On the Brink of a Quantum Singularity with Calvin and Arminius

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Last year, the well-known physicist Stephen Hawking admitted he was wrong about one of his pet theories concerning black holes. In the rarefied academic air, this amounted to a near recanting of biblical proportions. But Hawking’s admitting that his formulas can’t accurately describe what takes place in the physics world within a black hole was no death knell for his career. The truth is, no one has been able to accurately describe what happens on the brink of a quantum singularity.

If you don’t already know, black holes form when very large stars die and collapse in upon themselves, creating an incredibly dense piece of matter—a quantum singularity—whose mass is so enormous that it warps the fabric of space itself into a giant, nearly bottomless well. If you’ve ever seen one of those parabolic coin games where you roll a coin along the edge and it progressively travels in tighter and tighter circles until finally falling into a hole at the end of the funnel, then you’ve seen the basics of a black hole at work. Once matter gets trapped beyond a certain point of the black hole’s tug of gravity (the “event horizon”), that matter, be it dust or even a massive star, can’t escape the gravity grip of the singularity, in the process possibly being totally destroyed even down to the subatomic level.

Physicists for years have tried to explain the physics behind black holes and their singularities with astonishingly little success. The problem is that all the physics we hold dear (from Einstein’s relativity theories to Maxwell’s equations) cease to work the closer one gets to a quantum singularity. Physicists see cracking the physics behind a black hole as one of the true Holy Grails in physics. Whoever manages to do it will join the pantheon of greats right up there with Albert E. himself.

This brings us to John Calvin and Jacobus Arminius.

You’ve probably heard those names tossed about if you’ve been a Christian longer than a year or two. Both of these men proffered different takes on the “quantum singularity” of Christian theology, how people technically come to (and stay with) Christ.

Let’s take a look at the basics of each:

Five Points of Arminianism

  • Conditional Election – Election is based on the faith or belief of men.
  • Universal Atonement – The atonement is for all, but only believers enjoy its benefits.
  • Saving Faith – Man, unaided by the Holy Spirit, is unable to come to God.
  • Resistible Grace – The drawing of the Holy Spirit can be resisted.
  • Uncertainty of Preservation – This doctrine was left open to inquiry.

Five Points of Calvinism

  • T = Total Depravity – Man is completely a sinner, without any hope of helping himself.
  • U = Unconditional Election – God elected saints to salvation when they had no merit at all. God did not look down upon the earth and see some sinners believing, therefore elected them to salvation, but He looked down upon the earth, and saw all were sinners, therefore elected some to salvation.
  • L = Limited Atonement – The atonement is limited to the elect.
  • I = Irresistible Grace – It is impossible for a sinner to resist salvation once the Holy Spirit begins drawing him.
  • P = Preservation – A saved person will be saved forever, and will live a holy and Godly life.

(Thanks to Pastor Wayne Reynolds for the quick overviews of Calvinism and Arminianism.)

These two streams of belief divide the Protestant world almost in half (there are other belief systems that don’t adhere perfectly to either stream, but they are not majority groups.) Most American denominations that arose out of the Second Great Awakening follow Arminianism and, technically at least, are the Evangelicals we hear so much about. Churches like The Assemblies of God or Methodists are representative. The “Old Line” Presbyterian or Reformed churches are Calvinist, but have muddied the water by occasionally assuming the title “Evangelical” in order to sound like they are up to date with the rest of the Protestant churches out there.

These two streams have slugged it out for a long time. Interestingly enough, the blogosphere is becoming a battleground for these two points of view, with blogrolls developing that highlight bloggers who ascribe to one view or another. I have read so many blog posts lately that can be condensed to “Only Calvinism is Truth” that I have lost count. Anyone who has stumbled into such a debate can attest to the viciousness that often results in defense of one position or another.

Now comes the point in this post where I alienate every single one of my readers.

A physicist like Stephen Hawking is brilliant enough to be able to describe the way virtually all of the universe works from a physics standpoint. He can tell you how it is possible to hit a kilometer-wide target on a moving planet, something NASA does effortlessly (most of the time). He can tell you how gravity works, and light, and the weak force, and electromagnetism…in short, virtually everything we know about how the universe works, he can explain. But he can’t explain what happens on the brink of a quantum singularity.

Likewise, I wonder if John Calvin and Jacobus Arminius are not in the same bind as Hawking when it comes to theology. I contend that perhaps what Calvin and Arminius are trying to describe are the edges of where Jesus wants His true followers to be. It is possible I think, that God never intended us to be hanging out at the brink of the theological quantum singularity Calvin and Arminius address.

Another way of looking at this: If you have teenagers or have ever worked with them, you know that on the issue of sex it is inevitable that you will get asked the question, “Well, how far is too far?” Wise people understand that this is actually the wrong question, but the kids don’t. I suspect that this may be the case in the Calvin/Arminius debate, too.

Take a look at the issue of Preservation of the Saints, for instance. Arminians typically believe it may be possible to wander away from God and lose one’s salvation. Calvinists would argue that this is impossible, contending that if such a thing were to happen the original nature of a person’s “conversion” would be suspect.

But isn’t this like the black hole issue? Jesus calls us to be His disciples and the point of being a disciple is to stay at the Master’s feet, not to toy around with “How far can I wander away and still be saved?” Nor is it a matter of saying, “I can get away with just about anything because He won’t cast me out.” Don’t we see how both of those are skirting the edges of where we need to be as disciples? Those are “brink of the quantum singularity” thoughts—not where the Lord wants us to focus. Sadly, a lot of people get sucked out of the rest of the Christian universe and get stuck at the event horizon of such ideas, forever trapped by the power of one stream or the other. This results in a great number of causalities out there in the pews.

We all know people who have been crushed by their struggles at the brink of this theological quantum singularity. But there is a whole universe of faith as a disciple where those forces don’t have to tug us down a hole. In truth, they may very well be moot points for a person who seeks only to please the Lord in all he or she does.

Ours is a love relationship with the Lord of the Universe. This is more important than the mechanisms that get us there and keep us there. Discipleship is like a marriage between Christ and the disciple—divorce is out of the question and the engagement is merely a formality once the marriage is consummated. We can’t live like the man who asked to bury to his parents, or the one who looks back over his shoulder at what is being left behind.We simply cannot live at the brink; true disciples want to be in the center of the Lord’s will. We do what the Lord asks and are content in doing so.

And maybe that is where the Lord would prefer we all be.

I know this is a contentious issue. R.C. Sproul is probably already scratching my name off his mailing list. So if you have comments, please feel free to leave them—with all humility and love for the brethren, of course. (In other words, take a deep breath and count to ten before you post!)

God vs. State, Round 1…

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When I first saw a link to the following article, I thought it might be a fraud. But as I read, it was apparent that it is sadly true and is the kind of harbinger of the future we should not ignore.

From The Telegraph UK:

If you don’t take a job as a prostitute, we can stop your benefits
By Clare Chapman
1/30/05

A 25-year-old waitress who turned down a job providing “sexual services” at a brothel in Berlin faces possible cuts to her unemployment benefit under laws introduced this year.

Prostitution was legalised in Germany just over two years ago and brothel owners—who must pay tax and employee health insurance—were granted access to official databases of jobseekers.

The waitress, an unemployed information technology professional, had said that she was willing to work in a bar at night and had worked in a cafe.

She received a letter from the job centre telling her that an employer was interested in her “profile” and that she should ring them. Only on doing so did the woman, who has not been identified for legal reasons, realise that she was calling a brothel.

Under Germany’s welfare reforms, any woman under 55 who has been out of work for more than a year can be forced to take an available job—including in the sex industry—or lose her unemployment benefit. {Emphasis added.} Last month German unemployment rose for the 11th consecutive month to 4.5 million, taking the number out of work to its highest since reunification in 1990.

The government had considered making brothels an exception on moral grounds, but decided that it would be too difficult to distinguish them from bars. As a result, job centres must treat employers looking for a prostitute in the same way as those looking for a dental nurse.

When the waitress looked into suing the job centre, she found out that it had not broken the law. Job centres that refuse to penalise people who turn down a job by cutting their benefits face legal action from the potential employer.

“There is now nothing in the law to stop women from being sent into the sex industry,” said Merchthild Garweg, a lawyer from Hamburg who specialises in such cases. “The new regulations say that working in the sex industry is not immoral any more, and so jobs cannot be turned down without a risk to benefits.”

Read the whole thing.

Americans think we are insulated from this kind of problem. But the kind of incrementalism that caused this in Germany is not impossible here, especially when we link it to healthcare, job, and retirement. Under this kind of “Nanny State” finagling, anything is possible if sold correctly to the public by well-meaning people. Unfortunately, we Christians continue to place too much trust in the State and not enough in the Lord.

It is not hard to imagine how this demonic ploy in Germany came about. Tax pressures, social activism, joblessness, and a leaders of low morality and conscience made it happen. It is even possible that people who knew better assented when faced with political pressure brought about by a financial squeeze.

Legislation that makes this kind of debauched socialism work always seems harmless on the surface. Forcing a reliance on the government to take care of you instantly creates a scenario like this—easily sold in a United States in which everyone has a sense of entitlement.

I have written before that I believe our rugged individualism in America is not of God. Oddly enough, as much as we worship at the throne of self-reliance, we are also very vocal in calling for handouts and entitlements. In fact, America is fast becoming a nation of people chanting, “Gimme what is owed me!”

However, this article should be our wake-up call as to what is produced when we look to the State to fulfill all our needs rather than to God working through His Church.

Christians in this country who crusade for social issues by looking to government to resolve them should wake up and see what kind of bastard child is born from that kind of union. Diligence is called for whenever we try to make the government an arm of the Church. We need to watch to see if our call for entitlements that address social needs instead enslaves us and becomes our God.

Government cannot supplant the work of the Church, nor should it. In these Last Days, we need to be aware of the issues at stake in our country and be on guard against “helpful” legislation that can turn around and bite us long term.

Wisdom is known by her children.

Everything You Know Is Wrong

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Now that I’ve got your attention with that catchy title, I want to discuss what I believe to be the most important Christian book to hit the shelves since Dallas Willard’s The Divine Conspiracy came out eight years ago.

Total Truth:Liberating Christianity from Its Cultural Captivity is written by science writer and longtime Chuck Colson collaborator Nancy Pearcey. Her premise: Christians have abandoned a unified Christian view of reality in favor of one that is hopelessly split between the worlds of scientific truth and spiritual truth. She contends that Darwinism and neo-Platonism are as likely to inform how Christians think about facts as Christianity does. The Church is filled with people who have separated their faith from the rest of reality, making for a worldview that is no longer uniquely Christian, and which has little bearing on the “real” world.

Total Truth CoverWe see the results of this every day. The Wall Street Journal (sadly) pointed out that the top execs at Enron, Tyco, Global Crossing, and Worldcom were all pillars of their evangelical churches, some even functioning as deacons and Sunday School teachers. Their tragedy—and ours—is their disjointed worldview that kept their faith from influencing their real-life work situations. Yet, the news gets worse: For every Ken Lay there are hundreds of other less prominent people who daily keep their Christianity in a crystal box they open on Sundays, all the while mentally assenting to the fallen ideologies of Darwin, Plato, Plotinus, or Marx during the rest of the week.

It comes down to worldview. Pearcey claims (correctly) that we have yet to see a fully developed Christian worldview sweep the Church, particularly in America. Without such a view, churches here will increasingly and unconsciously stray from Truth, adopting worldviews that are strictly anti-Christ. As go the churches, so go the congregants, and our society is subsequently crippled by a lack of Christian voices speaking into the public square, particularly voices with a unified Christian apologetic that explains not only the spiritual world, but the material one as well.

And what is a Christian worldview? It seeks to address all of reality in light of Creation, The Fall, and Redemption, bringing the Gospel’s answers to how we came to exist, why we experience evil, and how we can return to a state of grace. It seeks to bring a consistent theological framework to understanding the common things of life, too, like our work, our relationships, and our goals in life. As one who has been crusading to overcome the Church’s failure to address the realities of our work lives—in twenty-eight years as a Christian, I have yet to hear a message on bringing Christ into the workplace—I had to nod with every insight Pearcey brings. Her fearlessness in calling Christians to wake up and face reality is a refreshing change from the litany of recent Christian books marketed to only tickle itching ears.

I believe every Christian should make it a priority to read this book. Foundational works like this come along rarely. That Pearcey so effortlessly examines the streams of current philosophy, and so easily makes them understandable to even those of us who can’t tell Hegel from Hobbes, makes this book rarer still. A winner of the ECPA Gold Medallion Book Award for How Now Shall We Live?, a Senior Fellow at the Discovery Institute, and a former student of Francis Schaeffer’s, Pearcey brings a laudable list of qualifications, yet never writes over anyone’s head. So worthy is this book of inclusion in every Christian’s library that I am installing on my sidebar list of essential Christian books.

Read Total Truth! It may indeed reveal that everything you know is wrong.