Saturday, May 12, 2018

Burn it all down

As I read Clark Pinnock’s Flame of Love, I came across this sentence:

I hope the reader will sense how in love with God I am.

and I couldn’t help but chuckle. In reality, a discerning reader will sense how in love Clark Pinnock is with his theology. Clark Pinnock does not love God, at least not the God revealed in scripture. Pinnock loves the God that he has created. Behold the scorecard of The Grace of God and the Will of Man[1]:

Chapter 1: Pinnock’s religious autobiography, or how he changed his mind from unpleasant scriptural truth that he didn't understand to anti scriptural pleasant doctrines that made sense.

Chapters 2-4: God’s salvation is universal.

Some of the chapters are written by theologically suspect Seventh Day Adventists, by the way.[2]

Chapter 5: God sovereignly limits his sovereignty. Also, God knows everything that will be, and because of this, he can allow humans their wonderful freedom by responding to them as they freely live their free lives of freedom.

Chapter 6: God doesn’t know everything because if he did, that knowledge would limit humanity’s freely living free lives of freedom. We prefer our freedom over God’s. If the future doesn’t exist, how can God know it, all claims of divine prophecy not withstanding?

Chapter 7: But God does know everything, just differently. If God knows all possible outcomes, then we can still be free and God can still be omniscient, because he doesn’t know exactly what free choices we will freely make.

Chapters 5-7 are all speculation.[3]

Chapters 8-10: God is not sovereign (part the second). Arminians are better Christians unless you consider the faith teachers, the legalists, or the Catholics.

Chapter 11-13: God doesn’t choose arbitrarily. In other words, he doesn’t do what he wants. God doesn’t choose individuals, but he has chosen Jesus, and this is not a weird or redundant thing to say at all. Election is corporate with regards to us. Also, let’s take a break from speculation and talk about experience.

Chapters 14-15: God is not sovereign (part the third) because we don't understand how he possibly can be and still be just. God is also not sovereign because we can't possibly understand how he can be sovereign and men be responsible simultaneously. Also God is subject to moral law.
We don't claim to have the last word but we do know that God absolutely does not.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to The Grace of God and the Will of Man.

[1] Clark Pinnock, General Editor, The Grace of God and the Will of Man, (Minneapolis, Minnesota: Bethany House Publishers, 1989).
[2] Pinnock’s own admission. Page xi.
[3] “The debate about foreknowledge is speculative.” (page xiii)

Monday, May 7, 2018

Clark Pinnock's Flame of Love


Book Review: Flame of Love: A Theology of the Holy Spirit
Alejandro Gonzaga
April 21, 2018
THEO 546
Clark Pinnock (February 3, 1937—August 15, 2010) was Professor Emeritus of Systematic Theology at McMaster Divinity College and explored varying schools of theological thought before his death. He tackles the difficult subject of pneumatology in The Flame of Love: A Theology of the Holy Spirit. From his introduction, Pinnock reveals his bias against a purely-scriptural theology, and instead declares that he will “provide the full perspective required by the church” by moving “beyond exegesis”[1]. Pinnock attempts to reconstruct the Gospel in order to make it more attractive to men, but only succeeds in diminishing the glory of God.
Pinnock begins his introduction with a prayer that asks, “Help us to overcome our forgetfulness of Spirit” [2]. Pinnock distinguishes between three different theological traditions and says that “in both Catholic and Protestant theology the place of the Spirit has surely been diminished”[3]. He says this because Western traditions neglect the experiential side of the Spirit. This point cannot be overstated. In his introduction, Pinnock states repeatedly that his book will forego a scriptural basis for pneumatology and strive to discover what other avenues have to say about the Holy Spirit. Pinnock alludes to finding a “more experiential basis for the doctrine of the Spirit”[4]. He wants to not only use Scripture, but “insights from the ecumenical church”. He says that we have to be “sensitive to things that are only spiritually discerned” as opposed to scripturally discerned[5]. He believes that “knowing the Spirit is experiential”[6]. Finally, as to drive the point home that Scripture is insufficient for his task, Pinnock says, “Exegesis alone cannot provide the full perspective required by the church. There has to be a wider sweep of investigation that takes into account other dimensions—historical, theological, philosophical, cultural, and mystical.”[7]
Pinnock aims to examine “the Christian vision from the vantage point of the Spirit”[8]. His book explores this through seven chapters:
  • 1.       Spirit and Trinity
  • 2.       Spirit in Creation
  • 3.       Spirit and Christology
  • 4.       Spirit and Church
  • 5.       Spirit and Union
  • 6.       Spirit and Universality
  • 7.       Spirit and Truth

Chapter 1 covers the Holy Spirit in his relationship with God and Christ in the Trinity. Chapter 2 covers the Holy Spirit as Lord and Giver of Life. Chapter 3 explores how the Holy Spirit “anointed Jesus of Nazareth to heal human brokenness”. Chapter 4 dives into the presence and activities of the Spirit in the Church. Chapter 5 examines the goal of salvation, living in union with God through the Holy Spirit. Chapter 6 explains how God desires all men to be saved and the Holy Spirit is “present with every person in every place”[9]. Finally, in chapter 7, Pinnock explains how the Spirit leads the church in its mission to spread the Gospel.
If the Gospel tells us that God sent his Son to earth to save us from his wrath, then Pinnock has written this book to rewrite this Gospel. Pinnock consciously moves the focus of the Gospel away from God’s glory and directly towards man’s dignity. God’s love for man, and not God’s glory, is the central theme of Pinnock’s Gospel. In Chapter 2, instead of acknowledging God’s power to create conscious, living, thinking humans, Pinnock attributes the existence of humanity to evolution. He says, “The orderliness of the world is amazing—especially the capacity of nature [emphasis added] to produce living, conscious, personal beings.”[10] While the psalmist believes that the purpose of creation is to “declare the glory of God” (Psalm 19.1), Pinnock says that “theology declares that humanity is the goal of creation”[11]. In Chapter 3, Pinnock attempts to remove God’s wrath from the Gospel. He claims that the satisfaction of God’s wrath on the cross is “strange” and that God does not actually hate sinners and is not humanity’s enemy[12], but we know this is false (Prov 6.16-19; Romans 5.10). In attempting to state that the Gospel does not preach individual guilt under God’s law, Pinnock uses Philippians 3.6 to say that “Paul did not have a guilty conscience”[13]. This is a blatant distortion. Paul intends to say that if he were to be judged superficially by the Old Testament law, he would be guiltless, but regardless, his so-called perfection under the law does not matter in view of living for Christ. Pinnock often takes scripture intended only for believers and applies it to everyone. He says that “humanity is not destined for wrath, but for salvation”[14] (1 Thess 5.9). Chapter 6 is dedicated completely to asserting that the Holy Spirit is present everywhere, working salvation in men who do not hear and do not respond to the Gospel. He says, God “is the reconciler of the whole world” and “there is no general revelation or natural knowledge of God that is not at the same time gracious revelation and a potentially saving knowledge.”[15] Despite appearing to avoid claims of universalism, Pinnock plainly states that “Spirit works everywhere in advance of the church’s mission,”[16] and that even if someone is not a Christian, they are saved.[17] Pinnock’s aims to preach universalism and declare that everyone will eventually be saved.
Pinnock slants this book heavily toward a glossy view of humanity, and for this reason and others, I cannot in any way recommend it. Humanity is infected with sin and that to the core. We are dead in it and enemies of God. God’s is rightfully angry with us. Scripture teaches that we are sinners by nature and not by a conscious and completely “free” choice. If anyone is to be saved, God must save them, yet he does not save everyone. God remains perfectly justified in saving some but not all, for grace is elective, but wrath is obligatory. Pinnock desperately strives to rebuild the dignity and freedom that Adam and Eve had before the Fall, but he must completely shipwreck scriptural teaching in order to do so. Pinnock is not committed to scripture, but to his opinion, and for this reason, his book fails as theology.


[1] Clark Pinnock, Flame of Love: A Theology of the Holy Spirit (Downers Grove, IL: Zondervan, 1996), page 17.
[2] Ibid, 9.
[3] Ibid, 10.
[4] Ibid, 10.
[5] Ibid, 13.
[6] Ibid, 15.
[7] Ibid, 17.
[8] Ibid, 18.
[9] Ibid, 18.
[10] Ibid, 67.
[11] Ibid, 71.
[12] Ibid, 107.
[13] Ibid, 156.
[14] Ibid, 109
[15] Ibid, 187.
[16] Ibid, 192.
[17] Ibid, 194.

more about you know what

the catholic church claims that truth lies in itself. truth is not in scripture, not in God's revelation, not from the holy spirit, but primarily from the church. they first of all claim that scripture is a creation of the church. therefore they change scripture, rewrite it, add or remove from it whenever and however they like. scripture is not the only means of God's revelation. it is written by men.
the church does this because they desire to centralize power, like any human institution. why do you think God has allowed the protestant church to splinter into a thousand different denominations? because a single denomination has power, and power desires to maintain and increase power. centralization brings wealth and unity, but in the case of the catholic church, the unity is not created nor maintained by the spirit, but by the organization itself. think about the world religions. is any so fractured as the protestant church? God allows this for a reason

Sunday, May 6, 2018

Arminianism

Pride sits as the core of the Arminian gospel. Pride is the desire to understand God, his ways, his purposes, and his desires in spite of what scripture reveals. Whatever we comprehend we have power over. This is what their false gospel seeks: power over the almighty.
"I will send a deceiving influence." Does God lie? Does he deceive? No. He sends judgment. He removes the possibility of repentance. How fits this into "free will"? It does not. God judges now and he  judges before all creation. He determines or fate because he is God.  This arbitrary consignment to one side of eternity or that other baffles us. He is not comprehended by us. Would you remove scripture? Would you say it does not mean what it clearly declares? Feel free, but do not claim to minister the gospel of Christ.

The Fear of God

Fear is fear. The word means fear. We know what fear is. Yes, fear is reverence. That's the easy part. Let's talk about the hard part.
"It is a terrifying thing to fall into the hands of the living God." Why would the author of Hebrews say this? Fear is reverence but it is also terror.
Terror is what is unknown, inconceivable, unnatural. The incomprehensible terrifies us. God is incomprehensible. He is far beyond anything and everything that we conceive or create. Terror also threatens us, not with mere harm or common peril or even death. Terror threatens us with uncommon destruction. Terror threatens us with a lasting trauma that affects us deeply and to our core. It causes us to question everything that we have built our identity on. Terror exposes us for the conceited, egotistical cowards that we are. Terror burns us down to ash. God is terrifying, for he passionately hates the sinner.  Outside of Christ, God threatens us with eternal, agonizing, burning destruction. Do not merely revere him. Fear him.

The Hate of God

"God loves everyone"
Think about it. God loves Jesus and Abraham and Paul and you and me. God also loves Satan and Hitler and murderers and child molesters and rapists and so on and so on.
What kind of weak, two-dimensional, loser, no-standard-of-right-or-wrong coward loves everyone the same?
"Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated."
"For forty years I loathed that generation"
God is not holy if God does not hate, not merely the sin,  but the sinner. Sin is an abstract; it is a phantom that deserves contempt and scorn. It does not warrant our slightest attention. It is corruption and decay and death. However the sinner... The sinner gives himself to this corruption. He willfully surrenders to the destruction and death that sin brings. He celebrates it. He promotes it and he delights in it. He happily takes what has been given for his and for others' benefit and he uses it to kill, to maim, to poison, to molest and to destroy.
Yes. God hates the sinner or he is not God.

Goat Farmers: Introduction

  Introduction I am not ashamed of the Gospel. [1] The late Christian apologist Ravi Zacharias explains the motivation that led him to write...