestine. This could shed some light on the discussion.

Reply to This

What I did was try to stay within the system as presented by some reformed folk. It winds up being Platonic in some respects because its already working with platonic presuppositions. I think my 3 is closer to a compatibalistic model but it winds up, ultimately, still making God effectively choosing by not-choosing.

I'm still trying to wrack my brain to see if there's other ways to allow God's not choosing (to salvation) being ultimately choosing (to damnation) but I can't figure another option out. Do you have any other suggestions that still work within the framework of the topic opener?

edit: I didn't really get them from anywhere particularly--they're models already drawn up in philosophy and honestly can be found really in comic books. My fifth proposition is pretty much Crisis on Infinite Earths, my 2nd (which I think was the one that there was no options but damnation) is basically X-Men Days of Future Past (then subsequently Present) where the X-Men's Future always ends in disaster, always ends with Rachel Phoenix hunting Mutants and always ends with the Sentinels killing Wolverine. My third is the Infra* option stated by the reformed position in some arguments, my first is mostly Arminian (and the X-Men stories: we control our own fate!) and my Fourth is Back To the Future 2.

But I think they have real names. Like 2 would be a form of Hard Determinism--maybe Fatalism, 3 would be Compatibalism (which technically doesn't work in light of my question), 4 would be Backward Causality and 5 would be, probably a form of Molinism. I've seen Molinism applied to this issue but from an Arminian perpspective. I haven't seen Backward Causality, I don't think.

Karl St. said:
I have gone over all your five options again, far more in depth this time. My congratulations for taking the time to think through the various options you have presented. One critique if I may; this is all Platonic thought. Were you aware of this? You have done a good job of presenting many ideas of metaphysical dualism. If we accept your premises as is, I have no idea where to take this. I sincerely appreciate the work you have done on the options. But I think working outside the ideas of Platonic philosophy might steer your discussion differently. Where, how, did you come up with these 5 options? Nice system of analysis....
Karl

Reply to This

Some would say its mental gymnastics and say we shouldn't discuss it because it broaches on mystery. Reason I want to talk about it is because if its true that this form of predestination in effect still makes God effectively responsible for damnation, there's no reason to ignore double predestination. I think that's a road that most Calvinists don't want to take but it's probably the most consistent road to travel.

I thought that another way to get rid of the problem was to drop the concept of individual election to salvation but then that wouldn't be Calvinism.

Karl St. said:
There are two options but I am not sure you would want to travel those roads at this point. 1) Universalism 2) re-examining the premise as to whether or not there is a hell. I think over the major theologians in the past 100-150 years and predestination is not something they deal with significantly. They touch upon it but it never, ever gets developed. Niebuhr's complete disregard for it ended my debate on the topic years ago. Is it a doctrine that really has an impact on the world or is it mental gymnastics? I am becoming a pragmatist in my old age (Dewey).

Reply to This

Reply to This

RSS

About

Sponsors

Birthdays

Birthdays Tomorrow

Badge

Loading…

Get the Widget


Sponsor


© 2009   Created by Michael Patton on Ning.   Create a Ning Network!

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!