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Originally Posted by cih1355 You can say that the word, "will", has two different meanings. One meaning of the word, "will", could be "command". Another meaning of the word, "will", could be "ordain". | So does no one disagree when I say that God has a preceptive and a decretive will, or at least a twofold will? I remember reading elsewhere on this forum that classified Low Calvinists as adherents to the fact that God has two wills, followed by several affirmations of High Calvinism. Does this imply that these people reject the notion of two wills?
I'm just a little confused here, because I thought the "two wills" belief was basically universal in Reformed theology.
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Ben
First Presbyterian Church (PCUSA)
Ada, OH
"What is more, I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ." - Philippians 3:8
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