I have been reading it with great profit. I note his reference to Heb 10 and covenant breaking "the Lord will judge his people". Matthew, I am aware that Heb 10 was one of the passages that convinced you of paedobaptism. Can you recommend any helpful resources on this - especially online material [I am reading through Thomas Blake at present with great profit]. Thanks.
Stephen,
The warning passages became an issue when I was working through this in a reformed Baptist church I attended for some years. They "more or less" (and some blatantly) dismissed those passages as "not for the elect" since the elect will never fall away. One said, "Those don't apply to me because I'm elect."
I didn't really deal with a specific book or passage on "that" issue. Instead, I dealt with hermeneutics and the relevance it had on interpreting those passages in light of
me, as a believer, (believers
alone can understand the relevance of those passages, "But the natural man
receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither
can he know them, because they are
spiritually discerned." (1Co. 2:14), and the importance of Hebrew's argument over and against Israel's rebellion.) which meant the warning passages
applied to me as a covenanted member of the church as they have in every age, without the possibility of dismissal - stipulations on the covenant always apply. This in turn pressed me to further consider how hermeneutics worked, and how there is a differentiation between how God wills and decrees both election and reprobation (i.e. trampling the blood of the Son of God and not having any more sacrifice for sin...etc.). That in turn pressed me to expand my Master's thesis into my Ph.D. work on "The Two Wills of God." (God doesn't have two wills BTW). It is all based on hermeneutics, (i.e. how 1 Samuel 15 says, " "It repenteth me that I have set up Saul to be king" and at the end of the chapter it says, "And also the Strength of Israel will not lie nor repent: for he is not a man, that he should repent." (1Sa. 15:29). I Samuel daft? God repents, then Samuel says he doesn't?) It devolved into the compound and divided sense without which one
cannot understand Scripture. It's simply impossible to understand Scripture while "doing hermeneutics wrong."
Turretin was "mostly clear" on how to handle the two senses (he didn't explain them, but just used them all over the place). All the reformers talk about them, but not with those precise terms (they would say "after the manner of men"). In any case, it was really dealing
with Scripture that did it in light of those hermeneutical rules. The warning passages are for me, not reprobate Harry. As a result, the dominoes started tumbling very quickly at that point. (i.e. it wasn't at all about Baptism, but about
covenant concepts.)
After wading through all that, baptism (and infant baptism) is the last 5 minutes on a 5 month study on CT.