Martin Q. Blank said:
The Banned said:
Martin Q. Blank said:
Quote:
The initial reformers were very invested in God's sovereign will being the only factor in whether or not we are saved. There is nothing that we can do that results in us being saved. Even our cooperation after initial salvation is not of our own doing. This is clear in Luther, Calvin and Zwingli.
I don't think I've ever read that. At the very least, faith is a condition of salvation.
Luther's bondage of the will. Calvin in basically everything Calvin wrote on free will. Zwingli just followed Calvin. Their view was that if man chooses to cooperate with God, then man has an active role in his salvation. Therefore they flatly rejected it.
Some of their protegees tried to teach that we cooperate with God to be saved (Melanchthon in Lutheranism and Arminius in Calvinism) but both teachings were fully repudiated by councils in their respective denominations.
I just wonder why this has to be seen as an affront to God's sovereignty when logic would dictate that God could sovereignly decree that He wants us to exert our free will in choosing to follow Him
Can you provide a quote that says God's sovereignty is the ONLY factor? There is NOTHING we do to be saved? Not even have faith? You would have to cut out 90% of their works on man's duty.
"free will" is just the power to discern what is good and evil, and to choose good. Aquinas called it the "rational appetite."
What natural man, apart from God's grace, has this power regarding spritual things? He must be born again.
Lutheran perspective:
Augsburg Confessions:
That we may obtain this faith, the Ministry of Teaching the Gospel and administering the Sacraments was instituted. For through the Word and Sacraments, as through instruments,
the Holy Ghost is given, who works faith; where and when it pleases God, in them that hear the Gospel; to wit, that God, not for our own merits, but for Christ's sake, justifies those who believe that they are received into grace for Christ's sak
Formula of Concord:
Now, if in St. Paul and in other regenerate men the natural or carnal free will even after regeneration strives against God's Law, it will be much more obstinate and hostile to God's Law and will before regeneration. Hence it is manifest (as it is further declared in the article concerning original sin, to which we now refer for the sake of brevity) that
the free will from its own natural powers, not only cannot work or concur in working anything for its own conversion, righteousness, and salvation, nor follow [obey], believe, or assent to the Holy Ghost, who through the Gospel offers him grace and salvation, but from its innate, wicked, rebellious nature it resists God and His will hostilely, unless it be enlightened and controlled by God's Spirit.There are plenty of statements from Luther himself that go far beyond this such as:
"When the Spirit of God begins to work faith in a person, the will is no longer in the same bondage as before. It is loosed from the chains of sin and death and becomes willing to follow God's commandments. But this willing is not of its own strength or nature; rather,
it is moved, bent, and renewed by the Spirit, who causes the will to desire and do what pleases God.Yet this new freedom of the will does not mean that the person is perfectly free from sin in this life. The will is still weak and inclined to evil, but it now strives against sin and
cooperates in good worksnot by its own power but by the grace that the Spirit continually imparts.Therefore, the will is truly free only insofar as it is
governed by the Spirit and united to Christ. Apart from this union, the will remains captive and powerless."
Calvin:
"The grace of God does not merely offer assistance to our will, as if the choice were ours, but actually causes us to will rightly. He does not move the will in such a manner as has been taught and believed for many agesthat it is afterwards in our choice either to obey or resist the motionbut by disposing it efficaciously. In other words, God not only makes salvation possible for us, but indeed impels the mind to choose what is right, moves the will effectively to obedience, and arouses and advances the endeavor until the actual completion of the work is attained
"This movement of the will … is not … one which thereafter leaves us the choice to obey or resist it, but one which affects us
efficaciously. We must, therefore, repudiate the oft-repeated sentiment … 'Whom he draws, he draws willingly,' insinuating that the Lord only stretches out his hand, and waits to see whether we will be pleased to take his aid. … The Apostle's doctrine is not, that the grace of a good will is offered to us if we will accept of it, but that
God himself is pleased so to work in us as to guide, turn, and govern our heart by his Spirit, and reign in it as his own possession. … And the only meaning … of our Savior's words, 'Every man… that hath heard … cometh unto me,' (John 6:45), is that the grace of God is
effectual in itself.
I hate proof texting, but you asked for quotes. If you review scholarship on their beliefs from people who have much more time to research, their belief that man does not cooperate with God is not really debated. Both founders believed that we do not cooperate with the spirit working within us with our own will, but because He
makes us do it. Man's duty is more of a descriptor of what happens to believers, because believers clearly don't have the autonomy to agree without being made to agree.