(I've personally felt it easier to read a series of single central thoughts per post than a single post containing multiple thoughts...just sharing this in case someone thinks I'm spamming...)
Central thought: The Protestant Reformation was based on denying freewill and upholding Monergism.
Not that one should weigh traditions on its own, but history can teach us - more so specially when it's founded on Scriptural arguments. Martin Luther debates Erasmus on the topic of freewill, "the grand hinge upon which the whole turned", in his 'Bondage of the Will' -
I'm merely stating that it should give us pause to go against a rich legacy of godly puritans. Of course, they're men and can be wrong - but we could conclude that after genuinely considering their references and interpretations to Scripture, not before?
Central thought: The Protestant Reformation was based on denying freewill and upholding Monergism.
Not that one should weigh traditions on its own, but history can teach us - more so specially when it's founded on Scriptural arguments. Martin Luther debates Erasmus on the topic of freewill, "the grand hinge upon which the whole turned", in his 'Bondage of the Will' -
Jonathan Edwards addresses the same in his Freedom of the Will, again upholding the same denying of freewill in man as we speak of it.In this, moreover, I give you great praise, and proclaim it — you alone in pre-eminent distinction from all others, have entered upon the thing itself; that is, the grand turning point of the cause; and, have not wearied me with those irrelevant points about popery, purgatory, indulgences, and other like baubles, rather than causes, with which all have hitherto tried to hunt me down, — though in vain! You, and you alone saw, what was the grand hinge upon which the whole turned, and therefore you attacked the vital part at once; for which, from my heart, I thank you.
I'm merely stating that it should give us pause to go against a rich legacy of godly puritans. Of course, they're men and can be wrong - but we could conclude that after genuinely considering their references and interpretations to Scripture, not before?