『Why Calvinism Can’t Let “World” Mean World - Original Sin, Election, and the Narrowing of God’s Love』のカバーアート

Why Calvinism Can’t Let “World” Mean World - Original Sin, Election, and the Narrowing of God’s Love

Why Calvinism Can’t Let “World” Mean World - Original Sin, Election, and the Narrowing of God’s Love

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Episode 17 —

Why Calvinism Can’t Let “World” Mean World

What does “world” actually mean in John 3:16?

In this episode, I explore the theological tension surrounding one of Christianity’s most famous verses:

“For God so loved the world…”

Why have so many Reformed theologians historically struggled to let “world” mean humanity universally?

And how did ideas about:

  • Original Sin,
  • inherited guilt,
  • election,
  • and divine love

shape broader Christian anthropology, denominational fracture, and even the moral imagination surrounding slavery in America?

This episode examines:

  • the Greek word κόσμος (kosmos) in John,
  • Augustinian and Reformed theology,
  • the emotional logic of limited atonement,
  • Orthodoxy’s understanding of humanity and salvation,
  • Abraham Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address,
  • and the relationship between divine image, Incarnation, and universal human dignity.

Topics include:

  • John 3:16
  • Romans 5:8
  • 1 John 5:19
  • Original Sin vs ancestral sin
  • the image of God
  • slavery and the Civil War
  • Protestant denominational fragmentation
  • Orthodoxy and the Incarnation
  • divine solidarity with humanity

Referenced figures include:

  • Abraham Lincoln
  • Augustine of Hippo
  • Martin Luther
  • John Calvin
  • John Piper
  • R. C. Sproul
  • Francis Schaeffer

“The darker the world becomes, the more astonishing the love becomes.”

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