Definition of limited atonement: Jesus's death only paid for the sins of the elect
Winger defines limited atonement as the doctrine that God only provided payment for the sins of certain people (the elect), not for all humanity.
Introduction: topic triggered by viewer question and James W
Next →Three aspects of the atonement framework: intent, extent, an
Responses
Calvinism — Research Notes (Cheryl Schatz)
Collection of 5 research notes on Calvinism, covering God's mercy to all (Romans 11:30-32), the purpose of divine mercy and compassion, Esau's election as about Messianic lineage not individual salvation (Malachi 1:2-3), and Calvin's concept of Evanescent Grace.
The Giving Part 2: Judas the Betrayer, a Balanced View of the Sovereignty of God
[Music] the giving is a balanced view of the sovereignty of God God's sovereignty is vitally important for us to know God yet it's God's sovereignty taught as a system of theological thought which can lead to a person reading into the biblical text an outside concept that is foreign to the writers i...
Judas the Betrayer and the death of Jesus
We have just released part 2 of our video project on the Sovereignty of God. And we have released this part of the project for free! Why? Because I felt that the message was so important that I didn’t want any hindrance I wanted to get as wide a viewing as possible.
No man left behind: Jesus died for all
Did Jesus’ death leave no man left behind that was not covered by His death on the cross? For many Christians who identify as Calvinists, the gospel includes the conclusion that Jesus died only for a select group of people who were predetermined by God before the world was created.
@ThePastorBurris Unlimited atonement, reconciliation limited to those whose fait
@ThePastorBurris Unlimited atonement, reconciliation limited to those whose faith is in Christ.
Your Tags
Personal labels you apply to any item — separate from system topics. Tags are shared across all databases. Visit /tags to browse all your tags.
...more
Personal labels you apply to any item — separate from system topics. Tags are shared across all databases. Visit /tags to browse all your tags.
...more