
The Spectrum of Christian Soteriology: Contrasting Views on Grace, Faith, and Election
| Theological View | View on Human Will & Depravity | Grace & Election | Atonement | Role of Faith | Evangelism & Missions | Proponent & Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pelagianism | Human nature is not affected by Adam’s sin; people can choose good or evil without divine aid. | No election; salvation is by human effort. | Christ’s atonement is a moral example rather than necessary for salvation. | Faith and good works lead to salvation. | Evangelism is about teaching moral living. | Pelagius, Letter to Demetrias |
| Semi-Pelagianism | Humanity is weakened by sin but can initiate faith; grace assists but is not necessary for the first step. | Election based on God foreseeing faith. | Universal atonement (Christ died for all). | Faith is a human choice that cooperates with grace. | Evangelism is necessary; people can respond freely to the gospel. | John Cassian, Conferences |
| Arminianism | Total depravity, but prevenient grace enables all to choose God. | Conditional election based on foreseen faith. | Universal atonement. | Faith is enabled by grace but must be accepted by free will. | Evangelism is vital; God’s grace enables people to respond. | Jacob Arminius, The Works of James Arminius |
| Amyraldianism (Four-Point Calvinism) | Total depravity; grace is needed for salvation. | Conditional election, but Christ’s atonement is sufficient for all, efficient for the elect. | Universal atonement in provision, but applied only to the elect. | Faith is a response to grace and a means of applying salvation. | Evangelism is necessary; Christ’s atonement is sufficient for all. | Moïse Amyraut, Brief Traité de la Prédestination |
| Calvinism (Five-Point / Classic) | Total depravity; sinners cannot choose God without grace. | Unconditional election; God chooses the elect apart from foreseen faith. | Limited atonement (Christ died only for the elect). | Faith is a gift from God, granted to the elect. | Evangelism is commanded, as God uses means to save the elect. | John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion |
| High Calvinism | Stronger emphasis on God’s sovereignty in salvation; human will is completely passive. | Supralapsarianism (God decrees election before the Fall). | Strict limited atonement, rejecting any universal aspect of the atonement. | Faith is not a condition for salvation but an evidence of election. | Evangelism is important but secondary to God’s eternal decree. | John Gill, The Cause of God and Truth |
| Neo-Calvinism | Similar to traditional Calvinism but applied to all areas of life (culture, politics, society). | Unconditional election, with an emphasis on God’s sovereignty in all areas of life. | Limited atonement, but God’s common grace influences culture and society. | Faith is a response to God’s call and shapes cultural engagement. | Evangelism includes not only saving souls but also transforming society. | Abraham Kuyper, Lectures on Calvinism |
| Hyper-Calvinism | Humans are totally depraved and incapable of any response. | Absolute predestination; God has already determined who will be saved or damned. | Strict limited atonement; no offer of salvation to the non-elect. | Faith is not a duty of all but only given to the elect. | Evangelism is unnecessary because God will save the elect without human effort. | Joseph Hussey, God’s Operations of Grace but No Offers of Grace |
Key Additions & Summary
- Pelagianism (Pelagius) – Denies original sin and claims humans can achieve salvation by their own efforts.
- Semi-Pelagianism (John Cassian) – A compromise allowing human initiation of faith with God’s grace assisting.
- Arminianism (Arminius) – Total depravity but prevenient grace enables free will.
- Amyraldianism (Amyraut) – Universal atonement with limited application (Four-Point Calvinism).
- Calvinism (Calvin) – Five points of Calvinism (TULIP).
- High Calvinism (Gill) – Supralapsarianism, stronger predestinarian view.
- Neo-Calvinism (Kuyper) – Applies Calvinism to all aspects of life, not just theology.
- Hyper-Calvinism (Hussey) – Rejects free offer of the gospel and evangelism.