saved By grace
Through faith in
lord Jesus Christ
(A
Book About Reality)
Happy Riches
Happy Riches © 2014. All rights reserved.
Individual use is permitted.
CONTENTS
Preface
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ix
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Introduction
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1
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1
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Saved By Grace
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11
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2
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What Is Grace?
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27
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3
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Saved By Faith
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41
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4
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Process of Salvation
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65
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5
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TULIP
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87
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6
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What Is Faith?
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145
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7
8
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Saved By Grace Through Faith
Bondage Of The Will
Notes
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175
221
236
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tulip
Total Depravity-Unconditional Election-Limited Atonement-Irresistible Grace Perseverance of the Saints
Assessed by the light and the truth of Scripture, does TULIP stand up to the scrutiny of the discerning mind, and do its adherents and promoters have the fragrance of truth?
Total Depravity
The doctrines known by the acronym
TULIP are gaining favor among many within Protestant churches. This teaching
finds favor with established churchgoers more than those who are searching for
Jesus Christ. An example of the difference between the efficacy of the TULIP
doctrines and the churches that hold to the teachings can be been evidenced by
what happened in Korea beginning in the 1950s, when those churches are compared
with another that rejects the man-made philosophy.
Paul Yongi Cho started a congregation
that was Pentecostal. At the time, there was a church in Korea that had a
congregation of around forty thousand people. The congregation that Cho headed
grew and eventually had over one million people. The church that held to TULIP
teachings had a congregation that remained the same in number; it retained its
numbers by members producing offspring. The original growth of the church was
the product of missionary efforts largely due to the financial aid that the
overseas congregations provided. These people believed in the Bible, and some
even found faith in Jesus, but did not believe in the power of God to heal or
the need for the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
The underlying reason why the
church that held to the TULIP teachings did not grow, once it reached a certain
critical number, is its members believed (and still do) that they were
especially chosen before the foundation of the world to be saved. They also
believe Jesus died to save only those chosen before the foundation of the
world, whose names were in the Lamb’s book of life. They believe people do not
have freewill to choose salvation, but are held captive by the Devil to do his
work. Of course, they themselves are exempt because they are the ones God has
chosen to be saved. With a theology like this, we can easily see why the
members of the congregation see no reason to be active soul winners. Why bother
to win souls when those chosen for salvation have already been named and
numbered before the foundation of the world.
The doctrines of TULIP are total depravity, unconditional election, limited
atonement, irresistible grace and perseverance
of the saints. These are not all of the doctrines that are peculiar
to those who adhere to these teachings. Another doctrine, which is most notably
a damnable and blasphemous heresy, is double
predestination, and it is this teaching that appears to be at the
base of TULIP. We have discussed some
aspects of these teachings in the chapter about the salvation process as
understood from the systematic method of using biblical truths in understanding
salvation. The TULIP doctrines are essentially propositional truths created by
taking a verse (sometimes two) from the Bible and then selecting texts
throughout the Old and New Testament for support to the exclusion of other
Scripture that contradict the claims being made. As one would expect, this
method of developing doctrines would have to produce bigots and hypocrites who
are liars that have their consciences seared. It definitely produces cognitive
dissonance among adherents where they have to hold conflicting beliefs that
instead of producing souls who are free from sin, finds them struggling with
sin and wondering why they are not experiencing the freedom that is promised in
Lord Jesus Christ from sin. According to the Apostle Paul, those who are
members of the body of Christ are set free from sin. We read:
For freedom
Christ has set us free; stand fast therefore, and do not submit again to a yoke
of slavery. (Gal. 5:1)
As we shall discover in the
following discussion, the claims for the doctrines that form TULIP, although
based on texts from Scripture actually distort the truths of the Bible and lead
people astray from obtaining the freedom that rightfully belongs to every
person who calls upon the name of the LORD.
TOTAL
DEPRAVITY
Total depravity as understood by
those who subscribe to TULIP is foundational to the following four doctrines.
Without the doctrine of total depravity, the other four heresies of
unlimited election, limited atonement, irresistible grace and perseverance of
the saints become absolutely nonsensical.
The doctrine of total depravity
teaches that we are born as the vilest creatures ever to have existed as a
result of the sin of Adam in the Garden of Eden. According to this teaching, we
could not become anymore depraved, and because of our inherent wickedness, we
are fit for no good thing and cannot do anything of worth. Since Adam sinned,
we have lost our freewill. We are conceived in our mother’s womb bearing the
guilt of Adam’s sin and need to be punished by God. We are born depraved, dead
in sin, and enslaved to sin. We are not willing to return to God, because we
prefer evil rather than good. This inherent wickedness means we are born in a
depraved state deprived of the knowledge of right and wrong, and our wickedness
has left every one of us spiritually blind and in utter darkness, perverted of
mind and distorted in our judgments, with a hardened heart towards God, we are thereby
possessed of a recalcitrant will, having forsaken all goodness. Our corruption
has riddled us so much that any emotion that might be otherwise of a positive
nature is impure. Our attitudes are like hardened steel, immovably set towards
an eternity of torment.
When we read what the evil doctrine
of total depravity claims about our mothers as they gave of themselves
and fed us, clothed us, comforted us and cared for us as newborn babies, we
begin to think our Creator is the Devil. Can we really believe this is what a
loving God thinks of people? Does this
sound like the God who showers loving kindness on people, in the hope that they
might repent? Could a righteous loving God have thought this of all mothers
since the birth of Cain? Yet, unbelievably, this is the heartless attitude and
belief system that is fostered by religionists who claim they are only
expounding what the Bible teaches. To question this, as far as they are
concerned, is worthy of death. Actually, the man who championed this doctrine
of total depravity, as part of what became known as the Reformation, was a
murderer, just as the Apostle Paul was one before he became a Christian. Only
this man consented to have people murdered after he had claimed to be a
Christian for many years. Any who defend this man, are just as guilty of his
sins, as Jesus said concerning the Pharisees and scribes of His day, that they
too were guilty of killing the prophets because they identified with those who
did (Matthew 23:29-33).
The Bible teaches that if we
believe in Jesus we are saved (1 John 5:13). If we hate another person, we are
a murderer (1 John 3:15). No murderer has a place in Heaven; for such a person
is destined for the second death (Revelation 21:8), unless, of course, the
person repents. Now there are many principles in the Bible, and they hold true.
One of these principles is if we honor sinners, we are endorsing their sins,
for this is what Jesus said:
Woe to you! For
you build the tombs of the prophets, and your fathers killed them. So you testify and consent to the works of
your fathers. For they killed them, and you build their tombs. Therefore also
the wisdom of God said, ‘I will send to them prophets and apostles; and some of
them they will kill and persecute.’ (Luke 11:47-49)
The idea that honoring a murderer
by giving him a burial is to consent to his sin, when fully understood,
condemns many people in this world. Who would have thought that merely honoring
someone is to participate in the person’s sin? Holiness, the standard of God,
far exceeds what we might perceive to be the right thing to do. What Jesus said
in respect to honoring the fathers who were murderers goes beyond what Saul of
Tarsus, who became the Apostle Paul did. He told King Agrippa that by
consenting to the death of Stephen he was just as guilty of murder as those who
stoned him to death:
I said, ‘Lord,
they themselves know that I imprisoned and beat in every synagogue those who
believed in you. When the blood of Stephen, your witness, was shed, I also was
standing by, and consenting to his death, and guarding the cloaks of those who
killed him.’ (Acts 22:19-20).
Now you might think that what you
are reading about total depravity could not possibly be true, but this is what
those who adhere to these TULIP doctrines believe, with many simply accepting
them as the truth because it suits their itching ears. Worse still, they defend those who created
them and, if the father of Calvinism, John Calvin consented to the deeds that
are attributed to him, then those who defend him are identifying with his murderous,
vengeful sins, just as Jesus said that those in his day, wore the guilt of
their fathers who hated and killed the prophets.
Canons
of the Synod of Dort
The following articles are from the
Canons of the Synod of Dort.[1]
The articles have an element of truth that seems like correct teaching, but you
will find there is also inconsistency. This will become evident when you
realize that the teachings claim, on the one hand, man is responsible for his
sin but, on the other hand, he has no freewill to choose sin.
Article 1: All Mankind Condemnable before
God
Forasmuch as all
men have sinned in Adam, and are become guilty of the curse, and of eternal
death (Rom 5:12); God had done wrong unto no man, if it had pleased him to
leave all mankind in sin, and under the curse, and to condemn them for sin:
according to those words of the apostle: All the world guilty before God (Rom
3:19). And: All have sinned, and come short of the glory of God (Rom 3:23).
And: The wages of sin is death (Rom 6:23).
For the most part, there seems
nothing wrong with this article, apart from the suggestion of injustice in the
words: “God had done wrong unto no man, if it had pleased him to leave all
mankind in sin, and under the curse, and to condemn them for sin.” For many
Christians this seems to be acceptable, because this is what the verses seem to
be saying. However, just because Adam chose to sin: Why are all guilty of
Adam’s curse? Why should every child born thereafter be condemned to sin? Would
not God have been more just to deal with Adam and create a new race? On the face of it, the answer to the last
question would be, yes. But, since God did not create a new race, there would
have to be a very good reason for allowing children to be born into sin and
show the Creator is just. If the teaching of TULIP doctrines, which permeate
the thinking of those who hold to them, is not false, then this should become
evident throughout the Bible and there should not be any contradiction at all.
Article 5: The Cause of Unbelief,
The cause, or
fault of this unbelief, as of all other sins, is no wise in God, but in man
(Heb 4:6).
This article is about belief and
faith. Unbelief is sin, so since we are discussing the subject of sinful
depravity of humans, we will look at its relevance. The claim is clear; the man
is responsible for any unbelief that he might possess. Adam looked at Eve in
unbelief when he saw her not die after eating of the forbidden fruit. The reference to the book of Hebrews below
does not refer to Adam, but to those who had disobeyed and, because of this,
did not enter the Promised Land at the time of Joshua, and also to us—which
makes this a different matter.
Seeing therefore
it remains that some should enter therein, and they to whom the good news was
before preached failed to enter in because of disobedience, he again defines a
certain day, today, saying through David so long a time afterward (just as has
been said), “Today if you will hear his voice, don’t harden your hearts.”
(Hebrews 4:6-7)
The Bible teaches the cause of
unbelief is disobedience. Now disobedience implies freewill. Although some will
disagree with this because they take their dog to obedience classes and,
because a dog to be trained to be obedient, this is evidence animals and humans
do not possess freewill. For an animal to be disobedient, it has to be trained
first. Likewise, children are trained up
in the way they should go, and the Bible tells us, when they are old, they will
not depart from it (Proverbs 22.6). This gives the impression children are like
dogs—but, can dogs harden their hearts?
Humans, however, unlike dogs,
actually think. The difference between a human and a dog is vast. Humans are
creative thinkers who have the capacity to make decisions based on an assessment
as to whether a matter is good or evil.
Decisions to obey or break the Ten Commandments in respect to other
humans occur every day. These are such things as “shall I tell that person a
lie” or “shall I take something without asking”, or “shall I obey what my
parents have requested of me”, just to name three. After the initial decision,
the lies, stealing and parental disobedience can become habitual without any
thought at all. Yet we find many teenagers still wrestling with decisions to
lie or steal or disobey parents because they have not become habitual behavior.
A dog on the other hand, once it has trained at obedience school, obeys the
commands of its master. A dog will never talk back to its master, as a child
will to a parent. In which case, training dogs to be obedient and requesting
children to be obedient are two different scenarios that have little in common,
if anything at all.
We train dogs in a different way to
humans. Initially, parents might be able to train children using reward and
punishment methods. However, there comes a time when other influences will
cause children to question whether they should do as parents say. Parents may
find themselves having to give reasons for children to obey requests rather
than treating them as dogs when expecting them to do as told.
Children might be merely curious
and, like little mice, begin to play when the cat is away. Children left alone
to play with each other often get up to mischief. Yes, it is true; dogs do the
same thing as well, when let off their leash. The difference is owners do not
explain to dogs the reasons why certain behavior is not acceptable and other
behavior is acceptable, owners simply put them back on the leash, growl at
them, and the dog puts its tail down and looks at its owner, knowing that a bigger
dog has won the day. A child will want to know the reason why this is so.
Interestingly, we read the
following in the second book of Peter:
But these, as
unreasoning creatures, born natural animals to be taken and destroyed, speaking
evil in matters about which they are ignorant, will in their destroying surely
be destroyed, receiving the wages of unrighteousness; people who count it
pleasure to revel in the daytime, spots and defects, reveling in their deceit
while they feast with you; having eyes full of adultery, and who can’t cease
from sin; enticing unsettled souls; having a heart trained in greed; children
of cursing; forsaking the right way, they went astray, having followed the
way of Balaam
the son of Beor, who loved the wages of wrongdoing. (2 Peter 2:12-15)
Here is a comparison of humans with
animals. This speaks of children who refuse to reason and prefer to do what is
wrong, rather than what is right. Now we know we cannot reason if we have no
freewill to make the appropriate decisions after having considered the facts.
Some people refuse to reason and prefer to revel in wrongdoing. However, we
cannot say that when a twelve-month-old child is placed on a rug on the floor
and told to sit there, but instead crawls off, the child has reasoned that this
is the best thing to do, and is therefore willfully disobedient. We can say the
child disobeyed, but then to suggest this is disobedience is highly
questionable, because, for any of us to disobey a command, we need to have an
understanding of the command before we can disobey. Children disobey when they
have been told what they are to do, but do not comply; only if they do not
understand what it is they are supposed to do, there is no culpable
disobedience (Romans 7:7), even though, as in the case of dogs, their action
will be referred to as being disobedient.
In the above quoted Scripture from
the second book of Peter, we see Balaam as an example of an accursed child—but
Balaam was a man who spoke and reasoned with God. Balaam knew what he was
doing, and he chose to do what God had told him not to do (Numbers 22:4-32).
Balaam is an accursed man. Yet here is a man who was not preordained to be
disobedient by God; he is a prophet of God, for that is what he is in the
account. By choosing to be disobedient, as we learn in these additional verses
of Scripture, Balaam is now consigned to eternity in darkness (Hell):
…but he was
rebuked for his own disobedience. A mute donkey spoke with a man’s voice and
stopped the madness of the prophet. These are wells without water, clouds
driven by a storm; for whom the blackness of darkness has been reserved
forever. (2 Peter 2:16-17)
As is clear, Balaam was depraved,
and yet we learn he was able to reason with God, make his own decisions
[contrary to predestination] and defy God. Consequently, he has a place
reserved for him in Hell.
The doctrine of total depravity
informs us that man does not have the ability to make freewill choices. The
evil that a man like Balaam did was going to happen because he was never
regenerate and his will was always defective, controlled by sin and this was
preordained by God Himself. Yet after having disobeyed God initially, we learn
that Balaam decides to do what was right and he told his employers, who were
paying him to curse Israel, that he would only prophecy what God permits:
Balaam said to
Balak, “Didn’t I also tell your messengers who you sent to me, saying, ‘If
Balak would give me his house full of silver and gold, I can’t go beyond
Yahweh’s word, to do either good or bad of my own mind. I will say what Yahweh
says’? (Numbers 23:12-13)
Balaam disobeys God. Then God
permits him to go and earn his money, but tells Balaam, that he can only say
the words that He gives him. If Balaam had no freewill in the matter, then where
is the justice in God sending him to eternal punishment? The doctrine of total depravity opposes the
idea that Balaam or anyone else has freewill—including you! Regarding freewill,
this is what the council of Dort stated:
This is a novel
idea and an error and has the effect of elevating the power of free choice,
contrary to the words of Jeremiah the prophet: The heart itself is deceitful
above all things and wicked (Jer. 17:9); and of the words of the apostle: All
of us also lived among them (the sons of disobedience) at one time in the
passions of our flesh, following the will of our flesh and thoughts (Eph. 2:3).
We will now consider the two texts that
are used by the Council of Dort to justify their claims:
The heart is
deceitful above all things, and it is exceedingly corrupt: who can know it?
(Jeremiah 17:9)
…in which you
once walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of
the power of the air, the spirit who now works in the children of disobedience;
among whom we also all once lived in the lust of our flesh, doing the desires
of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, even as the
rest (Ephesians 2 :2-3)
The Council of Dort claim those two
texts say that we have no freewill and are unable to exercise freewill. According
to this council of men, these two texts are authoritative and conclusive evidence
that we have no freewill to choose good or even to choose life rather than
death. We are trapped in the sin of Adam and we cannot escape his sin.
Based on these claims, the irony becomes, if the heart is deceitful, then how can we trust those who
form the Council of Dort to tell us what
is true? They are probably
twisting scriptural truth—which they are!
There is no mention of freewill in
either of those texts, just an allusion to it. By stating the heart is
deceitful, this implies that man has the capacity to make decisions. When
talking about the desires of the mind, this is an implication that humans may
have freewill because they choose to be disobedient, but it does not mean we
have no freewill and are robots.
In effect, the doctrine of total
depravity teaches that we have no freewill and are therefore robots; or are
like animals that disobey God’s commands because we were born to do so. This is
taught in the following article:
Article 15: Reprobation Described
Moreover, the
holy scripture herein chiefly manifests and commends unto us this eternal and
free grace of our election, in that it further witnesseth, that not all
men are elected, but some not elected, or passed over in God’s eternal election (Rom 9:22): whom doubtless God in his most
free, most just, unreproachable and unchangeable
good pleasure hath decreed to leave in the common misery (whereinto by their
own fault they precipitated
themselves [1 Pet 2:8]), and not to bestow saving faith and the grace of
conversion upon them; but, leaving them in their own ways, and under just
judgment (Acts 14:16), at last to condemn and everlastingly punish them, not
only for their unbelief, but also for their other sins, to the manifestation of
his justice. And this is the decree of reprobation, which in no wise makes God the author of sin, (a thing blasphemous once to conceive,)
but a fearful, unreproveable, and just judge and revenger.
Here we see the contradiction of
this doctrine of total depravity. The logical outcome of the argument is that God
is the author of sin—and the suggestion that God is the author of sin is
blasphemous. Even though the Council of Dort makes the clear statement that accuses
God of evil, they claim they do not; because, as they admit, those developing
this doctrine know that this would make the Creator to look like a fiendish imp
who suffered from an inferiority complex; something akin to what we would
expect of the god of this world.
The argument put forward is God has
decided that some should suffer a
common misery of everlasting punishment, while the elect will not. This has nothing to do with any decision made
by anyone, it is simply a matter of God’s will. No reason is required for God
to punish or excuse, for as Creator of the Universe He can do as he likes. Note
how they say this is no wise makes God the
author of sin—tell a lie repeatedly and the deceitful of heart will
believe it.
In their argument as they prosecute
God as unjust (although claiming they do not), the creators of this devilish
teaching (for this is what it is), overlooked the argument that is made in
Romans, chapter nine. They only selected the first two verses of the text and
excluded the rest. For although God is willing to demonstrate his righteous
displeasure towards the unrighteous behavior of the Jews, who as a nation had
been elected to receive His favor, nevertheless, He has suffered their
impudence so that He could also justify Gentiles who believe in Jesus Christ.
What if God,
willing to show his wrath, and to make his power known, endured with much
patience vessels of wrath made for destruction, and that he might make known
the riches of his glory on vessels of mercy, which he prepared beforehand for
glory, us, whom he also called, not from the Jews only, but also from the
Gentiles? As he says also in Hosea, “I
will call them ‘my people,’ which were not my people; and her ‘beloved,’ who
was not beloved.”
“It
will be that in the place where it was said to them, ‘You are not my people,’
There they will be called ‘children of the living God.’”
Isaiah
cries concerning Israel, “If the number of the children of Israel are as the
sand of the sea, it is the remnant who will be saved; for He will finish the
work and cut it short in righteousness, because the LORD will make a short work
upon the earth.”
As
Isaiah has said before, “Unless the Lord of Armies had left us a seed, we would
have become like Sodom, and would have been made like Gomorrah.”
What
shall we say then? That the Gentiles, who didn’t follow after righteousness,
attained to righteousness, even the righteousness which is of faith; but
Israel, following after a law of righteousness, didn’t arrive at the law of
righteousness. Why? Because they didn’t seek
it by faith, but as it were by works of the law. They stumbled over
the stumbling stone; even as it is written, “Behold, I lay in Zion a stumbling
stone and a rock of offense; and no one who believes in him will be
disappointed.” (Romans 9:22-33)
The argument can be summarized: If
the number of the children of Abraham is to be as the sand of the sea, those
who were not numbered among the elect nation of Israel will need to be
included. A remnant will be saved from the elect nation, but it is only those who seek righteousness by faith and believe in
Jesus Christ who will find the promised salvation—both Jew and Gentile alike.
This God has brought about with patience.
The argument developed in the text
from Romans, chapter nine, is much different to the doctrine of double
predestination. The doctrine of double predestination is based on a
couple of verses taken out of context to support the argument that an unjust
Creator consigns all men to a state of sin, and then only delivers those whom
he has decided (for no particular reason) to favor before the foundation of the
world. Unlike the Calvinists, when we include
the fullness of the argument that is developed by the Apostle Paul in this
passage, we find ourselves not having to create convoluted reasons for
dismissing other Scripture such as “God so loved the world that all who believe
in Him may be saved” (John 3:16), or “God desires all men to be saved” (1
Timothy 2:4). They all fall into place.
The argument of the Apostle Paul in
Romans, chapter nine, is that the stumbling stone is Jesus Christ. He is a
stumbling stone because people who seek to lay hold of eternal life through any
other means, have to demonstrate that they have not sinned and have the power
over death. Lord Jesus Christ has become a stumbling stone because no sinner
can now claim a righteousness of his own, since the Son of God, in the
flesh, has demonstrated that the Law can be kept unto death; therefore He holds
the key to the door that opens to eternal life.
Jesus is the way, the truth and the life; no person can have access to
the Father except through Him (John 14:6). As we have seen, the Apostle has
argued in this chapter that access is
only granted to those who are righteous by faith and not by their
own righteousness based on works of the law—or any other form of
self-righteousness, for that matter. However, instead of following the logical
argument of Romans, chapter nine, the Calvinists prefer to take an idea out of
context from another passage. This is because they can incorporate into a
plausible theology concerning reprobation their heresy of God predestinating
people for eternal punishment before they were born and not giving them
freewill. The key word in the text (1 Peter 2:8) they use for their heretical
interpretation is “appointed”, which is found in the sentence: “they stumble at
the word, being disobedient, to which also they were appointed.” Notice that
this once again is the deceptive sleight of hand of the deceiver at play taking
Scripture out of context, for we read:
Putting away
therefore all wickedness, all deceit, hypocrisies, envies, and all evil
speaking, as newborn babies, long for the pure milk of the Word, that with it
you may grow. If indeed you have
tasted that the Lord is gracious: coming to him, a living stone, rejected
indeed by men, but chosen by God, precious. You also, as living stones, are
built up as a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual
sacrifices, acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. Because it is contained in
Scripture:
“Behold,
I lay in Zion a chief cornerstone, chosen, and precious: he who believes in him will not be disappointed.”
For you who
believe therefore is the honor, but for
those who are disobedient, “The stone which the builders rejected, has become the chief
cornerstone,” and, “a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offense.”
For
they stumble at the word, being disobedient, to which also they were
appointed. But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a
people for God’s own possession, that you may proclaim the excellence of him
who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light: who in time past were
no people, but now are God’s people, who
had not obtained mercy, but now have
obtained mercy.
(1
Peter 2:1-10)
The argument of the deceivers is
that those who reject Jesus Christ, the Living Stone, did not reject Him at
all—as this requires freewill. Instead, they were appointed to be disobedient
before time began, so they could be punished forever. This is why the complete argument in Romans,
chapter nine, is not permitted in their discussion on election and
predestination of the wicked. For Calvinists to present the texts used to
justify the doctrine of “No Freewill”
within the full context of the argument, would mean the scriptural truth that we possess freewill would
become obvious. Instead, the argument is overlooked and another text is plucked
out of context to hide the truth about freewill, so the doctrine of double
predestination can have support at the expense of the truth.
Important to our discussion is the
fact that those who are now chosen, had not previously obtained mercy, but now
have obtained mercy, after having been called out of darkness, unlike the
disobedient who [by freewill] rejected the call and the cornerstone.
Whereas those who believe in Jesus will not be disappointed for what reason?
Because they have made the decision to follow Jesus, having reasoned out that
unless the dead are raised, there is no hope for those who are born. Why are
the disobedient appointed to disobey the word? Because they prefer to sin rather
than obey the word of righteousness. This is how the Mounce Interlinear
Greek New Testament translates the verse regarding being appointed to stumble
because of disobedience, which is lifted out of context by the Calvinists:
and, a stone
that makes people stumble and a rock that makes them fall: They stumble, as
they were destined to do since they do not obey the word. (1 Peter 2:8
Mounce[2])
When we see both these passages of Scripture
and the context of the Scripture, it is clear that WE POSSESS FREEWILL to
reject or accept the inheritance that is available through faith in Jesus
Christ. In the passages we have quoted there is no mention of the word
“inheritance” but when taken in context of the reason Jesus died, this is what
is meant by inheriting a righteousness that is not our own.
The third Scripture used to support
this article is once again taken out of context; so that in reading the
designated texts together, they say something different to what is written in the Bible. For when we
consider the following passage, once more we see a plea to the listeners to
exercise their freewill:
“Men, why are you doing these things? We also
are men of like passions with you, and bring you good news, that you should turn from these
vain things to the living God, who made the sky and the earth and the sea,
and all that is in them; who in the
generations gone by allowed all the nations to walk in their own
ways. Yet he didn’t leave
himself without witness, in that he did good and gave you rains from the sky
and fruitful seasons, filling our hearts with food and gladness.” (Acts
14:15-17)
There would be no need for Apostles
to preach the Gospel to others if all those who were going to be saved had been
appointed before the foundation of the world and people had no choice in the
matter. Yet once more, we see an appeal
to reason and an invitation to the
listeners to turn (repent) from the vanity of their ways and acknowledge
the Creator of the Universe for Who He really is. For it is by God’s grace that
the nations have not been destroyed; instead He has through the witness of the
Creation made Himself known to all who sought to know the truth about
life. We even read that God allowed the
people to walk in their own ways—and did not appoint them to walk in
their own ways as if they had no choice to seek Him and find Him. Yet
according to the Calvinist’s doctrine of total depravity, God’s grace only
extends to the elect who were chosen before the foundation of the world.
However, we know the god of this world would not want anyone to believe
that salvation comes by faith in Lord Jesus Christ (2 Timothy 3:15).
Another Scripture that is taken out
of context, and used by those who subscribe to the TULIP doctrines of the
Calvinists, speaks of having been captured by the Devil to do his will. According to their philosophical reasoning, this
fits in nicely with the idea of following the power of the prince of the air in
acts of disobedience (Ephesians 2:2). However, when we look at this verse
within the context of the whole passage, we see that the Apostle Paul is
speaking to Timothy to exercise his will
to flee from lusts and to teach others to do so too. If
people have no freewill, how is Timothy to teach them to exercise it? This is
what the Apostle writes:
Flee from
youthful lusts; but pursue righteousness, faith, love, and peace with those who
call on the Lord out of a pure heart.
But refuse foolish and ignorant questionings, knowing that they generate
strife. The Lord’s servant must not
quarrel, but be gentle towards all, able to teach, patient, in gentleness
correcting those who oppose him: perhaps
God may give
them repentance leading to a full knowledge of the truth, and they
may recover themselves out of the Devil’s snare, having been taken captive by him to his will. But know this, that
in the last days, grievous times will come. For men will be lovers of self,
lovers of money, boastful, arrogant, blasphemers, disobedient to parents,
unthankful, unholy, without natural affection, unforgiving, slanderers, without
self-control, fierce, not lovers of good, traitors, headstrong, conceited,
lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God; holding a form of godliness, but
having denied its power. Turn away from these, also. (2 Timothy 2:22-3:5)
We see in this text the words perhaps, may,
repentance and taken
captive. These words suggest the possibility of change. Perhaps and
may both express uncertainty and
have no difference in meaning in that something
may happen or perhaps it will not.
When it comes to repentance in this instance, if the people are genuine in
seeking God, He might grant them to be born from above (John 3:3-7). As for
having been taken captive by the Devil,
people are not taken captive unless
it is against their will.
The idea of fleeing from the Devil
or his influences is resident in what James, the Lord’s brother has to say
regarding resisting the Devil. We cannot really run away from the Devil by
going to another country, state or city; rather we might flee from sinful
activists and, in doing so, submit ourselves to God as we resist the Devil.
This is what the book of James has to say:
Be subject
therefore to God. But resist the Devil, and he will flee from you. (James 4:7)
We cannot resist the Devil if we do
not first submit to God. This requires an act of the will. Calvinists claim
that because we are in bondage to sin we cannot resist the Devil, and neither
can we be subject to God. Yet we read in the book of James that we are
encouraged to submit ourselves to God, and in doing this, the Devil has no
power over us, because we have chosen
life rather than death.
One of the reasons, Calvinists, and
even people who hold to a belief in Lord Jesus Christ, do not understand freewill and
predestination and election and what being born into sin means, has to do with a
lack of understanding of ourselves as individual human beings. Now the key to
understanding the truth lies in understanding the truth of the incarnation.
When this truth about the Son of God is not understood, all manner of evil
persists, guided by the power of the prince of the air, who is the god of this
world. The Son of God entered at birth the baby born of Mary, while she was
still a virgin. Unfortunately, many insist that Mary carried the Son of God in
her womb and point to a particular passage in Luke (1:35-45) to justify this
doctrine. The plausibility of the heresy that Mary is the mother of God rests
on that Scripture. However, the Bible is clear, that a body (not a woman’s womb
or ovum) was to be prepared for the Son of God to enter. For we read:
Therefore when
he comes into the world, he says, “Sacrifice and offering you didn’t desire, but you prepared a body for me. You had no pleasure in whole burnt offerings
and sacrifices for sin. Then I said, ‘Behold, I have come (in the scroll of the
book it is written of me) to do your will, O God.’” Previously saying,
“Sacrifices and offerings and whole burnt offerings and sacrifices for sin you
didn’t desire, neither had pleasure in them” (those which are offered according
to the law), then he has said, “Behold, I have come to do your will.” He takes
away the first, that he may establish the second, by which will we have been
sanctified through the offering of the
body of Jesus Christ once for all.
(Hebrews
10:5-10)
Some might like to argue that the
body that was prepared was the woman Mary, who was still a virgin. However, we
know this does not make sense and could not possibly be the case, since the
body that was prepared for the preexistent Son of God to enter, was also the
body that was offered on the Cross. The Virgin Mary was not offered as the sin
offering, only that of Jesus. The body that was prepared was the body that came
forth from the womb of Mary, while she was still a virgin; for we know she had
other children (Mk.3:31-2; Mt 12:46; Lk 8;19).
In
respect to us as individuals, God creates spirits and puts them in children
born of the flesh, which is a criterion for being born into the Kingdom of God
(John 3:5). Just as the Son of God entered the body that was born of the woman
Mary at birth, so too does God place an individual spirit within each baby at
birth. This spirit is distinct from the soul and the body (1 Thessalonians
5:23). The following are some of the
texts from the Bible that clearly state we have spirits and God is not only the
God of the spirits, but also the Father (Creator) of spirits
Zechariah 12:1 A revelation, Yahweh’s
word concerning Israel. Yahweh, who stretches out the heavens, and lays the
foundation of the earth, and forms the spirit of man within him says…
John 4:23-24 But the hour comes, and
now is, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth,
for the Father seeks such to be his worshipers. God is spirit, and those who
worship him must worship in spirit and truth.
1 Corinthians 2:11 For who among men
knows the things of a man, except the spirit of the man, which is in him? Even
so, no one knows the things of God, except God’s Spirit.
Numbers 16:22 They fell on their faces,
and said, “God, the God of the spirits of all flesh, shall one man sin, and
will you be angry with all the congregation?”
Numbers 27:16 Let Yahweh, the God of
the spirits of all flesh, appoint a man over the congregation.
Hebrews 12:9 Furthermore, we had the
fathers of our flesh to chasten us, and we paid them respect. Shall we not much
rather be in subjection to the Father of spirits, and live?
Isaiah 26:9 With my soul have I desired
you in the night. Yes, with my spirit within me will I seek you earnestly; for
when your judgments are in the earth, the inhabitants of the world learn
righteousness.
Ecclesiastes 12:7 and the dust returns
to the earth as it was, and the spirit returns to God who gave it.
Isaiah 26:19 Your dead shall live. My
dead bodies shall arise. Awake and sing, you who dwell in the dust; for your
dew is like the dew of herbs, and the earth will cast out the departed spirits.
Psalm 88:10 Do you show wonders to the
dead? Do the departed spirits rise up and praise you? Selah.
Isaiah 26:14 The dead shall not live.
The departed spirits shall not rise. Therefore you have visited and destroyed
them, and caused all memory of them to perish
Isaiah 14:9 Sheol from beneath has
moved for you to meet you at your coming. It stirs up the departed spirits for
you, even all the rulers of the earth. It has raised up from their thrones all
the kings of the nations.
Proverbs 2:18 For her house leads down
to death, her paths to the departed spirits.
Proverbs 9:18 But he doesn’t know that
the departed spirits are there, that her guests are in the depths of Sheol.
Proverbs 21:16 The man who wanders out
of the way of understanding shall rest in the assembly of the departed spirits.
1 Peter 3:18-19 Because Christ also
suffered for sins once, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring
you to God; being put to death in the flesh, but made alive in the spirit; in which he also went and preached to the
spirits in prison.
Clearly, we are conscious beings
because we possess a spirit, and we possess the ability to worship God in
spirit and truth. God is not only the God of all spirits, but the Father of us all,
and there are those who choose to be saved and those who go to the eternal
prison. This is why God is called our Father in Heaven, but only those who
recognize Him as Father will be saved from having to give an account to Him and
all of creation of every careless word they have uttered on the day of the
judgment.
When we understand that we are
spirits, and our spirit enables us to be thinking, conscious beings, capable of
making decisions, we can appreciate that the Son of God was a pre-existing
Spirit, distinct from the Father. For we learn that through Him, all things
were created and in Him Alone exists life. When it comes to Jesus being born of
Mary (a virgin), the pre-existent Son of God, through Whom everything was
created, had no need to reside in her womb as the fetus within her grew. When
Mary gave birth to the body that was prepared for the pre-existent Son of God
to enter at birth, at that point of time the Word became flesh (John 1:14).
The doctrine of total depravity incorporates
the teaching of people being born merely to be thrown into everlasting
punishment. Central to this belief of total depravity is the doctrine of traducianism. Traducianism
is the doctrine that the soul originates with the male parent and every
one born carries the sin and nature of Adam. Furthermore, the guilt of Adam’s
original sin and condemnation has also been passed down from Him by every male
progenitor through the ages. This is in effect the false doctrine of being held
accountable for the guilt of the sins of the fathers.
Because the authors and teachers of
Calvinist total depravity have no understanding of a person possessing a spirit,
a soul and a body, and think only in terms of souls. Their doctrines are
predicated on the concept of the sin of Adam being passed down through the
soul, where they believe the faculty of each individual’s will resides. The
following paragraph on the effect of the fall forms the basis of the argument
put forward for the TULIP doctrine of total depravity using three passages of
Scripture.
The Effect of the Fall[3]
Man, in the beginning, being made
according to God’s image, was adorned in his mind with true and saving
knowledge of his Creator, and of things spiritual; in his will and heart with
righteousness; in all his affections with purity; and so was in all his parts
and faculties holy (Gen 1:26-27). But he, by the Devil’s instigation, and
liberty of his own will, revolting from God, bereaved himself of these
excellent gifts (Gen 3:1-7), and contrariwise, in lieu of them, gat in his mind
horrible darkness, vanity, and crookedness of judgment; in his heart and will,
malice, rebellion, and obduration; and in all his affections, impurity (Eph
4:17-19).
God said, “Let
us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over
the fish of the sea, and over the birds of the sky, and over the livestock, and
over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.”
God created man in his own image. In God’s image he created him; male and
female he created them. (Gen. 1:26-27)
Now the serpent
was more subtle than any animal of the field which Yahweh God had made. He said
to the woman, “Has God really said, ‘You shall not eat of any tree of the
garden?’”
The woman said
to the serpent, “We may eat fruit from the trees of the garden, but not the
fruit of the tree which is in the middle of the garden. God has said, ‘You
shall not eat of it. You shall not touch it, lest you die.’”
The
serpent said to the woman, “You won’t surely die, for God knows that in the day
you eat it, your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good
and evil.”
When the woman saw that the tree was good for
food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be
desired to make one wise, she took some of its fruit, and ate; and she gave
some to her husband with her, and he ate it, too. Their eyes were opened, and
they both knew that they were naked. They sewed fig leaves together, and made
coverings for themselves. (Genesis 3:1-7)
This I say
therefore, and testify in the Lord, that you no longer walk as the rest of the
Gentiles also walk, in the futility of their mind, being darkened in their understanding,
alienated from the life of God, because of the ignorance that is in them,
because of the hardening of their hearts;
who having become callous gave themselves up to lust, to work all
uncleanness with greediness. (Ephesians 4:17-19)
Discussion of Argument
The effect of the fall was for the
eyes of both the man and the woman to be opened, as a sinner rather having
their eyes opened as a saint, which would have been the case had they eaten of
the tree of life. Now they both became conscious of their nakedness in a manner
unlike that possessed before their disobedience. This does not mean that the
two humans were not conscious beings prior to having had their eyes opened,
just that they were now conscious of their sin and aware of lustful feelings
towards each other. Adam and Eve had become aware of the lusts of the world:
the pride of life, the lust of the eyes and lust of the flesh (1 John 2:16).
Prior to disobeying God, they had no consciousness of these desires, but since
they had listened to the guardian angel (Ezekiel 28:13-15), he had claimed dominion
over them and mankind was now subject to the prince of disobedience (Ephesians
2:2).
The implication from the argument
for the effects of man by using “being darkened in their understanding,
alienated from the life of God” once again becomes one of those leaps of
supposition, which are not really fully supported by Scripture. Too many people
have a habit of expounding ideas and half-quoting texts, pulling scripture out
of its context to support another pretext, and placing events from the New
Testament into the Old Testament. Besides that, often a lack of understanding
of what the Gospel message really means, God’s true purpose, and the
constitution of man, also contribute to wrongly interpreting scripture. What
the Council of Dort is saying here is partly true, but not entirely true, and
this is where we encounter a problem, which so often seems to be the case for
error.
For it is true that Adam disobeyed
God, and in doing so alienated himself. But it is also true that God did not
cast Adam into prison. Adam was removed from the Garden of Eden, but not the
presence of God. We also know that Adam and Eve had children, but one of their
children, Cain, after he had murdered Abel, left the presence of God to live in
the land of Nod, east of Eden (Genesis 4:16). This indicates there are
assumptions being made in this doctrine of total depravity that are not
necessarily supported by the very Bible that is claimed to support their proposition
and how they define it. If Adam was totally depraved and everyone else from
that time forth, it is rather odd that he and Eve were still in the presence of
God.—God even clothed them (Gen. 3:21. cp. Rev. 3:18).
The effect of the fall was to hand over
the reins to govern this world to Satan, who sinned from the beginning and
obtained the right to rule over the world by deceiving Eve and causing Adam to
disobey God. Instead of Adam and his descendants having the right to rule over
Earth, this right had been transferred to Satan because of disobedience. Satan
became the god of this world. His desire is for everyone to worship him, rather
than acknowledge God the Creator. The evidence is that He attempted to beget a
race of his own when the sons of Gods (angels) took as wives the daughters of
men (Genesis 6:1-4). As a consequence of this attempt to create a mixed race of
angels and men, wickedness began to reign on Earth to such extent that God was
grieved in having created Man. This is what the Bible records:
The Nephilim
were in the earth in those days, and also after that, when God’s sons came in
to men’s daughters and had children with them. Those were the mighty men who
were of old, men of renown. Yahweh saw that the wickedness of man was great in the
earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of man’s heart was
continually only evil. Yahweh was sorry
that he had made man on the earth, and it
grieved him in his heart (Genesis 6:4-6)
For God to be grieved, suggests
that this was not what He had intended. Yet the total depravity doctrine of the
Calvinists depends on God having predestined men to be born into eternal
punishment. The dilemma for adherents of TULIP is in trying to demonstrate these
abovementioned texts from the Bible are incorrect. Are the Calvinists correct with
their doctrine of total depravity
and double predestination of the
elect unto salvation and the wicked for condemnation? If this were so, then God
would not be grieved by anything a man or a woman would do. There would be no
need for God to grieve over people having an evil heart, since this is what he
planned, as Calvinists claim. (Remember reading the following in the statement
from the Council of Dort about reprobation: that not all men are elected,
but some not elected, or passed over in God’s eternal election whom
doubtless God in his most free, most just, unreproachable and unchangeable good
pleasure hath decreed to leave in the common misery …to condemn
and everlastingly punish them.)
Now if the Calvinists are incorrect
and the truth is their TULIP doctrines are of the Devil, then there should be
evidence in the Bible to demonstrate that this is so. There should be evidence
of freewill being a faculty that God expects to be used, even though we are all
born into a world governed by sin. If God hoped that men and women might seek
after Him but instead they did evil and disregarded Him, contrary to His will,
then we would expect our Heavenly Father to feel grief.
Grief occurs when death occurs
against our will—planned deaths do not produce grief.
From the account that is written in
the book of Genesis at the time of Noah, evidently God grieves when men do not seek Him but prefer to do evil and
follow after prince of the power of the air, which is the spirit of disobedience
luring people into a false freedom; one that creates distrust and fear rather
than faith and peace. In fact, the Apostle Paul actually made the claim that the
reason God created humans was in the hope that they seek Him out. This is what
the Apostle said:
The God who made
the world and all things in it, he, being Lord of heaven and earth, doesn’t
dwell in temples made with hands, neither is he served by men’s hands, as
though he needed anything, seeing he himself gives to all life and breath, and
all things. He made from one blood every nation of men to dwell on all the
surface of the earth, having determined appointed seasons, and the boundaries
of their dwellings, that they should
seek the Lord, if perhaps they might reach out for him and find him, though he is not far
from each one of us. ‘For in him we live, and move, and have our being.’ As
some of your own poets have said, ‘For we are also his offspring.’
(Acts 17:24-28)
As we have already discussed, the
idea that “perhaps (maybe) we might reach out to God”, is indicative of
freewill. Furthermore, this also suggests that we are consigned to sin, unless
we recognize that there has to be something better. Other translations have in the hope they might feel after (or grope for), with the generic meaning
of the Greek being if then feeling for[4]
God they might find Him. The general idea is that God is waiting to see what each person will do. Who will seek after Him? Who will
reject Him?
God obviously created us that we
might seek Him out and find Him. Our Heavenly Father did not just want us to be
robots, but was obviously hoping that Adam and Eve would choose to have
fellowship with Him because they loved Him. Indeed it is one thing to be
treated as an animal and be told what to do (or programmed as a robot) but it
is another matter to decide what to do from freewill. Only freewill allows love
to exist in its highest form of virtue. We can love things. We can love
animals. Animals can be trained and afterwards prove to be loyal.
Unfortunately, animals cannot think and decide to love us because they
appreciate who we are. This is something that God can do. This is something
humans can do also, because we have been made in the image of God. God was
hoping for something precious to occur, instead, He felt sorrow because once
the women had given birth to children by the angels, evil and violence became
commonplace (Genesis 6:11). One man, however, found favor with God. This was
Noah (Gen. 6:8).
In the New Testament, we learn that
Noah was a righteous man (2 Peter 2:5; Hebrews 11:7). This can only be because
Noah sought God out and hated the evil that he saw around him. From the Old
Testament we also learn reasons why Noah may have found favor with God. The
following Scripture indicates the difference between the wise and the foolish:
Proverbs 1:7 The fear of Yahweh is the
beginning of knowledge; but the foolish despise wisdom and instruction.
Proverbs 9:10 The fear of Yahweh is the
beginning of wisdom. The knowledge of the Holy One is understanding.
Psalm 111:10 The fear of Yahweh is the
beginning of wisdom. All those who do his work have a good understanding. His
praise endures forever!
Jeremiah 9:23-24 Yahweh says, Don’t let
the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in his might,
don’t let the rich man glory in his riches; but let him who glories glory in
this, that he has understanding, and knows me, that I am Yahweh who exercises
loving kindness, justice, and righteousness, in the earth: for in these things
I delight, says Yahweh.
The Bible has a message to all
humans that if we seek the Lord God, we will discover our Father in Heaven is
full of loving kindness, and executes justice in righteousness, which is
without partiality. Adam sinned and, even though God drove him and his wife out
of the Garden of Eden, He had clothed them and still permitted them to dwell in
His presence. Why did God clothe Adam and Eve and still permit them to live in
His presence? Could God have loved Adam
and Eve, in the same way as he so loved the world that He sent His Son to be
the propitiation for sin? If Adam and Eve were estranged from God and living in
the futility of a fallen state, then they would not have been still in the
presence of God. Cain would not have been born in the presence of God. Yet we
know Cain was in God’s presence (Genesis 4:16), and by implication, so were his
parents and brothers and sisters. Those who proclaim the doctrine of total depravity would have us believe that
this was not the case. They claim that at the time of Noah, because the hearts
of men were said to be evil, this had been preordained by God. But if these
people were like pieces in a chess game, there would be no need for God to grieve over having created man.
Although, the Bible does not exactly say how Noah found favor with God, we read
the following in the New Testament:
Without faith it
is impossible to be well pleasing to him, for he who comes to God must believe
that he exists, and that he is a rewarder of those who seek him. By faith,
Noah, being warned about things not yet seen, moved with godly fear, prepared a
ship for the saving of his house, through which he condemned the world, and
became heir of the righteousness which is according to faith. (Hebrews 11:6-7)
What we do know about the doctrine
of double predestination is it states that those who are destined for
everlasting punishment had no say in the matter because they were preordained
to be cast into Hell. Those who are predestined to be part of the elect were
preordained to be saved. According to this doctrine, this is a matter of grace,
least any person should boast. However, when we read the book of Hebrews, we
learn that Noah was saved by faith, not grace. Faith is essential if we are to
find favor in God’s sight. Therefore, Noah had to have believed God existed and
rewarded those who sought after Him. Noah’s salvation was not a matter of grace
alone, rather it was the outcome of his faith and personal desire to seek God
rather than do evil.
Let us look further into what the
Council of Dort has to say about the corruption that came into the world as a
result of the fall of Adam and how it has affected every human being since.
The Spread of Corruption[5]
And such as man after the fall,
such children he begat; namely, a corrupt issue from a corrupt father (Job
14:4; Ps 51:5): this corruption being by the just judgment of God derived from
Adam to all his posterity (Rom 5:12) (Christ only excepted [Heb 4:15]), and
that not by imitation (as of old the Pelagians would have it), but by the
propagation of nature with her infection.
Who can bring a
clean thing out of an unclean? Not one..
(Job 14:4)
Behold, I was
born in iniquity. In sin my mother conceived me.. (Psalm 51:5)
Therefore as sin
entered into the world through one man, and death through sin; and so death
passed to all men, because all sinned. (Romans 5:12)
For we don’t
have a high priest who can’t be touched with the feeling of our infirmities,
but one who has been in all points tempted like we are, yet without sin.
(Hebrews 4:15)
Discussion of Argument
The argument here about the spread
of corruption is based largely upon the idea that Adam was a corrupt Father,
evil in fact. Adam sinned and, in doing so, he had become unclean—as did Eve.
Every child thereafter had to be born unclean, because we read the reference
from Job, Psalm and Romans and we learn that there appears to have a
continuation of sin and death as the result of the sin of Adam. The proposition
is unmistakably clear, we are riddled to the core with sin and corruption, absolutely
rotten, the same as Cain would have been. Yet we read of Cain that there was a
time when he had not sinned, because sin was couching at his door, only he had
to master it. This is how the account reads:
As time passed,
Cain brought an offering to Yahweh from the fruit of the ground. Abel also
brought some of the firstborn of his flock and of its fat. Yahweh respected
Abel and his offering, but he didn’t respect Cain and his offering. Cain was
very angry, and the expression on his face fell. Yahweh said to Cain, “Why are
you angry? Why has the expression of your face fallen? If you do well, won’t it be lifted up? If you
don’t do well, sin crouches at the door.
Its desire is for you, but you
are to rule over it.”
Cain
said to Abel, his brother, “Let’s go into the field.” While they were in the
field, Cain rose up against Abel, his brother, and killed him.
Yahweh
said to Cain, “Where is Abel, your brother?”
He
said, “I don’t know. Am I my brother’s keeper?”
Yahweh
said, “What have you done? The voice of your brother’s blood cries to me from
the ground. Now you are cursed because
of the ground, which has opened its mouth to receive your brother’s blood from
your hand. From now on, when you till
the ground, it won’t yield its strength to you. You will be a fugitive and a
wanderer in the earth.”
Cain said to
Yahweh, “My punishment is greater than I can bear. (Genesis 4:3-13)
The idea that sin desired Cain, but
was only at his door, and he had to take authority over it, means that sin did
not have authority over him. Cain had not been taken captive by the Devil
to do his will at this particular time (cp. 2 Timothy 2:26). This means that
Cain had not yet sinned. Cain was angry, but he had not sinned. The Apostle
Paul admonishes the Ephesians that they can be angry, as long as they do not
sin (Ephesians 4:26). Now if Cain was already alienated from God because he had
been conceived in sin within his mother’s womb, we are left to question the
reason he is being told that sin desires him. Surely, having been conceived in
sin, he was already sold to sin, and sin had him. Of course, if this was not
the case and sin is not passed down from father to son, then each must not be
born sinners, even if we are born into sin—there is a big difference.
If we are born sinners, then we are
not just born into sin or conceived in a world that is bound by sin, we are
born sinful and rotten to the core. However, if we are conceived in sin and
born into sin, but our spirits are placed into the souls of our bodies by God
at birth, then we have not made a
conscious choice to sin, and do not
inherit the sin of our father. This is different to what the doctrine of total depravity teaches. It teaches that we
are totally depraved, which means corrupt and unable to make a decision, because
we are born captive to the will of the Devil. However, in the case of Cain we
see this is not the case and his father’s sins were not passed down to him that
he should bear the guilt. Cain was guilty because he sinned; not because his
father sinned. The Bible does not teach that we are guilty of our father’s sin.
This is what the Lord God has to say:
The soul who
sins, he shall die: the son shall not bear the iniquity of the father,
neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the son; the righteousness of the
righteous shall be on him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be on him.
(Ez. 18:20)
Just because death has passed down
to all men, and all men sin, this does not mean that the sins of the parents
pass down on to the children, so they bear their parent’s guilt. What this
means is that because we are born into sin, sin reigns on this Earth, and all
things are subject to death. Nevertheless, every child sins when coveting
something that belongs to someone else, bears false witness, takes something
without permission and disobeys a parent. From that point on, once one of those
commandments has been broken, the child is guilty of having committed sin. What this means is even though we are
conceived in sin and born into sin, we are not guilty of sin until we actually
commit sin. Our spirits are untainted by
sin, until we are guilty of having sinned. As spiritual beings made in the
image of God, like Cain we are not guilty of sin until we have actually sinned
as an act of our volition, regardless of the fact our souls are passed down
through our parents, as are our physical characteristics and we may have a
proclivity towards sin.
In respect to humans being subject
to death, and after the flood, not living as long as they did before the flood,
there are three reasons why this could be so. Firstly, sin affected the blood,
of which the DNA passes down via the male of the species—the Blood of Jesus was
not the blood of man. Secondly, our own sins contribute to our inability to
ward off cell-death. Thirdly, the atmosphere has changed to such an extent
since those days that the environment is no longer conducive to living for
ever, or even longevity of individuals approaching one thousand years duration.
The longest living person that has been verifiably documented in the modern era
has only lived one hundred and twenty-two years, one hundred and sixty-four
days.[6]
This is what the Bible has to say
about death being passed to all men and how through one man’s disobedience
death reigns, but through one man’s obedience eternal life is attainable:
Therefore as sin
entered into the world through one man, and death through sin; and so death passed to all men, because all
sinned. For until the law, sin was in the world; but sin is not charged
when there is no law. Nevertheless death reigned from Adam until Moses, even
over those whose sins weren’t like Adam’s disobedience, who is a foreshadowing
of him who was to come. But the free gift isn’t like the trespass. For if by the
trespass of the one the many died, much more did the grace of God, and the gift
by the grace of the one man, Jesus Christ, abound to the many. The gift is not
as through one who sinned: for the judgment came by one to condemnation, but
the free gift came of many trespasses to justification. For if by the trespass of the one, death
reigned through the one; so much more will those
who receive the abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness reign
in life through the one, Jesus Christ. So then as through one trespass, all men
were condemned; even so through one act of righteousness, all men were
justified to life. For as through the one man’s disobedience many
were made sinners, even so through
the obedience of the one, many will be made righteous. The law came in besides, that the trespass
might abound; but where sin abounded, grace abounded more exceedingly; that as sin reigned in death, even so grace
might reign through righteousness to
eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. (Romans 5:12-21)
The idea that death passed down to
all men because of one man’s sin, and we inherit his sin as well as death,
ignores the fact death is the result of each one’s own sin. The Apostle argues
that even without the law, sin occurred, but the law was necessary to point out
sin and compare it with grace. What confuses many when reading this text is
that physical death does not mean spiritual death. Similarly, neither does a
righteousness of works mean eternal life. Sin came into the world because of
Adam, but if a person were not to sin, then that person would have eternal
life. However, the Apostle argues since all men died, all men had to have
sinned. Being born into a world governed by sin, many were made sinners, but
not all (John the Baptist is considered by some to be one). The exception, of course,
was Jesus Christ our Lord. Since Jesus did not commit sin, when he died, his
righteousness was presented as a gift to those who receive it. In the Gospel of
John, we read concerning Jesus:
He came to his own, and those who were his own
didn’t receive him. But as many as
received him, to them he gave the right to become God’s children, to those who
believe in his name. (John 1:11-12)
Not all receive the gift. The gift
is rejected. In that text, we see that even those who were Jesus’ own did not
receive Him. To reject Jesus is to reject the gift of righteousness and eternal
life. To receive Jesus is be given the right to born into the Kingdom of God
and be adopted by God as His children; that is, sons of God, who possess the
same righteous nature as He Himself possesses. To receive or reject the gift is
an exercise of our freewill.
The argument for the validity of
the doctrine of total depravity is a faulty argument. The claim is all men have
died because of Adam’s sin and death is passed down from generation to
generation because of this alone. The claim is false because Enoch (Gen. 5:24;
Heb. 11:5) did not die and neither did Elijah (2 Kgs. 2:11; Mk. 9:4). Both of
these men did not see death but were taken to be with God. This means the
argument that all men died because of the sin of Adam is false and this was not
what the Apostle Paul was really saying; rather, he was saying that although we
are born into sin, because of Adam’s forfeiture of his right to reign, we can
now reign through righteousness to
eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
The argument for death caused by
the guilt of Adam being passed down the male line has no warrant from Scripture. The Son of God entered a human soul, which He
obtained from the body that came from Mary. Jesus was sinless, therefore the
soul, while possessing the desires of the flesh, is not sinful of itself. Sin
is the actual breaking of one of the Ten Commandments. The Apostle Paul states,
humanly speaking, that sin does not exist, except for the Ten Commandments. The
Ten Commandments are the only words written by God Himself. They are also the
standard that defines and measures sin. This is what the Apostle wrote:
What shall we
say then? Is the law sin? May it never be! However, I wouldn’t have known sin,
except through the law. For I wouldn’t have known coveting, unless the law had
said, “You shall not covet.” But sin, finding occasion through the
commandment, produced in me all kinds of coveting. For apart from the law, sin is dead. I was alive apart from the law once, but when the
commandment came, sin revived, and I died.
The commandment, which was for life, this I found to be for death; for
sin, finding occasion through the commandment, deceived me, and through it
killed me. Therefore the law indeed is
holy, and the commandment holy, and righteous, and good. Did then that which is good become death to me?
May it never be! But sin, that it might be shown to be sin, by working death to
me through that which is good; that through the commandment sin might become
exceedingly sinful. (Romans 7:7-13)
In this passage of Scripture, the
Apostle is saying that he was alive before he knew the commandments of God. The
Law here is a reference to the Ten
Commandments written by God. According to the doctrine of total depravity, the
Apostle had to have been dead in his sins, not alive, as he claims here. He
even claims he would not have known sin if it were not for the Law, which
suggests he was righteous (as was Cain before he succumbed to sin). But we are
informed all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God, so we cannot
build a doctrine that people are righteous, if they do not know the Ten
Commandments. Instead, the Apostle is arguing that the while we might think we
have no need to acknowledge God, the Law points out our shortcomings in a way that
our conscience does not bear witness—because we can sear it; whereas, what is
written remains to accuse us, regardless of what sins we commit. This is
covered in the second chapter of Romans, and points to the fact that we possess
freewill to choose to do what we know to be right. As James says:
To him therefore
who knows to do good [this is, right], and doesn’t do it, to him it is sin.
(James 4:17)
Calvinists love lifting texts out
of context to justify their doctrine that we are all condemned to being wicked,
and we being wicked have no say in a matter—except themselves, of course, as
they falsify the truth.
One text used to justify the belief
we have no say in a matter is found in the book of Proverbs. First, we will
look at the verse in question, then some other verses lifted out of Proverbs
before placing the first-mentioned Scripture—Calvinists lift out of context—back
into context.
Proverbs 16:4 Yahweh has made everything for its own end— yes, even
the wicked for the day of evil.
Proverbs 28:4 Those who forsake the law
praise the wicked; but those who keep the law contend with them.
Proverbs 21:7 The violence of the
wicked will drive them away, because they refuse to do what is right.
Proverbs 17:15 He who justifies the
wicked, and he who condemns the righteous, both of them alike are an
abomination to Yahweh.
Proverbs 16:3-5 Commit your deeds to
Yahweh, and your plans shall succeed. Yahweh
has made everything for its own end— yes, even the wicked for the day of evil.
Everyone who is proud in heart is an abomination to Yahweh: they shall
certainly not be unpunished.
As is evident, the text (Pr 16:4)
used to justify the belief that the wicked do not possess freewill, on its own,
does seem to indicate that this may be the case. But when we take (the
following) three other verses mentioned that are found in Proverbs, we see that
people can forsake the law, instead of keeping it; by refusing to do what is
right, they become violent in nature; and those who justify the wicked
(including those who suggest the Lord has created them to be wicked) are an
abomination to our Heavenly Father. Following this, when we read in context,
the Scripture used to justify God creating the wicked to do evil that He might
punish them, we learn that people are informed that they ought to commit their
deeds to God, so that he can help them, but those who are proud in heart will
not go unpunished. This is because everything has its own end, those who choose
to be righteous commit to God, while those who choose to be wicked, because
they are too proud to commit to God, are an abomination. Jesus picks up the
same theme, when he talks about those who hate the truth and those who love the
truth. In fact, we could say that Jesus was merely rephrasing what we have just
read in the three verses from the sixteenth chapter of the book of Proverbs.
For we read:
This is the
judgment, that the light has come into the world, and men loved the darkness
rather than the light; for their works were evil. For everyone who does evil
hates the light, and doesn’t come to the light, lest his works would be
exposed. But he who does the truth comes to the light, that his works may be
revealed, that they have been done in God. (John 3:19-21)
The verses of Scripture we are
discussing here all point to freewill. The failure of those who contrived the
doctrine of total depravity to consider that we are tripartite beings (spirit,
soul and body) and not dipartite (soul and body) could be the reason for this
heresy of possessing no freewill, even though we have been made in the image of
God.
In respect to this
doctrine of total depravity, when we start to consider the context of the
verses from where the proof texts have been taken to justify the pretext that all
men are inherently evil and have no freewill, we note that the Bible does not
teach what they claim. By considering the context of the texts that are used to
justify the falsehood that humans do not possess freewill and are born as
beings of total depravity who are unable to make choices between good and evil,
we actually see the Bible teaches men have freewill and those who hate evil and
seek God are saved through faith. Even Cain could have overcome sin, had he
resisted the Devil and drawn near to God. For Cain to have drawn near to God,
he would have had to been like Noah and believed he would be rewarded. This is
contrary to the doctrine of total depravity, upon which the rest of the
articles of belief found in the doctrines known by the acronym of TULIP rest.
UNCONDITIONAL
ELECTION
Since we have seen clear evidence
for the doctrine of Total Depravity being an outright heresy and
contrary to the teaching of Scripture, the next four doctrines of the
Calvinist’s fall apart very quickly because the foundation for their
propositions is false. The first of the four we will look at is the doctrine of
Unconditional Election.
Many would like to say that we
embrace the doctrine of unconditional election because
it is true. Those who claim it is true, say it is true because they want to
believe they are part of the chosen and refer to Jesus’ statement to His
disciples that they did not choose Him, but that He chose them (John 15:16) as
proof that this means them. These same people will tell us that we must take Scripture
in context and would claim that any text, which clearly states “God desires the
salvation of all men” (which is the truth), must not be taken out of context.
Hence, we too must put this Scripture about Jesus choosing His disciples in
context. He was speaking to the twelve and not anybody else.
John Piper is one of the modern-day
mouthpieces for the TULIP doctrines. He makes the following claims about the
second of the TULIP doctrines when claiming that there are five reasons to
embrace unconditional election:
“I use the word
embrace because unconditional election is not just true, but precious. Of
course, it can’t be precious if it’s not true. So that’s the biggest reason we
embrace it. But let’s start with a definition:
Unconditional
election is God’s free choice before creation, not based on foreseen faith,
to which traitors he will grant faith and repentance, pardoning them, and
adopting them into his everlasting family of joy.
We
embrace unconditional election because it is true.
All
my objections to unconditional election collapsed when I could no longer
explain away Romans 9.”[7]
We have had a look at Romans,
chapter nine (p100), and there was nothing to explain away. Romans chapter nine
speaks about people being made righteous
through faith in Jesus Christ. Either John Piper has missed the fact people
are made righteous through faith in Jesus Christ, or he has decided to be a
teacher of false doctrines to further his academic career and find a solid
support base among Calvinists purporting to be Christians who have good paying
jobs. This is not a condemnation of the man; rather it is a legitimate
statement of what is true. Either the man has not read Romans chapter nine with
the intent to understand it, or he has other motives for calling those, who are justified by faith, traitors.
Whatever the case, the doctrine is devilish because it teaches we do not
need to exercise faith. His definition of unconditional election appears to be
deceptively confusing and purposely so. A better definition of unconditional
election would have been much clearer and to the point, such as this:
Unconditional
election is the decision God made before Creation to grant salvation to some
people and condemn the rest to everlasting punishment; it is not based on faith
but based on unmerited favor (partiality).
As is evident in the definition
that I have provided, the issue of faith is clear and not stated in a confusing
manner like that which Piper uses. Why do tricksters convolute matters?
Tricksters design definitions to deceive those who are looking for
guidance in knowing the truth.
As for being traitors, this
suggests that people have turned their backs on God; to do so, a decision has
to have been made. If people had no freewill, they could not make decisions. If
people have freewill and are able to make decisions, this means that God had
not chosen who would be saved before the foundation of the world without
desiring all men be saved.
Much is made of the fact Jesus said
that no one comes to Him unless the Father draws them, and He chose His
disciples, they did not choose Him. Instead of just pulling out a Scripture
here and there, once more we will look at the context of what Jesus was saying
at the time of His quotes (doesn’t this make you feel clean instead of devious,
deceptive and dirty):
If you keep my commandments, you will
remain in my love; even as I have kept my Father’s commandments, and remain in
his love. I have spoken these things to
you, that my joy may remain in you, and that your joy may be made full.
“This
is my commandment, that you love one another, even as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that
someone lay down his life for his friends. You are my friends, if you do
whatever I command you. No longer do I
call you servants, for the servant doesn’t know what his lord does. But I have
called you friends, for everything that I heard from my Father, I have made
known to you. You didn’t choose me, but
I chose you, and appointed you, that you should go and bear fruit, and that
your fruit should remain; that whatever you will ask of the Father in my name,
he may give it to you.
“I
command these things to you, that you may love one another. If
the world hates you, you know that it has hated me before it hated you. If
you were of the world, the world would love its own. But because you are not of
the world, since I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you.
Remember the word that I said to you: ‘A servant is not greater than his lord.’
If they persecuted me, they will
also persecute you. If they kept my
word, they will keep yours also. (John 15:10-20)
Jesus talking to the twelve uses
“if” a number of times here. The word “if” is a conditional conjunction used to
indicate uncertainty. While the
disciples to whom Jesus was speaking may have been chosen by Him, there were
still many “ifs” within the speech. Notice that Jesus said to them that those
who will keep the word of the disciples would only do so if they were prepared to keep Jesus’ word. What we see here is
Jesus effectively saying that if
people desire to keep the Father’s commandments, they will desire to keep His
commandments and the word of the disciples also. On the other hand, if they are not prepared to keep the
commandments of the Father or the Son, neither will they listen to the
disciples. Moreover, it is important for us to understand that not all who were
disciples were prepared to follow Jesus. We learn:
But Jesus
knowing in himself that his disciples murmured at this, said to them, “Does
this cause you to stumble? Then what if you would see the Son of Man ascending
to where he was before? It is the spirit who gives life. The flesh profits
nothing. The words that I speak to you are spirit, and are life. But there are
some of you who don’t believe.” For Jesus knew from the beginning who they were who didn’t believe, and who
it was who would betray him. He
said, “For this cause have I said to you that no one can come to me, unless it
is given to him by my Father.”At this, many of his disciples went back, and
walked no more with him. Jesus said
therefore to the twelve, “You don’t also want to go away, do you?”
Simon
Peter answered him, “Lord, to whom would we go? You have the words of eternal
life. We have come to believe and
know that you are the Christ, the Son of the living God.”
Jesus
answered them, “Didn’t I choose you, the twelve, and one of you is a devil?”
(John 6:60-70)
Here we see that not everybody was
prepared to follow Jesus. They made decisions to leave Him. However, notice
what Simon Peter said regarding his decision to stay with Jesus. Indeed,
freewill was very much a part of this relationship. Not only do we see evidence
of freewill, but the reason why Jesus chose whom He did. Jesus possessed
foreknowledge—because he was able to discern the thoughts and intentions of a
person’s heart (Rev. 2:23; Heb. 4:12-14) and included Judas as one of the
twelve because He knew the man’s heart.
Jesus would not have needed to make a choice if everything had been already decided before the foundation
of the world. Jesus would have known that Judas was the man (or robot) he was
going to use before Adam was made. We cannot deny that this would have been the
case if the doctrine of unconditional election for the saved and eternal
punishment for the condemned were true—only it is not true; it is false; a
concoction of manmade philosophy.
Much of what Jesus said in the
Gospels applied to those present and to the situation at the time.
Nevertheless, understanding the principles of salvation contained within the
Eternal Gospel is another matter, and the Calvinist proposition of unconditional
election in some respects does sound like unconditional salvation
and universal salvation for all; but the way they explain the
proposition, it is not. The proposition is that God only provided
unconditional salvation for a certain select number of people. If the doctrine
of unconditional election were the truth, whether it meant universal salvation
or salvation for a particular number of people, there is no incentive
and no need to preach the gospel
if those who are to be saved have already been chosen. Yet this
is what John Piper says is the strong point of unconditional election (salvation):
When you offer Christ freely to all unbelievers, suppose one says, “I have sinned too terribly. God
could never choose to save me.” The most ultimate despair-destroying thing you
can say is this: Do you realize that God chose before the foundation of the
world whom he will save? And he did it based on absolutely nothing in you.
Before you were born or had done anything good or bad, God chose whether to
save you or not.[8]
Firstly, it needs to be said, that
if only a certain elect have been chosen before the foundation of the world,
how can Piper or anyone else, for that matter, offer salvation to
unbelievers? Notice how he advises by implication, look we have a trick
up our sleeves, “we say he is really saved because God chose the unbeliever
before the foundation of the world”. Unless there is an ulterior motive, who
would tell unbelievers untruths? Who
resorts to tricks? Who are agents of the
Devil? Who but Pharisees will do and say anything to make a convert?
Unfortunately, the convert becomes twice as much a child of Hell as themselves?
Look what Jesus said:
“Woe to you,
scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!
For you travel land and sea to win
one proselyte, and when he is won, you make him twice as much a son of hell as
yourselves.
(Matthew 23:15
NKJV[9])
In this scenario, the unbeliever
thinks he has sinned too terribly to be saved. But instead of being told about
how salvation is provided to those who have faith in the death and resurrection
of Jesus, he is told, God has already decided who will be saved, so there is
nothing to worry about. The person then thinks, since there is nothing I can do
about the matter, I will just continue in my sin and there is no need to repent
after all. Either I am saved or I am not.
If I am saved, there is nothing I can do about it. If I am not saved,
there is nothing I can do about it, so I may as well enjoy my sin.
Because the unbeliever does not see
any reason to become a church member or participate in the hypocrisy of the
self-righteous, the hypocrite then does everything he or she can to persuade
the person that now they are saved (even though they are an unbeliever) it is
really better for them to demonstrate to others that they belong together and
become a member of those who have been selected. These people then begin to
provide inducements, claiming that they are from the blessings of the Lord. Not
only are financial gifts provided but also career and employment opportunities,
depending on the convert’s abilities, employment history and social standing.
Often those who are of a lower social standing are encouraged to attend Bible
College to raise their academic profile. Those who have not got the finances
are often supported financially, so they can then be indoctrinated in
apologetics and the propositional truths of TULIP and become full time
ministers.
The doctrine of unconditional
election is the doctrine that we are saved by grace alone. There are no
conditions attached to our salvation. In this respect, universal salvation for
all is the same as unconditional salvation (election). However, the Bible
teaches that we are not saved by grace alone, we are saved through faith in
Lord Jesus Christ. Faith is a condition required for salvation. If salvation
were unconditional:
(1) There would
be no need for Jesus dying on the Cross.
(2) There would
be no need to seek God.
(3) There would
be no need to repent.
(4) There would
be no need to have a changed heart.
(5) There would
be no need to obey the commandments of
God.
(6) There would
be no need for Jesus to search our hearts.
(7) There would
be no need at all for the six conditions that
have just been mention to be included in the
Bible.
If we had been chosen before the
foundation of the world, there is no need for God to search our hearts at all.
He already knows who is going to be saved. However, if salvation were conditional
upon our hearts being acceptable to God, then it is understandable that our
hearts need to be searched. In fact, the
Bible tells us that God searches our hearts and that we need to search after
God also, as this is the precondition for our salvation. Here are some of the
verses regarding this:
Romans 8:27 He [Jesus] who searches the
hearts knows what is on the [Holy] Spirit’s mind, because he makes intercession
for the saints according to God [the Father].
Revelation 2:23 I [Jesus] will kill her children with Death,
and all the assemblies will know that I am He who searches the minds and
hearts. I will give to each one of you according to your deeds.
Psalm 7:9 Oh let the wickedness of the
wicked come to an end, but establish the righteous; their minds and hearts are
searched by the righteous God.
Jeremiah 17:10 I, Yahweh, search the
mind, I try the heart, even to give every man according to his ways, according
to the fruit of his doings.
Hebrews 4:12-13 For the word of God is living and active, and
sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing of soul and
spirit, of both joints and marrow, and is
able to discern the thoughts and intentions of the heart. There is no creature that is hidden from his sight,
but all things are naked and laid open before the eyes of him to whom we must give an account.
Deuteronomy 4:29 But from there you
shall seek Yahweh your God, and you shall find him, when you search after him
with all your heart and with all your soul.
Jeremiah 29:13 You shall seek me, and
find me, when you shall search for me with all your heart.
Psalm 139:23 Search me, God, and know
my heart. Try me, and know my thoughts.
1 Chronicles 28:9 You, Solomon my son,
know the God of your father, and serve him with a perfect heart and with a
willing mind; for Yahweh searches all
hearts, and understands all the imaginations of the thoughts. If you seek
him, he will be found by you; but if you forsake him, he will cast you off
forever.
Clearly, God searches the hearts of
all people to see who are searching after Him. For without faith we cannot
please God. But if we believe that He exists, and He rewards those who seek Him
(Hebrews 11:6), we will be inclined to do so.
Atheists do not seek God because
they do not believe there is any need. They see no reason to find a purpose in
life other than living for themselves and, usually, they are seeking approval
from other people. Michael Shermer, founder of the Skeptics Society, is such an
atheist. He claims he was once a born again Christian and studied theology for
a while, but is now an atheist. Instead of knocking on doors and telling people
about religion, he found there was more personal success in pursuing an
anti-God crusade. Shermer is an opportunist like those who did not really believe
in Jesus but were only after free food, when He was providing feeding frenzies
for the multitude. When Jesus began to talk about true realities of life, they
were not interested and went their own way. This is what atheists do; but like
Antony Flew, when death approaches, often they start thinking that the only
hope for humans is if God is real.
In some respects, it seems
pointless continuing to discuss John Piper’s claims because the doctrine of
unlimited election is not actually biblical, as we have convincingly refuted
them already. But just in case there are some who happen to feel the need for
the following answered, a short rebuttal will be made. Besides this, we can see
how deceived these people really are.
PIPER CLAIMS:
Jesus
confirms this teaching: “All that the Father gives me will come to me, and
whoever comes to me I will never cast out” (John 6:37). Coming to Jesus is not
a condition we meet to qualify for election. It is the result of election. The
Father has chosen his sheep. They are his. And he gives them to the Son. That
is why they come. “No one can come to me unless it is granted him by the
Father” (John 6:65). “You did not choose me, but I chose you” (John 15:16; see
John 17:2, 6, 9; Galatians 1:15).[10]
Here the trickster Piper, who was
devising plans to convert unbelievers (as revealed earlier), says all that the
Father gives will come, and that coming to Jesus is not a condition, because
the Father had chosen who would be saved beforehand (which leaves honest people
wondering why Piper promotes the need to convert unbelievers). Even if we put
this in the context of today, rather than the context of when Jesus was
speaking to His disciples (John 17:25-26), we see that the Apostle Paul says it
is Jesus doing the choosing; not the Father (Romans 8:27).
PIPER CLAIMS:
In
the book of Acts, why did some believe and not others? Luke’s answer is
election: “As many as were appointed to eternal life believed” (Acts 13:48).
This “appointment” — this election—was not based on foreseen faith; it was the
cause of faith.[11]
In saying “as many who were
appointed to eternal life believed” is the same as saying “as many who were
chosen believed”. What this means is that at that particular place, those who
believed were the only ones among the redeemed at the time. There were no
people of weaker faith who could lose their salvation (Hebrews 6:6), as we find
in other places such as Corinth (1 Corinthians 8:8-13), where all manner of
wickedness was going on in the church; so much so, that the Apostle Paul wrote
to them saying that they were worse than the heathen (1 Corinthians 5:1).
PIPER CLAIMS:
“God chose
what is foolish in the world to shame the wise . . . so that no human being
might boast in the presence of God. . . . Let the one who boasts, boast in the
Lord” (1 Corinthians 1:27, 29, 31).[12]
To suggest that God preordained the
wise in the world to be shamed by the foolish contradicts the book of Proverbs,
which states that when a fool mixes with wise people, the fool ceases to be
wise, but when a wise man mixes with fools, he becomes a fool himself (Proverbs
13:20). However, the context of the texts mentioned here is a different matter
all together.
The foolishness of the cross is
compared to the wisdom of man’s philosophy in that those who have accepted
Jesus were often those who were despised by the world. Consequently, as in
those days, even today, the more educated and wealthier people become, the less
likely they are to look to the Cross of Jesus. Hence, when we read the Sermon
on the Mount, we find those who are more likely to look to Jesus being
those who are poor in spirit or who are mourning or merciful rather than filled
with worldly knowledge, enjoying the riches of this life and self-interest.
If Piper and his ilk are to be
believed, the other point, of course, is God determined before the foundation
of the world only to choose the foolish—which we know is not true, for only the wise choose God, whereas a fool says there is no God (Psalm
14:1).
PIPER CLAIMS:
“Put
on then, as God’s chosen ones, holy and loved, compassionate hearts, kindness .
. . forgiving each other” (Colossians 3:12–13). No one has seen or savored his
election truly who is not moved by it to become kind and patient and forgiving.[13]
This has nothing to do with the doctrine
of unconditional election, but is a ploy that is used by tricksters to divert a
person’s thinking away from the real issues. However, if the person has been
already elected to salvation, there is no need to put on anything, for
everything has been done. It is a different matter if we have freewill and need
to forgive others before our Heavenly Father will forgive us (Mark 11:25-26
Matt. 6:14-15).
PIPER CLAIMS:
Therefore,
you dare not get in God’s face and tell him what qualifications you lack in
order to be chosen. There were no qualifications for being chosen. “What then
should I do?” he asks. “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and you will be
saved” (Acts 16:31). That’s how you begin to “confirm your calling and
election” (2 Peter 1:10). If you will embrace the Savior, you will confirm that
you are elect, and you will be saved.[14]
As we have noted that there are a
number of qualifications for being chosen, but these are not works based, they
based on how genuine our desire is to know God. Even telling a person what he
needs to do suggests that something is required to qualify for salvation. In
this scenario, where the person is asking the question of what needs to be
done, he is not told, “Nothing, because you were already saved before the
foundation of the world.” Instead, he is
told, “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and you will be saved.” Which also
means, “if you do not believe, you will not be saved.” To this, the Calvinist
will say, the person was not elected, because he is not a believer. However,
Piper goes on to say, “If you will embrace the Savior...” “If” is used to express a condition. And as
for the need to confirm one’s election, the question becomes Why? And to Whom?
Why the need to confirm to God, what has already been decided? But if we need
to confirm our election to others, this is the same as becoming a member of a
club and conforming to the club’s requirements as men pleasers. (And let us not
forget Piper’s early remarks about the ploy of being saved before the
foundation of the world to convert unbelievers to Calvinism.)
The most puzzling statements by
John Piper are the ones about needing to proclaim the grace of God to a hostile
world and seek converts. If people are already unconditionally saved before the
foundation of the world, there are no lost sheep or lost souls to save. Yet
Piper writes:
We embrace unconditional
election because God designed it to make us fearless in our proclamation of his
grace in a hostile world. We embrace unconditional election because God
designed it to make us humble. We embrace unconditional election because God
made it a powerful moral impetus for compassion, kindness, and forgiveness. We
embrace unconditional election because it is a powerful incentive in our
evangelism to help unbelievers, who are great sinners, not despair.[15]
You could use the phrase “theory of
evolution” instead of unconditional election, when claiming it is a powerful
incentive to make converts. Atheists are doing this all the time. The theory of
evolution is taught to children in schools and creates believers out of people
who initially claim they did not believe. There is no difference really in the
methodology that Piper advocates. There is no doubt that what Jesus said about
hypocrites making converts twice as much a child of Hell as themselves (Matthew
23:15) has to apply to those who become Calvinists, because they believe they
have already been chosen, but, like Piper, to get numbers they need to make
converts out those unbelievers who have not been chosen.
It is more understandable to seek
out sinners if we believe that unless they hear the gospel, they face eternal
punishment without a chance of salvation. Evangelicals and Pentecostals that
believe this are extremely missionary minded. Pentecostals, more than Evangelicals,
tend to preach about faith in the resurrection and baptism of the Holy Spirit
than holding to ideas of total depravity and limited
atonement for the special ones, who are always wicked and not able
to possess the thoughts that God has. On the other hand, if we receive the
baptism of the Holy Spirit, then it makes sense that the thoughts of God can be
our thoughts. To suggest that we can possess the Holy Spirit and still be
powerless to change is a denial of the power of God. In respect to such people
and their beliefs, this is what the Bible states:
…having a form
of godliness but denying its power. And from such people turn away! (2 Timothy
3:5)
For the kingdom
of God is not in word but in power.
(1 Corinthians
4:20)
In actual fact, to say that we possess the Holy
Spirit and deny that we can be transformed by the renewal of our minds to think
and act like God would have us do so, in accordance to His ways, is an act of
unbelief and a damnable heresy.
LIMITED ATONEMENT
This doctrine teaches that Jesus
died only for those who had been elected to salvation before the foundation of
the world. Once the idea of unconditional election has been established in the
minds of people, it would be foolish to then say that Jesus died for the sins
of the whole world and this really means everyone. According to this heresy,
the Apostle John evidently did not mean Jesus died for the whole world when he
wrote that this is what our Savior did. According to Calvinists, the whole
world means “all those who were unconditionally elected in the whole world”.
(Do you get the feeling that someone is trying to pull the skin of a bull over
your eyes and darken your mind?)
This is what the letter that the
Apostle John wrote, states:
My little
children, I write these things to you so that you may not sin. If anyone sins,
we have a Counselor with the Father, Jesus Christ, the righteous. And he is the atoning sacrifice for our
sins, and not for ours only, but also
for the whole world. This is how we know that we know him: if we keep his
commandments. One who says, “I know him,” and doesn’t keep his commandments, is
a liar, and the truth isn’t in him. But
whoever keeps his word, God’s love has most certainly been perfected in him.
This is how we know that we are in him:
he who says he remains in him ought himself also to walk just like he
walked (1 John 2:1-6)
Let us go consider what the Apostle
John wrote. We are told that in the event we happen to sin—that is break one of
the commandments—we have an advocate with the Father. Now this presents Jesus
as a lawyer representing a client before a judge. If there is a need for a
lawyer, then this suggests that there has to be a prosecutor. A prosecutor
accuses someone of a crime before a judge and insists that the person should be
punished accordingly. The lawyer advocates that this is unnecessary because of
mitigating circumstances. This occurs if the lawyer’s client is guilty or
pleads not guilty because of ignorance, or is actually innocent and has been
declared guilty due to the evidence. When it comes to appearing before the
throne of God, innocence is not something that can be pleaded. The Devil
(Satan) only prosecutes those he can lay some charge against. Jesus, on the
other hand, pleads the case for the guilty, whether this is because the sins
were committed in ignorance or because the person has truly felt remorse for knowingly,
or having with intent, willfully, committed sin against other individuals and
the Lord God.
There are two types of sin that
need to be dealt with in the Bible. These are the sins that involve our own
actions and the sin that Adam committed which handed over the world to Satan.
As a Christian, if we have
committed a sin, Satan has the right to persecute us and cause us to suffer.
However, after having sinned as a Christian, if we have repented of our sin, by
calling upon the name of the Lord and having asked forgiveness, Satan now has
to prosecute his case to obtain permission to harm us or take away our
blessings in respect to that particular sin. Depending on the circumstances of
the situation, justice will be done.
For instance, if we have committed
a sin of omission and failed to have done something that we should have done
because of forgetfulness, confusion, uncertainty or doubt, or find ourselves in
a situation seemingly beyond our control and do not want to sin, but call out
to God in the sin, Jesus acts as our advocate and gets us off the hook.
However, if we knowingly fail in a certain area of our commitment to the Lord or
actively sin (sins of commission), Satan has the right to persecute us. This
often occurs in situations where we are presumptuous, and rather than seek the
will of the Lord in a matter, we think we know better, and then inadvertently
stumble. When we realize our error, we go back to the Lord, but Satan is still
demanding his pound of flesh in the courts of Heaven; only we are now seeking
the Lord to cover us once more, and plead our circumstances. While this idea of
Satan appearing in Heaven as our accuser might sound absurd to some, this is actually
what happens, and the story of Job brings this home (Job 1:6-2:10), as does
King David’s sin (1 Chronicles 21:1-30), and we must not forget Satan desiring
to possess Peter, the disciple of Jesus (Luke 22:31-32).
The second sin issue concerns what
Adam committed and this affects the whole world. The Apostle John says that
Jesus is also the atoning sacrifice, that is, the ransom price, for the sins of
the whole world. This covers the sin that Adam committed, which gave Satan
control over the whole world. However, Jesus redeemed the right to rule over
the whole world when he paid the ransom price.
This is what Jesus said:
For the Son of
Man also came not to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom
for many. (Mark 10:45)
Calvinists claim that this means
Jesus only died for some and not all. (They overlook that “For if through the
offence of one many be dead, much more the grace of God, and the gift by grace,
which is by one man, Jesus Christ, hath abounded unto many”—Romans 5:15 KJV.
The “many” here actually means “all”, otherwise “many” did not die.) However,
when we understand that Jesus did not just die to redeem the world from the sin
of one man, Adam, but the sins of many (including all who believe by faith)
then there is no limited atonement. Not only did Jesus redeem the world and
wrest it from Satan, but also the many descendants who would seek God and be
acceptable to Him.
The third point in this passage from
the second chapter of John that we will consider, speaks of knowing God because
we keep His commandments. In the event that we desire to keep His commandments
but we fall short because we are struggling in an area of sin that we have yet
to overcome, we have an advocate. If we claim we know God but do not keep His
commandments, we make ourselves to be liars. Those who do not desire to honor
God and keep His commandments are hypocrites. While, on the one hand, if we
desire to walk with God, we will do our best to seek Him and keep His
commandments; on the other hand, if we are hypocrites and deliberately sin, we
have no advocate and face the prospects of everlasting punishment. This is what
we are told in the book of Hebrews:
For if we sin
willfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remains no
more a sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful expectation of judgment, and a
fierceness of fire which will devour the adversaries. (Hebrews 10:26-27)
The Calvinists actually create a
description of our Heavenly Father that is more in keeping with the god of this
world. They fail to realize that Jesus
gained the right to judge the world when He paid the price for sin. Not only is
the ruler of the world judged, but Jesus will draw all people to
Himself, not just some, as the Calvinists claim. We read:
When he has
come, he will convict the world about sin, about righteousness, and about
judgment; about sin, because they don’t believe in me; about righteousness,
because I am going to my Father, and you won’t see me any more; about judgment,
because the prince of this world has been judged. (John 16:8-11)
Jesus answered, “This voice hasn’t come for my
sake, but for your sakes. Now is the
judgment of this world. Now the prince of this world will be cast out. And I, if
I am lifted up from the earth, will
draw all people to myself.”
(John 12:30-32)
Because Jesus will draw all
(not some, not many, but all) people to Himself, as we have already noted about
those who love evil, this does not mean that they will accept His invitation.
While we all have the opportunity to make choices and choose whether we want
death or life, we can also refuse Jesus.
I call heaven
and earth to witness against you today, that I have set before you life and
death, the blessing and the curse. Therefore choose life, that you may live, you and your descendants.
(Deuteronomy 30:19)
You search the Scriptures,
because you think that in them you have eternal life; and these are they which
testify about me. Yet you will not
come to me, that you may have life.
I don’t receive glory from men. (John 5:39-40)
We make our own decisions as to
whether we are going to seek God and desire to keep His commandments because we
accept they are the way of blessing. If we do desire what God has for us, then
we will find ourselves in the kingdom of God, however, if we are relying on our
own understanding, then we will miss out. Many think by reading the Bible that
they are saved and are part of those who have been predestined before the
foundation of the world to be numbered among the elect. Yet the very Scriptures
themselves inform us these people refuse to come to Jesus to be cleansed of
their sin. This is why Calvinists are always moaning about possessing a wicked
heart. They do not see the need to seek Jesus with all their heart and be
cleansed; whereas those of us who have been saved though faith and understand
the truth, desire to keep God’s commandments and walk in faith. We do not
believe that our destiny was predetermined before the foundation of the world
and therefore we are saved by grace alone. Having secured the assurance of our
salvation through faith, we now rely upon Jesus’ unmerited favor to keep us
from sin. We recognize that Jesus died so that we might be raised with Him in
his death (Romans 6:4) and tell the world about our wonderful Savior, so that those
who hear might choose life, too, rather than death.
Nobody asked to be born into this
world. It is because of this that the sin of the world needed dealing with, in
order to prove that God is just. When Jesus died, He went into Hell and
preached to the spirits that had disobeyed in the days of Noah, so that they
might know why they are judged.
Because Christ
also suffered for sins once, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might
bring you to God; being put to death in the flesh, but made alive in the
spirit; in which he also went and preached to the spirits in prison, who before
were disobedient, when God waited patiently in the days of Noah, while the ship
was being built. In it, few, that is, eight souls, were saved through water.
This is a symbol of baptism, which now saves you—not the putting away of the filth
of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience toward God, through the
resurrection of Jesus Christ, who is at the right hand of God, having gone into
heaven, angels and authorities and powers being made subject to him. (1 Peter
3:18-22)
Jesus died for the unrighteous. Who
are the unrighteous? Everyone who has sinned is unrighteous before God. Jesus
did not know sin, yet He became sin, so we might enter into His righteousness
(2 Corinthians 5:17). This righteousness is conditional upon us believing in
the death and resurrection of Jesus. For if we do not believe that Jesus rose
from the dead, we are in our sins and our faith is in vain (1 Corinthians
15:14-17). But this would not matter if
we had been saved by unconditional election before the foundation of the world.
This only matters if our salvation is conditional upon our faith in Jesus
Christ (1 Timothy 3:15).
One of the reasons Jesus needed to
die to redeem the world was that the righteousness of God, although shown in
the Law, did not bring about the redemption of humans. The Law only described
the righteousness of God. For God to be
truly seen as righteous, He needed to pay the ransom price and redeem what had
been taken from Him. The only just way God could recover ownership of what
Satan had stolen was to provide a righteous life that would atone for sins and
leave an inheritance for those who desired to be His children. This becomes
evident when we consider the following two passages of Scripture:
But now apart from the law, a righteousness of
God has been revealed, being testified by the law and the prophets; even the
righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ to all and on all those who
believe. For there is no distinction, for all have sinned, and fall short of
the glory of God; being justified freely by his grace through the redemption
that is in Christ Jesus; whom God sent to be an atoning sacrifice, through
faith in his blood, for a demonstration
of his righteousness through the passing over of prior sins, in God’s
forbearance; to demonstrate his righteousness at this present time; that he might himself be just, and the justifier of him who has faith in
Jesus. (Romans 3:21-26)
How much more
will the blood of Christ, who
through the eternal Spirit offered himself without defect to God, cleanse your conscience from dead works to serve the
living God? For this reason, he is the mediator of a new covenant, since a
death has occurred for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the
first covenant, that those who have been
called may receive the
promise of the eternal inheritance. For where a last will and testament
is, there must of necessity be the death of him who made it. For a will is in
force where there has been death, for it is never in force while he who made it
lives (Hebrews 9:14-17)
All have sinned and Jesus paid the
price for all; there is no distinction. Jesus did not pay the price of sin for
many while, at the same time, not pay the price for many more; or, to put this
another way, Jesus did not pay the price for some and not others; that is, the
price of sin for the elect, but not the condemned. Jesus paid the price of sin
for all of humankind and, because of this; He
has the right to judge those who refuse to accept the offer of
forgiveness and participate in the inheritance that has been made available.
As for those who refused to accept
the offer of salvation provided by Noah, they too were judged, but they did not
understand the significance of the reason for their confinement in Hades (the
holding prison until the Great White Throne Judgment when those whose name is
not in the book of life are thrown into the Eternal Lake of Fire). When Jesus
had paid the price of their salvation, as well as ours, they learned the
reality of the truth they had rejected. This occurred when Jesus went into
where they were kept to tell them that He was the Savior of the world that they
had rejected when Noah was preaching. Now that they have been made alive in the
spirit, their worm will never die. Jesus paid the price for everyone so that He
could judge all and show mercy on the merciful; those who forgive others for
the sins they commit against them.
IRRESISTIBLE GRACE
The claim for this doctrine is that
the grace of God is needed to save the elect. Yet according to the doctrine of
unconditional election, the elect are already saved by grace before the
foundation of the world, so why would God need to institute another means to
save the elect by grace. Evidently, some men think God is not as powerful or as
good as His word. For if God had saved the elect by His unmerited favor before
the foundation of the world and His word is law, there would be no reason to
institute another means such as irresistible
grace. This doctrine suggests God is impotent, even
though Calvinists claim this doctrine demonstrates His power. What we have here
is clearly an attempt by men to put the Infinite Almighty God in a box—which is
really what TULIP doctrines are designed to do. This is why these doctrines are
so convoluted, inconsistent, and illogical.
In my experience, Calvinists like
to say they honor God with their doctrines and get very defensive if any one
suggests that the Bible actually has other Scripture that contradict what they
claim. They are quick to point out the word freewill is not in the
Bible, but overlook the names of their doctrines are not found either.
There is no mention of total depravity, unconditional election, limited
atonement, and irresistible grace. When Calvinists are shown from Scripture how
their doctrines are unscriptural and overlook certain Scripture, they refuse to
acknowledge the verses pointed out. However, like a woman who is having a child
taken from her, Calvinists refuse to let go of the false beliefs they cherish;
instead, like some rat that is cornered, they will go on the attack making numerous
false accusations.
If Calvinist claims for double
predestination were true, there would be no need for any doctrine of saving
grace, for the Word of God is all-powerful and the end of the matter. Once
saved before the foundation of the world should be sufficient to be saved. The
idea that effective grace needs introduction into a sinful world to save those
who are already saved seems rather bizarre; although proponents of the TULIP
heresy will insist, it is essential. Effectively, it states that the original
grace executed to choose those for unconditional election is ineffectual, and
their god is not the God of Creation. In some way, their kind of thinking is
like reincarnation where people originate from the All-soul, go through a
series of meaningless existences because they return once more to be
non-existent, having been absorbed into the All-soul. What this demonstrates is
these doctrines are philosophies of man, or doctrines of demons, but not
the truth of God.
This doctrine of Irresistible
Grace actually originated because a man by the name of Arminius and a group
of about fifty preachers in Hague disagreed with the oldest doctrinal
confessions of belief adhered to by the Reformed Church. This is the
(Calvinist) Belgic Confession that we are not justified by faith. Apart
from what Arminius disagreed with, there are issues with that Confession
claiming that Jesus had human blood—which means tainted blood—instead of the
blood of God (Acts 20:28).
The following two articles of faith
are the statements in the Confession that denies we are justified by faith, which
is a refutation of the very Scripture they claim is the Written Word of God.
Article 22: The Righteousness of Faith
We believe that for us to acquire
the true knowledge of this great mystery the Holy Spirit kindles in our hearts
a true faith that embraces Jesus Christ, with all his merits, and makes him its
own, and no longer looks for anything apart from him.
For it must
necessarily follow that either all that is required for our salvation is not in
Christ or, if all is in him, then he who has Christ by faith has his salvation
entirely.
Therefore,
to say that Christ is not enough but that something else is needed as well is a
most enormous blasphemy against God-- for it then would follow that Jesus
Christ is only half a Savior. And therefore we justly say with Paul that we are
justified "by faith alone" or by faith "apart from works."
However, we do not mean, properly speaking, that
it is faith itself that justifies us—for
faith is only the instrument by which we embrace Christ, our righteousness.
But Jesus
Christ is our righteousness in making available to us all his merits and all
the holy works he has done for us and in our place. And faith is the instrument
that keeps us in communion with him and with all his benefits.
When those
benefits are made ours they are more than enough to absolve us of our sins.[xvi]
Article 23: The Justification of Sinners
We believe that our blessedness
lies in the forgiveness of our sins because of Jesus Christ, and that in it our
righteousness before God is contained, as David and Paul teach us when they
declare that man blessed to whom God grants righteousness apart from works. And
the same apostle says that we are justified "freely" or "by
grace" through redemption in Jesus Christ. And therefore we cling to this
foundation, which is firm forever, giving all glory to God, humbling ourselves,
and recognizing ourselves as we are; not claiming a thing for ourselves or our
merits and leaning and resting on the sole obedience of Christ crucified, which
is ours when we believe in him.
That is enough to cover all our
sins and to make us confident, freeing the conscience from the fear, dread, and
terror of God's approach, without doing what our first father, Adam, did, who
trembled as he tried to cover himself with fig leaves.
In fact,
if we had to appear before God relying-- no matter how little-- on ourselves or
some other creature, then, alas, we would be swallowed up.
Therefore everyone must say with
David: "Lord, do not enter into judgment with your servants, for before you no living person shall be
justified."
Arminius’ Objection
The two little subtleties that were
introduced into the articles that state, “we do not mean, properly speaking,
that it is faith itself that justifies us” and “before you no living person
shall be justified” were objected to by Arminius and his followers.
Below are the points the followers
of Arminius wanted the Reformed Church to accept:
Article I — That God, by an eternal, unchangeable purpose in Jesus
Christ, his Son, before the foundation of the world, hath determined, out of
the fallen, sinful race of men, to save in Christ, for Christ's sake, and
through Christ, those who, through the grace of the Holy Ghost, shall believe
on this his Son Jesus, and shall persevere in this faith and obedience of
faith, through this grace, even to the end; and, on the other hand, to leave
the incorrigible and unbelieving in sin and under wrath, and to condemn them as
alienate from Christ, according to the word of the Gospel in John iii. 36:
"He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life; and he that believeth
not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him," and
according to other passages of Scripture also.
Article II — That, agreeably thereto, Jesus Christ, the Savior of
the world, died for all men and for every man, so that he has obtained for them
all, by his death on the cross, redemption, and the forgiveness of sins; yet
that no one actually enjoys this forgiveness of sins, except the believer,
according to the word of the Gospel of John iii. 16: "God so loved the
world that he gave his only-begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him
should not perish, but have everlasting life"; and in the First Epistle of
John ii. 2: "And he is the propitiation for our sins; and not for ours
only, but also for the sins of the whole world."
Article III — That man has not saving grace of himself, nor of the
energy of his free will, inasmuch as he, in the state of apostasy and sin, can
of and by himself neither think, will, nor do anything that is truly good (such
as having faith eminently is); but that it is needful that he be born again of
God in Christ, through his Holy Spirit, and renewed in understanding,
inclination, or will, and all his powers, in order that he may rightly
understand, think, will, and effect what is truly good, according to the word
of Christ, John xv. 5: "Without me ye can do nothing."
Article IV — That this grace of God is the beginning, continuance,
and accomplishment of a good, even to this extent, that the regenerate man
himself, without that prevenient or assisting, awakening, following, and
co-operative grace, can neither think, will, nor do good, nor withstand any
temptations to evil; so that all good deeds or movements, that can be
conceived, must be ascribed to the grace of God in Christ. But, as respects the
mode of the operation of this grace, it
is not irresistible, in as much as it is written concerning many that they have resisted the Holy Ghost,—Acts vii, and elsewhere in many
places.
Article V — That those who are incorporated into Christ by a true
faith, and have thereby become partakers
of his life-giving Spirit, have
thereby full power to strive against Satan, sin, the world, and their own
flesh, and to win the victory, it being well understood that it is
ever through the assisting grace of the Holy Ghost; and that Jesus Christ
assists them through his Spirit in all temptations, extends to them his hand,
and if only they are ready for the conflict, and desire his help, and are not
inactive, keeps them from falling, so that they, by no craft or power of Satan,
can be misled, nor plucked out of Christ's hands, according to the word of
Christ, John x. 28: "Neither shall any man pluck them out of my
hand." But whether they are capable, through negligence, of forsaking
again the first beginnings of their life in Christ, of again returning to this
present evil world, of turning away from the holy doctrine which was delivered
them, of losing a good conscience, of becoming devoid of grace, that must be
more particularly determined out of the Holy Scriptures before they can teach
it with the full persuasion of their minds.[xvii]
A Deceptive Technical Truth
The idea that we are not justified
by faith of itself is technically true, but when we are speaking of faith, we
have to have faith in something or someone. This thin edge of a devilish
doctrine has manifested in the doctrines of TULIP to lead people astray so they
do not to have faith in Lord Jesus Christ, but have faith in the belief that grace is extended to all men—only
“all”, according to Calvinists, means, “All who were predestined to be saved
before the foundation of the world.”
In support of faith—even faith in
Jesus Christ—not justifying anyone
before God, an appeal is made to a prayer of King David’s in which he
says. “Lord, do not enter into judgment
with your servants, for before you no living person shall be justified."
Like so much of TULIP support from the Scriptures, this is twisted as it is
lifted from the context of the situation.
For we read:
Hear my prayer,
Yahweh. Listen to my petitions. In your faithfulness and righteousness, relieve
me. Don’t enter into judgment with your servant, for in your sight no man
living is righteous. For the enemy pursues my soul. He has struck my life
down to the ground. He has made me live in dark places, as those who have been
long dead. Therefore my spirit is overwhelmed within me. My heart within me is
desolate. I remember the days of old. I meditate on all your doings. I
contemplate the work of your hands. I spread out my hands to you. My soul
thirsts for you, like a parched land. Selah.
Hurry
to answer me, Yahweh. My spirit fails. Don’t hide your face from me, so that I
don’t become like those who go down into the pit. Cause me to hear your loving
kindness in the morning, for I trust in you. Cause me to know the way in which
I should walk, for I lift up my soul to you. Deliver me, Yahweh, from my
enemies. I flee to you to hide me. Teach me to do your will, for you are my
God. Your Spirit is good. Lead me in the land of uprightness. Revive me,
Yahweh, for your name’s sake. In your righteousness, bring my soul out of
trouble. In your loving kindness, cut off my enemies, and destroy all those who
afflict my soul, For I am your servant. (Psalm 143:1-12)
When we examine the context in which we find
the text of Scripture we are discussing, we see that David is seeking the Lord
in prayer—an act of faith. Now we know the Lord searches our hearts to see
whether we are seeking Him from a pure motive. David also understands the need
to possess a pure heart, as we have already seen in his advice to Solomon (1
Chronicles 28:9). When David speaks of nobody being justified in His sight,
effectively, he is saying that all have sinned and not one of us can justify
ourselves in God’s sight, for there is none righteous, not one, but blessed are
we to whom He does not impute our sin; because we put our faith in Him to
deliver us. This becomes evident as we read the following verses of the Psalm
and see the context of the verse taken out of context.
The Bible is replete with Scripture
that speaks about justification by faith. It is an affront to common sense to
suggest that this is not the case, or that we need not accept that we are
taught to repent and exercise faith towards God (Hebrews 6:1) or that the
Scriptures are able to instruct us for salvation through faith in Lord Jesus
Christ (1 Timothy 3:15). For many these might seem like moot points and a
matter for theologians in ivory towers, alienated from the common person,
arguing about words. But there is no need to argue over Greek nuances of
meaning as some do. The Scriptures are very clear and the seriousness of false
doctrine needs to be addressed, especially that which can cause people to turn
away from seeking and serving Lord Jesus Christ, and living lives of hypocrisy,
because of what they have been taught.
Irresistible grace is supposedly
the agency that the Holy Spirit uses to draw those who were singled out before
the foundations of the world to Jesus. Much is made out of what Jesus said to
his disciples to justify this teaching of irresistible grace. This is the
particular Scripture that it is claimed this false belief of irresistible grace
rests upon:
No one can come
to me unless the Father who sent me draws him, and I will raise him up in the
last day. (John 6:44)
Once more, we will look at the
context of the Scripture to see whether the claim is justified as a proof text,
in this case, for the Doctrine of Irresistible Grace. Here is
context in which Jesus spoke:
Jesus said to
them, “I am the bread of life. He who comes to me will not be hungry, and he
who believes in me will never be thirsty. But I told you that you have seen me,
and yet you don’t believe. All those
whom the Father gives me will come to me. He who comes to me I will in no way
throw out. For I have come down from
heaven, not to do my own will, but the will of him who sent me. This is the will of my Father who sent me,
that of all he has given to me I should lose nothing, but should raise him up
at the last day. This is the will of the
one who sent me, that everyone who sees
the Son, and believes in him, should
have eternal life; and I will raise him up at the last day.”
The
Jews therefore murmured concerning him, because he said, “I am the bread which
came down out of heaven.” They said,
“Isn’t this Jesus, the son of Joseph, whose father and mother we know? How then
does he say, ‘I have come down out of heaven?’”
Therefore
Jesus answered them, “Don’t murmur among yourselves. No one can come to me unless the Father
who sent me draws him, and I will raise him up in the last day. It is written in the prophets, ‘They will all
be taught by God.’ Therefore everyone
who hears from the Father, and
has learned, comes to me. Not
that anyone has seen the Father, except he who is from God. He has seen the
Father. Most certainly, I tell you, he who believes in me has eternal life. (John 6:35-47)
He who has seen the Son and
believes in Him has eternal life, but the added emphasis again is “he who
believes in me has eternal life”. Never does this say, “he who responds to
irresistible grace has eternal life.” There is no mention of irresistible
grace. Choice is what is on offer. The
people saw the Son of God and they rejected Him. Not because they were not
drawn to Him, but because they were not willing to accept Jesus as the Son of
God. The fact that no one can come to
Jesus unless they are drawn to him does not preclude unbelievers or those who
refuse to believe. Nevertheless those who are drawn to Jesus and who do believe
will be raised up in the last day.
From the book of John, we read the
most well-known Scripture regarding the gospel of Jesus Christ that endorses
the need to believe in Jesus, and its context clearly indicates that freewill
is involved not irresistible grace.
For God so loved
the world, that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish, but have eternal life.
For God didn’t send his Son into the world to judge the world, but that the
world should be saved through him. He who believes in him is not judged. He who
doesn’t believe has been judged already, because he has not believed in the
name of the one and only Son of God.
This is the judgment, that the light has come into the world, and men
loved the darkness rather than the light; for their works were evil. For
everyone who does evil hates the light, and doesn’t come to the light, lest
his works would be exposed. But he who does the truth comes to the
light, that his works may be revealed, that they have been done in God.” (John
3:16-21)
There is no denying that Jesus will
lose none of whom the Father has given Him—the number is set (Rom. 11:25)—and He
will in the last day raise them up. As for nobody being able to come to Jesus
except the Father draw Him, and this being irresistible, not only do people who
do evil hate coming to the light, lest their deeds be exposed, but there is the
famous incidence of Sapphira and Ananias, who were obviously drawn to Lord
Jesus Christ, but resisted the call of grace. This is what is recorded in the
book of Acts:
But a certain
man named Ananias, with Sapphira, his wife, sold a possession, and kept back
part of the price, his wife also being aware of it, and brought a certain part,
and laid it at the apostles’ feet. But Peter said, “Ananias, why has Satan filled your heart to lie
to the Holy Spirit, and to keep back part of the price of the land? While you
kept it, didn’t it remain your own? After it was sold, wasn’t it in your power?
How is it that you have conceived this
thing in your heart? You haven’t lied to men, but to God.”
Ananias,
hearing these words, fell down and died. Great fear came on all who heard these
things. The young men arose and wrapped him up, and they carried him out and
buried him. About three hours later, his wife, not knowing what had happened,
came in. Peter answered her, “Tell me whether you sold the land for so much.”
She said, “Yes, for so much.”
But
Peter asked her, “How is it that you
have agreed together to tempt the
Spirit of the Lord? Behold, the feet of those who have buried your
husband are at the door, and they will carry you out.”
She
fell down immediately at his feet, and died. The young men came in and found
her dead, and they carried her out and buried her by her husband. Great fear
came on the whole assembly, and on all who heard these things. By the hands of
the apostles many signs and wonders were done among the people. They were all
with one accord in Solomon’s porch. None of the rest dared to join them, however the people honored them. More believers
were added to the Lord, multitudes of both men and women. (Acts 5:1-14)
As we can see that rather than be
truthful, Ananias and Sapphira decided to lie to the Holy Spirit. According to
Calvinists, this was predetermined before the foundation of the world, so the
loving God of Creation could punish them according to His good pleasure. Ananias
and Sapphira had believed in the Lord Jesus Christ and what the apostles were
teaching, but like Achan (Joshua 7:1-26), they were not fully committed to the
calling. Consequently, we see many more people believe, but are not committed
enough to join the Apostles in a greater sacrifice of themselves unto the Lord,
even though they glorified the name of Jesus Christ.
While it may be argued that all this
was planned before by God and those who were not worthy were not called by
irresistible grace, there is no justification for such an argument from the Scriptures.
Instead, what we see is a calling going out to all the world (Ps 19:1-4) and
people responding (Romans 10:20). Jeremiah says God spoke to him and said that
He has drawn His people to Him through loving kindness (Jeremiah 31:3) and the
prophet Hosea makes a similar claim regarding Israel coming out of Egypt (Hosea
11:4). The Apostle Paul tells us that God’s goodness and loving kindness is
meant to bring all people to repentance both Jew and non-Jew. For we read:
Or do you
despise the riches of his goodness, forbearance, and patience, not knowing that
the goodness of God leads you to
repentance? But according to
your hardness and unrepentant heart you are treasuring up for yourself wrath in
the day of wrath, revelation, and of the righteous judgment of God; who “will pay back to everyone according to
their works:” to those who by patience in well-doing seek for glory, honor, and
incorruptibility, eternal life; but to those who are self-seeking, and don’t
obey the truth, but obey unrighteousness, will be wrath and indignation, oppression and anguish, on every soul of man
who does evil, to the Jew first, and also to the Greek.
But
glory, honor, and peace go to every man who does good, to the Jew first, and
also to the Greek. For there is no
partiality with God. (Romans 2:4-11)
God shows no partiality and if
people resist His Spirit as He calls every human to repentance, then they will
be judged accordingly. There is no
doctrine of irresistible grace justifiable from the Scriptures that state nobody
can resist God’s calling. There is, however, plenty of Scripture in support of
a loving God reaching out to people who are self-seeking rather than being desirous
of the truth and seeking to know their Creator. In fact, in the book of
Hebrews, we also learn of two Scriptures that debunk any claim to not being
able to deliberately resist God’s call and turn away from Him. This is what the
Bible says:
For concerning
those who were once enlightened and tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made
partakers of the Holy Spirit, and tasted the good word of God, and the powers
of the age to come, and then fell away,
it is impossible to renew them again
to repentance; seeing they crucify the Son of God for themselves again,
and put him to open shame. For the land which has drunk the rain that comes
often on it, and produces a crop suitable for them for whose sake it is also
tilled, receives blessing from God; but if it bears thorns and thistles, it is
rejected and near being cursed, whose end is to be burned. (Hebrews 6:4-8)
For if we sin
willfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remains no
more a sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful expectation of judgment, and a
fierceness of fire which will devour the adversaries. (Hebrews 10:26-27)
After a while, it does begin to get
monotonous as we beat the same drum found within the Bible that tells us the
word of God and the grace of God are resistible, and although God desires all
men to be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth, not all do.
Many, unfortunately, turn away after having initially responded, but are not
prepared to continue with a full commitment. Jesus is searching the hearts of
everyone. Those that are capable of bearing fruit, and do, are the ones who are
acceptable to Him. Even as we read about the vine and the branches and learn
that the branches that do not bear fruit are cut off, Jesus is reminding us
that those who resist can lose the salvation that is promised them. Jesus said:
“I am the true
vine, and my Father is the farmer. Every
branch in me that doesn’t bear fruit, he takes away. Every branch that bears
fruit, he prunes, that it may bear more fruit.
You are already pruned clean because of the word which I have spoken to
you. Remain in me, and I in you. As the branch can’t bear fruit by itself,
unless it remains in the vine, so neither can you, unless you remain in
me. I am the vine. You are the branches.
He who remains in me, and I in him, the same bears much fruit, for apart from
me you can do nothing. If a man doesn’t
remain in me, he is thrown out as a branch, and is withered; and they gather
them, throw them into the fire, and they are burned. If you remain in me, and my words remain in
you, you will ask whatever you desire, and it will be done for you. (John
15:1-7)
How similar this is to what we read
in the book of Hebrews, chapter six, about only being fit to be burned if we do
not bear fruit. To bear fruit, we need to continue in the promises of God. This
is only possible if we have truly been chosen by Jesus and set free from sin
(John 8:36). Jesus also said:
The Father loves
the Son, and has given all things into his hand. One who believes in the Son
has eternal life, but one who disobeys the Son won’t see life, but the wrath of
God remains on him. (John 3:35-36)
The evidence is very clear that not
only can we resist God and turn away from seeking the truth, we can be given to
Jesus and yet still disobey. Those who trumpet the false teachings of TULIP are
really doing the work of the Devil, even if they are doing it in ignorance. As
for those who are truly ignorant of these false teachings, for their sakes, let
us hope they wake up from their ignorance and repent. For how can a person
reject Scripture to justify a philosophy of man and then claim that the Bible
is the inerrant, authoritative, Word of God, and not be a hypocrite?
PERSEVERANCE
OF THE SAINTS
For anyone holding to the doctrine
of unconditional election that is based on the belief that we were saved before
the foundation of the world, while those who are condemned have no hope because
they were predestined to everlasting punishment, there is no need for
perseverance. This idea of perseverance is an oxymoron; that is, it is
contradictory because there is nothing to persevere for, if true, eternal life
has already been granted. What is there for those who have already been
predestined as members of the elect to attain? There is nothing to seek or
pursue or attain to, if they already have eternal life; for if the doctrine of
unconditional election is not a false teaching—which it is—they have been saved
by grace alone.
One can only think that the reason
that this doctrine could have been dreamed up is to make it look like people
are actually saved, and because of this, they have a purpose in doing some good
works. Many atheists point out that they are better than most Christians
because they are more noble in intent when it comes to doing good works. Similarly,
many claiming to be Christians who are members of the Reformed movement have a
good works agenda.
In a study of educated people and
their religious propensities, research within the United States has revealed,
somewhat surprisingly for secularists, that educated people are more religious
than thought. What is noticeable is they are attracted to denominations that
espouse the Calvinist view or congregations that are more inclined towards
TULIP. Not all denominations insist that congregations adhere to teachings
other than what are known as the essentials.
The most essential teaching is
Jesus Christ is the preexistent Son of God, through Whom all things came into
existence. In human form, Jesus was born of the Virgin Mary, and having not
sinned, was crucified on the Cross of Calvary, only to rise from the dead three
days later, victorious over sin and death. Since the day of Pentecost the Holy
Spirit has been bestowed upon all who believe and are members of the Body of
Christ, who will be received in glory by the resurrection of the just at the
Second Advent, when Lord Jesus Christ returns to rule the Earth.
Anybody can give lip service to the
above teaching and be declared a believer. Many congregations exist as part of
a denomination or movement that acknowledge the above essential teaching, but
then teach other ideas that are not truly biblical, because they are
propositional assumptions that are purported to be true, as is the case with
the TULIP doctrines.
The idea of unconditional election
appeals to people whose only interest in attending church is for any reason
other than genuinely seeking God. To
quote the report from the research into educated people and their religious
propensities:
“It all falls
down to what you consider to be religious,” said Schwadel, an assistant
professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. “If it’s simply attending
religious services, then no. Highly educated people are not less religious; in
fact, they’re more religious.”[xviii]
In another article discussing why intelligent
people are less likely to be religious, the author concludes that social
environment is the major reason for not attending church. While secular
thinking academics interpret the drift of the more educated away from attending
church as people seeing reason, this is because of their own presuppositions.
Meanwhile, one researcher, looking for other reasons than personal rejection of
religion, has observed a correlation with peer group influence. The view is
expressed that intelligent people reject religion because they are influenced
by their
social environments to consider it
to be wrong.[xix]—So
much for the so-called critical thinking that the intelligent are supposed to
possess.
What appears to be overlooked is when
one does not think for oneself and is influenced by others; this demonstrates a
lack of intelligence. We are encouraged to reason with God (Isaiah 1:18) but
this is overlooked by people who are indoctrinated by the education system and
mistake intelligence for the regurgitation of ideas. Those who think that there
has to be a Creator, but are influenced by secular environments to be socially
aware of their status as professions, are less likely to be found in a
Pentecostal “holy roller” congregation. Therefore rather than seek God, being part
of a denomination that holds to a philosophy consisting of supposed theological
propositional truths, rather than atheistic reasons for existence, has
appeal—especially the idea of being saved by grace. Hence, many of the
participants who sit in on religious services are comfortable with the TULIP
worldview. This is because perseverance is not really about struggling to be
anointed or appointed by Jesus Christ to become a fruit-bearer for the Kingdom
of God. Perseverance from a Calvinist perspective is about infallible grace,
eternal security, the impossibility of losing salvation (for once we are saved
we are always saved), and demonstrating to the those who do not belong to the club
how much superior they are as people.
Those who adhere to this belief
believe that they possess the guarantee of their inheritance because they have
been sprinkled with water, or baptized, or take communion or have become a
church member. They believe that because God knows them by name—especially if
they are a church member—no one can cause them to lose their eternal security
and have their name removed from the book of life. Even though this implies
that regardless of what people do, they cannot lose their salvation, they will
be told they must be faithful to the end; this is because church attendance is
important. Hypocrisy, of course, abounds even more—sounds very much like
Judaism at the time of Jesus.
The number of people who have
rejected attending church because of religious hypocrisy is high. (I was one of
those people myself, but I would not judge people now, even if comments in this
book are barbed and challenging, as I have since found Jesus Christ in person
and He alone is the judge.) In addition, the idea that we can sin and it does
not really matter is implicit in the teachings of unconditional salvation and
forms part of this teaching of the perseverance of the saints. However, such an
explicit declaration would be contrary to the gospel, so a charade is
maintained and adherents are encouraged to refrain from loose living and
worldliness.
For those who do take the idea of
being faithful to the end seriously, self-righteousness often becomes a problem
as they perform their good works. Good works and concepts that are false lead
people to being self-righteous, or, more to the point, the self-righteous are
attracted to good works and propositional truths masquerading as the real deal.
Sincere people who like to please
their fellows are always susceptible to deception. The more schooled people are
in conceptualizing intellectual ideas, the easier they are to deceive when it
comes to theoretical matters that sound plausible. Hence, a girl might be
looking for some meaning in life and when presented with the idea of God being
true rather than not true, because of environmental influences, she attends a
TULIP church, which may be Baptist but definitely Reformed and most likely one
of the mainline protestant or evangelical churches, other than those influenced
by Wesley. Instead of continuing to seek Jesus, the person is told that because
she has confessed her belief in Him, she is saved (chosen before the foundation
of the world, just like John Piper advocates). From that time on, she will
become encouraged to read the Bible and understand the propositional truths
about God being a judge who is angry at sin and the unrighteous, which forms
part of the doctrine of total depravity. The person will also learn that she is
saved by God’s grace because she is part of the elect, and as such, she was
predestined to be chosen before the foundation of the world. She will be told
God hates people like Esau before they are born, but not those who have
responded to His irresistible grace. This person will feel so privileged to
have been chosen before the foundation of the world to be part of the elect;
the fact that Jesus only died for her sins is all that really matters. The doctrine
of limited atonement is usually not questioned, as like the doctrine of
unconditional election, this is not mentioned much from the pulpit. The wrath
of God on the sinner, the irresistible grace of God and the need to persevere
to the end are more likely mentioned; with total depravity and perseverance thumped
the most. The person ends up believing that she is saved and it does not matter
whether she tells other people, since God knows who is going to be saved, and
she can continue to persevere in her Westernized, Educated, Industrialized,
Rich and Democratized (WEIRD) way.
Cognitive dissonance is often the
result of the TULIP doctrines. A woman might become a member of a congregation
that adheres to these teachings; only to find that she is serving an angry God
who hates sin and expects her to do better. The result is conceptually she has
high ideals, but in practice, she is always failing. Eventually, she becomes
depressed and, spends much of the rest of her life visiting the doctors for
medication to help her depression. However, having been indoctrinated that God
is the Creator, and strong in her views, she will defend them and proclaim that
things like the Bible is the Living Word of God, and if the word, “blood” were
taken out of the Bible it loses its efficacy to bring people to the knowledge
of salvation and improve their lot in life. She is told reading the Bible is
essential if she is to have a relationship with God and possess the knowledge
and truth about salvation. Only because she is a sinner, her thoughts and ways
can never be God’s ways, all she can do is persevere in her struggle against
sin, even though she has been chosen in Jesus before the foundation of the
world. She knows this, because Jesus told His disciples, the Twelve, that He
had chosen them and one of them was a devil (John 6:70). Subconsciously, she
sometimes wonders if the Devil is herself. She is chosen, yet she sees herself
unworthy of God and He does not answer her prayers. She prays for many situations in the world,
and ironically, she is encouraged to be pray for the lost; but her prayers seem
in vain. Still God’s infallible grace covers her, but most of the time the
struggle seems futile, for her depression reigns.
Many of the preachers in churches
that do major on the doctrines of depravity and perseverance find there is
sufficient to preach about because the world is depraved and sin is easily
spotted, but persevere the church attendee must. Every week many go to hear
what they call the Word of God; a homily about the evils of the world, and the
good grace of God towards each one of them, the saints. Also they are told how
they are eternally secure in the arms of Jesus, chosen and precious—which is a
marvelous position to be in, if true and each person possesses the joy of
salvation.
There will be exhortations about
how they ought to attend church regularly, perform tasks, and assume
responsibilities within the congregation, if they are to honor their commitment
to the word of God. Yet there is a lack of warmth among the people and there is
often a sterile atmosphere within the church; although, these days, efforts to
greet and meet are encouraged more often with some congregations having the
sign of the peace where they shake hands with the person next to them. Still
people find that no matter what they do, they believe they are in a battle
between striving against sin and looking good in front of other people.
The irony of the doctrines of TULIP
is those who espouse them believe in working out their own salvation. Like
every false teaching, there has to be the appearance of truth, but the emphasis
is always on the Scriptures that discourage true realization of each one’s
personal obligation to diligently be seeking God’s rest—so we can rest from our
labors, as the Creator of the Universe did from His (Hebrews 4:11).
The tragedy about these doctrines
is many of those who believe in these heresies think that being totally
depraved as sinners means they have to work out their own salvation with fear
and trembling; only they cannot do this until their will is set free from
bondage. Unfortunately, they are unable to do this because their hearts are deceitful.
However, since they were chosen before the world by the unconditional election
of God’s grace, and their sins have been covered by the blood of Jesus, which
was predetermined to redeem the fall of Adam that God preordained (even though
it was really freewill), the irresistible grace of God enables them to be born
again into His Kingdom. Some believe that once born again, they can exercise their
freewill to work out their own salvation, having been set free from the bondage
of total depravity. But then they claim since they are sinners and cannot
change their wicked ways, they have to persevere, for God is at work in them
for His good pleasure. With fear and trembling, they will proclaim their belief
in God, even though they know they will not change until they are resurrected
from the dead.
The idea of the perseverance of the
saints is a dangerous doctrine when presented within the context of the TULIP
worldview, because it sets up people for failure. Instead of learning about
faith—that is, how to grow in faith and have prayers answered—perseverance is
about toughing it out, maybe God will answer prayers, maybe He will not, or
maybe He is saying wait. (Atheist researchers using TULIP adherents and Roman
Catholics enjoy pointing out how ineffective those who pray are found to be in
studies designed to assess the efficacy of prayer.) Whereas those who are
walking in faith, know where they stand with God and seek him out until they
have the confidence that their prayers have been answered. Perseverance of
faith is not the same as perseverance under grace. True humility comes as we
grow in faith, not on account of us needing more grace, because this suggests
defeat and not victory. To quote the Apostle Paul:
What shall we
say then? Shall we continue in sin, that
grace may abound? May it never be!
We who died to sin, how could we live in it any longer? Or don’t you know that
all we who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We
were buried therefore with him through baptism to death, that just as Christ
was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, so we also might walk
in newness of life. (Romans 6:1-4)
We are called to be
victorious in our proclamation of emancipation; for according to the gospel of
Lord Jesus Christ, the captive is set free. We are not called to bemoan that we
are wicked sinners undeserving of the favor of God, because our ways and
thoughts are not His ways and thoughts. Without faith in Jesus, what we do is
in vain. This faith only comes when we are baptized in the Holy Spirit and have
the joy of salvation as the guarantee of our eternal security. This is not an
intellectual concept. This is an experience of the reality of life in Christ
Jesus; something which cannot be discovered if we are relying on God’s grace
and not exercising faith. We are not saved by grace alone. We are saved
by grace through faith in Jesus Christ and not of works, least any man should
boast (Ephesians 2:8-9).
[1] Peter Hall, The
Harmony of Protestant Confessions (London: John F. Shaw, 1844), 539–73. This
translation is in the public domain. The titles of the articles, not part of
the original, are added from the edition of the Canadian and American Reformed
Churches, see “The Canons of Dort,” pages 1–26. http://www.esvbible.org/resources/creeds-and-catechisms/article-the-canons-of-the-synod-of-dort-1619/--retrieved
—retrieved Dec. 1 2014.
[2] Mounce, Robert H..,
William D..The Mounce Reverse-Interlinear™ New Testament Copyright © 2011. Used by permission. All
rights reserved.
[3] Article 1 Third and
Fourth Main Points of Doctrine - Of the Corruption of Man, His Conversion to
God, and the Way It Occurs.
[4] psēlapháō comes from a root meaning,
"to rub, wipe"; hence, to feel on the surface HELPS Word Studies
copyricht 2011. Used with permission.
[5] Article 2 Third and
Fourth Main Points of Doctrine - Of the Corruption of Man, His Conversion to
God, and the Way It Occurs.
[6]
http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/oldest-person/
[7] John Piper
Topics: The Doctrines of Grace /
Calvinism— July 9, 2013 Five Reasons to Embrace Unconditional Election
http://www.desiringgod.org/blog/posts/five-reasons-to-embrace-unconditional-election
—retrieved Dec. 2 2014.
[8] ibid
[9] New King James
Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights
reserved.
[10] John Piper, ibid.
[11] ibid
[12] ibid
[13] ibid
[14] ibid
[15] ibid
[xvi] The Belgic
Confession Reformed .Org. http://www.reformed.org/documents/index.html?mainframe=http://www.reformed.org/documents/BelgicConfession.html —retrieved Dec. 3 2014.
[xvii] Five articles of
Remonstrance. http://www.theopedia.com/Five_articles_of_Remonstrance—retrieved
Dec. 3 2014.
[xviii] Study: More
educated tend to be more religious, by some measures
By Jim Kavanagh,
CNN
http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2011/08/11/study-more-educated-tend-to-be-more-religious-by-some-measures/ —retrieved Dec. 3 2014.
[xix] Monge. Jordan. Why
Intelligent People Are Less Likely To Be Religious. Christianity Today http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2013/august-web-only/brains-and-belief-arent-mutually-exclusive.html —retrieved Dec. 3 2014.