- Moderate Calvinism
Moderate Calvinism (or moderate
Arminianism ) is sometimes called the "non-traditional view" ofCalvinism . It is a medley of Calvinist and Arminiansoteriology . Prominent apologists for and supporters of moderate Calvinism have included theologians James Orr, Henry C. Thiessen,Zane C. Hodges andJosh McDowell , ministers Charles Stanley andBill Bright , and philosophersNorman Geisler andRavi Zacharias .Criticism
Traditional Calvinist thinkers often feel this moderate label is a misnomer that incorrectly attempts to portray their position as "extreme"Fact|date=November 2007. They insist that historical Calvinist doctrines are diametrically opposed to Arminian ones (as explained in the
Canons of Dort ) and cannot be "blended" with them as theologian Norman Geisler attempts to do in his book, "Chosen But Free".Fact|date=November 2007Geisler and other moderate Calvinists have generally denied the following Calvinist distinctives (collectively referred to by the acronym TULIP):
unconditional election ,limited atonement , andirresistible grace ; yet they have retained modified versions oftotal depravity andperseverance of the saints . Because of this, James R. White, the Calvinist apologist who wrote "The Potter's Freedom" in response to Geisler's book, asserts that "inconsistent Arminianism" is a more accurate description of this position than "moderate Calvinism."ee also
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Amyraldism (four-point Calvinism)
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