Arminian Contractor Builds Bridge Halfway Across River

MennoSota

New member
(Satire)

ELKINS, WV—In an attempt to remain consistent with a synergistic theology, an Arminian-owned bridge contractor has constructed a bridge only spanning half of a river, sources confirmed.

The bridge opened for public transit Monday, with cars careening off the unfinished end into the murky waters below.

“We’ve done most of the work, and now people just have to drive a little bit farther to finish spanning the gap,” said Jacob Carter, the business owner and president. “Our bridge is freely available to all, wide enough for everyone in the world to cross—but you’ll just have to put in a little bit of effort if you don’t want to plummet to the deadly, rushing river a hundred feet down.”

Carter calls the bridge a compassionate act of mercy on his part, freely offering everyone the chance to cross the bridge, if they can just muster up enough faith to step on the gas and launch themselves the remaining few hundred feet over the valley.

“We couldn’t go all the way across—that would be violating your free will, not giving you the chance to garner enough faith to cross on your own merits,” he said.

A competing Calvinist contractor also opened a bridge downstream: one that crosses the entire river, but isn’t open to the public.

https://babylonbee.com/news/arminian-contractor-builds-bridge-halfway-across-river/
 

Robert Pate

Well-known member
Banned
(Satire)

ELKINS, WV—In an attempt to remain consistent with a synergistic theology, an Arminian-owned bridge contractor has constructed a bridge only spanning half of a river, sources confirmed.

The bridge opened for public transit Monday, with cars careening off the unfinished end into the murky waters below.

“We’ve done most of the work, and now people just have to drive a little bit farther to finish spanning the gap,” said Jacob Carter, the business owner and president. “Our bridge is freely available to all, wide enough for everyone in the world to cross—but you’ll just have to put in a little bit of effort if you don’t want to plummet to the deadly, rushing river a hundred feet down.”

Carter calls the bridge a compassionate act of mercy on his part, freely offering everyone the chance to cross the bridge, if they can just muster up enough faith to step on the gas and launch themselves the remaining few hundred feet over the valley.

“We couldn’t go all the way across—that would be violating your free will, not giving you the chance to garner enough faith to cross on your own merits,” he said.

A competing Calvinist contractor also opened a bridge downstream: one that crosses the entire river, but isn’t open to the public.

https://babylonbee.com/news/arminian-contractor-builds-bridge-halfway-across-river/


Your analogy is true for religion, but it is not true for Christianity.

The work of Christ is a finished work. All that Jesus did in our name and on our behalf for our justification is a finished work. We are complete in him, Colossians 2:10. This is why, all, anyone, everyone, "That shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved" Romans 10:13.
 

MennoSota

New member
Your analogy is true for religion, but it is not true for Christianity.

The work of Christ is a finished work. All that Jesus did in our name and on our behalf for our justification is a finished work. We are complete in him, Colossians 2:10. This is why, all, anyone, everyone, "That shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved" Romans 10:13.
So...just say the magic words...
 

genuineoriginal

New member
The problem with the OP is that it has a contractor acting as God.

To be a true analogy, both contractors would have built the parts that required effort by man and neither would have built the part of the bridge that depended on the effort by God.
 
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