What is the difference between the General of the Salvation Army and the Pope? Less than I presumed a week ago. Both, of course, care about the poor, which has ever been a mark of the Church.
“Not to enable the poor to share in our goods is to steal from them and deprive them of life,” declared St John Chrysostom 1,600 years ago. “The goods we possess are not ours, but theirs.”
Until last week, I’d thought the Salvation Army was Calvinist. That is no crime. But the Army, I find, believes that the “saved” can backslide. “We believe that continuance in a state of salvation depends upon continued obedient faith in Christ.” That is No 8 in the 11 succinct doctrines of the Salvation Army. As William Booth put it in 1879: “We are a salvation people ”“ this is our speciality ”“ getting saved and keeping saved, and then getting somebody else saved, and then getting saved ourselves more and more.” One hostile commentator on the internet characterises such a belief as “demonic works-salvation”.
(Telegraph) Christopher Howse–The Pope and the Salvation Army
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[blockquote] Until last week, I’d thought the Salvation Army was Calvinist.[/blockquote] Maybe I am just uninformed but I have never heard The Salvation Army identified as Calvinists before. There seems to be a tendency, lately, to identify certain groups as “Calvinists” as though everyone understands what a “Calvinist” is but it appears to me that very few people know what John Calvin taught, who adhered to his teaching, or even who he was.
The only denomination I know of that identifies themselves as Calvinists are the Presbyterians but I believe that most people simply identify the Presbyterian Church as a Christian Church.
Like bettcee, with the link to the Holiness Movement (at least in the United States) and that movement’s connection with Wesley’s Methodism, Calvinism isn’t a word that I’d ever have associated with the Salvation Army.