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What is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics What is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics
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Jo
Jo is on page 50 of 272
Feb 03, 2026 06:33PM Add a comment
What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Lisa du Plessis
Lisa du Plessis is on page 205 of 272
“The goal of the atonement was to save the lost. Christy loved his church and gave himself for it. He died in order to save his sheep. His purpose was to effect reconciliation and redemption for his people. […] Was God’s propose to make salvation for all possible, or to make salvation for the elect certain? The ultimate aim of God’s plan of redemption was to redeem his elect.” (p202)
Feb 03, 2026 11:01AM Add a comment
What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Lisa du Plessis
Lisa du Plessis is on page 187 of 272
“[God] considers the mass of mankind in their fallen sinful condition. He chooses to redeem some people from this condition and to leave the rest in that condition. He intervenes in the lives of the elect, while he does not intervene in the lives of the reprobate. One group receives mercy and the other receives justice. […]No one is treated with injustice.No one can charge that there is unrighteousness in God.”
Feb 02, 2026 12:49PM Add a comment
What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Lisa du Plessis
Lisa du Plessis is on page 185 of 272
“The positive side refers to God’s active intervention in the lives of the elect to work faith in their hearts. The negative refers, not to God’s working unbelief in the hearts of the reprobate, but simply to his passing them by and withholding his regenerating grace from them.” (p185, on God’s decrees in double predestination)
Feb 02, 2026 12:44PM Add a comment
What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Lisa du Plessis
Lisa du Plessis is on page 176 of 272
“In reality he elects to save some, but not all. Those who are saved are beneficiaries of his sovereign grace and mercy. Those who are not saved are not victims of his cruelty or injustice; they are recipients of justice. No one receives punishment at the hands of God that they do not deserve. Some receive grace at his hands that they do not deserve.” (p176)
Jan 31, 2026 05:18PM Add a comment
What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Lisa du Plessis
Lisa du Plessis is on page 176 of 272
“It still seems that if God gives grace to one person, in the interest of fairness he “ought” to give grace equally to another. It is precisely this “oughtness” that is foreign to the biblical concept of grace. Among the mass of fallen humanity, all guilty of sin before God and exposed to his justice, no one has any claim or entitlement to God‘s mercy.” (p176)
Jan 31, 2026 05:15PM Add a comment
What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Lisa du Plessis
Lisa du Plessis is on page 170 of 272
“The prescient view holds that we are elected because we will have faith. The Reformed view holds that we are elected unto faith and justification. Faith is a necessary condition for salvation, but not for election. The prescient view makes faith a condition of election; Reformed theology sees faith as the result of election.” (p170)
Jan 31, 2026 05:12PM Add a comment
What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Kori
Kori is on page 30 of 217
Jan 31, 2026 12:53PM Add a comment
What is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Lisa du Plessis
Lisa du Plessis is on page 161 of 272
“‘When God converts a sinner, and translated him into the state of grace, He freeth him from his natural bondage under sin; and, by His grace alone, enables him freely to wil and to do that which is spiritually good; yet so, as that by reason of his remaining corruption, he doth not perfectly, nor only, will that which is good, but doth also will that which is evil.“ (p161)
Jan 30, 2026 07:17AM Add a comment
What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Lisa du Plessis
Lisa du Plessis is on page 158 of 272
“Fallen man has the natural ability to choose God (the necessary faculties of choice), but he lacks the moral ability to do so. The ability to make righteous moral choices requires righteous desires and inclinations. […] Since the flesh makes no provision for the things of God, grace is required for us to be able to choose them.” (p159)
Jan 30, 2026 07:12AM Add a comment
What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Lisa du Plessis
Lisa du Plessis is on page 158 of 272
“Prior to the fall we also had a good inclination, enabling us to choose the good. It is precisely this inclination to the good that was lost in the fall. Original sin does not destroy our humanity or our ability to make choices. The natural ability or faculty remains intact. What was lost is the good inclination or righteous desire for obedience.” (p158)
Jan 30, 2026 07:09AM Add a comment
What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Liam Miller
Liam Miller is on page 163 of 217
Jan 28, 2026 05:13AM Add a comment
What is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Liam Miller
Liam Miller is on page 158 of 217
Jan 27, 2026 04:30PM Add a comment
What is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Ashlee Cecil
Ashlee Cecil is on page 207 of 272
Jan 27, 2026 05:55AM Add a comment
What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

Ashlee Cecil
Ashlee Cecil is on page 189 of 272
Jan 26, 2026 02:03PM Add a comment
What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics

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