Calvinism is Biblical
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- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 5
- Time for argument
- One day
- Max argument characters
- 10,000
- Voting period
- One week
- Point system
- Winner selection
- Voting system
- Open
This debate will evaluate whether the theological system known as Calvinism is biblically supported. Calvinism, often summarized by the acronym TULIP, includes five core doctrines: Total Depravity, Unconditional Election, Limited Atonement, Irresistible Grace, and Perseverance of the Saints. These doctrines affirm God's absolute sovereignty in salvation, man's inability to choose God apart from grace, and the effectual nature of Christ's atoning work for the elect.
The Pro side will argue that Calvinism faithfully represents the teachings of Scripture concerning human nature, divine sovereignty, salvation, and grace. The Con side will argue that Calvinism either misrepresents or goes beyond what the Bible teaches, and that alternative interpretations (e.g., Arminianism, Molinism, or other soteriologies) align more closely with Scripture.
Definitions:
Calvinism: The Reformed theological system centered on God’s sovereign election and the doctrines of grace, particularly as articulated in the five points of Calvinism.
Biblical: Derived from or supported by the proper interpretation of the Bible.
Burden of Proof:
The burden is shared. Pro must demonstrate that the key doctrines of Calvinism are clearly taught in Scripture. Con must demonstrate that these doctrines are either not supported by Scripture or are contradicted by it.
Debate Structure (suggested):
Round 1: Opening arguments (no rebuttals).
Round 2: Rebuttals and defense.
Round 3: Further rebuttals and analysis.
Round 4: Final rebuttals and closing arguments (no new arguments).
Rules:
Arguments must be grounded in Scripture. Appeals to church history, logic, or tradition are welcome but should not replace biblical support.
No forfeits. No trolling or semantics.
Citations of Scripture should include chapter and verse for verification.
This is a theological debate with eternal significance. Both sides are encouraged to engage respectfully, thoughtfully, and with a sincere commitment to truth.
- All people are born in sin (Psalm 51:5, Romans 5:12).
- No one naturally seeks God or does good (Romans 3:10–12).
- The natural human condition is spiritual death (Ephesians 2:1–3).
- Spiritual death means inability, not just unwillingness (John 6:44, where "no one can come" indicates a lack of ability).
- God chose individuals for salvation before the world began (Ephesians 1:4–5).
- His choice was not based on works or future decisions (Romans 9:11–13).
- Election is rooted in God's purpose and mercy, not human will (Romans 9:16, 18).
- Jesus told His disciples that they did not choose Him, but He chose them (John 15:16).
- Jesus came to save His people from their sins (Matthew 1:21).
- He laid down His life specifically for His sheep (John 10:14–15).
- He gave Himself for the Church, not indiscriminately for all (Ephesians 5:25).
- If Christ died for all in the same way, all would be saved. Yet Scripture teaches that some will face judgment, which means Christ's death must have a particular intention.
- All whom the Father gives to the Son will come to Him (John 6:37).
- No one can come unless the Father draws them (John 6:44).
- Those whom God calls are also justified (Romans 8:30), which means the call is effectual.
- God opened Lydia’s heart to respond to Paul’s preaching (Acts 16:14), which shows that saving grace acts directly on the heart.
- Those who are justified will be glorified. No one falls out along the way (Romans 8:30).
- Jesus said He will lose none of those the Father has given Him (John 6:39).
- No one can snatch believers out of God’s hand (John 10:28–29).
- Those who fall away were never truly born again (1 John 2:19).
- Arguments must be grounded in Scripture.You relied on Sirach, which is not recognized as Scripture under Sola Scriptura. You did not cite any canonical Scripture to support your argument against Calvinism.
- No trolling or semantics.Opening with “Ion wanna read essays :(” was dismissive and unserious, which is not appropriate in a formal, Bible-based debate.
- Scripture should be cited with chapter and verse.Only Revelation 22:18–19 and Sirach 15 were quoted. You did not use any verses from the 66-book Protestant canon to support your claims.
- Round 1 was for opening arguments only.Your post was a rebuttal, not an opening argument. You skipped the agreed structure and went straight into attacking my position, which was not permitted in this round.
- Why did Rome wait until the 1500s to formally define the Apocrypha as canon?
- Why did early church fathers disagree on it? Athanasius rejected it. Jerome rejected it. Origen distinguished it.
- It is not Scripture, so it is not a valid refutation of a biblical doctrine.
Sola Scriptura means that doctrine must be built on inspired Scripture. Sirach may have historical or devotional value, but it carries no authority. - Even if it were canonical, it would not contradict Calvinism.
Calvinists affirm human responsibility. The Bible teaches both divine sovereignty and moral accountability (see Acts 2:23, Genesis 50:20, Philippians 2:12–13).
Sirach 15 emphasizes that people sin willingly, not by force. Calvinism agrees. The doctrine of Total Depravity does not teach that people are forced to sin, but that they sin freely according to their nature.
“He left him in the power of his own inclination” does not teach libertarian free will. It reflects the reality described in Romans 1 and John 3:19:
“People loved the darkness rather than the light because their works were evil.”
Calvinism does not teach that God makes people sin. It teaches that He permits sin and ordains all things for His glory, while never being the author of evil.
- Sirach (non-canonical): Says man chooses life or death.
- John 6:44 (canonical): “No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him.”
- Romans 3:11: “No one seeks God.”
- Ephesians 2:1: “You were dead in trespasses and sins.”
- Book Referenced: Additions to Daniel (Susanna, Bel and the Dragon)
- Quote (Letter to Africanus):
"The story of Susanna... ought to be included in the number of the sacred Scriptures..."
- Books Referenced: All the Deuterocanonical Books
- Quote (On Christian Doctrine, Book II, Ch. 8):
"The whole canon of Scripture on which we say this judgment is to be exercised, is contained in these books:... Tobit, Judith, Wisdom, Ecclesiasticus, Baruch..."
- Explicitly lists these books as part of the canon.
- order or decree (something) officially:"equal punishment was ordained for the two crimes"
- (especially of God or fate) prescribe; determine (something):"the path ordained by God"
- established or decided in advance:"a predetermined level of spending"
- (of an outcome or course of events) determined in advance by divine will or fate; predestined:"I had come to believe life was random chaos, not a predetermined path"
- He also believed the Septuagint was inspired, which few today affirm.
- He was part of a long-standing Western debate. Others, like Jerome, disagreed strongly.
- You did not mention Athanasius, Cyril of Jerusalem, Gregory of Nazianzus, and Jerome, who explicitly rejected the Apocrypha as canon.
- Acts 2:23: “This Jesus… you crucified and killed… according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God.”
- Genesis 50:20: “You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good.”
- Ephesians 1:11: “God works all things according to the counsel of His will.”
- Proverbs 16:4: “The Lord has made everything for its purpose, even the wicked for the day of trouble.”
- The Trinity is not true because Nicaea said so. It is true because Scripture reveals one God in three persons (Matthew 28:19, John 1:1, Acts 5:3–4).
- The full deity and humanity of Christ was upheld at Chalcedon, but it was already clear in John 1:14, Colossians 2:9, and Hebrews 1:3.
- The Council of Ephesus (431) condemned Nestorius.
- The Council of Chalcedon (451) condemned Monophysitism.
- The Second Council of Nicaea (787) upheld the veneration of icons, which Protestants and many Eastern churches reject.
- The Council of Trent (1546) declared the Apocrypha to be Scripture, over the objections of early fathers like Jerome, Athanasius, and Cyril of Jerusalem.
- 2 Timothy 3:16–17: “All Scripture is breathed out by God… that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.”
- Isaiah 8:20: “To the law and to the testimony! If they do not speak according to this word, it is because they have no dawn.”
- Matthew 15:9: “In vain do they worship Me, teaching as doctrines the commandments of men.”
- Violation of Round Structure: Round 1 was meant for opening arguments. Con skipped this and launched directly into rebuttals, disrupting the agreed debate flow.
- You misunderstood my earlier comment about Revelation. When I said you only cited Revelation 22:18–19 and Sirach 15, I wasn’t denying that Revelation is Scripture. I was pointing out that neither of those passages actually refute Calvinism, and that Sirach is not part of the Protestant canon as defined in this debate. I fully affirm the book of Revelation as inspired Scripture. You’ve misread my statement. That said, Revelation 22:18–19 refers specifically to the book of Revelation itself, not to the entire canon or to the question of which books belong in Scripture. Using that passage to argue against the Protestant canon or Luther’s rejection of the Apocrypha is a misapplication.
- Dismissive and Informal Tone: Phrases like “K,” “Stuff,” and “😢” do not meet the standard of a formal theological debate on doctrines with eternal consequences. If biblical truth is at stake, we must treat it with seriousness and reverence.
- Failure to Cite Verified Scripture: The rules require full chapter and verse citation from inspired Scripture. My opponent has often omitted this or offered passages not found in the agreed canon.
- This is not about being pedantic. It’s about fairness. I’ve stayed within the guidelines, responding with Scripture, structure, and substance. My opponent has not.
- Luther did not remove any books from Scripture. He included the Apocrypha in his Bible, just in a separate section, identical to what Jerome, Athanasius, and even some early councils did.
- Your appeal to the Councils of Rome, Hippo, and Carthage proves my point: there was no ecumenical agreement on canon. These were regional councils, not universally binding. That’s why the canon remained debated until Trent (1546).
- Jerome, translator of the Latin Vulgate, rejected the Apocrypha as canonical. So did Gregory of Nazianzus, Cyril of Jerusalem, and Origen (despite your selective quote). Augustine supported it, but many others did not.
- Athanasius, in his 39th Festal Letter, listed the OT canon as 22 books (matching the Hebrew Bible) and excluded the Apocrypha.
- Melito of Sardis (c. 170 AD) traveled to Palestine to confirm the Jewish Scriptures and listed the same canon Protestants accept today, without the Apocrypha.
- Origen distinguished between canonical Hebrew books and “ecclesiastical books” like Wisdom and Sirach.
- And yes, Ruth absolutely belongs in the Hebrew canon. It’s part of the Writings (“Ketuvim”) as recognized by the Jews, which Jesus affirmed in Luke 24:44. The fact that it’s not quoted directly in the New Testament is irrelevant. Quotation is not the standard for canonicity. By that logic, books like Esther and Ecclesiastes would also be disqualified, which no one accepts.
- Jesus affirms Scripture is truth (John 17:17).
- Paul says it makes the man of God “complete” (2 Tim. 3:16–17).
- God tells His people to test everything by the Word (Isa. 8:20), not by tradition or church authority.
- God ordains all things (Eph. 1:11), including human choices.
- Humans act freely according to their nature (John 3:19; Rom. 3:11).
- God remains sovereign, yet morally pure (Hab. 1:13).
- Ezekiel 18, Joel 2, Isaiah 55, all show God’s righteous commands.
- But Romans 8:7 says the natural mind is hostile to God and “cannot submit.”
- John 6:44: “No one can come to Me unless the Father draws him.”
- Ephesians 2:1–5: “Dead in sin… but God made us alive.”
- “Your Word is truth” (John 17:17), not “your councils are truth.”
- He rebuked traditions that nullified Scripture (Matt. 15:3–9).
- He upheld the Old Testament canon the Jews had (Luke 24:44), which excluded the Apocrypha.
- Appealed to non-canonical texts (Sirach).
- Misrepresented Calvinism’s view of free will and responsibility.
- Claimed councils are infallible, which is neither biblical nor logically consistent.
- Offered no serious exegesis of any Calvinist proof texts like John 6, Romans 9, or Ephesians 2.
- Dozens of Scripture passages affirming:
- Human inability to come to God apart from grace (John 6:44, Rom. 3:10–12)
- God’s sovereign election (Eph. 1:4–5, Rom. 9)
- Christ’s particular redemption for His sheep (John 10:14–15)
- Irresistible grace (Acts 16:14, Rom. 8:30)
- Perseverance of the saints (John 10:28–29, 1 John 2:19)
You have not meaningfully engaged with the key Calvinist texts, John 6, Romans 9, Ephesians 2, Acts 16, or Romans 8:30, nor have you offered coherent alternatives. That's not a disagreement. That’s a derailment.
The biblical case for Calvinism has been laid out. You’ve avoided it. That speaks volumes.
- I presented Total Depravity from John 6:44, Romans 3, and Ephesians 2. He agreed in part, then denied its implications without refutation.
- I showed Unconditional Election from Romans 9 and Ephesians 1. He responded with misreadings and emotional objections: “That’s not loving.” But that’s not an argument, that’s a feeling.
- I defended Limited Atonement with John 10 and Matthew 1:21, showing Christ died for His sheep. He ignored the texts and ran to general atonement prooftexts without answering what those specific verses mean.
- I gave Irresistible Grace from Romans 8:30 and Acts 16:14. He responded with Acts 7:51 and said, “See? The Spirit can be resisted” ignoring that those whom God calls in Romans 8 are also justified, meaning they will be saved. He never explained how his theology fits the text. He just waved at other verses.
- I showed Perseverance of the Saints from John 10 and 1 John 2:19. He quoted Hebrews 6, without context, and ignored the surrounding verses that explicitly state God keeps His people.
- The Apocrypha
- The infallibility of Roman Catholic councils
- The claim that Scripture is unclear without Church authority
- The idea that Sola Scriptura was “made up” by Luther
- Emojis
- Mocking exaggerations
- Sarcastic tone
- Personal attacks
- One that submits to the authority of Scripture alone, no matter how uncomfortable.
- One that elevates church tradition and feelings above what the Word actually says.
In my vote, I said, " As it is, it's open-season, and Con cited from "open-season" sources, then accused, in R2, that Con violated the rules. What rules?" Please read as " As it is, it's open-season, and Con cited from "open-season" sources, then Pro accused, in R2, that Con violated the rules. What rules? "
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