The Great Divide and the Salvation Paradox

The Great Divide and the Salvation Paradox

  • David P. Griffith
Publisher:Wipf and Stock PublishersISBN 13: 9781666724592ISBN 10: 1666724599

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The Great Divide and the Salvation Paradox is written by David P. Griffith and published by Wipf and Stock Publishers. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 1666724599 (ISBN 10) and 9781666724592 (ISBN 13).

The church in its first centuries split on whether Christ saved everyone or a few, Universalism versus Exclusivism. In the sixth century, the church settled the issue seemingly and held that Universalism was heresy. This book reviews this history as well as what provoked it--Scripture, on its face, gives two contradictory accounts of salvation's extent: everyone is ultimately saved and everyone is not. In contrast to both Exclusivism and Universalism, the book takes Scripture's two accounts of salvation's extent as true--that is, as a paradox. This is the approach the church has taken with other scriptural paradoxes. Saying one God is three, or one Son is both God and man, appeared to be contradictory too, but, to embrace Scripture entirely, these were seen as paradoxical. The Trinity modeled how one can be three, and the hypostatic union modeled how one can be two. For the paradox of salvation's extent, the answer lies in the individual's divisibility in the afterlife, one can be two. That is, in ultimate salvation, each individual can be both saved and unsaved.