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[Download] "What Is Calvinism; The Meaning & Uses of the Term; Brief Untechnical Statement of Reformed Faith" by B. B. Warfield " Book PDF Kindle ePub Free

What Is Calvinism; The Meaning & Uses of the Term; Brief Untechnical Statement of Reformed Faith

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eBook details

  • Title: What Is Calvinism; The Meaning & Uses of the Term; Brief Untechnical Statement of Reformed Faith
  • Author : B. B. Warfield
  • Release Date : January 06, 2018
  • Genre: Christianity,Books,Religion & Spirituality,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 600 KB

Description

It is very odd how difficult it

seems for some persons to understand just what Calvinism is. And yet the matter

itself presents no difficulty whatever. It is capable of being put into a

single sentence; and that, on level to every religious man's comprehension. For

Calvinism is just religion in its purity. We have only, therefore, to conceive

of religion in its purity, and that is Calvinism.

In what attitude of mind and

heart does religion come most fully to its rights? Is it not in the attitude of

prayer? When we kneel before God, not with the body merely, but with the mind

and heart, we have assumed the attitude which above all others deserves the

name of religious. And this religious attitude by way of eminence is obviously

just the attitude of utter dependence and humble trust. He who comes to God in

prayer, comes not in a spirit of self-assertion, but in a spirit of trustful

dependence. No one ever addressed God in prayer thus: "0 God, thou knowest

that I am the architect of my own fortunes and the determiner of my own

destiny. Thou mayest indeed do something to help me in the securing of my

purposes after I have determined upon them. But my heart is my own, and thou

canst not intrude into it; my will is my own, and thou canst not bend it. When

I wish thy aid, I will call on thee for it. Meanwhile, thou must await my

pleasure." Men may reason somewhat like this; but that is not the way they

pray. There did, indeed, once two men go up into the temple to pray. And one

stood and prayed thus to himself (can it be that this "to himself"

has a deeper significance than appears on the surface?), "God, I thank

thee that I am not as the rest of men." While the other smote his breast,

and said, "God be merciful to me a sinner." Even the former

acknowledged a certain dependence on God; for he thanked God for his virtues.

But we are not left in doubt in which one the religious mood was most purely

exhibited. There is One who has told us that with clearness and emphasis. 


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