Hey Robin,
I'll do what I can to offer some answers. But keep in mind that I am not a spokesperson for any movement or idea. I can only share with you what I think, and how I've come to understand some of these ideas. That, and 50¢, won't get you a stale cup of coffee in a cheap diner...
rbaitz wrote:I am understanding what you have said to mean that God predestined the Church, so Eph2 is talking about the Church, not individual believers, am I correct?
Yes, that is what I meant.
rbaitz wrote:If this is so, I'm not really understanding though why a distinction is made (if its made) when the Church is made up of individual believers, from all generations can be the "us". Maybe I am just not getting it. Can you explain?
I don't think it is a case of making a distinction of individual believers or of the Church as a whole. Let me explain this way ...
When I was Calvinistic, I would read Eph 1:4-5 this way: "God chose me before the foundation of the world that I should be holy and blameless ... He predestined me to adoption as a son ..."
As a non-Calvinist, I see the same passage this way: God chose the Church before the foundation of the world that it should be holy and blameless ... He predestined the Church to adoption as a son ..."
Once again, think of Israel, whom God chose. It is true that God did not chose the Philistines, the Egyptians, the Assyrians - or any other nation; He chose the Israelites to work through. Yet, a Philistine, an Egyptian, or an Assyrians could
become a convert to Judaism (i.e. Rahab). By converting to Judaism one became part of the chosen, and could share in its destiny. In a very similar way God has chosen and predestined the Church, which accepts converts who are circumcised of the heart.
rbaitz wrote:As for Mystery ... Something taught in scripture but we cannot fully understand it.
I think I understand what you mean now. You originally asked:
But if someone never accepts mystery in the Bible couldn't it lead to error? Im not saying those who don't accept reformed theology are in error, but I am saying that to reject mystery could lead to error.
I agree that there are many things in the Bible that are mysterious to me. I can accept the fact that I do not understand many (if not most) things. But to say that "reject[ing] mystery" leads to error is not something I can be comfortable agreeing with. In my opinion what leads to error is rejecting what is clear, not what is mysterious.
peace,
dane
"God - He'll bloody your nose and then give you a ride home on his bicycle..." Rich Mullins 1955-1997