Published: 2016-03-301

Unlimited Atonement and Resistible Grace. A Classical Arminianism in the Contemporary Evangelical Theology

Damian Dorocki

Abstract

The evangelical theology is not monolith in some areas. One of the evidence for such statement is the existence of two great traditions in evangelical bosom, namely Calvinism and Arminianism. The article presents the evangelical Arminianism in order to show that it is an alternative side of the evangelical Protestantism. The author starts from historical-theological perspective, exposing the soteriology of Jacob Arminius and his followers (so-called Remonstrants) as the main source of modern evangelical Arminian thought. The next part contains the presentation of views of Arminian theologians (F. Leroy Forlines, Robert E. Picirilli, Jack Cottrell, I. Howard Marschall, Roger E. Olson). The analysis, which has been made, indicates that the representatives of this theological stream believe in total depravity of human nature, Christ’s universal atonement and the particular application of redemption, the necessity of God’s grace, which is not irresistible in its nature, and in conditional predestination, which is realized in the saving union with Christ. Moreover, the author includes the Arminian exegesis of three biblical passages that relate to the operation of grace (John 6: 37.39.44); eternal predestination (Eph 1: 3-14); and the extent of the universal salvific will of God and the atonement (1Tim 2: 1-6).

Keywords:

Arminianism, Evangelicalism, Calvinism, Grace, Predestination, salvation

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Dorocki, D. (2016). Unlimited Atonement and Resistible Grace. A Classical Arminianism in the Contemporary Evangelical Theology. Theological Yearbook, 58(1), 37–58. Retrieved from https://ojs.chat.edu.pl/index.php/rt/article/view/84

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