The Evangelical Universalist Forum

Can a Non-Believer Live a Moral Life?

Total Depravity

“It is advocated to various degrees by many Protestant confessions of faith and catechisms, including those of some Lutheran synods,[1][2] and Calvinism.[3][4][5][6] Arminians, such as Methodists, believe and teach total depravity, but with distinct differences.[7][8]”

“…During the Protestant Reformation, the Reformers took Scotus’s position to be the Catholic position and argued that it made sin only a defect or privation of righteousness rather than an inclination toward evil. Martin Luther, John Calvin and other Reformers used the term “total depravity” to articulate what they claimed to be the Augustinian view that sin corrupts the entire human nature.[11] This did not, however, mean the loss of the imago Dei (image of God).”

“…John Calvin used terms like “total depravity” to mean that, despite the ability of people to outwardly uphold the law, there remained an inward distortion which makes all human actions displeasing to God, whether or not they are outwardly good or bad.[12] Even after regeneration, every human action is mixed with evil.[13] Later Calvinist theologians were agreed on this, but the language of the Canons of Dort as well as the 17th-century Reformed theologians which followed it did not repeat the language of “total depravity”, and arguably offer a more moderate view on the state of fallen humanity than Calvin.[12]”

“…Some Reformed theologians have mistakenly used the term “Arminianism” to include some who hold the Semipelagian doctrine of limited depravity, which allows for an “island of righteousness” in human hearts that is uncorrupted by sin and able to accept God’s offer of salvation without a special dispensation of grace.[15]”

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Total_depravity

This is the argument against TD and Calvinism. Channing, 1809.
I’ve shortened it but it is still long.

To return; the principal argument
against Calvinism, in the General View of Christian Doctrines, is the moral
argument, or that which is drawn from the inconsistency of the system with
the divine perfections. It is plain that a doctrine which contradicts our best
ideas of goodness and justice, cannot come from the just and good God, or be a
true representation of his character. This moral argument has always been
powerful to the pulling down of the strongholds of Calvinism. Even in the dark
period, when this system was shaped and finished at Geneva, its advocates often
writhed under the weight of it; and we cannot but deem it a mark of the
progress of society that Calvinists are more and more troubled with the
palpable repugnance of their doctrines to God’s nature, and accordingly labor
to soften and explain them, until in many cases the name only is retained. If
the stern reformer of Geneva could lift up his head and hear the mitigated tone
in which some of his professed followers dispense his fearful doctrines, we
fear that he could not lie down in peace until he had poured out his
displeasure on their cowardice and degeneracy. He would tell them, with a
frown, that moderate Calvinism was a solecism, a contradiction in terms,
and would bid them in scorn to join their real friend, Arminius. Such is the
power of public opinion and of an improved state of society on creeds, that
naked, undisguised Calvinism is not very fond of showing itself, and many of
consequence know imperfectly what it means. What, then, is the system against
which the View of Christian Doctrines is directed?

Calvinism teaches that, in
consequence of Adam’s sin in eating the forbidden fruit, God brings into life
all his posterity with a nature wholly corrupt, so that they are utterly
indisposed, disabled, and made opposite to all that is spiritually good, and
wholly inclined to all evil, and that continually. It teaches, that all
mankind, having fallen in Adam, are under God’s wrath and curse, and so made
liable to all miseries in this life, to death itself, and to the pains of hell
for ever. It teaches, that, from this ruined race God, out of his mere good
pleasure, has elected a certain number to be saved by Christ, not induced to
this choice by any foresight of their faith or good works, but wholly by his
free grace and love; and that, having thus predestinated them to eternal life,
He renews and sanctifies them by his almighty and special agency, and brings
them into a state of grace, from which they cannot fall and perish. It teaches,
that the rest of mankind He is pleased to pass over, and to ordain them to
dishonor and wrath for their sins, to the honor of his justice and power; in
other words, He leaves the rest to the corruption in which they were born,
withholds the grace which is necessary to their recovery, and condemns them to
“most grievous torments in soul and body without intermission in hell-fire
for ever.” Such is Calvinism, as gathered from the most authentic records of
the doctrine. Whoever will consult the famous Assembly’s Cathechisms and
Confession, will see the peculiarities of the system in all their length and
breadth of deformity. A man of plain sense, whose spirit has not been broken to
this creed by education or terror, will think that it is not necessary for us
to travel to heathen countries, to learn how mournfully the human mind may
misrepresent the Deity.

The moral argument against
Calvinism, of which we have spoken, must seem irresistible to common and
unperverted minds, after attending to the brief statement now given. It will be
asked with astonishment, How is it possible that men can hold these doctrines
and yet maintain God’s goodness and equity? What principles can be more
contradictory? To remove the objection to Calvinism, which is drawn from its
repugnance to the divine perfections, recourse has been had, as before
observed, to the distinction between natural and moral inability, and to other
like subtilties. But a more common reply, we conceive, has been drawn from the
weakness and imperfection of the human mind, and from its incapacity of
comprehending God. Calvinists will tell us that because a doctrine opposes our
convictions of rectitude, it is not necessarily false; that apparent are not
always real inconsistencies; that God is an infinite and incomprehensible
being, and not to be tried by our ideas of fitness and morality; that we
bring their system to an incompetent tribunal, when we submit it to the
decision of human reason and conscience; that we are weak judges of what is
right and wrong, good and evil, in the Deity; that the happiness of the
universe may require an administration of human affairs which is very offensive
to limited understandings; that we must follow revelation, not reason or moral
feeling, and must consider doctrines, which shock us in revelation, as awful
mysteries, which are dark through our ignorance, and which time will enlighten.
How little, it is added, can man explain or understand God’s ways! How
inconsistent the miseries of life appear with good- ness in the Creator! How
prone, too, have men always been to confound good and evil, to call the just,
unjust. How presumptuous is it in such a being, to sit in judgment upon God,
and to question the rectitude of the divine administration, because it shocks his
sense of rectitude; such we conceive to be a fair statement of the manner in
which the Calvinist frequently meets the objection that his system is at war
with God’s attributes. Such the reasoning by which the voice of conscience and
nature is stifled, and men are reconciled to doctrines, which, if tried by the
established principles of morality, would be rejected with horror. On this
reasoning we purpose to offer some remarks; and we shall avail ourselves of the
opportunity, to give our views of the confidence which is due to our
rational and moral faculties in religion.

That God is infinite, and that man
often errs, we affirm as strongly as our Calvinistic brethren. We desire to
think humbly of ourselves, and reverently of our Creator. In the strong
language of Scripture, “We now see through a glass darkly.” “We
cannot by searching find out God unto perfection. Clouds and darkness are round
about him. His judgments are a great deep.” God is great and good beyond
utterance or thought. We have no disposition to idolize our own powers, or to
penetrate the secret counsels of the Deity. But, on the other hand, we think it
ungrateful to disparage the powers which our Creator has given us, or to
question the certainty or importance of the knowledge, which He has seen fit to
place within our reach. There is an affected humility, we think, as dangerous
as pride. We may rate our faculties too meanly, as well as too boastingly. The
worst error in religion, after all, is that of the skeptic, who records
triumphantly the weaknesses and wanderings of the human intellect, and
maintains that no trust is due to the decisions of this erring reason. We by no
means conceive, that man’s greatest danger springs from pride of understanding,
though we think as badly of this vice as other Christians. The history of the
church proves that men may trust their faculties too little as well as too
much, and that the timidity which shrinks from investigation has injured the
mind, and betrayed the interests of Christianity, as much as an irreverent
boldness of thought.

It is an important truth, which we
apprehend has not been sufficiently developed, that the ultimate reliance of a
human being is and must be on his own mind. To confide in God, we must first
confide in the faculties by which He is apprehended, and by which the proofs of
his existence are weighed. A trust in our ability to distinguish between truth
and falsehood is implied in every act of belief; for to question this ability
would of necessity unsettle all belief. We cannot take a step in reasoning or
action without a secret reliance on our own minds. Religion in particular
implies, that we have understandings endowed and qualified for the highest
employments of intellect. In affirming the existence and perfections of God, we
suppose and affirm the existence in ourselves of faculties which correspond to
these sublime objects, and which are fitted to discern them. Religion is a
conviction and an act of the human soul, so that, in denying confidence to the
one, we subvert the truth and claims of the other. Nothing is gained to piety
by degrading human nature, for in the competency of this nature to know and
judge of God all piety has its foundation. Our proneness to err instructs us,
indeed, to use our powers with great caution, but not to contemn and neglect
them. The occasional abuse of our faculties, be it ever so enormous, does not
prove them unfit for their highest end, which is, to form clear and consistent
views of God. Because our eyes sometimes fail or deceive us, would a wise man
pluck them out, or cover them with a bandage, and choose to walk and work in
the dark? or, because they cannot distinguish distant objects, can they discern
nothing clearly in their proper sphere, and is sight to be pronounced a
fallacious guide? Men who, to support a creed, would shake our trust in the
calm, deliberate, and distinct decisions of our rational and moral powers,
endanger religion more than its open foes, and forge the deadliest weapon for
the infidel.

It is true that God is an infinite
Being, and also true that his powers and perfections, his purposes and
operations, his ends and means, being unlimited, are incomprehensible.
In other words, they cannot be wholly taken in or embraced by the
human mind. In the strong and figurative language of Scripture, we “know
nothing” of God’s ways; that is, we know very few of them. But this
is just as true of the most advanced archangel as of man. In comparison with
the vastness of God’s system, the range of the highest created intellect is
narrow; and, in this particular, man’s lot does not differ from that of his
elder brethren in heaven. We are both confined in our observation and
experience to a little spot in the creation. But are an angel’s faculties
worthy of no trust, or is his knowledge uncertain, because he learns and
reasons from a small part of God’s works? or are his judgments respecting the
Creator to be charged with presumption, because his views do not spread through
the whole extent of the universe? We grant that our understandings cannot
stretch beyond a very narrow sphere. But still the lessons, which we learn
within this sphere are just as sure as if it were indefinitely enlarged.
Because much is unexplored, we are not to suspect what we have actually
discovered. Knowledge is not the less real because confined. The man who has
never set foot beyond his native village knows its scenery and inhabitants as
undoubtingly as if he had travelled to the poles. We indeed see very little;
but that little is as true as if every thing else were seen; and our future
discoveries must agree with and support it. Should the whole order and purposes
of the universe be opened to us, it is certain that nothing would be disclosed
which would in any degree shake our persuasion that the earth is inhabited by
rational and moral beings, who are authorized to expect from their Creator the
most benevolent and equitable government. No extent of observation can unsettle
those primary and fundamental principles of moral truth, which we derive from
our highest faculties operating in the relations in which God has fixed us. In
every region and period of the universe, it will be as true as it is now on the
earth, that knowledge and power are the measures of responsibility, and that
natural incapacity absolves from guilt. These and other moral verities, which
are among our clearest perceptions, would, if possible, be strengthened, in
proportion as our powers should be enlarged; because harmony and consistency
are the characters of God’s administration, and all our researches into the
universe only serve to manifest its unity, and to show a wider operation of the
laws which we witness and experience on earth.

We grant that God is incomprehensible,
in the sense already given. But He is not therefore unintelligible; and
this distinction we conceive to be important. We do not pretend to know the whole
nature and properties of God, but still we can form some clear ideas of
him, and can reason from these ideas as justly as from any other. The truth is,
that we cannot be said to comprehend any being whatever, not the simplest plant
or animal. All have hidden properties. Our knowledge of all is limited. But
have we therefore no distinct ideas of the objects around us, and is all our
reasoning about them unworthy of trust? Because God is infinite, his name is
not therefore a mere sound. It is a representative of some distinct conceptions
of our Creator; and these conceptions are as sure, and important, and as proper
materials for the reasoning faculty, as they would be if our views were
indefinitely enlarged. We cannot indeed trace God’s goodness and rectitude
through the whole field of his operations; but we know the essential nature of
these attributes, and therefore can often judge what accords with and opposes
them. God’s goodness, because infinite, does not cease to be goodness, or
essentially differ from the same attribute in man; nor does justice change its
nature, so that it cannot be understood, because it is seated in an unbounded
mind. There have indeed been philosophers, “falsely so called,” who
have argued from the unlimited nature of God, that we cannot ascribe to him
justice and other moral attributes, in any proper or definite sense of those
words; and the inference is plain, that all religion or worship, wanting an
intelligible object, must be a misplaced, wasted offering. This doctrine from
the infidel we reject with abhorrence; but something, not very different, too
often reaches us from the mistaken Christian, who, to save his creed, shrouds
the Creator in utter darkness. In opposition to both, we maintain that God’s
attributes are intelligible, and that we can conceive as truly of his goodness
and justice, as of these qualities in men. In fact, these qualities are
essentially the same in God and man, though differing in degree, in purity, and
in extent of operation. We know not and we cannot conceive of any other justice
or goodness, than we learn from our own nature; and if God have not these, he
is altogether unknown to us as a moral being; he offers nothing for esteem and
love to rest upon; the objection of the infidel is just, that worship is
wasted; “We worship we know not what.”

It is asked, On what authority do we
ascribe to God goodness and rectitude, in the sense in which these attributes belong
to men, or how can we judge of the nature of attributes in the mind of the
Creator? We answer by asking, How is it that we become acquainted with the mind
of a fellow-creature? The last is as invisible, as removed from immediate
inspection, as the first. Still we do not hesitate to speak of the justice and
goodness of a neighbour; and how do we gain our knowledge? We answer, by
witnessing the effects, operations, and expressions of these attributes. It is
a law of our nature to argue from the effect to the cause, from the action to
the agent, from the ends proposed and from the means of pursuing them, to the
character and disposition of the being in whom we observe them. By these
processes, we learn the invisible mind and character of man; and by the same we
ascend to the mind of God, whose works, effects, operations, and ends are as
expressive and significant of justice and goodness, as the best and most
decisive actions of men. If this reasoning be sound (and all religion rests
upon it,) then God’s justice and goodness are intelligible attributes, agreeing
essentially with the same qualities in ourselves. Their operation indeed is
infinitely wider, and they are employed in accomplishing not only immediate but
remote and unknown ends. Of consequence, we must expect that many parts of the
divine administration will be obscure, that is, will not produce immediate
good, and an immediate distinction between virtue and vice. But still the
unbounded operation of these attributes does not change their nature. They are
still the same, as if they acted in the narrowest sphere. We can still
determine in many cases what does not accord with them. We are particularly
sure that those essential principles of justice, which enter into and even form
our conception of this attribute, must pervade every province and every period
of the administration of a just being, and that to suppose the Creator in any
instance to forsake them, is to charge him directly with unrighteousness,
however loudly the lips may compliment his equity.

“But is it not presumptuous in
man,” it is continually said, “to sit in judgment on God?” We
answer, that to “sit in judgment on God” is an ambiguous and
offensive phrase, conveying to common minds the ideas of irreverence, boldness,
familiarity. The question would be better stated thus: Is it not presumptuous
in man to judge concerning God, and concerning what agrees or disagrees with
his attributes? We answer confidently, No; for in many cases we are competent
and even bound to judge. And we plead first in our de- fence the Scriptures.
How continually does God in his word appeal to the understanding and moral
judgment of man. “O inhabitants of Jerusalem and men of Judah, judge, I
pray you, between me and my vineyard. What could have been done more to my
vineyard, that I have not done in it.” We observe, in the next place, that
all religion supposes and is built on judgments passed by us on God and on his
operations. Is it not, for example, our duty and a leading part of piety to praise
God: And what is praising a being, but to adjudge and ascribe to him just and
generous deeds and motives? And of what value is praise, except from those, who
are capable of distinguishing between actions which exalt and actions which
degrade the character? Is it presumption to call God excellent? And what
is this, but to refer his character to a standard of excellence, to try it by
the established principles of rectitude, and to pronounce its conformity to
them; that is, to judge of God and his operations?

We are presumptuous, we are told, in
judging of our Creator. But He himself has made this our duty, in giving us a
moral faculty; and to decline it, is to violate the primary law of our nature.
Conscience, the sense of right, the power of perceiving moral distinctions, the
power of discerning between justice and injustice, excellence and baseness, is
the highest faculty given us by God, the whole foundation of our
responsibility, and our sole capacity for religion. Now we are forbidden by
this faculty to love a being, who wants, or who fails to discover, moral
excellence. God, in giving us conscience, has implanted a principle within us,
which forbids us to prostrate ourselves before mere power, or to offer praise
where we do not discover worth; a principle, which challenges our supreme
homage for supreme goodness, and which absolves us from guilt, when we abhor a
severe and unjust administration. Our Creator has consequently waived his own
claims on our veneration and obedience, any farther than he discovers himself
to us in characters of benevolence, equity, and righteousness. He rests his
authority on the perfect coincidence of his will and government with those
great and fundamental principles of morality written on our souls. He desires
no worship, but that which springs from the exercise of our moral faculties
upon his character, from our discernment and persuasion of his rectitude and
goodness. He asks, he accepts, no love or admiration but from those, who can
understand the nature and the proofs of moral excellence.

There are two or three striking
facts, which show that there is no presumption in judging of God, and of what
agrees or disagrees with his attributes. The first fact is, that the most
intelligent and devout men have often employed themselves in proving the existence
and perfections of God, and have been honored for this service to the cause of
religion. Now we ask, what is meant by the proofs of a divine
perfection? They are certain acts, operations, and methods of government, which
are proper and natural effects, signs, and expressions of this perfection, and
from which, according to the established principles of reasoning, it may be
inferred. To prove the divine attributes is to collect and arrange those works
and ways of the Creator, which accord with these attributes, correspond to
them, flow from them, and express them. Of consequence, to prove them requires
and implies the power of judging of what agrees with them, of discerning
their proper marks and expressions. All our treatises on natural theology rest
on this power. Every argument in support of a divine perfection is an exercise
of it. To deny it, is to overthrow all religion.

Now, if such are the proofs of God’s
goodness and justice, and if we are capable of discerning them, then we are not
necessarily presumptuous, when we say of particular measures ascribed to him,
that they are inconsistent with his attributes, and cannot belong to him. There
is plainly no more presumption in affirming of certain principles of
administration, that they oppose God’s equity and would prove him unrighteous,
than to affirm of others, that they prove him upright and good. There are signs
and evidences of injustice as unequivocal as those of justice; and our
faculties are as adequate to the perception of the last as of the first. If
they must not be trusted in deciding what would prove God unjust, they are
unworthy of confidence when they gather evidences of his rectitude; and of
course, the whole structure of religion must fall.

It is no slight objection to the
mode of reasoning adopted by the Calvinist, that it renders the proof of the
divine attributes impossible. When we object to his representations of the
divine government, that they shock our clearest ideas of goodness and justice,
he replies, that still they may be true, because we know very little of God,
and what seems unjust to man, may be in the Creator the perfection of
rectitude. Now this weapon has a double edge. If the strongest marks and
expressions of injustice do not prove God unjust, then the strongest marks of
the opposite character do not prove him righteous. If the first do not deserve
confidence, because of our narrow views of God, neither do the last. If, when
more shall be known, the first may be found consistent with perfect rectitude,
so, when more shall be known, the last may be found consistent with infinite
malignity and oppression. This reasoning of our opponents casts us on an ocean
of awful uncertainty. Admit it, and we have no proofs of God’s goodness and
equity to rely upon. What we call proofs, may be mere appearances, which a
wider knowledge of God may reverse. The future may show us, that the very laws
and works of the Creator, from which we now infer his kindness, are consistent
with the most determined purpose to spread infinite misery and guilt, and were
intended, by raising hope, to add the agony of disappointment to our other
woes. Why may not these anticipations, horrible as they are, be verified by the
unfolding of God’s system, if our reasonings about his attributes are rendered
so very uncertain, as Calvinism teaches, by the infinity of his nature?

We have mentioned one fact to show
that it is not presumptuous to judge of God, and of what accords with and
opposes his attributes; namely, the fact that his attributes are thought susceptible
of proof. Another fact, very decisive on this point, is, that Christians of all
classes have concurred in resting the truth of Christianity in a great degree
on its internal evidence, that is, on its accordance with the
perfections of God. How common is it to hear from religious teachers, that
Christianity is worthy of a good and righteous being, that it bears the marks
of a divine original! Volumes have been written on its internal proofs, on the
coincidence of its purposes and spirit with our highest conceptions of God. How
common, too, is it to say of other religions, that they are at war with the
divine nature, with God’s rectitude and goodness, and that we want no other
proofs of their falsehood! And what does all this reasoning imply? Clearly this,
that we are capable of determining, in many cases, what is worthy and what is
unworthy of God, what accords with and what opposes his moral attributes. Deny
us this capacity, and it would be no presumption against a professed
revelation, that it ascribed to the Supreme Being the most detestable
practices. It might still be said in support of such a system, that it is
arrogant in man to determine what kind of revelation suits the character of the
Creator. Christianity then leans, at least in part, and some think chiefly, on
internal evidence, or on its agreeableness to God’s moral attributes; and is it
probable, that this religion, having this foundation, contains representations
of God’s government which shock our ideas of rectitude, and that it silences
our objections by telling us, that we are no judges of what suits or opposes
his infinite nature?

We will name one more fact to show
that it is not presumption to form these judgments of the Creator. All
Christians are accustomed to reason from God’s attributes, and to use them as
tests of doctrines. In their controversies with one another, they spare no
pains to show that their particular views accord best with the divine
perfections, and every sect labors to throw on its adversaries the odium of
maintaining what is unworthy of God. Theological writings are filled with such
arguments; and yet we, it seems, are guilty of awful presumption when we
deny of God principles of administration, against which every pure and good
sentiment in our breasts rises in abhorrence.

We shall conclude this discussion
with an important inquiry. If God’s justice and goodness are consistent with
those operations and modes of government, which Calvinism ascribes to him, of
what use is our belief in these perfections? What expectations can we found
upon them? If it consist with divine rectitude to consign to everlasting misery
beings who have come guilty and impotent from his hand, we beg to know what
interest we have in this rectitude, what pledge of good it contains, or what evil
can be imagined which may not be its natural result? If justice and goodness,
when stretched to infinity, take such strange forms and appear in such
unexpected and apparently inconsistent operations, how are we sure, that they
will not give up the best men to ruin, and leave the universe to the powers of
darkness? Such results indeed seem incompatible with these attributes, but not
more so than the acts attributed to God by Calvinism. Is it said that the
divine faithfulness is pledged in the Scriptures to a happier issue of things?
But why should not divine faithfulness transcend our poor understandings as
much as divine goodness and jus- tice, and why may not God, consistently with
this attribute, crush every hope which his word has raised? Thus all the divine
perfections are lost to us as grounds of encouragement and consolation, if we
maintain, that their infinity places them beyond our judgment, and that we must
expect from them measures and operations entirely I opposed to what seems to us
most accordant with their nature.

We have thus endeavored to show,
that the testimony of our rational and moral faculties against Calvinism is
worthy of trust. We know that this reasoning will be met by the question, What,
then becomes of Christianity? for this religion plainly teaches the doctrines
you have condemned. Our answer is ready. Christianity contains no such
doctrines. Christianity, reason, and conscience are perfectly harmonious on the
subject under discussion. Our religion, fairly construed, gives no countenance
to that system, which has arrogated to itself the distinction of Evangelical.
We cannot, however, enter this field at present. We will only say, that the
general spirit of Christianity affords a very strong presumption, that its
records teach no such doctrines as we have opposed. This spirit is love,
charity, benevolence. Christianity, we all agree, is designed to manifest God
as perfect benevolence, and to bring men to love and imitate him. Now it is
probable, that a religion, having this object, gives views of the Supreme
Being, from which our moral convictions and benevolent sentiments shrink with
horror, and which, if made our pattern, would convert us into monsters? It is
plain, that, were a human parent to form himself on the Universal Father, as
described by Calvinism, that is, were he to bring his children into life
totally depraved, and then to pursue them with endless punishment, we should
charge him with a cruelty not surpassed in the annals of the world; or, were a
sovereign to incapacitate his subjects in any way whatever for obeying his
laws, and then to torture them in dungeons of perpetual woe, we should say that
history records no darker crime. And is it probable, that a religion, which
aims to attract and assimilate us to God, considered as love, should hold him
up to us in these heart-withering characters? We may confidently expect to find
in such a system the brightest views of the divine nature; and the same
objections lie against interpretations of its records, which savor of cruelty
and injustice, as lie against the literal sense of passages which ascribe to
God bodily wants and organs. Let the Scriptures be read with a recollection of
the spirit of Christianity, and with that modification of particular texts by
this general spirit, which a just criticism requires, and Calvinism would no
more enter the mind of the reader, than Popery, we had almost said, than
Heathenism.

In the remarks now made, it will be
seen, we hope, that we have aimed to expose doctrines, not to condemn their professors.
It is true, that men are apt to think themselves assailed, when their system
only is called to account. But we have no foe but error. We are less and less
disposed to measure the piety of others by peculiarities of faith. Men’s
characters are determined, not by the opinions which they profess, but by those
on which their thoughts habitually fasten, which recur to them most forcibly,
and which color their ordinary views of God and duty. The creed of habit,
imitation, or fear, may be defended stoutly, and yet have little practical
influence. The mind, when compelled by education or other circumstances to
receive irrational doctrines, has yet a power of keeping them, as it were, on
its surface, of excluding them from its depths, of refusing to incorporate them
with its own being; and, when burdened with a mixed, incongruous system, it
often discovers a sagacity, which reminds us of the instinct of inferior
animals, in selecting the healthful and nutritious portions, and in making them
its daily food. Accordingly the real faith often corresponds little with that
which is professed. It often happens, that, through the progress of the mind in
light and virtue, opinions, once central, are gradually thrown outward, lose
their vitality, and cease to be principles of action, whilst through habit they
are defended as articles of faith. The words of the creed survive, but its
advocates sympathize with it little more than its foes. These remarks are
particularly applicable to the present subject. A large number, perhaps a
majority of those, who surname themselves with the name of Calvin, have little
more title to it than ourselves. They keep the name, and drop the principles
which it signifies. They adhere to the system as a whole, but shrink from all
its parts and distinguishing points. This silent but real defection from
Calvinism is spreading more and more widely. The grim features of this system
are softening, and its stern spirit yielding to conciliation and charity. We
beg our readers to consult for themselves the two Catechisms and the Confession
of the Westminster Assembly, and to compare these standards of Calvinism, with
what now bears its name. They will rejoice, we doubt not, in the triumphs of
truth. With these views, we have no disposition to disparage the professors of
the system which we condemn, although we believe that its influence is yet so
extensive and pernicious as to bind us to oppose it.

Calvinism, we are persuaded, is
giving place to better views. It has passed its meridian, and is sinking, to
rise no more. It has to contend with foes more formidable than theologians,
with foes, from whom it cannot shield itself in mystery and metaphysical
subtilties, we mean with the progress of the human mind, and with the progress
of the spirit of the gospel. Society is going forward in intelligence and
charity, and of course is leaving the theology of the sixteenth century behind
it. We hail this revolution of opinion as a most auspicious event to the
Christian cause. We hear much at present of efforts to spread the gospel. But
Christianity is gaining more by the removal of degrading errors, than it would
by armies of missionaries who should carry with them a corrupted form of the
religion. We think the decline of Calvinism one of the most encouraging facts
in our passing history; for this system, by outraging conscience and reason,
tends to array these high faculties against revelation. Its errors are peculiarly
mournful, because they relate to the character of God. It darkens and stains
his pure nature; spoils his character of its sacredness, loveliness, glory, and
thus quenches the central light of the universe, makes existence a curse, and
the extinction of it a consummation devoutly to be wished. We now speak of the peculiarities
of this system, and of their natural influence, when not counteracted, as they
always are in a greater or less degree, by better views, derived from the
spirit and plain lessons of Christianity.

What’s fulfilled grace?

What does it have to do with total depravity?

How does it compare to Christian Universalism?

ironstrikes.com/blog/uncle-b … -depravity

Read the Channing piece. It has the answers.

Here ya go qaz. The first 5 paragraphs can be ignored - the paragraph beginning “To return: the principal argument…” is where the meat of the essay begins.

wizduum.net/book/moral-argum … inism-1809

The word “depravity” is not mentioned at all in the posted material. The word “depraved” just one time:

" It is plain, that, were a human parent to form himself on the Universal Father, as
described by Calvinism, that is, were he to bring his children into life
totally depraved, and then to pursue them with endless punishment, we should
charge him with a cruelty not surpassed in the annals of the world"

Which is not an objection to depravity but to endless punishment, not applicable to those who support Calvinistic-Universalism.

The entire argument is right there, Origen. The word ‘depraved’ does not make the argument or break it - it is the argument itself. Surely you can see that? Thousands before you have understood it very well.

You’re welcome qaz. :smiley:

I like this:pantelism.com/redemption/fulfilledgrace.html

I’ve read several parts of it. I saw nothing related to any argument against depravity. I’ve already debunked in detail a lengthy 3 argument article against depravity that no one here has addressed. Does this guy have anything new to add? Maybe someone who’s read it can sum it up briefly, as this guy seems awfully long winded.

[size=150]^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^[/size]

Don’t hold your breath Dave, this old maxim still rings true…

I keep forgetting that, dang it. Okay - breathing… :smiley:

Do these people even read the Bible? There are many who had fellowship with God, for example, Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Elijah, Job, Samson, Samuel, David, Solomon, Moses etc. etc. The list goes on and on.

This is basically denying the Spirit of God that speaks to our hearts and minds. As I mentioned previously, such words came from the mouth of a serpent even before the fall. " God told you this? Really?" One thing is true, that after Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit, it did affect their conscience. They were both ashamed of what they’d done and it changed them for the better because they found out God’s words were true. This is the reason why they left the garden as it says in Matthew 10:36 " He who finds his life will lose it , and he who loses his life for My sake will find it."

How does a list of a few people who had “fellowship with God” relate to, or disprove, the statement [not mine BTW] you are responding to?

I’m quite sure Calvinists read the Bible. They even seem to put more emphasis on that & holy living than Christians in general.

BTW, as regards David, for example, from your list, even after having “fellowship with God” he committed premeditated adultery & murder. This man who is said to be after God’s own heart.

How do those words (not mine) deny that? Do you deny that sin affected a fall in Adam & Eve?

Is the Spirit of God speaking to the hearts & minds of suicide bombers to blow themselves & others into pieces?

Was the Spirit of God speaking to the hearts & minds of those of Noah’s time:

Gen.6:5 The LORD saw how great the wickedness of the human race had become on the earth, and that every inclination of the thoughts of the human heart was only evil all the time.

Did that include Noah? Who later found grace with God?

Here’s a question, that has been puzzling me. Would the world come to believe in Total Depravity, if the Zombie apocalypse
( see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zombie_apocalypse) were to occur?

http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_mcnm7ejPr71rrfrqco1_500.gif

If you’re not interested enough in actually getting answers to read a 15 minute essay, I’m not going to do it for you.
No offense - I don’t think you’ve debunked a thing. I don’t think you have actually thought this through on your own yet. Perhaps I’m wrong. Perhaps yu are sincere, perhaps you are getting off on trolling. I’m not sure.

It is my view that each of Adam’s descendants has inherited from Adam and Eve a nature that has a tendency to sin (or do wrong), but CERTAINLY HAS NOT inherited a nature that is totally depraved and can perform no righteous acts.

Sorry, i’m not feeling motivated to read or address the essay.

Evidently others (yourself included) are not motivated enough to respond to my refutation of the 3 argument article that took me hours to write up & post in this thread.

In chess that’s what you might call a “stalemate”.

In my thinking, though, you’ve been checkmated, mate! :smiley: