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The Five Points of Calvinism
R. L. Dabney
Dabney wrote before the familiar TULIP formula was made popular. He and most writers of his era dealt with the five points in a more logical order. But for readers interested in following the TULIP format, here is an index:
- Total depravity (Original Sin)
- Unconditional election (God's Election)
- Limited atonement (Particular Redemption)
- Irresistible grace (Effectual Calling)
- Perseverance of the Saints
The Five Points of Calvinism
ISTORICALLY,
this title is of little accuracy or worth; I use it to
denote certain points of doctrine, because custom has made it
familiar. Early in the seventeenth century the Presbyterian Church of
Holland, whose doctrinal confession is the same in substance with
ours, was much troubled by a species of new-school minority, headed
by one of its preachers and professors, James Harmensen, in Latin,
Arminius (hence, ever since, Arminians). Church and state have
always been united in Holland; hence the civil government took up the
quarrel. Professor Harmensen (Arminius) and his party were
required to appear before the States General (what we would call
Federal Congress) and say what their objections were against the
doctrines of their own church, which they had freely promised in
their ordination vows to teach. Arminius handed in a writing
in which he named five points of doctrine concerning which he and his
friends either differed or doubted. These points were virtually:
Original sin, unconditional predestination, invincible grace in
conversion, particular redemption, and perseverance of saints. I may
add, the result was: that the Federal legislature ordered the holding
of a general council of all the Presbyterian churches then in the
world, to discuss anew and settle these five doctrines. This was the
famous Synod of Dort, or Dordrecht, where not only Holland ministers,
but delegates from the French, German, Swiss, and British churches
met in 1618. The Synod adopted the rule that every doctrine should be
decided by the sole authority of the Word of God, leaving out all
human philosophies and opinions on both sides. The result was a short
set of articles which were made a part thenceforward of the
Confession of Faith of the Holland Presbyterian Church. They are
clear, sound, and moderate, exactly the same in substance with those
of our Westminster Confession, enacted twenty-seven years
afterward.
I have always considered this paper
handed in by Arminius as of little worth or importance. It is
neither honest nor clear. On several points it seeks cunningly to
insinuate doubts or to confuse the minds of opponents by using the
language of pretended orthodoxy. But as the debate went on, the
differences of the Arminians disclosed themselves as being, under a
pretended new name nothing in the world but the old semi-pelagianism
which had been plaguing the churches for a thousand years, the
cousin-german of the Socinian or Unitarian creed. Virtually it denied
that the fallen Adam had brought man's heart into an entire and
decisive alienation from God. It asserted that his election of grace
was not sovereign, but founded in his own foresight of the faith,
repentance, and perseverance of such as would choose to embrace the
gospel. That grace in effectual calling is not efficacious and
invincible, but resistible, so that all actual conversions are the
joint result of this grace and the sinner's will working abreast.
That Christ died equally for the non-elect and the elect, providing
an indefinite, universal atonement for all; and that true converts
may, and sometimes do, fall away totally and finally from the state
of grace and salvation; their perseverance therein depending not on
efficacious grace, but on their own free will to continue in gospel
duties.
Let any plain mind review these
five changes and perversions of Bible truth, and he will see two
facts: One, that the debate about them all will hinge mainly upon the
first question, whether man's original sin is or is not a complete
and decisive enmity to godliness; and the other, that this whole plan
is a contrivance to gratify human pride and self-righteousness and to
escape that great humbling fact everywhere so prominent in the real
gospel, that man's ruin of himself by sin is utter, and the whole
credit of his redemption from it is God's.
We Presbyterians care very little
about the name Calvinism. We are not ashamed of it; but we are
not bound to it. Some opponents seem to harbor the ridiculous notion
that this set of doctrines was the new invention of the Frenchman
John Calvin. They would represent us as in this thing followers of
him instead of followers of the Bible. This is a stupid historical
error. John Calvin no more invented these doctrines than he invented
this world which God had created six thousand years before. We
believe that he was a very gifted, learned, and, in the main, godly
man, who still had his faults. He found substantially this system of
doctrines just where we find them, in the faithful study of the
Bible, Where we see them taught by all the prophets, apostles, and
the Messiah himself, from Genesis to Revelation.
Calvin also found the same
doctrines handed down by the best, most learned, most godly,
uninspired church fathers, as Augustine and Saint Thomas Aquinas,
still running through the errors of popery. He wielded a wide
influence over the Protestant churches; but the Westminster Assembly
and the Presbyterian churches by no means adopted all Calvin's
opinions. Like the Synod of Dort, we draw our doctrines, not from any
mortal man or human philosophy, but from the Holy Ghost speaking in
the Bible. Yet, we do find some inferior comfort in discovering these
same doctrines of grace in the most learned and pious of all churches
and ages; of the great fathers of Romanism, of Martin Luther, of
Blaise Paschal, of the original Protestant churches, German, Swiss,
French, Holland, English, and Scotchand far the largest part of the
real scriptural churches of our own day. The object of this tractate
is simply to enable all honest inquirers after truth to understand
just what those doctrines really are which people style the peculiar
"doctrines of Presbyterians," and thus to enable honest minds to
answer all objections and perversions. I do not write because of any
lack in our church of existing treatises well adapted to our purpose;
nor because I think anyone can now add anything really new to the
argument. But our pastors and missionaries think that some additional
good may come from another short discussion suitable for
unprofessional readers. To such I would earnestly recommend two
little books, Dr. Mathews's on the Divine Purpose, and Dr.
Nathan Rice's God Sovereign and Man Free. For those who wish
to investigate these doctrines more extensively there are, in
addition to their Bible, the standard works in the English language
on doctrinal divinity, such as Calvin's Institutes
(translated), Witsius on the Covenants, Dr. William
Cunningham's, of Edinburgh, Hill's and Dicks's Theologies, and
in the United States those of Hodge, Dabney, and Shedd. (Most of these can
be purchased from or through
Great
Christian Books and sent by mail.)
1
Original Sin
What Presbyterians really mean by
terms such as "Original Sin," "Total Depravity," and "Inability of
the Will" is defined by our Confession of Faith, Chapter 10, Section
3: "Man, by his fall into a state of sin, hath wholly lost all
ability of will to any spiritual good accompanying salvation; so as a
natural man being altogether averse from that good, and dead in sin,
is not able, by his own strength, to convert himself, or to prepare
himself thereunto."
By original sin we mean the evil
quality which characterizes man's natural disposition and will. We
call this sin of nature original, because each fallen man is born
with it, and because it is the source or origin in each man of his
actual transgressions. By calling it total, we do not mean that men
are from their youth as bad as they can be. Evil men and seducers wax
worse and worse, "deceiving and being deceived" (2 Tim. 3:13). Nor do
we mean that they have no social virtues toward their fellowmen in
which they are sincere. We do not assert with extremists that because
they are natural men therefore all their friendship, honesty, truth,
sympathy, patriotism, domestic love, are pretenses or hypocrisies.
What our Confession says is, "That they have wholly lost ability of
will to any spiritual good accompanying salvation." The worst
retain some, and the better much, ability of will for sundry moral
goods accompanying social life. Christ teaches this (Mk. 10:21) when,
beholding the social virtues of the rich young man who came kneeling
unto him, He "loved him." Christ could never love mere
hypocrisies.1 What we teach is that by the fall man's moral
nature has undergone an utter change to sin, irreparable by himself.
In this sense it is complete, decisiveor total. The state is as
truly sinful as their actual transgressions, because it is as truly
free and spontaneous. This original sin shows itself in all natural
men in a fixed and utter opposition of heart to some forms of duty,
and especially and always to spiritual duties, owing to God, and in a
fixed and absolutely decisive purpose of heart to continue in some
sins (even while practicing some social duties), and especially to
continue in their sins of unbelief, impenitence, self-will, and
practical godlessness. In this the most moral are as inflexibly
determined by nature as the most immoral. The better part may
sincerely respect sundry rights and duties regarding their fellow
men, but in the resolve that self-will shall be their rule, whenever
they please, as against God's sovereign holy will, these are as
inexorable as the most wicked.
I suppose that a refined and
genteelly reared young lady presents the least sinful specimen of
unregenerate human nature. Examine such a one. Before she would be
guilty of theft, profane swearing, drunkenness, or impurity, she
would die. In her opposition to these sins she is truly sincere. But
there are some forms of self-will, especially in sins of omission as
against God, in which she is just as determined as the most brutal
drunkard is in his sensuality. She has, we will suppose, a Christian
mother. She is determined to pursue certain fashionable conformities
and dissipations. She has a light novel under her pillow which she
intends to read on the Sabbath. Though she may still sometimes repeat
like a parrot her nursery prayers, hers is spiritually a prayerless
life. Especially is her heart fully set not to forsake at this time
her life of self-will and worldliness for Christ's service and her
salvation. Tenderly and solemnly her Christian mother may ask her,
"My daughter, do you not know that in these things you are wrong
toward your heavenly Father" She is silent. She knows she is wrong.
"My daughter, will you not therefore now relent, and choose for your
Savior's sake, this very day, the life of faith and repentance, and
especially begin tonight the life of regular, real, secret prayer.
Will you?" Probably her answer is in a tone of cold and bitter pain.
"Mother, don't press me, I would rather not promise." No; she will
not! Her refusal may be civil in form, because she is well-bred;
but her heart is as inflexibly set in her as the hardened steel not
at this time to turn truly from her self-will to her God. In that
particular her stubbornness is just the same as that of the most
hardened sinners. Such is the best type of unregenerate humanity.
Now, the soul's duties toward God
are the highest, dearest, and most urgent of all duties; so that
wilful disobedience herein is the most express, most guilty, and most
hardening of all the sins that the soul commits. God's perfections
and will are the most supreme and perfect standard of moral right and
truth. Therefore, he who sets himself obstinately against God's right
is putting himself in the most fatal and deadly opposition to moral
goodness. God's grace is the one fountain of holiness for rational
creatures; hence, he who separates himself from this God by this
hostile self-will, shuts himself in to ultimate spiritual death. This
rooted, godless, self-will is the eating cancer of the soul. That
soul may remain for a time like the body of a young person tainted
with undeveloped cancer, apparently attractive and pretty. But the
cancer is spreading the secret seeds of corruption through all the
veins; it will break out at last in putrid ulcers, the blooming body
will become a ghastly corpse. There is no human remedy. To drop the
figure; when the sinful soul passes beyond the social restraints and
natural affections of this life, and beyond hope, into the world of
the lost, this fatal root, sin of wilful godlessness will soon
develop into all forms of malignity and wickedness; the soul will
become finally and utterly dead to God and to good. This is what we
mean by total depravity.
Once more, Presbyterians do not
believe they lose their free-agency because of original sin.
See our Confession, Chapter 9, Section 1: "God hath endued the will
of man with that natural liberty, that it is neither forced, nor by
any absolute necessity of nature determined, to good or evil." We
fully admit that where an agent is not free he is not morally
responsible. A just God will never punish him for actions in which he
is merely an instrument, impelled by the compulsion of external force
or fate. But what is free agency? There is no need to call in any
abstruse metaphysics to the sufficient answer. Let every man's
consciousness and common sense tell him: I know that I am free
whenever what I choose to do is the result of my own
preference.
If I choose and act so as to please
myself, then I am free. That is to say, our responsible volitions are
the expression and the result of our own rational preference. When I
am free and responsible it is because I choose and do the thing which
I do, not compelled by some other agents, but in accordance
with my own inward preference. We all know self-evidently that this
is so. But is rational preference in us a mere haphazard state? Do
our reasonable souls contain no original principles regulative of
their preferences and choices? Were this so, then would man's soul be
indeed a miserable weathercock, wheeled about by every outward wind;
not fit to be either free, rational, or responsible. We all know that
we have such first principles regulative of our preferences; and
these are own natural dispositions. They are inward, not
external They are spontaneous, not compelled, and so as free as our
choices. They are our own, not somebody else's. They are ourselves.
They are essential attributes in any being possessed of personality.
Every rational person must have some kind of natural disposition. We
can conceive of one person as naturally disposed this way, and of
another that way. It is impossible for us to think a rational free
agent not disposed any way at all. Try it.
We have capital illustrations of
what native disposition is in the corporeal propensities of animals.
It is the nature of a colt to like grass and hay. It is the nature of
a bouncing schoolboy to like hot sausage. You may tole the colt with
a bunch of nice hay, but not the boy; it is the hot sausage will
fetch him when he is hungry; offer the hot sausage to the colt and he
will reject it and shudder at it. Now both the colt and the boy
are free in choosing what they like; free be cause their
choices follow their own natural likings, i. e., their own
animal dispositions.
But rational man has mental
dispositions which are better than illustrations, actual cases of
native principles regulating natural choices. Thus, when happiness or
misery may be chosen simply for their own sakes, every man's natural
disposition is toward happiness and against misery. Again, man
naturally loves property; all are naturally disposed to gain and to
keep their own rather than to lose it for nothing. Once more, every
man is naturally disposed to enjoy the approbation and praise of his
fellow-men; and their contempt and abuse are naturally painful to
him. In all these cases men choose according as they prefer, and they
prefer according to their natural dispositions, happiness rather than
misery, gain rather than loss, applause rather than abuse. They are
free in these choices as they are sure to choose in the given way.
And they are as certain to choose agreeably to these original
dispositions as rivers are to run downward; equally certain and
equally free, because the dispositions which certainly regulate their
preferences are their own, not some one else's, and are spontaneous
in them, not compelled.
Let us apply one of these cases. I
make this appeal to a company of aspiring young ladies and gentlemen:
"Come and engage with me of your free choice in this given course of
labor; it will be long and arduous; but I can assure you of a certain
result. I promise you that, by this laborious effort, you shall make
yourselves the most despised and abused set of young people in the
State." Will this succeed in inducing them? Can it succeed? No; it
will not, and we justly say, it cannot. But are not these young
persons free when they answer me, as they certainly will, "No,
Teacher, we will not, and we cannot commit the folly of working hard
solely to earn contempt, because contempt is in itself contrary and
painful to our nature." This is precisely parallel to what
Presbyterians mean by inability of will to all spiritual good.
It is just as real and certain as inability of faculty. These
young people have the fingers with which to perform the proposed
labor (let us say, writing) by which I invite them to toil for the
earning of contempt. They have eyes and fingers wherewith to do
penmanship, but they cannot freely choose my offer, because it
contradicts that principle of their nature, love of applause, which
infallibly regulates free human preference and choice. Here is an
exact case of "inability of will."
If, now, man's fall has brought
into his nature a similar native principle or disposition against
godliness for its own sake, and in favor of self-will as against God,
then a parallel case of inability of will presents itself. The former
case explains the latter. The natural man's choice in preferring his
self-will to God's authority is equally free, and equally certain.
But this total lack of ability of will toward God does not suspend
man's responsibility, because it is the result of his own free
disposition, not from any compulsion from without. If a master would
require his servant to do a bodily act for which he naturally had not
the bodily faculty, as, for instance, the pulling up of a healthy oak
tree with his hands, it would be unjust to punish the servant's
failure. But this is wholly another case than the sinner's. For, if
his natural disposition toward God were what it ought to be, he would
not find himself deprived of the natural faculties by which God is
known, loved, and served. The sinner's case is not one of
extinction of faculties, but of their thorough willful
perversion.
It is just like the case of
Joseph's wicked brethren, of whom Moses says (Gen. 37:4): "That they
hated their brother Joseph, so that they could not speak
peaceably unto him." They had tongues in their heads? Yes. They could
speak in words whatever they chose, but hatred, the wicked voluntary
principle, ensured that they would not, and could not, speak kindly
to their innocent brother.
Now, then, all the argument turns
upon the question of fact: is it so that since Adam's fall the
natural disposition of all men is in this state of fixed, decisive
enmity against God's will, and fixed, inexorable preference for their
own self-will, as against God? Is it true that man is in this
lamentable state, that while still capable of being rightly disposed
toward sundry virtues and duties, terminating on his fellow
creatures, his heart is inexorably indisposed and wilfully opposed to
those duties which he owes to his heavenly Father directly? That is
the question! Its best and shortest proof would be the direct appeal
to every man's conscience. I know that it was just so with me for
seventeen years, until God's almighty hand took away the heart of
stone and gave me a heart of flesh. Every converted man confesses the
same of himself. Every unconverted man well knows that it is now true
of himself, if he would allow his judgment and conscience to look
honestly within. Unbeliever, you may at times desire even earnestly
the impunity, the safety from hell, and the other selfish advantages
of the Christian life; but did you ever prefer and desire that life
for its own sake? Did you ever see the moment when you really wished
God to subjugate all your self-will to his holy will? No! That is the
very thing which the secret disposition of your soul utterly resents
and rejects. The retention of that self-will is the very thing which
you so obstinately prefer, that as long as you dare you mean to
retain it and cherish it, even at the known risk of an unprepared
death and a horrible perdition. But I will add other proofs of this
awful fact, and especially the express testimony of the Holy
Spirit:
There is the universal fact that
all men sin more or less, and do it wilfully. In the lives of most
unrenewed men, sin reigns prevalently. The large majority are
dishonest, unjust, selfish, cruel, as far as they dare to be, even to
their fellow creatures, not to say utterly godless to their heavenly
Father. The cases like that of the well-bred young lady, described
above, are relatively few, fatally defective as they are. This
dreadful reign of sin in this world continues in spite of great
obstacles, such as God's judgments and threatenings, and laborious
efforts to curb it in the way of governments, restrictive laws and
penalties, schools, family discipline, and churches. This sinning of
human beings begins more or less as soon as the child's faculties are
so developed as to qualify him for sinning intentionally. "The wicked
are estranged from the womb: they go astray as soon as they be born,
speaking lies" (Ps. 58:3). Now, a uniform result must proceed from a
regular prior causethere must be original sin in man's nature.
Even the great rationalistic
philosopher Emmanual Kant believed and taught this doctrine. His
argument is that when men act in the aggregate and in national
masses, they show out their real native dispositions, because in
these concurrent actions they are not restrained by public opinion
and by human laws restricting individual actions, and they do not
feel immediate personal responsibility for what they do. The actions
of men in the aggregate, therefore, show what man's heart really is.
Now, then, what are the morals of the nations toward each other and
toward God? Simply those of foxes, wolves, tigers, and atheists. What
national senate really and humbly tries to please and obey God in its
treatment of neighbor nations? What nation trusts its safety simply
to the justice of its neighbors? Look at the great standing armies
and fleets! Though the nation may include many God-fearing and
righteous persons, when is that nation ever seen to forego a
profitable aggression upon the weak, simply because it is unjust
before God? These questions are unanswerable.
In the third place, all natural
men, the decent and genteel just as much as the vile, show this
absolute opposition of heart to God's will, and preference for
self-will in some sinful acts and by rejecting the gospel. This they
do invariably, knowingly, wilfully, and with utter obstinacy, until
they are made willing in the day of God's power. They know with
perfect clearness that the gospel requirements of faith, trust,
repentance, endeavors after sincere obedience, God's righteous law,
prayer, praise, and love to him, are reasonable and right. Outward
objects or inducements are constantly presented to their souls, which
are of infinite moment, and ought to be absolutely omnipotent over
right hearts. These objects include the unspeakable love of God in
Christ in giving his Son to die for his enemies, which ought to melt
the heart to gratitude in an instant; the inexpressible advantages
and blessings of an immortal heaven, secured by immediate faith, and
the unutterable, infinite horrors of an everlasting hell, incurred by
final unbelief, and risked to an awful degree, even by temporary
hesitation. And these latter considerations appeal not only to moral
conscience, but to that natural selfishness which remains in full
force in unbelievers. Nor could doubts concerning these gospel
truths, even if sincere and reasonably grounded to some extent,
explain or excuse this neglect. For faith, and obedience, and the
worship and the love of God, are self-evidently right and good for
men, whether these awful gospel facts be true or not. He who believes
is acting on the safe side in that he loses nothing, but gains
something whichever way the event may go; whereas neglect of the
gospel will have incurred an infinite mischief, with no possible gain
should Christianity turn out to be true.
In such cases reasonable men always
act, as they are morally bound to do, upon the safe side, under the
guidance of even a slight probability. Why do not doubting men act
thus on the safe side, even if it were a doubtful case (which it is
not)? Because their dispositions are absolutely fixed and determined
against godliness. Now, what result do we see from the constant
application of these immense persuasives to the hearts of natural
men? They invariably put them off; sometimes at the cost of
temporary uneasiness or agitation, but they infallibly put them off,
preferring, as long as they dare, to gratify self-will at the known
risk of plain duty and infinite blessedness. Usually they make this
ghastly suicidal and wicked choice with complete coolness, quickness,
and ease! They attempt to cover from their own consciences the folly
and wickedness of their decision by the fact they can do it so coolly
and unfeelingly. My common sense tells me that this very circumstance
is the most awful and ghastly proof of the reality and power of
original sin in them. If this had not blinded them, they would be
horrified at the very coolness with which they can outrage themselves
and their Savior. I see two men wilfully murder each his enemy. One
has given the fatal stab in great agitation, after agonizing
hesitations, followed by pungent remorse. He is not yet an adept in
murder. I see the other man drive his knife into the breast of his
helpless victim promptly, coolly, calmly, jesting while he does it,
and then cheerfully eat his food with his bloody knife. This is no
longer a man, but a fiend.
But the great proof is the
Scripture. The whole Bible, from Genesis to Revelation, asserts this
original sin and decisive ungodliness of will of all fallen men.
Genesis 6:3: "My spirit shall not always strive with man, for that
he also is flesh (carnally minded)." Again, Genesis 6:5: "God saw
that every imagination of the man's heart was only evil continually."
After the terrors of the flood, God's verdict on the survivors was
still the same. Genesis 8:21: "I will not again curse the ground any
more for man's sake; for the imagination of man's heart is evil from
his youth."
Job, probably the earliest sacred
writer, asks, "Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? not
one" (Job 14:4). David says: "Behold I was shapen in iniquity, and in
sin did my mother conceive me" (Ps. 51:5). Prophet asks (Jer. 13:23),
"Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? then
may ye also do good that are accustomed to do evil." Jeremiah 17:9
says, "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately
wicked." What does desperately mean? In the New Testament Christ
says (Jn. 3:4-5), "That which is born of the flesh is flesh;" and
"Except ye be born again ye cannot see the kingdom of God." The
Pharisees' hearts (decent moral men) are like unto whited sepulchers,
which appear beautifully outwardly, but within are full of
dead men's bones and all uncleanness. Does Christ exaggerate,
and slander decent people?
Peter tells us (Acts 8:23) that the
spurious believer is "in the gall of bitterness and the bond of
iniquity." Paul (Rom. 8:7): "The carnal mind is enmity against God:
for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be,"
(inability of will). Ephesians 2:3 All men are "by nature the
children of wrath" and "dead in trespasses and sins" (v. 1). Are not
these enough?
2
Effectual Calling
What is the nature and agency of
the moral revolution usually called effectual calling or
regeneration?
This change must be more than an
outer reformation of conduct; it is an inward revolution of first
principles which regulate conduct. It must go deeper than a change of
purpose as to sin and godliness; it must be a reversal of the
original dispositions which hitherto prompted the soul to choose sin
and reject godliness. Nothing less grounds a true conversion. As the
gluttonous child maybe persuaded by the selfish fear of pain and
death to forego the dainties he loves, and to swallow the nauseous
drugs which his palate loathes, so the ungodly man may be induced by
his self-righteousness and selfish fear of hell to forbear the sins
he still loves and submit to the religious duties which his secret
soul still detests. But as the one practice is no real cure of the
vice of gluttony in the child, so the other is no real conversion to
godliness in the sinner. The child must not only forsake, but really
dislike his unhealthy dainties; not only submit to swallow, but
really love, the medicines naturally nauseous to him. Selfish fear
can do the former; nothing but a physiological change of constitution
can do the latter. The natural man must not only submit from selfish
fear to the godliness which he detested, he must love it for its own
sake, and hate the sins naturally sweet to him. No change can be
permanent which does not go thus deep; nothing less is true
conversion. God's call to the sinner is: "My son, give me thine
heart" (Prov. 23:26). God requires truth in the inward parts and
in the hidden part: "Thou shalt make me to know wisdom" (Ps. 51:6).
"Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart" (Deut. 10:16). But
hear especially Christ: "Either make the tree good, and his fruit
good; or else make the tree corrupt, and his fruit corrupt" (Matt.
12:33). We call the inward revolution of principles
regeneration; the change of life which immediately begins from
the new principles conversion. Regeneration is a summary act,
conversion a continuous process. Conversion begins in, and proceeds
constantly out of, regeneration, as does the continuous growth of a
plant out of the first sprouting or quickening of its dry seed. In
conversion the renewed soul is an active agent: "[God's] people shall
be willing in the day of [his] power" (Ps. 110:3). The converted man
chooses and acts the new life of faith and obedience heartily and
freely, as prompted by the Holy Ghost. In this sense, he works out
his own salvation (Phil. 2:12). But manifestly in regeneration, in
the initial revolution of disposition, the soul does not act, but is
a thing acted on. In this first point there can be no cooperation of
the man's will with the divine power. The agency is wholly Gods, and
not man's, even in part. The vital change must be affected by
immediate direct divine power. God's touch here may be mysterious;
but it must be real, for it is proved by the seen results. The work
must be sovereign and supernatural. Sovereign in this sense, that
there is no will concerned in its effectuation except God's, because
the sinner's will goes against it as invariably, as freely, until it
is renewed; supernatural, because there is nothing at all in sinful
human nature to begin it, man's whole natural disposition being to
prefer and remain in a godless state. As soon as this doctrine is
stated, it really proves itself. In section 1 we showed beyond
dispute that man's natural disposition and will are enmity against
God. Does enmity ever turn itself into love? Can nature act
above nature? Can the stream raise itself to a higher level than its
own source? Nothing can be plainer than this, that since the native
disposition and will of man are wholly and decisively against
godliness, there is no source within the man out of which the new
godly will can come; into the converted man it has come; then it must
have come from without, solely from the divine will.
But men cheat themselves with the
notion that what they call free-will may choose to respond to valid
outward inducements placed before it, so that gospel truth and
rational free-will cooperating with it may originate the great change
instead of sovereign, efficacious divine grace. Now, any plain mind,
if it will think, can see that this is delusive. Is any kind of an
object actual inducement to any sort of agent? No, indeed. Is fresh
grass an inducement to a tiger? Is bloody flesh an inducement to a
lamb to eat? Is a nauseous drug an inducement to a child's palate; or
ripe sweet fruit? Useless loss an inducement to the merchant; or
useful gain? Are contempt and reproach inducements to aspiring youth;
or honor and fame? Manifestly some kinds of objects only are
inducements to given sorts of agents; and the opposite objects are
repellants. Such is the answer of common sense. Now, what has decided
which class of objects shall attract, and which shall repel?
Obviously it is the agents' own original, subjective dispositions
which have determined this. It is the lamb's nature which has
determined that the fresh grass, and not the bloody flesh, shall be
the attraction to it. It is human nature in the soul which has
determined that useful gain, and not useless loss, shall be
inducement to the merchant. Now, then, to influence a man by
inducement you must select an object which his own natural
disposition has made attractive to him; by pressing the opposite
objects on him you only repel him; and the presentation of the
objects can never reverse the man's natural disposition, because this
has determined in advance which objects will be attractions and which
repellants. Effects cannot reverse the very causes on which they
themselves depend. The complexion of the child cannot re-determine
the complexion of the father. Now, facts and Scripture teach us (see
section 1) that man's original disposition is freely, entirely,
against God's will and godliness and in favor of self-will and sin.
Therefore, godliness can never be of itself inducement, but only
repulsion, to the unregenerate soul. Men cheat themselves; they think
they are induced by the selfish advantages of an imaginary heaven, an
imaginary selfish escape from hell. But this is not regeneration; it
is but the sorrows of the world that worketh death, and the hope of
the hypocrite that perisheth.
The different effects of the same
preached gospel at the same time and place prove that regeneration is
from sovereign grace: "Some believed the things which were spoken,
and some believed not" (Acts 28:24). This is because, "As many as
were ordained to eternal life believed" (Acts 13:48). Often those
remain unchanged whose social virtues, good habits, and amiability
should seem to offer least obstruction to the gospel; while some old,
profane, sensual, and hardened sinners become truly converted, whose
wickedness and long confirmed habits of sinning must have presented
the greatest obstruction to gospel truth. Like causes should produce
like effects. Had outward gospel inducements been the real causes,
these results of preaching would be impossible. The facts show that
the gospel inducements were only instruments, and that in the real
conversion the agency was almighty grace.
The erroneous theory of conversion
is again powerfully refuted by those cases, often seen, in which
gospel truth has remained powerless over certain men for ten, twenty,
or fifty years, and at last has seemed to prevail for their genuine
conversion. The gospel, urged by the tender lips of a mother, proved
too weak to overcome the self-will of the boy's heart. Fifty years
afterward that same gospel seemed to convert a hardened old man!
There are two well-known laws of the human soul which show this to be
impossible. One is, that facts and inducements often, but
fruitlessly, presented to the soul, become weak and trite from vain
repetition. The other is, that men's active appetencies grow stronger
continually by their own indulgence. Here, then, is the case: The
gospel when presented to the sensitive boy must have had much more
force than it could have to the old man after it had grown stale to
him by fifty years of vain repetition. The old man's love of sin must
have grown greatly stronger than the boy's by fifty years of constant
indulgence. Now how comes it, that a given moral influence which was
too weak to overcome the boy's sinfulness has overcome the old man's
carnality when the influences had become so much weaker and the
resistance to it so much stronger. This is impossible. It was the
finger of God, and not the mere moral influence, which wrought the
mighty change. Let us suppose that fifty years ago the reader had
seen me visit his rural sanctuary, when the grand oaks which now
shade it were but lithe saplings. He saw me make an effort to tear
one of them with my hands from its seat; but it proved too strong for
me. Fifty years after, he and I meet at the same sacred spot, and he
sees me repeat my attempt upon the same tree, now grown to be a
monarch of the grove. He will incline to laugh me to scorn: "He
attempted that same tree fifty years ago, when he was in his youthful
prime and it was but a sapling, but he could not move it. Does the
old fool think to rend it from its seat now, when age has so
diminished his muscle, and the sapling has grown to a mighty tree?"
But let us suppose that the reader saw that giant of the grove come
up in my aged hands. He would no longer laugh. He would stand
awe-struck. He would conclude that this must be the hand of God, not
of man. How vain is it to seek to break the force of this
demonstration by saying that at last the moral influence of the
gospel had received sufficient accession from attendant
circumstances, from clearness and eloquence of presentation, to
enable it to do its work? What later eloquence of the pulpit can
rival that of the Christian mother presenting the cross in the tender
accents of love? Again, the story of the cross, the attractions of
heaven, ought to be immense, even when stated in the simplest words
of childhood. How trivial and paltry are any additions which mere
human rhetoric can make to what ought to be the infinite force of the
naked truth.
But the surest proof is that of
Scripture. This everywhere asserts that the sinner's regeneration is
by sovereign, almighty grace. One class of texts presents those which
describe the sinner's prior condition as one of "blindness,"
Ephesians 4:18; "of stony heartedness," Ezekiel 36:26; "of
impotency," Romans 5:6; "of enmity," Romans 8:7; "of inability, John
6:44 and Romans 7:18; "of deadness," Ephesians 2:1-5. Let no one
exclaim that these are "figures of speech." Surely the Holy Spirit,
when resorting to figures for the very purpose of giving a more
forcible expression to truth, does not resort to a deceitful
rhetoric! Surely he selects his figures because of the correct
parallel between them and his truth!
Now, then, the blind man cannot
take part in the very operation which is to open his eyes. The hard
stone cannot be a source of softness. The helpless paralytic cannot
begin his own restoration. Enmity against God cannot choose love for
him. The dead corpse of Lazarus could have no agency in recalling the
vital spirit into itself. After Christ's almighty power restored it,
the living man could respond to the Savior's command and rise and
come forth.
The figures which describe the
almighty change prove the same truth. It is described (Ps. 119:18) as
an opening of the blind eyes to the law; as a new creation; (Ps.
51:10; Eph. 2:5) as a new birth; (Jn. 3:3) as a quickening or
resurrection (making alive; Eph. 1:18, and 2:10). The man blind of
cataract does not join the surgeon in couching his own eye; nor does
the sunbeam begin and perform the surgical operation; that must take
place in order for the light to enter and produce vision.
The timber is shaped by the
carpenter; it does not shape itself, and does not become an implement
until he gives it the desired shape.
The infant does not procreate
itself, but must be born of its parents in order to become a living
agent.
The corpse does not restore life to
itself; after life is restored if becomes a living agent.
Express scriptures teach the same
doctrine in Jeremiah 31:18, Ephraim is heard praying thus: "Turn
thou me and I shall be turned." In John 1:13, we are
taught that believers are born "not of blood, nor of the will of man,
nor of the will of the flesh, but of God." In John 6:44, Christ
assures us that "No man can come to me except the Father which hath
sent me draw him." And in John 15:16, "Ye have not chosen me, but I
have chosen you, and ordained you, that you should go and bring forth
fruit." In Ephesians 2:10, "For we are his workmanship, created in
Christ Jesus unto good works, which Christ hath fore ordained that we
should walk in them."
It is objected that this doctrine
of almighty grace would destroy man's free-agency. This is not true.
All men whom God does not regenerate retain their natural freedom
unimpaired by anything which he does to them.
It is true that these use their
freedom, as in variably, as voluntarily, by choosing their self-will
and unregenerate state. But in doing this they choose in perfect
accordance with their own preference, and this the only kind of
free-agency known to men of common sense. The unregenerate choose
just what they prefer, and therefore choose freely; but so long as
not renewed by almighty grace, they always prefer to remain
unregenerate, because it is fallen man's nature. The truly regenerate
do not lose their free-agency by effectual calling, but regain a
truer and higher freedom; for the almighty power which renews them
does not force them into a new line of conduct contrary to their own
preferences, but reverses the original disposition itself which
regulates preference. Under this renewed disposition they now act
just as freely as when they were voluntary sinners, but far more
reasonably and happily. For they act the new and right preference,
which almighty grace has put in place of the old one.
It is objected, again, that unless
the agent has exercised his free-will in the very first choice or
adoption of the new moral state, there could be no moral quality and
no credit for the series of actions proceeding therefrom, because
they would not be voluntary. This is expressly false. True, the
new-born sinner can claim no merit for that sovereign change of will
in which his conversion began, because it was not his own choosing,
or doing, but God's; yet the cavil is untrue; the moral quality and
merit of a series of actions does not depend on the question, whether
the agent put himself into the moral state whence they how, by a
previous volition of his own starting from a moral indifference.
The only question is, whether his
actions are sincere, and the free expressions of a right disposition,
for
1. Then Adam could have no
morality; for we are expressly told that God "created him upright."
(Eccles. 7:29.)
2. Jesus could have had no
meritorious morality, because being conceived of the Holy Ghost he
was born that holy thing (Matt. 1:20; Luke 1:35)
3. God himself could have no
meritorious holiness, because he was and is eternally and
unchangeably holy. He never chose himself into a state of holiness,
being eternally and necessarily holy. Here, then, this miserable
objection runs into actual blasphemy. On this point John Wesley is as
expressly with us as Jonathan Edwards. See Wesley, On Original
Sin.
3
God's Election
In our Confession, Chapter 3,
Sections 3, 4, and 7, we have this description of it: "By the decree
of God, for the manifestation of his glory, some men and angels are
predestined unto everlasting life and others foreordained to
everlasting death" (3). "These angels and men, thus predestinated and
foreordained, are particularly and unchangeably designed; and their
number is so certain and definite that it cannot be either increased
or diminished" (4).
"The rest of mankind, God was
pleased, according to the unsearchable counsel of his own will,
whereby he extendeth or withholdeth mercy as he pleaseth, for the
glory of his sovereign power over his creatures, to pass by, and to
ordain them to dishonor and wrath for their sin, to the praise of his
glorious justice" (7).
The first and second sections of
this tract prove absolutely this sad but stubborn fact, that no
sinner ever truly regenerates himself. One sufficient reason is, that
none ever wish to do it, but always prefer, while left to themselves
by God, to remain as they are, self-willed and worldly. That is to
say, no sinner ever makes himself choose God and holiness, because
every principle of his soul goes infallibly to decide the opposite
preference. Therefore, whenever a sinner is truly regenerated, it
must be God that has done it. Take notice, after God has done it,
this new-born sinner will, in his subsequent course of repentance and
conversion, freely put forth many choices for God and holiness; but
it is impossible that this sinner can have put forth the first choice
to reverse his own natural principles of choice. Can a child beget
its own father? It must have been God that changed the sinner.
Then, when he did it he meant to do it. When was this intention to
do it born into the divine mind? That same day? The day that
sinner was born? The day Adam was made? No! These answers are all
foolish. Because God is omniscient and unchangeable he must have
known from eternity his own intention to do it. This suggests,
second, that no man can date any of God's purposes in time without
virtually denying his perfections of omniscience, wisdom,
omnipotence, and immutability. Being omniscient, it is impossible he
should ever find out afterward anything he did not know from the
first. Being all-wise, it is impossible he should take up a purpose
for which his knowledge does not see a reason. Being all-powerful, it
is impossible he should ever fail in trying to effect one of his
purposes. Hence, whatever God does in nature or grace, he intended to
do that thing from eternity. Being unchangeable, it is impossible
that he should change his mind to a different purpose after he had
once made it up aright under the guidance of infinite knowledge,
wisdom, and holiness. All the inferior wisdom of good men but
illustrates this. Here is a wise and righteous general conducting a
defensive war to save his country. At mid-summer an observer says to
him, "General, have you not changed your plan of campaign since you
began it?" He replies, "I have." Says the observer, "Then you must be
a fickle person?" He replies, "No, I have changed it not because I
was fickle, but for these two reasons: because I have been unable and
have failed in some of the necessary points of my first plan; and
second, I have found out things I did not know when I began." We say
that is perfect common sense, and clears the general from all charge
of fickleness. But suppose he were, in fact, almighty and omniscient?
Then he could not use those excuses, and if he changed his plan after
the beginning he would be fickle. Reader, dare you charge God with
fickleness? This is a sublime conception of God's nature and actions,
as far above the wisest man's as the heavens above the earth. But it
is the one taught us everywhere in Scripture. Let us beware how in
our pride of self-will we blaspheme God by denying it. Third.
Arminians themselves virtually admit the force of these views and
scriptures; for their doctrinal books expressly admit God's
particular personal election of every sinner that reaches heaven. A
great many ignorant persons suppose that the Arminian theology denies
all particular election. This is a stupid mistake. Nobody can deny it
without attacking the Scripture, God's perfections, and common sense.
The whole difference between Presbyterians and intelligent Arminians
is this: We believe that God's election of individuals is
unconditioned and sovereign. They believe that while eternal and
particular, it is on account of God's eternal, omniscient foresight
of the given sinner's future faith and repentance, and perseverance
in holy living. But we Presbyterians must dissent for these
reasons: It is inconsistent with the eternity, omnipotence, and
sovereignty of the great first cause to represent his eternal
purposes thus, as grounded in, or conditioned on, anything which one
of his dependent creatures would hereafter contingently do or leave
undone.
Will or will not that creature ever
exist in the future to do or to leave undone any particular thing?
That itself must depend on God's sovereign creative power. We must
not make an independent God depend upon his own dependent creature.
But does not Scripture often represent a salvation or ruin of sinners
as conditioned on their own faith or unbelief? Yes. But do not
confound two different things. The result ordained by God may depend
for its rise upon the suitable means. But the acts of God's mind in
ordaining it does not depend on these means, because God's very
purpose is this, to bring about the means without fail and the result
by the means.
Next, whether God's election of a
given sinner, say, Saul of Tarsus, be conditioned or not upon the
foresight of his faith, if it is an eternal and omniscient: foresight
it must be a certain one. Common sense says: no cause, no
effect; an uncertain cause can only give an uncertain effect. Says
the Arminian: God certainly foresaw that Saul of Tarsus would believe
and repent, and, therefore, elected him. But I say, that if God
certainly foresaw Saul's faith, it must have been certain to take
place, for the Omniscient cannot make mistakes. Then, if this
sinner's faith was certain to take place, there must have been some
certain cause insuring that it would take place. Now, no certain
cause could be in the "free-will" of this sinner, Saul, even as aided
by "common sufficient grace." For Arminians say, that this makes and
leaves the sinner's will contingent. Then, whatever made God think
that this sinner, Saul, would ever be certain to believe and repent?
Nothing but God's own sovereign eternal will to renew him unto faith
and repentance.
This leads to the crowning
argument. This Saul was by nature "dead in trespasses and in sins"
(Eph. 2:1), and, therefore, would never have in him any faith or
repentance to be foreseen, except as the result of God's purpose to
put them in him. But the effect cannot be the cause of its own cause.
The cart cannot pull the horse; why, it is the horse that pulls the
cart. This is expressly confirmed by Scripture. Christ says (Jn.
15:16): "Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you, and ordained
you, that ye should go and bring forth fruit, and that your fruit
should remain." Romans 9:11-13: "For the children being not yet born,
neither having done any good or evil, that the purpose of God
according to election might stand, not of works, but of him that
calleth; It was said unto her, The elder shall serve the younger. As
it is written, Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated;" and verse
16: "So then, it is not of him that: willeth, nor of him that
runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy." What is not? The connection
shows that it is the election of the man that willeth and runneth, of
which the apostle here speaks. Paul here goes so dead against the
notion of conditional election, that learned Arminians see that they
must find some evasion, or squarely take the ground of infidels. This
is their evasion: that by the names Esau and Jacob the individual
patriarchs are not meant, but the two nations, Edom and Israel, and
that the predestination was only unto the privation or enjoyment of
the means of grace. But this is utterly futile: First, because
certainly the individual patriarchs went along with the two
posterities whom they represented. Second, because Paul's
discussion in this ninth chapter all relates to individuals and not
to races, and to salvation or perdition, and not to mere church
privileges. Third, because the perdition of the Edomite race
from all gospel means must have resulted in the perdition of the
individuals. For, says Paul: "How could they believe on him of whom
they have not heard?"
This is the right place to notice
the frequent mistake when we say that God's election is sovereign and
not conditioned on his foresight of the elected man's piety. Many
pretend to think that we teach God has no reason at all for his
choice; that we make it an instance of sovereign divine caprice! We
teach no such thing. It would be impiety. Our God is too wise and
righteous to have any caprices. He has a reasonable motive for every
one of his purposes; and his omniscience shows him it is always the
best reason. But he is not bound to publish it to us. God knew he had
a reason for preferring the sinner, Jacob, to the sinner Esau. But
this reason could not have been any foreseeing merit of Jacob's piety
by two arguments: The choice was made before the children were born.
There never was any piety in Jacob to foresee, except what was to
follow after as an effect of Jacob's election. Esau appears to have
been an open, hard-mouthed, profane person. Jacob, by nature, a mean,
sneaking hypocrite and supplanter. Probably God judged their personal
merits as I do, that personally Jacob was a more detestable sinner
than Esau. Therefore, on grounds of foreseen personal deserts, God
could never have elected either of them. But his omniscience saw a
separate, independent reason why it was wisest to make the worse man
the object of his infinite mercy, while leaving the other to his own
profane choice. Does the Arminian now say that I must tell him what
that reason was? I answer, I do not know, God has not told me. But I
know He had a good reason, because he is God. Will any man dare to
say that because omniscience could not find its reason in the
foreseen merits of Jacob, therefore it could find none at all in the
whole infinite sweep of its Providence and wisdom? This would be
arrogance run mad and near to blasphemy.
One more argument for election
remains: Many human beings have their salvation or ruin practically
decided by providential events in their lives. The argument is, that
since these events are sovereignly determined by God's providence,
the election, or preterition of their souls is thereby virtually
decided, Take two instances: Here is a wilful, impenitent man who is
down with fever and is already delirious. Will he die or get well?
God's providence will decide that. "In his hands our breath is, and
his are all our ways" (Dan. 5:23). If he dies this time he is too
delirious to believe and repent; if he recovers, he may attend
revival meetings and return to God. The other instance is, that of
dying infants. This is peculiarly deadly to the Arminian theory,
because they say so positively that all humans who die in infancy are
saved. (And they slander us Presbyterians by charging that we are not
positive enough on that point, and that we believe in the "damnation
of infants.") Well, here is a human infant three months old. Will it
die of croup, or will it live to be a man? God's providence will
decide that. If it dies, the Arminian is certain its soul is gone to
heaven, and therefore was elected of God to go there. If it is to
grow to be a man, the Arminian says he may exercise his freewill to
be a Korah, Dalthan, Abiram, or Judas. But the election of the
baby who dies cannot be grounded in God's foresight of its faith and
repentance, because there was none to foresee before it entered
glory; the little soul having redeemed by sovereign grace without
these means.
But there is that sentence in our
Confession, Chapter 10, Section 3: "Elect infants, dying in infancy,
are regenerated and saved by Christ through the Spirit, who worketh
when and where and how he pleaseth." Our charitable accusers will
have it that the antithesis which we imply to the words "elect
infants dying in infancy" is, that there are non-elect infants dying
in infancy are so damned. This we always deny. But they seem to know
what we think better than we know ourselves. The implied antithesis
we hold is this: There are elect infants not dying in infancy, and
such must experience effectual calling through rational means, and
freely believe and repent according to Chapter 10. There were once
two Jewish babies, John and Judas; John an elect infant, Judas a
non-elect one. Had John the Baptist died of croup he would have been
redeemed without personal faith and repentance; but he was
predestinated to live to man's estate, so he had to be saved through
effectual calling. Judas, being a non-elect infant, was also
predestinated to live to manhood and receive his own fate freely by
his own contumacy. Presbyterians do not believe that the Bible or
their Confession teaches that there are non-elect infants dying in
infancy and so damned. Had they thought this of their Confession,
they would have changed this section long ago.
When an intelligent being makes a
selection of some out of a number of objects, he therein unavoidably
makes a preterition (a passing by) of the others; we cannot deny this
without imputing ignorance or inattention to the agent; but
omniscience can neither be ignorant nor inattentive. Hence, God's
preordination must: extend to the saved and the lost.
But here we must understand the
difference between God's effective decree and his permissive decree,
the latter is just as definite and certain as the former; but the
distinction is this: The objects of God's effective decree are
effects which he himself works, without employing or including the
free-agency of any other rational responsible person, such as his
creations, miracles, regenerations of souls, resurrections of bodies,
and all those results which his providence brings to pass, through
the blind, compulsory powers of second causes, brutish or material.
The nature of his purpose here is by his own power to determine these
results to come to pass.
But the nature of his permissive
decree is this: He resolves to allow or permit some creature
free-agent freely and certainly to do the thing decreed without
impulsion from God's power. To this class of actions belong all the
indifferent, and especially all the sinful, deeds of natural men, and
all those final results where such persons throw away their own
salvation by their own disobedience. In all these results God does
not himself do the thing, nor help to do it, but intentionally lets
it be done. Does one ask how then a permissive decree can have entire
certainty? The answer is, because God knows that men's natural
disposition certainly prompts them to evil; for instance, I know it
is the nature of lambs to eat grass. If I intentionally leave open
the gate between the fold and the pasture I know that the grass will
be eaten, and I intend to allow it just as clearly as if I had myself
driven them upon the pasture.
Now, it is vain for those to object
that God's will cannot have anything to do with sinful results, even
in this permissive sense, without making God an author of the sin,
unless these cavilers mean to take the square infidel ground. For the
Bible is full of assertions that God does thus foreordain sin without
being an author of sin. He foreordained Pharaoh's tyranny and
rebellion, and then punished him for it. In Isaiah 10 he foreordains
Nebuchadnezzar's sack of Jerusalem, and then punishes him for it. In
Acts 2:23 the wicked Judas betrays his Lord by the determinate
purpose and foreknowledge of God. In Romans 9:18, "he hath mercy on
whom he will have mercy, and whom he will he hardeneth," so in many
other places. But our Confession, Chapter 10, Section 7, makes this
express difference between God's decree of election and of
preterition. The former is purely gracious, not grounded in any
foresight of any piety in them because they have none to foresee,
except as they are elected and called, and in consequence thereof.
But the non-elect are passed by and foreordained to destruction
"for their sins, and for the glory of God's justice."
We thus see that usual fiery
denunciations of this preterition are nothing but absurd follies and
falsehoods. These vain-talkers rant as though it were God's
foreordination which makes these men go to perdition. In this
there is not one word of truth. They alone make themselves go, and
God's purpose concerning the wretched result never goes a particle
further than this, that in his justice he resolves to let them have
their own preferred way. These men talk as though God's decree of
preterition was represented by us as a barrier preventing poor
striving sinners from getting to heaven, no matter how they repent
and pray and obey, only because they are not the secret pets of an
unjust divine caprice.
The utter folly and wickedness of
this cavil are made plain by this, that the Bible everywhere teaches
none but the elect and effectually called ever work or try in earnest
to get to heaven; that the lost never really wish nor try to be
saints; that their whole souls are opposed to it, and they prefer
freely to remain ungodly, and this is the sole cause of their ruin.
If they would truly repent, believe, and obey, they would find no
decree debarring them from grace and heaven, God can say this just as
the shepherd might say of the wolves: if they will choose to eat my
grass peaceably with my lambs they shall find no fence of mine
keeping them from my grass. But the shepherd knows that it is always
the nature of wolves to choose to devour the lambs instead of the
grass, which former their own natures, and not the fence, assuredly
prompts them to do, until almighty power new-creates them into lambs.
The reason why godless men cavil so fiercely against this part of the
doctrine, and so fully misrepresent it, is just this: that they hate
to acknowledge to themselves that free yet stubborn godlessness of
soul which leads them voluntarily to work their own ruin, and so they
try to throw the blame on God or his doctrine instead of taking it on
themselves.
In fine, unbelieving men are ever
striving to paint the doctrine of election as the harsh, the
exclusive, the terrible doctrine, erecting a hindrance between
sinners and salvation. But properly viewed it is exactly the
opposite. It is not the harsh doctrine, but the sweet one, not the
exclusive doctrine, not the hindrance of our salvation, but the
blessed inlet to all the salvation found in this universe. It is sin,
man's voluntary sin, which excludes him from salvation; and in this
sin God has no responsibility. It is God's grace alone which
persuades men both to come in and remain within the region of
salvation; and all this grace is the fruit of election. I repeat,
then, it is our voluntary sin which is the source of all that is
terrible in the fate of ruined men and angels. It is God's election
of grace which is the sweet and blessed source of all that is
remedial, hopeful, and happy in earth and heaven. God can say to
every angel and redeemed man in the universe: "I have chosen thee in
everlasting love; therefore in loving kindness have I drawn thee."
And every angel, and saint on this earth and in glory responds, in
accordance with our hymn:
"Why was I made to hear his voice
And enter while there's room,
While others make a wretched choice
And rather starve than come?
'Twas the same love that spread the feast
That sweetly drew me in;
Else I had still refused to taste
And perish in my sin."
And now dare any sinner insolently
press the question, why the same electing love and power in God did
not also include and save all lost sinners? This is the sufficient
and the awful answer: "Who art thou, O man, that repliest against
God?" (Romans ix. 20.) Hast thou any claim of right against God, O
man, to force thee against thy preference and stubborn choice to
embrace a redemption unto holiness which thou dost hate and wilfully
reject in all the secret powers of thy soul? And if thou destroyest
thyself, while holy creatures may lament thy ruin, all will say that
thou art the last being in this universe to complain of injustice,
since this would be only complaining against the God whom thou dost
daily insult, that he did not make thee do the things and live the
life which thou didst thyself wilfully and utterly refuse!
Others urge this captious
objection: that this doctrine of election places a fatal obstacle
between the anxious sinner and saving faith. They ask, How can I
exercise a sincere, appropriating faith, unless I have ascertained
that I am elected? For the reprobate soul is not entitled to believe
that Christ died for him, and as his salvation is impossible, the
truest faith could not save him even if he felt it. But how can man
as certain God's secret purpose of election toward him?
This cavil expressly falsifies
God's teachings concerning salvation by faith. As concerning his
election the sinner is neither commanded nor invited to embrace as
the object of his faith the proposition "I am elected." There is no
such command in the Bible. The proposition he is invited and
commanded to embrace is this: "Whosoever believes shall be
saved" (Rom. 10:11.) God has told this caviler expressly, "Secret
things belong to the Lord our God, but the things that are revealed
belong to you and your children, that ye may do all the words of this
law." (Deut. 29:29.) Let us not cavil, but obey. God's promises also
assure us "that whosoever cometh unto God through Christ, he will in
no wise cast off" (Jn. 6:37). So that it is impossible that any
sinner really wishing to be saved can be kept from salvation by
uncertainty about his own election. When we add that God's decree in
no wise infringes man's free agency, our answer is complete.
Confession, Chapter 3, Section 1., by this decree, "No violence is
offered to the will of the creatures, nor is the liberty or
contingency of second causes taken away, but rather established.
But it is stubbornly objected that
those who are subject to a sovereign, immutable decree cannot be free
agents; that the two propositions are contradictory, and the
assertion of both an insult to reason. We explained that there are
various means by which we see free agents prompted to action, which
are not compulsory, and yet certain of effect, and that our God is a
God of infinite wisdom and resources. God tells them that in
governing his rational creatures according to his eternal purpose, he
uses only such means as are consistent with their freedom. Still, the
arrogant objectors are positive that it cannot be done, even by an
infinite God! that if there is predestination, there cannot be
free-agency. Surely the man who makes this denial should be himself
infinite!
But, perhaps, the best answer to
this folly is this: Mr. Arminian, you, a puny mortal, are actually
doing, and that often, the very thing you say an almighty God cannot
do! Predestining the acts of free-agents, certainly and efficiently,
without their freedom. For instance: Mr. Arminian invites me to
dine with him at one o'clock PM. I reply, yes, provided dinner is
punctual and certain, because I have to take a railroad train at two
PM He promises positively that dinner shall be ready at one PM How
so, will he cook it himself? Oh, no! But he employs a steady cook,
named Gretchen, and he has already instructed her that one PM must be
the dinner hour.
That is predestination he
tells me, certain and efficacious.
I now take up Mr. Arminian's
argument, and apply it to Gretchen thus: He says predestination and
free-agency are contradictory. He predestinated you, Gretchen,
to prepare dinner for one o'clock, therefore you were not a free
agent in getting dinner. Moreover, as there can be no moral desert
where there is no freedom, you have not deserved your promised wages
for cooking, and Mr. Arminian thinks he is not at all bound to pay
you.
Gretchen's common sense replies
thus: I know I am a free agent; I am no slave, no
machine, but a free woman, and an honest woman, who got dinner at one
o'clock because I chose to keep my word; and if Mr. Arminian robs me
of my wages on this nasty pretext, I will know he is a rogue.
Gretchen's logic is perfectly
good.
My argument is, that men are
perpetually predestinating and efficiently procuring free acts of
free agents. How much more may an infinite God do likewise. But this
reasoning need not, and does not, imply that God's ways of doing it
are the same as ours.
His resources of wisdom and power
are manifold, infinite. Thus this popular cavil is shown to be as
silly and superficial as it is common. It is men's sinful pride of
will which makes them repeat such shallow stuff.
Having exploded objections, I now
close this argument for election with the strongest of all the
testimonies, the Scriptures. The Bible is full of it; all of
God's prophecies imply predestination, because, unless he had
foreordained the predicted events, he could not be certain they would
come to pass. The Bible doctrine of God's providence proves
predestination, because the Bible says providence extends to
everything, and is certain and omnipotent, and it only executes what
predestination plans. Here are a few express texts among a hundred:
Psalm 33:11: "The counsel of the Lord standeth forever, the thoughts
of his heart to all generations." Isaiah 46:10: God declareth "the
end from the beginning, and from ancient times the things that are
not yet done, saying, my counsel shall stand, and I will do all my
pleasure." God's election of Israel was unconditional. See Ezekiel
16:6: "And when I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine own
blood, I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood, Live." Acts
8:48: "When the Gentiles heard this . . . as many as were ordained to
eternal life believed." Romans 8:29-30: "For whom he did foreknow, he
also did predestinate . . . Moreover, whom he did predestinate, them
he also called, and whom he called, them he also justified; and whom
he justified, them he also glorified." Ephesians 1:4-7: "He hath
chosen us in him (Christ) before the foundation of the world," etc. 1
Thessalonians 1:4: "Knowing, brethren, beloved, your election of
God." Revelation 21:27 ". . . . They that are written in the Lamb's
book of life."
Silly people try to say that
election is the doctrine of that harsh apostle Paul. But the loving
Savior teaches it more expressly if possible than Paul does. See,
again, John 6:16: "Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you,"
etc. John 6:37: "All that the Father giveth me shall come to me,"
etc.; see also verses 39, 44; Matthew 24:22; Luke 18:7; John 10:14,
28; Mark 13:22; Matt. 20:16.
4
Particular Redemption
Did Christ die for the elect only,
or for all men?" The answer has been much prejudiced by ambiguous
terms, such as "particular atonement," "limited atonement," or
"general atonement," "unlimited atonement," "indefinite atonement."
What do they mean by atonement? The word (at-one-ment) is used but
once in the New Testament (Rom. 5:11), and there it means expressly
and exactly reconciliation. This is proved thus: the same
Greek word in the next verse, carrying the very same meaning, is
translated reconciliation. Now, people continually mix two ideas when
they say atonement: One is, that of the expiation for guilt provided
in Christ's sacrifice. The other is, the individual reconciliation of
a believer with his God, grounded on that sacrifice made by Christ
once for all, but actually effectuated only when the sinner believes
and by faith. The last is the true meaning of atonement, and in that
sense every, atonement (at-one-ment), reconciliation, must be
individual, particular, and limited to this sinner who now believes.
There have already been just as many atonements as there are true
believers in heaven and earth, each one individual.
But sacrifice, expiation, is one
the single, glorious, indivisible act of the divine Redeemer,
infinite and inexhaustible in merit. Had there been but one sinner,
Seth, elected of God, this whole divine sacrifice would have been
needed to expiate his guilt. Had every sinner of Adam's race been
elected, the same one sacrifice would be sufficient for all. We must
absolutely get rid of the mistake that expiation is an aggregate of
gifts to be divided and distributed out, one piece to each receiver,
like pieces of money out of a bag to a multitude of paupers. Were the
crowd of paupers greater, the bottom of the bag would be reached
before every pauper got his alms, and more money would have to be
provided. I repeat, this notion is utterly false as applied to
Christ's expiation, because it is a divine act. It is indivisible,
inexhaustible, sufficient in itself to cover the guilt of all the
sins that will ever be committed on earth. This is the blessed sense
in which the Apostle John says (1 Jn. 2:2): "Christ is the
propitiation (the same word as expiation) for the sins
of the whole world."2
But the question will be pressed,
"Is Christ's sacrifice limited by the purpose and design of the
Trinity"? The best answer for Presbyterians to make is this: In the
purpose and design of the Godhead, Christ's sacrifice was intended
to effect just the results, and all the results, which would be found
flowing from it in the history of redemption. I say this is
exactly the answer for us Presbyterians to make, because we believe
in God's universal predestination as certain and efficacious so that
the whole final outcome of his plan must be the exact interpretation
of what his plan was at first. And this statement the Arminian
also is bound to adopt, unless he means to charge God with ignorance,
weakness, or fickleness. Search and see.
Well, then, the realized results of
Christ's sacrifice are not one, but many and various:
1. It makes a display of God's
general benevolence and pity toward all lost sinners, to the glory of
his infinite grace. For, blessed be his name, he says, "I have no
pleasure in the death of him that dieth" (Ezek. 18:32).
2. Christ's sacrifice has certainly
purchased for the whole human race a merciful postponement of the
doom incurred by our sins, including all the temporal blessings of
our earthly life, all the gospel restraints upon human depravity, and
the sincere offer of heaven to all. For, but for Christ, man's doom
would have followed instantly after his sin, as that of the fallen
angels did.
3. Christ's sacrifice, wilfully
rejected by men, sets the stubbornness, wickedness, and guilt of
their nature in a much stronger light, to the glory of God's final
justice.
4. Christ's sacrifice has purchased
and provided for the effectual calling of the elect, with all the
graces which insure their faith, repentance, justification,
perseverance, and glorification. Now, since the sacrifice actually
results in all these different consequences, they are all included in
Gods design. This view satisfies all those texts quoted against
us.
But we cannot admit that Christ
died as fully and in the same sense for Judas as he did for Saul of
Tarsus. Here we are bound to assert that, while the expiation is
infinite, redemption is particular. The irrefragable grounds on which
we prove that the redemption is particular are these: From the
doctrines of unconditional election, and the covenant of grace. (The
argument is one, for the covenant of grace is but one aspect of
election.) The Scriptures tell us that those who are to be saved in
Christ are a number definitely elected and given to him from eternity
to be redeemed by his mediation. How can anything be plainer from
this than that there was a purpose in God's expiation, as to them,
other than that it was as to the rest of mankind? (See the Scriptures
regarding the immutability of God's purposesIsa. 46:10; 2 Tim.
2:19.)
If God ever intended to save any
soul in Christ (and he has a definite intention to save or not to
save toward souls), that soul will certainly be saved (Jn. 10:27-28;
6:37-40). Hence, all whom God ever intended to save in Christ will be
saved. But some souls will never be saved; therefore some souls God
never intended to be saved by Christ's atonement. The strength of
this argument can scarcely be overrated. Here it is seen that a limit
as to the intention of the expiation must be asserted to rescue God's
power, purpose, and wisdom. The same fact is proved by this, that
Christ's intercession is limited (see Jn. 17:9, 20). We know that
Christ's intercession is always prevalent (Rom. 8:34; Jn. 11:42). If
he interceded for all, all would be saved. But all will not be saved.
Hence, there are some for whom be does not plead the merit of his
expiation. But he is the "same yesterday and to-day and forever"
(Heb. 13:8). Hence, there were some for whom, when be made expiation,
he did not intend to plead it. Some sinners (i. e., elect)
receive from God gifts of conviction, regeneration, faith, persuading
and enabling them to embrace Christ, and thus make his expiation
effectual to themselves, while other sinners do not, But these graces
are a part of the purchased redemption, and bestowed through Christ.
Hence his redemption was intended to effect some as it did not others
(see above.)
Experience proves the same. A large
part of the human race were already in hell before the expiation was
made. Another large part never hear of it. But "faith cometh by
hearing" (Rom. 10:17), and faith is the condition of its application.
Since their condition is determined intentionally by God's
providence, it could not be his intention that the expiation should
avail for them equally with those who hear and believe. This view is
destructive, particularly of the Arminian scheme.
"Greater love hath no man than
this, that a man lay down his life for his friends" (Jn. 15:13). But
the greater includes the less, whence it follows, that if God the
Father and Christ cherished for a given soul the definite electing
love which was strong enough to pay the sacrifice of Calvary, it is
not credible that this love would then refuse the less costly gifts
of effectual calling and sustaining grace. This is the very argument
of Romans 5:10 and 8:31-39. This inference would not be conclusive.
if drawn merely from the benevolence of God's nature, sometimes
called in Scripture "his love," but in every case of his definite,
electing love it is demonstrative.
Hence, it is absolutely impossible
for us to retain the dogma that Christ in design died equally for
all. We are compelled to hold that he died for Peter and Paul in some
sense in which he did not for Judas. No consistent mind can hold the
Calvinistic creed as to man's total depravity toward God, his
inability of will, God's decree, God's immutable attributes of
sovereignty and omnipotence over free agents, omniscience and wisdom,
and stops short of this conclusion. So much every intelligent
opponent admits, and in disputing particular redemption, to this
extent at least, he always attacks these connected truths as falling
along with the other.
In a word, Christ's work for the
elect does not merely put them in a salvable state, but purchases for
them a complete and assured salvation. To him who knows the depravity
and bondage of his own heart, any less redemption than this would
bring no comfort.
5
Perseverance of the Saints
Our Confession, in Chapter 17,
Sections 1 and 2, states this doctrine thus: "They whom God hath
accepted in his beloved, effectually called and sanctified by his
Spirit, can neither totally nor finally fall away from the state of
grace, but shall certainly persevere therein to the end., and be
eternally saved" (1). "This perseverance of the saints depends not
upon their own free will, but upon the immutability of the decree of
election, flowing from the free and unchangeable love of God the
Father; upon the efficacy of the merit and intercession of Jesus
Christ; the abiding of the Spirit and of the seed of God within them;
and the nature of the covenant of grace, from all which ariseth also
the certainty and infallibility thereof."
I beg the reader to weigh these
statements with candor and close attention, He will find that we do
not ascribe this stability of grace in the believer to any excellence
in his own soul, even regenerate, as source and cause, but we ascribe
it to the unchangeable purpose and efficacious grace of God dwelling
and operating in them. All the angels, and Adam, received from their
Creator holy natures; yet our first father and the fallen angels show
that they could totally fall away into sin. No one in himself is
absolutely incapable of sinning, except the unchangeable God.
Converted men, who still have indwelling sin, must certainly be as
capable of falling as Adam, who had none. We believe that the saints
will certainly stand, because the God who chose them will certainly
hold them up.
We do not believe that all
professed believers and church members will certainly persevere and
reach heaven. It is to be feared that many such, even plausible
pretenders, live in name only while they are actually dead (cf. Rev.
3:1). They fall fatally because they never had true grace to fall
from.
We do not teach that any man is
entitled to believe that he is justified, and therefore shall not
come again in condemnation on the proposition "once in grace always
in grace," although he be now living in intentional, wilful sin.
This falsehood of Satan we abhor. We say, the fact that this
deluded man can live in wilful sin is the strongest possible proof
that he never was justified, and never had any grace to fall from.
And, once for all, no intelligent believer can possibly abuse this
doctrine into a pretext for carnal security. It promises to true
believers a perseverance in holiness. Who, except an
idiot, could infer from that promise the privilege to be unholy?
Once more. We do not teach that
genuine believers are secure from backsliding, but if they become
unwatchful and prayerless, they may fall for a time into temptations,
sins, and loss of hope and comfort, which may cause them much misery
and shame) and out of which a covenant-keeping God will recover them
by sharp chastisements and deep contrition. Hence, so far as lawful
self-interests can be a proper motive for Christian effort, this will
operate on the Presbyterian under this doctrinal perseverance, more
than on the Arminian with his doctrine of falling from grace. The
former cannot say, "I need not be alarmed though I be backslidden";
for if he is a true believer he has to be brought back by grievous
and perhaps by terrible afflictions; he had better be alarmed at
these! But further, an enlightened self-love will alarm him more
pungently than the Arminians' doctrine will remonstrate him. Here is
an Arminian who finds himself backslidden. Does be feel a wholesome
alarm, saying to himself, "Ah, me, I was in the right road to heaven,
but I have gotten out of it; I must get back into it"? Well, the
Presbyterian similarly backslidden is taught by his doctrine to say:
I thought I was in the right road to heaven, but now I see I
was mistaken all the time, because God says that if I had really been
in that right road I could never have left it (1 Jn. 2:19). Alas!
therefore, I must either perish or get back, not to that old
deceitful road in which I was, but into a new one, essentially
different, narrower and straighter. Which of the two men has the more
pungent motive to strive?
As I have taken the definition of
the doctrine from our Confession, I will take thence the heads of its
proofs:
(a) The immutability of
God's election proves it. How came this given sinner to be now truly
converted? Because God had elected him to salvation. But God says,
"My [purpose] shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure" (Isa.
46:10). Since God is changeless and almighty, this purpose to save
him must certainly succeed. But no man can be saved in his sins,
therefore this man will certainly be made to persevere in grace.
(b) The doctrine follows
from the fact that God's election is sovereign and unconditional, not
grounded in any foreseen merit in the sinner elected. God knew there
was none in him to foresee. But God did foresee all the disobedience,
unthankfulness, and provocation which that unworthy sinner was ever
to perpetrate. Therefore, the future disclosure of this
unthankfulness, disobedience, and provocation by this poor sinner,
cannot become a motive with God to revoke his election of him. God
knew all about it just as well when he first elected him, and yet,
moved by his own motives of love, mercy, and wisdom, he did elect
him, foreknowing all his possible meanness.
(c) The same conclusion
follows from God's covenant of redemption with his Son the Messiah.
This was a compact made from eternity between the Father and the Son.
In this the Son freely bound himself to die for the sins of the world
and to fulfill his other offices as Mediator for the redemption of
God's people. God covenanted on this condition to give to his Son
this redeemed people as his recompense. In this covenant of
redemption Christ furnished and fulfilled the whole conditions; his
redeemed people none. So, when Christ died, saying "It is finished,"
the compact was finally closed; there is no room, without
unfaithfulness in the Father, for the final falling away of a single
star out of our Saviour's purchased crown; read John 17. It is "an
everlasting covenant, ordered in all things, and sure" (2 Sam.
23:5.)
(d), We must infer the same
blessed truth from Christ's love in dying for his people while
sinners, from the supreme merits of his imputed righteousness, and
the power of his intercession: "But God commendeth his love toward
us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. Much more
then, being now justified by his blood, we shall be saved from wrath
through him. For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God
by the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be
saved by his life" (Rom. v. 8-10.) "He that spared not his own Son,
but delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him also
freely give us all things?" (Rom. 8:32). Of Christ, the Intercessor,
it is said that the Father hears him always (cf. Jn. 11:42). But see
John 17:20: "Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which
shall believe on me through their word." If the all-prevailing High
Priest prays for all believers, all of them will receive what he asks
for. But what and how much does he ask for them? Some temporary,
contingent and mutable grace, contingent on the changeable and
fallible human will? See verse 24: "Father, I will that they also,
whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am; that they may behold
my glory, which thou hast given me."
(e) If any man is converted,
it is because the Holy Ghost is come into him; if any sinner lives
for a time the divine life, it is because the Holy Ghost is dwelling
in him. But the Bible assures us that this Holy Ghost is the abiding
seed of spiritual life, the earnest of heaven, and the seal of our
redemption.3 Believers are "born again, not of corruptible
seed, but of incorruptible, by the word of God, which liveth and
abideth for ever" (1 Pet. 1:23). The Apostle Paul declares4
that they receive the earnest of the Spirit, and that his indwelling
is "the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the
purchased possession" (Eph. 1:14).5 The same apostle says,
"grieve not the holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the
day of redemption" (Eph. 4:30).
An earnest, or earnest-money, is a
smaller sum paid in cash when a contract is finally closed, as an
unchangeable pledge that the future payments shall also be made in
their due time. A seal is the final imprint added by the contracting
parties to their names to signify that the contract is closed and
binding. Such is the sanctifying presence of the Holy Spirit in every
genuine believer; a deathless principle of perseverance therein,
God's advanced pledge of his purpose to give heaven also, God's seal
affixed to his covenant of grace. This, then, is the blessed
assurance of hope which the true believer is privileged to attain:
not only that God is pledged conditionally to give me heaven,
provided I continue to stick to my gospel duty in the exercise of my
weak, changeable, fallible will. A wretched consolation, that, to the
believer who knows his own heart! But the full assurance of hope is
this: Let the Holy Spirit once touch this dead heart of mine with his
quickening light, so that I embrace Christ with a real penitent
faith; then I have the blessed certainty that this God who has begun
the good work in me will perfect it unto the day of Jesus Christ (his
judgment day),6 that the same divine love will infallibly
continue with meand notwithstanding subsequent sins and
provocations, will chastise, restore, and uphold me, and give me the
final victory over sin and death. This is the hope inexpressible and
full of glory, a thousand-fold better adapted to stimulate in me
obedience, the prayer, the watchfulness, the striving, which are the
means of my victory, than the chilling doubts of possible falling
from grace. Again, the Scriptures are our best argument. I append a
few texts among many: See Jeremiah 32:40: "And I will make an
everlasting covenant with them, that I will not turn away from them,
to do them good; but I will put my fear in their hearts, that they
shall not depart from me." My sheep never perish, and none shall
pluck them out of my hand.7 Second Timothy 2:19: "The
foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal, the Lord knoweth
them that are his." Christ himself implies that it is not possible to
deceive his elect:8 First Peter 1:5: Believers "are kept by
the power of God through faith unto salvation." The same apostle thus
explains the apostasy of final backsliders. Second Peter 2:22: "The
sow that was washed returns to her wallowing in the mire." She is a
sow still in her nature, though with the outer surface washed, but
never changed into a lamb; for if she had been, she would never have
chosen the mire. The apostle (1 Jn. 2:19) explains final backslidings
in the same way, and in words which simply close the debate: "They
went out from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of
us, they would no doubt have continued with us; but they went out
that they might be made manifest that they were not all of us."
My affirmative argument virtually
refutes all objections. But there are two to which I will give a
word. Arminians urge always an objection drawn from their false
philosophy. They say that if God's grace in regeneration were
efficient, certainly determining the convert's will away from sin to
gospel duty, it would destroy his free-agency. Then there would be no
moral nor deserving quality in his subsequent evangelical obedience
to please God, any more than in the natural color of his hair, which
he could not help. My answer is, that their philosophy is
false. The presence and operation of a right principle in a man,
certainly determining him to right feelings and actions, does not
infringe his free-agency but rather is essential to all right
free-agency. My proofs are, that if this spurious philosophy were
true, the saints and elect angels in heaven could not have any
free-agency or praise-worthy character or conduct. For they are
certainly and forever determined to holiness. The man Jesus could not
have had any free-agency or merit, for his human will was absolutely
determined to holiness. God himself could not have had any freedom or
praiseworthy holiness. He least of all! for his will is eternally,
unchangeably, and necessarily determined to absolute holiness. If
there is anything approaching blasphemy in this, take notice, it is
not mine. I put this kind of philosophy from me with abhorrence.
It is objected, again, that the
Bible is full of warnings to believers to watch against apostasy,
like this in 1 Corinthians 10:12: "Let him that thinketh he standeth
take heed lest he fall." The sophism is, that if believers cannot
fall from grace, all these warnings are absurd. I reply, they are
reasonable, because believers could fall from grace if they were left
to their own natural powers. In this sense, they naturally might
fall, and therefore watchfulness is reasonably urged upon them,
because God's unchangeable purpose of grace toward them is
effectuated in them, not as if they were stocks or stones, or dumb
beasts, but rational free agents, to be guided and governed by the
almighty Spirit through the means of rational motives. Therefore,
when we see God plying believers with these rational motives not to
backslide, it is not to be inferred that he secretly intends to let
them backslide fatally, but rather just the contrary.
I will close with a little parable:
I watch a wise, intelligent, watchful, and loving mother, who is busy
about her household work. There is a bright little girl playing about
the room, the mother's darling. I hear her say, "Take care, baby
dear, don't go near that bright fire, for you might get burned." Do I
argue thus: "Hear that woman's words! I infer from them that that
woman's mind is made up to let that darling child burn itself to
death unless its own watchfulness shall suffice to keep it away from
the fire, the caution of an ignorant, impulsive, fickle little child.
What a heartless mother!"? But I do not infer thus, unless I am a
heartless fool. I know that this mother knows the child is a rational
creature, and that rational cautions are one species of means for
keeping it at a safe distance from the fire; therefore she does right
to address such cautions to the child; she would not speak thus if
she thought it were a mere kitten or puppy dog, and would rely on
nothing short of tying it by the neck to the table leg. But I also
know that that watchful mother's mind is fully made up that the
darling child shall not burn itself at this fire. If the little one's
impulsiveness and short memory cause it to neglect the maternal
cautions, I know that I shall see that good woman instantly drop her
instruments of labor and draw back her child with physical force
from that fire, and then most rationally renew her cautions to
the child as a reasonable agent with more emphasis. And if the little
one proves still heedless and wilful, I shall see her again rescued
by physical force, and at last I shall see the mother impressing her
cautions on the child's mind more effectually, perhaps by passionate
caresses, or perhaps by a good switching, both alike the expressions
of faithful love.
Such is the Bible system of grace
which men call Calvinism, so often in disparagement. Its least merit
is that it corresponds exactly with experience, common sense, and
true philosophy. Its grand evidence is that it corresponds with
Scripture. Let God be true, and every man a liar." This doctrine
exalts God, his power, his sovereign, unbought love and mercy. They
are entitled to be supremely exalted. This doctrine humbles man in
the dust. He ought to be humbled; he is a guilty, lost sinner, the
sole, yet the certain architect of his own ruin. Helpless, yet guilty
of all that makes him helpless, he ought to take his place in the
deepest contrition, and give all the glory of his redemption to God.
This doctrine, while it lays man's pride low, gives him an anchor of
hope, sure and steadfast, drawing him to heaven; for his hope is
founded not in the weakness, folly, and fickleness of his human will,
but in the eternal love, wisdom, and power of almighty God. "O
Israel, who is like unto thee, O people saved by the Lord!" "The
eternal God is thy refuge, and underneath are the everlasting arms"
(Deut. 33:29, 27.)
Notes:
1. Editor's note: Here Dabney appears to speak carelessly. Christ
did not love the young man for the sake of good that he saw in him,
but because it is the divine nature to love (1 Jn. 4:8, 16).
Scripture is clear in stating that "they that are in the flesh cannot
please God" (Rom. 8:8), so the ground of our Savior's love of this
young man could not have been anything in the young man himself.
(Back to text.)
2. The thrust of Dabney's argument is this: The price
the Savior paid for sin is infinite in its sufficiency. Had one
more sinner been elect, Christ would not have had to suffer another
stroke or endure any more of God's wrath. This is in perfect harmony
with the Canons of the Synod of Dordt (2nd head, art. 3): "The death of
the Son of God is the only and most perfect sacrifice and satisfaction for
sin, and is of infinite worth and value, abundantly sufficient to
expiate the sins of the whole world."
We might quibble, however, with
Dabney's interpretation of 1 John 2:2. It's one thing to say that
Christ's death is sufficient to expiate a world of guilt. It
is quite another to imply (as Dabney's use of 1 John 2:2 does) that
propitiation has been madeand thus God's wrath has actually been
satisfiedon behalf of the whole world. Again, it is our opinion
that Dabney spoke carelessly here.
A better explanation of 1 John 2:2
is this: "He is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours [the
Jewish nation's] only, but also for the sins of [the elect from every
nation in] the whole world." Elsewhere the apostle
clearly uses parallel expressions in precisely this sense:
" . . . that Jesus should die for
that nation; and not for that nation only, but that also he should
gather together in one the children of God that were scattered
abroad" (John 11:51-52).
(Back to text.)
3. See 1 John 3:9: "Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for
his seed remaineth in him: and he cannot sin, because he is born of
God."
(Back to text.)
4. 2 Corinthians 1:22: "Who hath also sealed us, and given the
earnest of the Spirit in our hearts"; 2 Corinthians 5:5: "Now he that
hath wrought us for the selfsame thing is God, who also hath given
unto us the earnest of the Spirit"
(Back to text.)
5. Ephesians 1:14: "Which is the earnest of our inheritance until the
redemption of the purchased possession, unto the praise of his
glory."
(Back to text.)
6. Philippians 1:6 "Being confident of this very thing, that he which
hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus
Christ."
(Back to text.)
7. John 10:27: "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they
follow me."
(Back to text.)
8. Matthew 24:24: "For there shall arise false Christs, and false
prophets, and shall show great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if
it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect."
(Back to text.)
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