Salvation/Soteriology Flashcards

1
Q

SOTERIOLOGY

A
  1. If there were no consequences to every sin, God could not be just
  2. God, however, is not only just but loving, and is therefore loathe to let sin’s natural end transpire
  3. The resolution of these two permanent aspects of God’s nature came at His own initiative, by His own person, and at supreme cost
  4. This resolution - paying personally the death penalty for man’s sin - is multifaceted and demands complex terminology
  5. Theories of atonement
  6. Noted issues in soteriology
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2
Q

Consequences to sin - Gods justice

A
  • all sin must and does bring death
  • If God were to abrogate this, His nature would be less than immaculate, moral fabric of the cosmos would cease to be
  • with no other contingency, the effort for man is universally terminal
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3
Q

God is loving

A
  • He is not willing that anyone perish
  • this is not in any way due to man’s desirability, but to God’s benevolence
  • God shows love to us because HE is love, not because we are lovable
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4
Q

The resolution of these two aspects of God came at His own initiative, by His own person, at supreme cost

A
  • any act of creation, being in the eternal counsels of God from the first place
  • actualized in the Heilsgeschichte - salvation history
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5
Q

This resolution demands complex theology

A
Propitiation - covering
Redemption - ransom 
Regeneration - rebirth/renew
Reconciliation - a 'cease fire' and embrace 
Deliverance - 'rescuing'
Healing - a 'wholeness'
Justification - a 'rightness' 
Adoption - a 'grafting'
Atonement - a 'satisfaction'
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6
Q

THEORIES OF ATONEMENT

A
  1. Subjective/moral influence view
  2. Governmental view
  3. The federal view
  4. Penal substitution view
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7
Q

Subjective/moral influence view

A

What Jesus did served as an example to emulate. Contains truth, but inadequate

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8
Q

Governmental view

A

Jesus upheld the moral law of God’s universe, God then simply gave men amnesty. Also inadequate

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9
Q

The Federal view

A

I am subject to Christ’s salvation via headship, just as I was subject to death via Adam

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10
Q

Penal Substitution view

A

Jesus took my penalty for me. Stated carefully, it is biblical in combination with….. biblical atonement

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11
Q

Biblical Atonement

A
VICARIOUS - on behalf of another
SUBSTITUTIONARY - in the very place of another 
IMPUTED - credited to another
UNMERITED - gifted to another
APPROPRIATED - implemented by
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12
Q

Noted issues in Soteriology

A

WORKS - What is necessary?
FAITH - What is relevant?
PROVISION - who is desired?

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13
Q

FAITH - What is relevant? Greek words

A

Notitia- ‘I understand Jesus is reported to have risen’
Assensus - ‘I accept that report as valid’
Fiducia - ‘I commit myself to the ramifications of that validity’

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14
Q

TULIP (five tenets of Calvinism)

A
Total depravity
Unconditional election
Limited atonement 
Irresistible grace
Perseverance of the saints (eternal security)
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15
Q

COGNITION vs. CAUSATION

A

Cognition is not causation - just because God knows something, doesn’t mean He causes it to be that way

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