amishrockstar
Puritan Board Freshman
After discussions about "particular grace" one
of the main questions that seems to follow is,
so what?
In other words, what does this doctrine mean
for me personally?
So, I'm curious ...how has the doctrine of
particular redemption ("limited atonement")
changed your life? Does it effect your daily
walk and enable you to grow in godliness?
Does it have positive, practical implications
for how you interact with people? In the
church? At home? At work?
Has it affected your evangelism (if you
actually do "evangelize")?
How would you answer the Arminian or the
4-point Calvinist who cannot see any practical
reasons for holding to the seemingly hardest
point to believe in?
Thanks,
Matthew
of the main questions that seems to follow is,
so what?
In other words, what does this doctrine mean
for me personally?
So, I'm curious ...how has the doctrine of
particular redemption ("limited atonement")
changed your life? Does it effect your daily
walk and enable you to grow in godliness?
Does it have positive, practical implications
for how you interact with people? In the
church? At home? At work?
Has it affected your evangelism (if you
actually do "evangelize")?
How would you answer the Arminian or the
4-point Calvinist who cannot see any practical
reasons for holding to the seemingly hardest
point to believe in?
Thanks,
Matthew