TULIP

The five points of Calvinism, examined against the open text

“They received the word with all eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see if these things were so.”
Acts 17:11 · The Bereans

TULIP is the familiar acrostic for the five points of doctrine affirmed at the Synod of Dort (1618–19), the Dutch Reformed answer to the five articles of the Remonstrance raised by the followers of Jacobus Arminius. The acrostic itself is a twentieth-century English mnemonic, but the doctrine it summarizes reaches back through Dort to Calvin, and behind Calvin to Augustine — a complete account of how God saves: who can respond, whom he chooses, for whom Christ died, whether grace can be refused, and whether the saved can be lost.

This study takes the tulip apart petal by petal. Each point is stated fairly, in its strongest form and in the words of its own confessions. The texts its defenders cite are gathered and read in context. Then, beside them, the passages that strain against the point are given the same careful hearing. The aim is neither defense nor demolition, but an honest verdict on the question the Bereans asked: are these things so?

Total Depravityopen

Sin touches every faculty of fallen humanity — mind, will, and affections — so that apart from grace, no one seeks God.

The QuestionDoes “dead in trespasses” mean unable to respond — or does the whole sweep of Scripture assume a summons that can be answered?

Unconditional Electionopen

Before creation, God chose whom he would save — not on the basis of foreseen faith, merit, or anything in the chosen.

The QuestionIs election in Scripture chiefly of individuals to salvation, or of a people for a purpose?

Limited Atonementopen

Christ’s death was designed not merely to offer salvation but to secure it — for the elect in particular.

The QuestionFor whom did Christ die — and what do the “world” and “all” passages mean if the design is particular?

Irresistible Graceopen

Those the Father draws will certainly come; the effectual call of God cannot finally be refused.

The QuestionCan grace be resisted — and what of “you always resist the Holy Spirit” (Acts 7:51), or a Jerusalem that would not?

Perseverance of the Saintsopen

Those truly regenerate are kept by the power of God and cannot finally fall away.

The QuestionWhat, then, are the warning passages for — Hebrews 6 and 10, and the branches cut from the vine?