Hello!
I have a question for calvinists:
Recently I read a lot of puritan books and biographies and heard that all puritans were calvinists. That should apply to John Bunyan too, as stated by Banner of Truth: “Bunyan was a warm-hearted, committed, thoroughly and truly evangelical Calvinist” (source: https://banneroftruth.org/us/resour...uction-to-john-bunyans-the-pilgrims-progress/).
However when I read his book “The pilgrim's progress”, I didn't discover any calvinist beliefs there. On the contrary, I found examples that I cannot bring together with the “perseverance of the saints” and the “limited atonement” doctrines:
* As Christian was at the house of the Interpreter, he saw things that should encourage and warn him for his further pilgrimage. One of the things was a man in an “Iron cage of Despair”, because as he said: “I have crucified him [Jesus] to myself afresh” (Heb 6.6). I guess that a calvinist would say, this man was never saved. However, why should “this man's Misery” be “an everlasting Caution” to Christian, as barely he left the house of the Interpreter, he got saved at the encounter with the Cross?
* Why should Christian be in a great distress at the prospect of not being received at the Celestial City unless he finds his Pass that he lost on the hill of Difficulty?
* In the Dungeon, as Christian was contemplating suicide, why did Hopeful warn him that it would cause him to go to Hell “for no murderer has Eternal Life”?
So, how could Bunyan be possibly calvinist and warn of the possiblity to lose salvation? Or did he believed a weaker form of calvinism?
Kind regards
Jonas
I have a question for calvinists:
Recently I read a lot of puritan books and biographies and heard that all puritans were calvinists. That should apply to John Bunyan too, as stated by Banner of Truth: “Bunyan was a warm-hearted, committed, thoroughly and truly evangelical Calvinist” (source: https://banneroftruth.org/us/resour...uction-to-john-bunyans-the-pilgrims-progress/).
However when I read his book “The pilgrim's progress”, I didn't discover any calvinist beliefs there. On the contrary, I found examples that I cannot bring together with the “perseverance of the saints” and the “limited atonement” doctrines:
* As Christian was at the house of the Interpreter, he saw things that should encourage and warn him for his further pilgrimage. One of the things was a man in an “Iron cage of Despair”, because as he said: “I have crucified him [Jesus] to myself afresh” (Heb 6.6). I guess that a calvinist would say, this man was never saved. However, why should “this man's Misery” be “an everlasting Caution” to Christian, as barely he left the house of the Interpreter, he got saved at the encounter with the Cross?
* Why should Christian be in a great distress at the prospect of not being received at the Celestial City unless he finds his Pass that he lost on the hill of Difficulty?
* In the Dungeon, as Christian was contemplating suicide, why did Hopeful warn him that it would cause him to go to Hell “for no murderer has Eternal Life”?
So, how could Bunyan be possibly calvinist and warn of the possiblity to lose salvation? Or did he believed a weaker form of calvinism?
Kind regards
Jonas