[forthright] What does it mean to be dead? (1)

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From: Forthright Magazine <forthrightmag@...>
Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2011 06:30:05 -0800 (PST)
Forthright Magazine 
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Straight to the Cross

The Fellowship Room, warm posts and hearty communion.
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COLUMN: FIDELITY

What does it mean to be dead? (1)
 by Mike Benson
http://tinyurl.com/72esbcm

Paul said we are dead. Specifically, he said we are
dead "in trespasses and sins" (Ephesians 2:1a).

The typical Calvinist interpretation of that passage
suggests that prior to our conversion, we are
completely devoid of any good or godly inclinations, or
to say it another way, we are totally depraved.

As one author asserts:

   [We] "are totally corrupt, in every part, in
   all [our] faculties, and all the principles
   of [our] nature, [our] understandings, and
   wills; and in all [our] dispositions and
   affections. [Our] heads, [our] hearts, are
   totally depraved; all the members of [our]
   bodies are only instruments of sin; and all
   [our] senses, seeing, hearing, tasting, etc.
   are only inlets and outlets of sin, channels
   of corruption. There is nothing but sin, no
   good at all." /1

John Calvin parroted these thoughts when he wrote:

   "The whole man, from the crown of the head
   to the sole of the foot, is so deluged, as
   it were, that no part remains exempt from
   sin, and therefore, everything which
   proceeds from him is imputed as sin." /2

Now think about it. Is an individual outside of Christ,
prior to conversion, incapable of any good whatsoever
as these men suggest? If not, then how can we account
for many of the people we read about in the New
Testament?

For example:

Devout men in Jerusalem for Pentecost: "And there were
dwelling in Jerusalem Jews, devout men, from every
nation under heaven" (Acts 2:5). 

If man is totally depraved and thus incapable of any 
good, then how could these individuals be described as 
"devout" in verse 5, when their conversion didn't take 
place until verse 41?

The Greek word translated devout is <i>eulabeis</i> and means
pious. How is it possible to be totally depraved and
pious at the same time?

   The Ethiopian eunuch: "And behold, a man of
   Ethiopia, a eunuch of great authority under
   Candace the queen of the Ethiopians, who had
   charge of all her treasury, and had come to
   Jerusalem to worship, as returning. And
   sitting in his chariot, he was reading
   Isaiah the prophet" (Acts 8:27-28). 

If a man prior to conversion incapable of any good,
then how can we account for the fact that the eunuch
had travelled a great distance to worship and was
engaged in studying the Old Testament Scriptures?

According to Calvinists, an individual who is totally
depraved is an inlet and outlet of sin, a channel of
corruption, and there is no good in him at all. He
therefore isn't capable of homage to the Father much
less in learning his word.

Cornelius: Luke describes him as "a devout man and one
who feared God with all his household, who gave alms
generously to the people, and prayed to God always"
(Acts 10:2). It is difficult to find anyone who is more
highly spoken of in Scripture than this Roman soldier
(v. 1).  

Cornelius was devout, believed in Jehovah and embraced
the moral and ethical standards of the Law, was
generous to those in need, was prayerful,  held in high
regard by the Jews, and described later in the chapter
as a "just" man (v. 22). 

Proponents of Calvinist theology insist that a person
outside of Christ is totally depraved and therefore
incapable of even the slightest aptitude for goodness
until the Holy Spirit acts upon him. If this doctrine
is true, how can we account for Cornelius’ behavior?

_________ 
1/ Jonathan Edwards, The Justice of God in
the Damnation of Sinners, 8-9. 
2/ John Calvin, Institutes of The Christian Religion, 
302.

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