will of god

  1. Travis Fentiman

    Online Resources on Perichoresis

    Perichoresis is a Greek word that refers to the mutual love and indwelling of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Social Trinitarians (rife in evangelicalism today) take this concept to teach that the Father, Son and Spirit have separate wills. The orthodox, early Church councils, on the other...
  2. Travis Fentiman

    Resources on God's Works ad extra

    As Christian evangelicalism continues to try and reinvent the wheel of theology from a blank slate, profound and fundamental, old, truths are lost sight of, and contradicted. The modern heresy of the Eternal Subordination of the Son presumes, wrongly, that each Person of the Trinity has a...
  3. pgwolv

    Does Calvinism make God "impersonal"?

    I was talking with a Provisionist who said that Calvinism equals fatalism. I referred him to pieces written by BB Warfield and HM Curry, discussing the difference between the two concepts. He keeps on claiming that Calvinism makes God impersonal. Specifically, he said, " God is personal when he...
  4. Travis Fentiman

    On the Affections of God, his Desire, Wrath, etc.

    Does God have emotions? People often respond to sincere inquirers with a blanket "No", and end up ignoring or denying as much truth as they affirm. The reformed orthodox terms were that God has affections and perfections. The affections that are attributed to God in Scripture, they held, were...
  5. SebastianClinciuJJ

    The difference between permitting and doing

    It is a well know fact that Calvin rejected the language that "something took place by the permission of God, but not also by the will of God." (Institutes, I. XVIII. I) It’s intersting that, after rejecting the language of permission, he cites Augustine using language of permission and takes...
  6. C. Matthew McMahon

    Does God Desire Things He Doesn't Decree? New Abridged Volume of McMahon's Two Wills

    https://vimeo.com/181684819 The Two Wills of God Made Easy by C. Matthew McMahon This book is taken from McMahon’s larger work: "The Two Wills of God: Does God Really Have Two Wills," which was a Ph.D. dissertation of over 800 pages. In this newly revised concise form (240 pages), McMahon has...
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