tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post321173632117913936..comments2023-04-14T04:28:54.000-04:00Comments on Reformed Apologist: Radical 2 Kingdom & The "General Equity" of the LawReformed Apologisthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17398596496540697639noreply@blogger.comBlogger14125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-86829769420402556842011-08-04T00:52:17.241-04:002011-08-04T00:52:17.241-04:00Isn't there a difference in the administration...Isn't there a difference in the administration of the new covenant from the old? And isn't one of those that the covenant is no longer administered through a nation or civil government and civil laws? <br /><br />So the visible church is now the vehicle for the administration of the covenant. But the church is multi national and not a government or able to legislate national laws. <br />It functions within what ever laws that state has. <br />It may have a duty to 1st call the officials to obedience to the moral law of god and to support the church and freedom of the gospel, it may even tell the officials they should make laws consistent with the general equity of the OT civil laws. <br />But the church only administers as church and therefore the church does not apply the general equity of the OT civil laws as civil sanctions. Therefore it uses discipline and excommunication and leaves any civil penalty to the government. <br />Now should the church recommend to the civil government that they stone disobedient children and heretics and adulterers? Or should it recommend something else with the general equity of that, or should it leave it to the civil government to do as it pleases?<br /><br />General equity therefore means that the church looks to the OT laws and sees a general principle and the equity it teaches as a guide for its lifestyle and obedience to God and church discipline. <br />But the church does not apply or enforce civil law.Don Phttp://donpartridge.wordpress.com/free-articles-and-great-books/read-free-books-sermons/calvin-errors-and-myths-corrected/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-85154899217382018882011-07-17T15:09:19.776-04:002011-07-17T15:09:19.776-04:00Does he really think there are more abortions goin...<i>Does he really think there are more abortions going on within the fundamentalist Muslim world?</i><br /><br />Steve,<br /><br />It is fallacious to compare one person to another, or one culture to another. What we must compare is the same person with himself, before and after conversion. People don't become worse upon conversion and nobody remains constant, consequently men become better upon conversion.Reformed Apologisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17398596496540697639noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-25197243153050877442011-07-17T15:04:34.638-04:002011-07-17T15:04:34.638-04:00"But I don’t know how you get around an impli..."<i>But I don’t know how you get around an implied conceit by contending that a believer is a better human being than when he was an unbeliever. Why not say he is justified and being sanctified?</i>"<br /><br />Steve,<br /><br />Is a man better if he loves God yet imperfectly than if he hates God without reservation? The former is the convert, whereas the latter is the unbeliever. <br /><br />Warmly,<br /><br />RonReformed Apologisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17398596496540697639noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-72242195471731674642011-07-17T14:55:37.067-04:002011-07-17T14:55:37.067-04:00Ron, I have not denied that sanctification occurs....Ron, I have not denied that sanctification occurs. The point I have tried to make is that it is more conservative than progressive. It is characterized more by faith than by sight. It is more mysterious than known. It doesn’t have the immediate cash value you seem to presume. What do you think it means to say that even only the holiest amongst us have but a small beginning of obedience in this life? Maybe you think the Heidelberg has a hard time articulating itself? But I don’t know how you get around an implied conceit by contending that a believer is a better human being than when he was an unbeliever. Why not say he is justified and being sanctified?<br /><br />But John Wesley’s point seems to be that we can measure whether Christians are better people than non-Christians by the frequency of abortions in either camp. Does he really think there are more abortions going on within the fundamentalist Muslim world?Stevehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11873871045094838036noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-81660389073376274242011-07-17T00:07:09.963-04:002011-07-17T00:07:09.963-04:00Nobody is suggesting that any particular Christian...Nobody is suggesting that any particular Christian is better than any particular non-Christian but rather, what is being argued is that any particular person is a better person as a Christian than as a non-Christian, which is something your literal words have denied over and over again. I'd like to attribute your denial of biblical sanctification to a lack of ability to express yourself than a lack of actual conviction. <br /><br />Yours,<br /><br />RonReformed Apologisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17398596496540697639noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-58311457537948780302011-07-16T22:03:03.220-04:002011-07-16T22:03:03.220-04:00Wow, feel the charity.
But, John Wesley, what cou...Wow, feel the charity.<br /><br />But, John Wesley, what could this possibly mean: “Does Zrim really think that there are more abortions taking place within the church than outside?”<br /><br />I’m pretty sure there are very few abortions happening within the Mormon church, despite very little conversion. Same for any devout false religious group. If a view and practice on abortion is your measure (yawn) then have you ever heard of “godless and secular pro-lifers”? See links below. They sound a lot like religious pro-lifers. And I’m willing to bet there is about as much abortion going on with these folks as there are with the truly converted. Do you guys really think faith is what is needed to have a hold on morality or the ethics of life? Ron, this is the sort of reasoning I am talking about when I talk about Christians being conceited. I may be “blind to reason” but is that much worse than being conceited about ability to figure ethics out? Heavens to Murgatroyd.<br /><br />Zrim<br /><br />http://www.godlessprolifers.org/home.html<br /><br />http://secularprolife.org/Stevehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11873871045094838036noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-7060796306311097612011-07-16T09:29:28.980-04:002011-07-16T09:29:28.980-04:00Thanks, A.Thanks, A.Reformed Apologisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17398596496540697639noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-30281332968133941282011-07-16T00:10:17.560-04:002011-07-16T00:10:17.560-04:00Ron, I need not say more but this is worth repeati...Ron, I need not say more but this is worth repeating. Well done!<br /><br />http://greenbaggins.wordpress.com/2011/07/07/the-sufficiency-of-the-word-compared-to-christendom/#comment-89637Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-73963870762030845972011-07-15T18:32:31.936-04:002011-07-15T18:32:31.936-04:00I'm now taking note of something Anonymous sai...I'm now taking note of something Anonymous said. Guys, nobody is a "moron" etc. Yes, I too marvel at how such nonsense is "paraded." I've said that to these guys for many years. What I have found is that some of these Protestants are very much like the Romanists out there. They have a certain play book that they parrot from, but they haven't internalized much of anything - not even their own position. So naturally, when challenged they cannot think on their feet. That's, also, why they show themselves incapable of drawing any sort of distinctions. Yes, they are "dull" in reasoning <i>but not in every area of life</i> I trust. The reason they struggle here is because either they really don't understand the very basics or else they are unwilling to address the real position that is before them. In any case, they appear over their head and terribly foolish. In many ways, they are the best spokespeople for theonomy. They misrepresent the opposing position, which is obvious to most, and even deny what God does in sanctifying grace. <br /><br />Let's give it a rest, shall we?Reformed Apologisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17398596496540697639noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-29989232546524477362011-07-15T09:19:49.411-04:002011-07-15T09:19:49.411-04:00John,
Zrim's problem could be that he's j...John,<br /><br />Zrim's problem could be that he's just stubborn and not truthful. His point, I hope, is that the church is in a sorry condition and that it's not as good as he perceives me to think it is. Of course, I never rendered a subjective opinion on the state of the church. All I noted is that objective truth that biblical salvation changes people for the good. Maybe he's seen no transformation in his own life. Or maybe he's just so obsessed with the legal aspect of justification that he doesn't understand what biblical salvation entails. It's hard to say why he's so blind to reason.Reformed Apologisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17398596496540697639noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-88836297777788001862011-07-15T09:05:14.871-04:002011-07-15T09:05:14.871-04:00Ron,
I see many problems with Zrim over at Baggin...Ron,<br /><br />I see many problems with Zrim over at Baggins. 1. He doesn't know the difference between common grace that restrains and converting grace that transforms. 2. Even if one single person becomes "better" through conversion, then the world is a better place. Now multiply that by thousands of conversions. If the converted person is a father, then an entire family is more blessed... 3. That the church is in bad shape (something that you never denied)true converts are always better off than they were. 4. Does Zrim really think that there are more abortions taking place within the church than outside? 5. Does he really think that converted men are no different after conversion?john_wesley1https://www.blogger.com/profile/08597744703767029932noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-20726422101526882372011-07-13T10:56:01.853-04:002011-07-13T10:56:01.853-04:00Tim - "lie" is beyond your ability to di...Tim - "lie" is beyond your ability to discern. I am convinced though that there is "dull" reasoning as Anonymous suggests, but given the degree of dullness in the face of clear arguments, I remain open to the idea that such dullness could be judicial, a frightening thought indeed. If one ignores the facts and refuses to treat the opposing biblical position according to its tenets, there can be what appears to be an increase of dullness, which would be due to an obstinate unwillingness to be truthful. We find this dynamic at work with professing atheists.Reformed Apologisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17398596496540697639noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-45783892393966480852011-07-13T09:28:52.639-04:002011-07-13T09:28:52.639-04:00Tim,
Maybe they are just dull? Seriously, that co...Tim,<br /><br />Maybe they are just dull? Seriously, that could be the case. The reason I think so is that they put their arguments out there for everyone to see (and laugh at).Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24271776.post-56892378859988406262011-07-12T08:21:35.454-04:002011-07-12T08:21:35.454-04:00Ron: Your point is well taken. These guys are not ...Ron: Your point is well taken. These guys are not confessional and they no less lie about their confession than do those who crept into the PCUSA and destroyed that denomination. I am not saying that these people have denied the gospel or anything like that, but they are liars just the same and are not to be trusted.Timnoreply@blogger.com