Mondar and Paidion,
I only quoted part of what Eckerty wrote, and I am sure, if you read the whole works, this quote would not seem so harsh. His premise is that at no time did the fate of man depend on what happen in the Garden and man choices afterwards, in regard to one’s ultimate salvation. Jesus is the Lamb slain before the foundation of the earth and those He so chooses to believe in Jesus in this age will believe (the elect, the first-fruits) and those in every age who come to the knowledge of Him are due to His sovereign choice. Yet, when it is all said and done all of man will be reconciled. 1Cor. 15:20ff; “And now, Christ hath risen out of the dead -- the first-fruits of those sleeping he became,
21for since through man [is] the death, also through man [is] a rising again of the dead,
22for even as in Adam all die, so also in the Christ all shall be made alive,
23and each in his proper order, a first-fruit Christ, afterwards those who are the Christ's, in his presence,
24then -- the end, when he may deliver up the reign to God, even the Father, when he may have made useless all rule, and all authority and power --
25for it behoveth him to reign till he may have put all the enemies under his feet --
26the last enemy is done away -- death;
27for all things He did put under his feet, and, when one may say that all things have been subjected, [it is] evident that He is excepted who did subject the all things to him,
28and when the all things may be subjected to him, then the Son also himself shall be subject to Him, who did subject to him the all things, that God may be the all in all.â€Â
Mondar, I was a Calvinist for nearly 20 years and do not believe Eckerty misrepresented the Calvinist position. I then and still believe God to be totally sovereign in our lives. The “bottom line†is that no one comes to knowledge of God without first their heart being regenerated by the Holy Spirit, such is the result of the 1st Adam’s fall. Most Calvinist like I gravitated to the Infralapsarian position, because it is simply more palatable then the Supralapsarian position, but even Calvin himself struggled between the two positions as did I, because the latter is more logical if God is indeed omniscient and omnipresent as we both believe. So, we can pretend that being left in ones sins (God being passive) and being created into vessels of wrath makes it Ok to send the multitude of mankind to eternal punishment, but down deep I think even you have a problem with why God would choose to make you into a vessel of mercy (God being actively involved in the individual life for no other reason than His good pleasure) and sending another to his demise. Yes, the Calvinist God is seen as cruel, unjust and unloving, just ask any Pelagian- Arminian, who believes in freewill as the answer to the dilemma of evil and an eternal Hell. Which brings me to what you wrote Paidion; when God allowed evil to enter in to the garden was it not His decision from “the get goâ€Â, did He not know Adam and Eve would fail miserably? Is not sin insidious once it gets a “foot holdâ€Â, did He not know that? Is He surprised by the magnitude of man’s sin throughout the ages? Yes, everyone from Adam on down to us in the “here and now†makes choices in regards to behaviors, but are these choices truly free of any influences? I think not. Is man responsible for his behaviors the Bible says we are; is God responsible for setting up the whole drama in the beginning? Yes He was and evil and actual sin in each of our lives are necessary in God’s economy to bring us into purification through the work of His Son Jesus in our very lives. Will someday evil, sin and death be no more, certainly. Even those who “rape and murder little girlsâ€Â, such is the great love of God who is not the author of sin but brings the sinner like those you imagine to a relationship with Himself.
Grace, Bubba