More Evidence: Common Grace Undermines Particular Atonement

More Evidence: Common Grace Undermines Particular Atonement

We often hear from proponents of the neo-Calvinists that Christ died “particularly” and “specifically” for the elect but there is a “sense” in which Christ died for the reprobate as well. Christ purchased for them an non-salvific or non-saving favor that allows for good in society and for general and natural revelation in the arts, sciences, and civic realm of the worldly kingdom. This could be understood as an endorsement of the Roman Catholic concept of “christendom”. That is, the emphasis becomes this world only and the success of the church militant is measured on a this worldly and secular measurement of the effects of the church on the surrounding society in sociological terms.

The effects of the teaching of Abraham Kuyper and Herman Bavinck even extends to the Old School Princeton theologians. Charles Hodge, for example, went against his Presbyterian denomination when the denomination ruled that Roman Catholic baptism was invalid because it was improperly administered. (See, baptism). In other words, the Roman Catholic Church teaches wrong doctrine during the administration of the sacrament of baptism, including the magical ex opere operato view, baptismal regeneration, and sacerdotalism. It is the priest who mediates between God and man in this system. The Protestant Reformers stood firmly against the Papist view of baptism and the Lord’s supper and said that a true church is one which rightly preaches the law and the gospel and one which duly, rightly, and correctly administers the sacraments. They also soundly rejected the other five so-called “sacraments” as not sacraments at all. Obviously, the reason the Reformers insisted on this is that they viewed the RCC administration of sacraments as an improper one. Hodge’s view would later become the official doctrine of the Presbyterian Church USA and this ecumenical emphasis led to the relativizing of Scriptural dogma and the Protestant theology of the sacraments. It is not illegitimate then to connect Hodge’s error in the ecumenical direction to his bias toward a divine favor toward all men.

That Hodge was influenced by Kuyper is beyond dispute, particularly since they lived in the same contemporary time frame. Looking at the timeline, however, it could be that Hodge influenced Kuyper’s theology of common grace. At any rate by 1898 the neo-Calvinist view was taking hold in the United States. A good indication of this is the Stone Lectures of 1898 at Princeton Seminary. Although this is well after the death of Charles Hodge it is an indication of a relationship with the neo-Calvinist school of thought at Princeton well before the lectures delivered by Kuyper in 1898.

Another area where Hodge and modern neo-Calvinists compromise is the atonement. They will acknowledge that Christ died specifically for the elect but they wobble at this point because of their bias and presuppositional assumption that God favors mankind in general. Charles Hodge again exemplifies this line of thinking:

The whole question, therefore, concerns simply the purpose of God in the mission of his Son. What was the design of Christ’s coming into the world, and doing and suffering all He actually did and suffered? Was it merely to make the salvation of all men possible; to remove the obstacles which stood in the way of the offer of pardon and acceptance to sinners? or, Was it specially to render certain the salvation of his own people, i. e., of those given to Him by the Father? The latter question is affirmed by Augustinians, and denied by their opponents. It is obvious that if there be no election of some to everlasting life, the atonement can have no special reference to the elect. It must have equal reference to all mankind. But it does not follow from the assertion of its having a special reference to the elect that it had no reference to the non-elect. Augustinians readily admit that the death of Christ had a relation to man, to the whole human family, which it had not to the fallen angels. It is the ground on which salvation is offered to every creature under heaven who hears the gospel; but it gives no authority for a like offer to apostate angels. It moreover secures to the whole race at large, and to all classes of men, innumerable blessings, both providential and religious. It was, of course, designed to produce these effects; and, therefore, He died to secure them. In view of the effects which the death of Christ produces in the relation of all mankind to God, it has in all ages been customary with Augustinians to say that Christ died “sufficienter pro omnibus, efficaciter tantum pro electis;” sufficiently for all, efficaciously only for the elect. There is a sense, therefore, in which He died for all, and there is a sense in which He died for the elect alone.

From: Charles Hodge. Systematic Theology: Part 3. Soteriology: Chapter VIII. For Whom Did Christ Die? 1. The State of the Question.

It is precisely this sort of ambiguity and compromise which leads to placing reason above God’s Word as the final authority. If common grace is true, then general revelation in “some sense” is equal to special revelation and from that point on theology is set up for a fall. The moment we concede that natural revelation trumps special revelation then liberalism is not far around the corner. We can see this in all sorts of ways when sociological and psychological studies lord it over theological studies in dogmatics. If the philosophy of religion and the sociology and psychology of religion reign, we end up with a theology from below, a man-centered or anthropological centered theology. If this world is all there is then the logical conclusion is that we ought to focus exclusively on social justice issues since the only judgment we will face is the consensus of society at large and a natural law by utilitarian ethics.

We can see that Hodge’s influence in fact contributed to the undermining of the doctrine of a particular and efficacious atonement and the idea that Christ redeemed everyone “hypothetically”. That view is exemplified by D. Broughton Knox:

Thus from the point of view of the preacher, Christ has died for all his audience. All may accept the proffered salvation which Christ has provided. The preacher is not concerned with the intended application off the atonement, which at the time of the preaching still lies hidden in the counsel of God. Thus, from the point of view of the preacher presenting the gospel (which is the same as our point of view), all have an equal interest in the death of Christ. Were it not so, and not true that Christ had died for all men, it would not be possible to extend a universal offer; for the offer, it it is to be a true offer, must rest on true an adequate grounds, which cannot be less than the death of Christ for those to whom the offer is being made. Thus if the gospel is offered genuinely to all, it can only be offered because Christ died for all, and if for all, then the preacher is at liberty, and indeed obliged, to press home the offer, and to say to each sinner individually, “Christ died for you.”

D. Broughton Knox: Selected Works. Volume I: The Doctrine of God. Tony Payne, ed. “The Christian Worldview: Some Aspects of the Atonement.” (Kingsford: Matthias Media, 2000), p. 261.

This is one huge non sequitur. First of all, this is the Arminian version of preaching Law and Gospel. Rather than showing our guilt under the Law, the Arminian takes the divine favor perspective. God has provided a “prevenient” grace beforehand to all mankind and God favors all mankind. The only obstacle to conversion therefore is man’s will. It’s up to the individual to accept or reject Christ as Savior to be lost. So the approach to preaching is not Law and Gospel—that is preaching for the conviction of the sinner as guilty of both original sin/totally corrupt from birth—but that everyone is in some status of “favor” and the implication is that it would be unjust of God to condemn them without “offering” them salvation. The Amyraldian would claim that he believes in particular election but that election only occurs after the decree to redemption in the logical order of God’s decrees. He claims to disagree with the Arminian but for all practical purposes his view is the same as the Arminian view. His view is that God redeems those whom He does not intend to save and we have the irony of Christ dying on the cross for those God never intends to save. Thus, the Amyraldian view, like Arminianism, is illogical and is an unbiblical theology of atonement. The Amyraldian, like the Arminian, has Jesus dying on the cross for those already in hell since election and reprobation have been set before creation even in the Amyraldian view.

It does not follow that we are to beg sinners to be saved or even to persuade them to be saved on the basis of some illegitimate “offer” or “favor”. The fact is no one has favor with God and we are all under the wrath of God apart from saving faith. I have no need to tell anyone “Christ died for you” unless that person is a believer! It is more correct to say, “Christ died for the sins of the whole world.” (1 John 2:2; Revelation 5:9). That’s what the Articles of Religion say and nowhere in the Thirty-nine Articles of Religion or in the 1559 or 1662 Book of Common Prayer will you find anything that says, “Christ died for every single individual who has ever lived.” Even more to the point, Scripture is the final authority and nowhere does the Bible teach unlimited atonement nor should any Anglican be obligated to believe it. But since the Bible does teach particular atonement, Anglicans ought to believe that doctrine. (John 10:11, 15; Matthew 1:21; Ezekiel 34:11-13; Revelation 5:9). We are commanded to “preach” repentance (Law) and Gospel (Promise), not to beg the elect or the reprobate to be saved. The Law of God commands everyone to repent. It does not give anyone the ability to obey. The grace of God alone can and does enable the elect alone to respond to the command to repent and believe the Gospel. (John 6:44, 65). The Gospel is the instrument God uses to present God’s covenant promises to His people. (2 Corinthians 1:20; Acts 2:39).

Moreover, presupposing that God favors all mankind rather than that all mankind is the object of God’s wrath leads to other errors. (Ephesians 2:3; John 3:36; Romans 5:9). Broughton Knox shows us that he does not have an adequate view of either the Synod of Dort or Calvin’s commentaries on the New Testament by his comments here:

All men receive benefits from Christ’s death. This is agreed. It should be further agreed that one of these benefits is savableness—which no fallen angel has received. Thus it is true to say that Christ is a ransom for all, without limiting the word ‘all’, nor limiting the word ‘ransom’ to that which is less than complete salvation.

Knox, p. 262.

This statement makes it clear that Knox does not understand election and reprobation or that salvation is not based on our decision but on God’s decision. His theology is from below. Furthermore, if we take Knox at his word then the result should be universal salvation since Christ has accomplished “complete salvation” for everyone by His active and passive obedience and His finished work on the cross. So all those reprobates from the time of Adam up until the cross and even those in hell at this moment have “complete salvation”. At least that’s the logical implication of Knox’s statement. A salvation that does not effectually save is no salvation at all!

Knox goes on to say:

In the phrase “Christ died for the elect”, the word ‘for’ is ambiguous. If it implies intention, it is true. Thus Scripture affirms that Christ came to save his people from their sins. But if it applies to the extent of his atonement, it is not true; so that, with the Church of England Catechism, we are right to in affirming that “Christ redeemed me, and all of mankind”; and with the Synod of Dort that he efficaciously redeemed only the elect. It is regrettable that the Westminster Confession has gone beyond this scriptural position of the Synod of Dort, to confine the redemption of Christ exclusively to the elect. “Neither are any other redeemed by Christ . . . but the elect only” (3.6).

To deny, as “limited atonement” does, the propriety of laying on the conscience of the unconverted their duties to repent and believe the gospel, by telling them “Christ died for you”, is improperly restrictive of the scope of the atonement, as seen from the point of view of preacher and hearer.

Knox, pp. 262-63.

As we can see, Hodge’s theology that, “There is a sense, therefore, in which He died for all, and there is a sense in which He died for the elect alone,” in fact leads to further confusion and compromise. The decrees of God are submitted to a theology from a human perspective and an emphasis that must submit God’s justice to the sinful rebellion of sinners and their perspective. This approach is like trying to persuade a child to do the right thing from his own perspective. If you tell a child who is too young to understand not to play in the street because a car might run him down, the child will in his natural rebellion continue to play in the street. Persuasion does not work. The child will feel you are being unjust in forbidding him to play in the street. The facts do not change, however. It is both just and right to command the child not to play in the street rather than caving in to the child’s own perverted sense of what is just or unjust.

The fact is, however, Knox has the Canons of Dort wrong and the Catechism wrong. The Catechism is to be interpreted in light of Scripture and not the other way around. The Canons of Dort in no way whatsoever endorse the hypothetical view of Amyraut. That would be an anachronistic argument since Amyraut’s purpose was to try to reconcile the Arminian view of the atonement with the Reformed view expressed by Calvin in his commentary on 1 John 2:2. In fact, Calvin flatly denies that the sufficient/efficient theory applies at all to “this verse” and 1 John 2:2 is one of the key proof texts used by Arminians and Amyraldians to support a general atonement that redeems no one in particular. Well, the Amyraldians try to have it both ways but it does not make logical sense.

Calvin says:

2. And not for ours only. He added this for the sake of amplifying, in order that the faithful might be assured that the expiation made by Christ, extends to all who by faith embrace the gospel.

Here a question may be raised, how have the sins of the whole world been expiated? I pass by the dotages of the fanatics, who under this pretense extend salvation to all the reprobate, and therefore to Satan himself. Such a monstrous thing deserves no refutation. They who seek to avoid this absurdity, have said that Christ suffered sufficiently for the whole world, but efficiently only for the elect. This solution has commonly prevailed in the schools. Though then I allow that what has been said is true, yet I deny that it is suitable to this passage; for the design of John was no other than to make this benefit common to the whole Church. Then under the word all or whole, he does not include the reprobate, but designates those who should believe as well as those who were then scattered through various parts of the world. For then is really made evident, as it is meet, the grace of Christ, when it is declared to be the only true salvation of the world.

Calvin’s Commentary on 1 John 2:2

When Calvin says that the writer of 1 John “designates those who should believe” he is not referring to contingency but to a future certainty that the elect will be brought to believe. It is difficult to see how any hypothetical “savableness” applies here when Calvin flatly rejects that the atonement is for the reprobate in any sense at all. In fact, it directly contradicts Knox’s idea that Christ did not die for fallen angels but did die for the reprobate. It is a non sequitur. Calvin says that if Christ did not die for Satan then He most certainly did not die for the reprobate either.

If we interpret the 1662 Catechism in light of Scripture and the Reformed view upon which it is based, it does not follow that the Catechism teaches the Amyraldian view as Knox would have it. Rather it simply means that Christ died for the sins of the elect all over the world: the sins of the whole world does not extend attributively to all individuals but distributively to the elect only, a specific set of individuals all over the world. This is particularly clear since 1 John is addressed to believers, not everyone without exception. (1 John 1:1-3).

Since salvation is not evident unless there is a clear and credible profession of faith, it follows that the atonement is not applied to those who are unbelievers. That is true of all three positions: Arminian, Amyraldian, and Calvinist/Reformed. But only the Calvinist is consistent with God’s revealed will in Scripture that both the sovereignty of God in election/reprobation and in the order of His decrees stand as God intended. The Calvinist accepts both the complete accountability of man for his rebellion and the absolute sovereignty of God in salvation. The two positions are compatible and are true simply because Scripture teaches both. Only the Calvinist can say to sinners, “All of us deserve hell, including the Christian. All of us deserve God’s justice in hell.” Therefore, we do not need to tell them that Christ died “for you”. That does not seem to persuade very many of the reprobates. In fact, it persuades none of them! I could tell someone that “Christ died for you” from here until the day they drop dead but the fact remains that such promises mean nothing to a dead man. If in fact God is the One who raises the dead sinner from spiritual death and regenerates him and gives him the grace to believe, it follows that God provided the atonement only for those He intended to save. Seen from God’s perspective, there is no atonement for the reprobate person and God never intended to save them in the first place. Did Jesus die on the cross for Judas Iscariot or Pharoah or Esau? May it never be said! The Scriptures never make such a statement and in fact teach the opposite:

So the honor is for you who believe, but for those who do not believe, “The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone,” 8 and “A stone of stumbling, and a rock of offense.” They stumble because they disobey the word, as they were destined to do. (1 Peter 2:7-8 ESV)

“Brothers, the Scripture had to be fulfilled, which the Holy Spirit spoke beforehand by the mouth of David concerning Judas, who became a guide to those who arrested Jesus. 17 For he was numbered among us and was allotted his share in this ministry.” (Acts 1:16-17 ESV)

(Now this man acquired a field with the reward of his wickedness, and falling headlong he burst open in the middle and all his bowels gushed out. (Acts 1:18 ESV) (See also: Romans 9:11-18).

There never was a possibility, not even a “hypothetical” possibility, in the mind of God as to what would happen. (Acts 2:23; Deuteronomy 29:29).

Now to him who is able to strengthen you according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery that was kept secret for long ages 26 but has now been disclosed and through the prophetic writings has been made known to all nations, according to the command of the eternal God, to bring about the obedience of faith– 27 to the only wise God be glory forevermore through Jesus Christ! Amen. (Romans 16:25-27 ESV)

God himself brings about election, regeneration, effectually calling, repentance, faith, justification, conversion, sanctification (both positional and progressive), and glorification. Salvation is all of God from beginning to end and we get none of the credit, not even that we accepted a hypothetical atonement for everyone in general and no one in particular. To say that Christ died for all and that Christ died only for the elect is irrational, illogical and inherently self contradictory to the propositional truth statements recorded in Holy Scripture. The compromises of Hodge and Kuyper and the neo-Calvinists is in fact undermining the Law of God and the Gospel of Jesus Christ. I cannot tell anyone that Christ died for them. But I can tell them that Jesus died for those who will believe. I can tell them that salvation is guaranteed and accomplished on the behalf of those who will believe. And I can tell them that if they do believe it is because God gave them that gift to believe unconditionally and without any foreseen goodness or deserving on their part. Unconditional election implies exactly that: Salvation itself is completely undeserved and a gift of God. (Ephesians 2:8-9; Romans 4:4-5).

May God grant unbelievers the grace to believe and may He give them the gift of the new birth.

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THREE MIGHTY QUOTES

  • "Those whom God effectually calls, He also freely justifies; not by infusing righteousness into them, but by pardoning their sins, and by accounting and accepting their persons as righteous; not for any thing wrought in them, or done by them, but for Christ’s sake alone; nor by imputing faith itself, the act of believing, or any other evangelical obedience to them, as their righteousness; but by imputing the obedience and satisfaction of Christ unto them, they receiving and resting on Him and His righteousness by faith; which faith they have not of themselves, it is the gift of God… God does continue to forgive the sins of those that are justified; and although they can never fall from the state of justification, yet they may, by their sins, fall under God’s fatherly displeasure, and not have the light of His countenance restored unto them, until they humble themselves, confess their sins, beg pardon, and renew their faith and repentance. The justification of believers under the Old Testament was, in all these respects, one and the same with the justification of believers under the New Testament." – The Westminster Confession of Faith, Of Justification, Chapter 11:1,5,6, Original Edition, 1647.
  • "This one and firm rock, which we call the doctrine of justification is the chief article of the whole Christian doctrine, which comprehends the understanding of all godliness… if this article stands, the Church stands; if it falls, the Church falls." – Martin Luther, Commentary on Galatians, 1538.
  • "We explain justification simply as the acceptance with which God receives us into His favour as righteous men. And we say that it consists in the remission of sins and the imputation of Christ’s righteousness." – John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, 3:11:2.

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Does God Really Desire to Save the Reprobate? By Rev. Angus Stewart

Does God Really Desire to Save the Reprobate?
By Rev. Angus Stewart

Pastor at Covenant Protestant Reformed Church (CPRC),
Ballymena, Northern Ireland

This article appeared in the British Reformed Journal – Issue 45 (Summer 2006)

Our subject in this article is God: God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth; the Triune God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. The question we are asking concerning the true God is this: Does God desire to save the reprobate? Does God really desire to save the reprobate?1

This is not, however, the way in which the issue is usually expressed. It is commonly stated along these lines: “God loves everybody and God desires to save everybody,” or “Sinner, God wants to save you,” or “God has a wonderful plan for your life.” This is declared promiscuously to everyone under the sound of the preacher’s voice.

How is the believer to analyse these statements? Obviously, he must think as a Christian in the light of the Word of God and the doctrines of the Word of God. He must bring to bear on these issues, of course, the truth of God’s glorious attributes and His eternal, unconditional decree of election and reprobation. These doctrines are stated in all the Reformed confessions along with such doctrines as the Trinity, the Person and natures of Jesus Christ, creation, and all the rest. Election, briefly stated, is God’s eternal, unconditional choice of some fallen sinners unto eternal life in Jesus Christ. Reprobation is God’s eternal rejection of others. God chose not to save them but to punish them in the way of their sins. This too is an unconditional choice of God before He formed the world.

This is Reformed teaching. This is the teaching of the Westminster Confession of Faith and the confessions which are derived from it: the Savoy Declaration of the Congregationalists (1658) and the Baptist Confession (1689). This is the teaching of the Canons of Dordt (1618-1619) and other Reformed creeds.

This is also biblical teaching. In Matthew 11:25, Jesus Christ says, “I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes.” Jesus had taught and wrought miracles in Galilee, so the people there had heard the truth of the gospel (vv. 20-24). Some spiritually understood and received it; others did not. The reason why some spiritually understood and received it while others did not is that God “revealed” it to some and “hid” it from others (v. 25). God’s hiding these things from the wise and the prudent takes place in time, in accordance with His decree of reprobation. God’s revealing the truth of salvation unto babes also takes place in time, in the illumination of the saints, according to God’s decree of election.

Jesus continues, “Even so, Father: for so it seemed good in thy sight” (v. 26). It was pleasing and good to God that some people would have the gospel hidden from them, even though they heard it preached, and that other people would have it revealed to them not only outwardly but also inwardly. When Jesus says, “it seemed good in thy sight,” we must understand that it was good in the sight of the eternal and unchangeable God. It is good in His sight on the day on which the illuminating of some and the blinding or hardening of others took place. It is also good in God’s sight before the foundation of the world, because God is timeless. Before the world, God eternally is; there is no time in the eternal God.

So then, does God love everybody, including the reprobate, those whom He has chosen not to save? Does God desire to save everybody? Does God have a wonderful plan for everybody’s life?

God does love all His elect people, the spiritual Israel of God. “Jacob have I loved,” God declares (Rom. 9:13). God does desire to save the elect and God shows that He desires to save the elect by sending Jesus Christ to die for them and by giving them faith and repentance that they might fellowship with and glorify Him. Moreover, God does have a wonderful plan for the lives of all of His elect people, for “all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose” (Rom. 8:28). This wonderful plan which God has for the believer’s life includes things which he would not have chosen for himself. But in God’s infinite wisdom, in His grace and providence, all things do work together for the believer’s spiritual and eternal good.

If these questions, though, are applied to the reprobate, the answer to them is “No.” God does not love them. “Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated” (Rom. 9:13). Esau, here, is an individual. But it is not as if God loved all the reprobate people in the world but hated just this one individual person. That is not the idea. All who are reprobated, God hates. God does not desire to save them. As Jesus said in Matthew 11, “I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things from the wise and the prudent … Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight” (vv. 25-26). This is good in God’s eyes. This is God’s desire, His purpose and will in this world. The whole Scripture teaches (and this is taught too especially in the Westminster Larger Catechism, Q. & A. 27-29), that those who are outside of Jesus Christ and are not chosen are cursed. They are cursed in their unbelief and rebellion both in this world and in the world to come. They perish forever and ever in hell. This is not a wonderful plan for them. In God’s purpose it brings glory to Him. It magnifies His justice. But for them it is not a wonderful plan. It is only mockery to proclaim to everybody promiscuously, including people who are professed unbelievers, that God has a wonderful plan for their lives. God did not have a wonderful plan for Esau (Rom. 9:10-13). He did not have a wonderful plan for Pharaoh (Rom. 9:17-18). He does not have a wonderful plan for the reprobate.

But we are not going to talk about God’s love as such or whom He loves. In this article we are answering the question: Does God desire to save everybody? or, more specifically, Does God really desire to save the reprobate?

The majority of people who take the name Christian believe that God desires to save everybody. Obviously, Arminians believe this for Arminians deny biblical election and reprobation. The Arminian teaches that salvation or non-salvation depends ultimately on the alleged free will of the sinner. This is the case with contemporary Arminians in the world today, and this was the case with the Arminians at the Synod of Dordt (1618- 1619). At the Synod of Dordt, the Arminians clearly stated the position called the free offer—that God desires to save everybody. But the Synod of Dordt did not take that position.

The Pelagians and Semi-Pelagians in the early church taught that God desires to save everybody. The Roman Catholic Church also insists that God desires and wishes to save everybody. Arminians and Romanists believe the same thing on these points. However, many who claim to be Calvinists also believe that God desires to save everybody, and therefore at this point their teaching is the same as the Arminians and the Roman Catholics. They teach that God desires to save the reprobate, although that is not the way they will frame it. That lets the cat out of the bag, because it is like saying that God desires to save those whom He has chosen not to save, or God desires to save those whom He does not desire to save because they are reprobate.

Those who do not hold this view that God desires to save the reprobate, commonly called the free offer or the well-meant offer, are told that they cannot truly preach the gospel. If this were true, this is a very serious, even damning, indictment. Then the epithet “hyper-Calvinist” is used. These professed Calvinists, who maintain that there is a desire or wish or will in the very being of God to save the reprobate, teach that this is sincere, for God earnestly wants to save them. They make it clear that this is not just an apparent desire. This is a real desire. In fact, this is an ardent desire. God patiently, longingly wants to save absolutely everybody. This is the teaching even of Professor John Murray. In many things he is a fine teacher, but he is sadly astray at this point. He states that God wants to save everybody, and then adds the adjectives: ardently, sincerely, passionately.2 If God wants to do something, and God is the one who tells us, “Whatsoever thy hand findest to do, do it with all thy might” (Ecc. 9:10), then God must be ardent about it. There are no half-hearted measures with God.

I will give you an analogy. Let us picture a man who says, “I want to go to church on Sunday. I really want to go.” Then comes Sunday morning, and the alarm goes. He knocks it off and rolls over. He does not get up and pray and prepare his heart for public worship. He does not dress as he would for going to church. He does not hop in the car. He stays at home. Now, he said that he really wanted to go to church. But he did not do anything that indicated that he really wanted to go to church. Did he really want to go to church? At best, it was but a half-hearted desire or notion, for he did not go.

Or take another instance, a man says, “I really want to go to church on the Lord’s Day.” He does get up, he eats his breakfast, he gets dressed but then he goes to watch a rugby match. Did that man really want to go to church? You know what he really wanted to do? He really wanted to go to the rugby match and that is why he went there. Because it is not what a man says but it is what he does that indicates most his desires.

Now we are told that God really, sincerely, ardently wants to save everybody including the reprobate. The whole doctrine of salvation includes many different elements. So we ask the question, Does God take any of the steps? There are certain requisite measures, things that have to be done if man is to be saved. Does God do all of these things, or many of these things, or some of these things or any of these things? Because although salvation is one, it consists of many distinct elements, as we shall see.

Election

I ask you, What is the very beginning or origin of salvation? The very beginning of salvation, as the Bible teaches us, is God’s eternal decree: some are elected and some are reprobated. We are told that God really wants to save everybody. But does God elect everybody to be saved? “No.” Does God then leave the future of the non-elect indeterminate? Again the answer is “No.” He does not leave it indeterminate. He eternally decrees—this is a terrible thing; we tremble at this—that the reprobate will live in sin all their days and they will be punished for their sin for the manifestation of God’s justice (Rom. 9:21-22). Jesus says in Matthew 11:25-26 that God eternally purposed to hide the truth of the gospel from their hearts. And Jesus calls this good, that which pleases God. God judged that it was good not to save these people but to punish them for their sins. But, as I said, we are told that God sincerely and ardently wants to save the reprobate. The first response that we have to this idea, on the basis of our consideration of election and reprobation, is that it certainly does not look as if God wants to save the reprobate for He does not take the initial step (electing them), and without this initial step, they cannot be saved. Supposedly He really and ardently wants them for His people, but He does not choose them for His people. In fact, He decrees that they not be His people. He decrees that though some of them will hear the gospel, they will not believe it, and He actually blinds them and hides the truth from their hearts. God actually purposes that there are two types of people. There is the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent (Gen. 3:15). God Himself puts enmity, hatred and opposition between the two parties, and that is obviously a reflection of God’s opposition to the seed of the serpent too. So if God does not decree to save the reprobate, then they cannot be saved. It is utterly impossible.

Atonement

Let us look at a second element in salvation. What is the basis or ground of our salvation? The perfectly righteous life of Jesus Christ and His atoning death on the cross, for the Scriptures teach clearly that all men are guilty sinners worthy of everlasting punishment. “The soul that sinneth, it shall die” (Eze. 18:20). Therefore, as God teaches us in His Word, the only way of salvation is through the blood of Jesus Christ—propitiation, sacrifice, atonement and redemption in Christ and Christ alone. But the Scriptures teach that, according to God’s purpose, Jesus Christ died only for the elect. The Bible declares that He died for His own, for the many, for His friends, for the sheep. Jesus, after explaining that the good shepherd lays down His life for the sheep, says to the Pharisees, “ye believe not, because ye are not of my sheep” (John 10:26). Consider this syllogism: (1) Jesus said, “I am going to die for my sheep.” (2) He added, referring to the Pharisees, “You are not my sheep.” (3) Therefore Jesus did not die for them. They are goats. The shepherd died for the sheep and not for the goats. That is biblical and Reformed doctrine.

We are told, however, that God earnestly, ardently desires to save the reprobate. But a man cannot be saved without the blood of the cross being shed for him, and God did not send His Son to die for the sins of the reprobate. Or, to look at it from another perspective, the Bible teaches that the cross of Christ is a ransom. God’s people were in prison and Christ paid the ransom to release us. Now I’ll give you an analogy. Mr. X is in prison. If a ransom is paid, Mr. X will be released. Mr. Y says, “Mr. X, I really want to ransom you. I have the money at my disposal.” But although Mr. Y could have ransomed Mr. X, he chose not to. Thus we have to ask, Did Mr. Y really, ardently and sincerely desire to ransom Mr. X? The answer is “No,” because he did not do it.

Regeneration

Let us move on from election and atonement to the very beginning of the application of salvation—regeneration. The sinner is totally depraved, “dead in trespasses and sins” (Eph. 2:1), without any spiritual life and “wholly incapable of doing any good, and inclined to all wickedness” (Heidelberg Catechism, Q. 8). God quickens His elect, giving them life. The Bible calls this being “born again” or the “new birth.” It is evident that there is no salvation without the new birth, because Jesus says, “Ye must be born again” (John 3:7). If you are not born again, you are not saved.

We are told that God really desires and wants to save the reprobate. But does God regenerate them? No. Jesus declared, “The wind bloweth where it listeth [or where it wills], and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is everyone that is born of the Spirit” (John 3:8). The wind blows where it wants. You do not say to the wind, “Could you blow in that field, but not blow in my garden.” The wind does what it wills. Jesus here is drawing an analogy between the blowing of the wind and the blowing of the Holy Spirit in regeneration. He blows where He wills or wants or desires. The Greek word, thelo, encompasses all three of those ideas. The Spirit regenerates whom He wills or wants or desires. He desires to regenerate this one, and He actually regenerates them. He does not regenerate that one. Why? Because He does not desire, wish or want to regenerate that one. The Spirit blows where He wills, and He does not blow where He does not will to blow. But if God sincerely wishes to save everybody, why does the Spirit not blow where He supposedly wants to blow?

Spiritual Illumination

Let’s move on to another point: spiritual illumination or enlightenment, the ability to see the kingdom of heaven by faith. This is a vital part of salvation also. In Matthew 11:25-26, Jesus says, “I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes. Even so, Father: for so it seemed good in thy sight.”

So why did God hide the truth of the gospel from the reprobate? Answer: “for so it seemed good in thy sight.” The “for” gives us the reason. It seemed good in God’s sight. It was a sovereign choice of His, and it pleased Him. To say it pleased God means that God desired to do it; that is what He willed and wished and wanted to do. Now obviously it was not that He wanted or desired to reveal these things to the reprobate. He rather wanted and willed and desired to hide these things from them, as it seemed good to Him. In fact, the will of God regarding the reprobate in this life, is expressed very clearly for us in Romans 9:18: “whom he will he hardeneth.” This is the operation of God upon the reprobate in time. Election results, in time, in the softening and illumination of God’s people. The eternal decree of reprobation issues, in time, in the person being hardened. And that, too, is the argument of Romans 9.

Repentance and Faith

The way of salvation is the way of repentance and faith. Repentance is turning from sin, and faith is trusting in Jesus Christ and receiving righteousness in Him. Advocates of the well-meant offer maintain that God really wants to save the reprobate. However, God does not give them repentance and He does not give them faith, divine gifts, wholly at His disposal. There is no salvation and there is no experience of salvation without these things. But if God really wanted to save them, why did He not give them repentance and faith?

Calling, Justification and Glorification

Let us consider that great apostolic summary of salvation in Romans 8:30: “Moreover whom he did predestinate, them he also called: and whom he called, them he also justified: and whom he justified, them he also glorified.” Four things are spoken of here: predestination, calling, justification and glorification. Obviously God desires to save those He predestinated. Those He predestinated, those He also called, those He also justified, and those He also glorified. So those whom God predestinates or elects are those He wants to save; there is no doubt about that. Therefore He calls them, He justifies them, and He glorifies them. But God does not call, does not justify and does not glorify the reprobate. So what sense does it make to say that God desires to save the reprobate (i.e., to predestinate, call, justify and glorify them) when He does not do any of the things?

Membership in the (Invisible) Church

Salvation, Scripture teaches us, also includes membership in the (invisible) church of Jesus Christ. Christ is the head and His church is His body. The elect together constitute all the parts of His body, and it is a perfect body, a body in which all the parts are properly proportioned and fit together perfectly. This is a mighty work of God’s grace. Why would God want Christ’s body, which He has decreed to be perfect, to have added to it other parts and members? We have two ears. Would you want to have a third ear? We have one nose. Would you like a second one? Why would God decree and purpose a glorious church with a perfectly formed body and then desire to add to it other body parts which would deform the body?

To use another biblical figure for the church, the church is a temple, with every elect child of God a living stone in the temple. This temple is of perfect design and structure. But if God really wants to save everybody, then He wants to make them members and parts of His temple. Why would He want more stones for His temple than He in His wisdom has determined? Where would all these stones go? To put these stones in the temple would spoil the temple. Why would God want that?

Covenant Friendship

The whole of salvation is summed up as covenant friendship with the true God. The free offer position holds that God ardently, sincerely wants to save the reprobate. This means He ardently and sincerely wants to make them His covenant friends. But He does not make them His covenant friends. Instead, He puts enmity between the seed of the woman (Christ and His church) and the reprobate seed of the serpent (Gen. 3:15). God wants to make them His friends, but He does not make them His friends. This presents God like a little boy in the playground who desperately wants so and so to be his friend. But he does not actually end up with that person becoming his friend at all. This cannot be Almighty God, the Lord of heaven and earth!

Listen to Psalm 11:5-7: “The wicked and him that loveth violence his soul hateth. Upon the wicked he shall rain snares, fire and brimstone, and an horrible tempest: this shall be the portion of their cup. For the righteous Lord loveth righteousness; his countenance doth behold the upright.”

Does this sound as if God wants to make the reprobate His friends? He says that His soul hates them, that is, God hates them in His inmost soul to the depths of His being and with all His heart.3 All mankind is polluted, filthy and defiled outside of Jesus Christ, and only the elect are loved in Christ who alone is righteous. Thus God pours out snares, fire, brimstone and an horrible tempest upon the wicked. This is the portion of their cup. This is a strange way for God to treat those whom He earnestly wants to become His friends!

We need to analyse further the free offer position that God really desires to save the reprobate.

Antichrist and Judas

If He earnestly wants to save everybody, then God desired to regenerate and sanctify Hitler and Stalin. Similarly, He wants to effectually call and justify Antichrist, because Antichrist too is part of the “everybody.” Yet the purpose of God in the coming of Jesus Christ is to destroy Antichrist with the brightness of His coming (II Thess. 2:8). If God desires to save everybody then He wanted to glorify Judas who is called “the son of perdition” (John 17:12). “Perdition” is perishing, the perishing of hell. Judas was the son of hell, as one eternally destined for hell, who by his sins heaped up wrath for himself in hell. But we are told that God really wanted to save Judas. What sort of foolishness is this?

Esau and Pharoah

If God desires to save everybody, then He wanted covenant fellowship with Esau. Yet Scripture says, “Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated” (Rom. 9:13). So God wants to commune with people whom He hates! This would also mean that God wanted to save the Pharaoh of the exodus, of whom we read in Romans 9:17: “Even for this same purpose [singular] have I raised thee up, that I might shew my power in thee.” God’s purpose and desire with Pharaoh was not to save him; God’s purpose and desire with Pharaoh was to destroy him in the Red Sea in order to magnify His power in the eyes of mankind, including us today! This is in effect what God said to Pharaoh: “Pharaoh, I have given you the throne of Egypt, a mighty kingdom. I have given you riches, many thousands of servants, and a massive army. By my providence, you are engaged in great building projects. I have raised you up. And I have done it for one purpose. I have not raised you up and given you these things because I love you and want to save you. I have raised you up to show my might in destroying you. ‘Even for this same purpose have I raised thee up, that I might shew my power in thee, and that my name might be declared in all the earth.'”

Moreover, these last two men of whom I have spoken, Esau and Pharaoh, are not one-off cases. Esau and Pharaoh are set forth to illustrate God’s dealings with all the reprobate, just as all the true sons of Abraham are like Jacob beloved of God even in their mother’s womb (Rom. 9:11, 13). From the particular case of Pharaoh (Rom. 9:17), the inspired Scripture draws a universal rule regarding all the reprobate: “whom he will he hardeneth” (Rom. 9:18). All the reprobate are hated by God in the way of their sins (as Esau), and, through all the earthly good they receive (as Pharaoh), God is raising them up to destroy them and magnify His own glorious sovereignty, justice and power (Rom. 9:21-22; Westminster Confession 3:7).

The Failing God

This idea that God earnestly wants to save the reprobate has terrible consequences for our understanding and knowledge of God. Sadly, many embrace the free offer without thinking through its implications concerning the Most High.

Just think about it: God’s desire to save the reprobate has failed with millions, nay billions, of people. God earnestly wanted to save billions but they perish. God’s desire to save everybody has failed with the majority of people. God’s ardent wish to save everybody has failed for over 6,000 years. Moreover, if God’s will to save them fails, God Himself fails.

The Frustrated God

Not only does God fail, but logically God is also frustrated (to speak as a fool). For to the extent that one’s desires are not carried out, one is frustrated, and the greater the desire, the greater the frustration. If a weak desire is unfulfilled, one is slightly disappointed or frustrated. If God’s ardent, sincere and earnest desire to save billions of reprobate fails, then God would be deeply frustrated, for the 6,000 or so years since the creation.4

The Contradictory God

Moreover, according to the free offer, God not only fails, and God not only is frustrated, but God is also contradictory. He passionately wants to save the reprobate, we are told, but He does not elect them; He reprobates them. He really desires to bring them out of spiritual jail, but He does not pay the ransom for them. He sincerely wants to give them the new birth, but He wills that the life-giving Spirit not blow on them. He ardently desires that they grasp the truth of the gospel, without which there can be no salvation, but He hides the truth from them, and this, Jesus says, “is good in [God’s] sight” (Matt. 11:25-26). He really wants to save Pharaoh, yet He raises him up in order that He might destroy him. The free-offer god is a contradictory god.

The Lying God

Logically, the free offer not only portrays God as failing, frustrated and contradictory, but it also makes God a liar. For it says that He earnestly wants to save the reprobate, yet He takes absolutely none of the necessary steps to save them. Last time I mentioned some ten or so elements of salvation—and I could have mentioned others—yet God does not work even one of them! Moreover, there are many people who never even hear the gospel during their lifetime, yet we are told that God sincerely and ardently wanted to save them.

I remind you of the illustration I used in the first part of this article in the last BRJ of the man who said that he really wanted to go to church, but he took none of the necessary steps and went to the rugby match instead. Did he really want to go to church? No. His actions falsified his claims. The man who says he earnestly desires to go to church but goes to watch a rugby match is telling lies. Similarly, the god who says that he earnestly desires to save the reprobate but does nothing to effect their salvation and instead reprobates and hardens them is telling lies. To speak more accurately, the people who portray God as sincerely desiring to save the reprobate are lying about God for His Word reveals that He does not do any of the things necessary to effect this alleged desire.

God’s Unity

To go a step further, the failing, frustrated, contradictory, lying god who is said earnestly to desire to save the reprobate is not really God at all. The true God is absolutely one in His essence or nature. That God is one means is that He is one in mind, will and desire. He does not have two desires or two wills or two minds. We are called to hearken to the truth of God’s perfect unity or simplicity: “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is one Lord” (Deut. 6:4). “Hear, O Israel”—God is telling us something very important. “Hear, O Israel” means “Hear, church of Christ,” because Israel was the church in the Old Testament. “Hear, O church, the Lord our God is one Lord, with one mind and one will and not two minds or two wills (Job 23:13) as the free offer portrays Him, because He is God and God is one!”

God’s Immutability

Think too of the immutability or the unchangeableness of God. According to the free offer, in time God desires to save the reprobate. But if you are going to hold to the truth of reprobation—a biblical and Reformed doctrine—you have to hold that God in “eternity past” did not choose or will to save the reprobate, because He reprobated them. Then, in “eternity future,” when the reprobate are in hell, clearly God does not will to save them.

The free offer position says that God passionately wants to save them, yet He reprobates them before the foundation of the world. So before the creation, He does not want to save them, but then in time He does want to save them, but when they die He does not want to save them. He does not want to save them, but then He does want to save them, but then He does not want to save them. If that is not change, then I do not know what is. The Bible says that there is “no shadow of turning” with God (James 1:17). God does not change. There is not even a flicker of His shadow as if God shifted just slightly and His shadow moved a little bit. There is absolutely “no shadow of turning” with God.

Nor did God decree a sequence of dispositions in Himself so that He would not desire in “eternity past,” desire in time, and not desire in “eternity future,” to save the reprobate. God cannot change nor can He decree to change. God decrees things outside of Himself. God does not decree Himself or His dispositions. God is Himself. The decree pertains to everything outside of Himself, not Himself at all. He is the decreeing Creator; the universe is the decreed creation.

God’s Power

What about God’s power? Job 23:13 declares, “What his soul desireth, even that he doeth.” There is an absolutely perfect correspondence between God’s desire and what He does. If He does it, it is because He desired it. If He desires it, then He does it. If He does not desire something, He does not do it. If He does not do something, He did not desire it. This is the absolutely perfect correspondence between God’s desire and what He does. What His soul desireth, even that (and no other) He doeth.

Listen to Psalm 135:6: “Whatsoever the Lord pleased, that did he in heaven, and in earth, in the seas, and all deep places.” “Whatsoever the Lord pleased”—that is the realm of God’s desires, His wishes, His wants. “Whatsoever the Lord pleased that did He.” He did it “in heaven,” He did it “in earth,” He did it “in the sea,” and He did it “in all the deep places.”

Similarly, Psalm 115:3 testifies, “But our God is in the heavens: he hath done whatsoever he hath pleased.” A God who does not do whatever He pleases is not God, and He certainly is not in the heavens. But our God is in the heavens! Whatsoever He pleased, He does. Psalm 115 presents the true God over against idols. The idols have eyes but they do not see; they have ears but do not hear; they have hands but they do not do anything; they have feet but they do not move (vv. 5-7). But our God, He is in the heavens. He does whatsoever He pleases. Whatever He pleases, He does. Whatever He does, it is because He is pleased to do it. There is nothing that He wants to do, wills to do, is pleased to do and does not do, because “our God is in the heavens: he hath done whatsoever he hath pleased.”

In Augustine?s treatment of election and reprobation in sections xciv-ciii of his Enchiridion he refutes the free offer, using similar arguments as advanced in this article, from God’s unity, immutability and power, and twice quotes Psalm 115:3:

And assuredly there was no injustice in God’s not willing that they should be saved, though they could have been saved had He so willed it. Then shall be seen in the clearest light of wisdom what with the pious is now a faith, though it is not yet a matter of certain knowledge, how sure, how unchangeable, and how effectual is the will of God; how many things He can do which He does not will to do, though willing nothing which He cannot perform; and how true is the song of the psalmist, “But our God is in the heavens; He has done whatsoever He has pleased.” And this certainly is not true, if God has ever willed anything that He has not performed; and, still worse, if it was the will of man that hindered the Omnipotent from doing what He pleased. Nothing, therefore, happens but by the will of the Omnipotent, He either permitting it to be done, or Himself doing it …. so long as we are not compelled to believe that the omnipotent God has willed anything to be done which was not done: for setting aside all ambiguities, if “He has done all that He pleased in heaven and in earth,” as the psalmist sings of Him, He certainly did not will to do anything that He has not done.5

God’s Wisdom

Moving on from God’s power, we turn to God’s wisdom. What is the wisdom of God? It is His adapting everything to the glory of His name. In His wisdom, God fulfils all His plans and desires. Unfulfilled desires not only mean limited power but also limited wisdom.

There are some things that we would like to do. But things do not work out that way. It shows that we have not the perfect wisdom to dispose and arrange everything in our lives; that we are lacking in some area. God’s wisdom means that all His desires and wishes and wants for the entire universe are always perfectly fulfilled. The idea that God desires to save the reprobate conflicts with the wisdom of God because, although He desires to save the reprobate, He does not adapt all things for their salvation. Instead all things, including reprobation (Rom. 9), prosperity (Ps. 73), and preaching (II Cor. 2:15-17), are always perfectly adapted for their destruction.

Reprobation

Not only does the free offer have terrible consequences for your doctrine of God, but it also has terrible consequences regarding Calvinism. When the free offer is held and thought through and applied to other aspects of a person’s theology, doctrinally and historically, reprobation has to go. For if God really wants to save everybody, then would He decree that some not be saved? Think about it. God really wants to save everybody, but what does He do? He chooses not to save them. These two things do not fit. This argument, that a desire of God to save everybody overthrows the eternal decree of reprobation, has won the day in most Presbyterian and Reformed churches. The Christian Reformed Church in North America embraced the free offer and made it binding doctrine in 1924. Henry R. Boer came to their 1974 Synod saying, “Hold on a minute, if God really wants to save everybody, why does our confession state that God eternally chose not to save some people?” The Synod could not stand against that free offer argument. Head I of the Canons of Dordt on (election and) reprobation (with its Rejection of Errors) became a dead letter.

Moreover, what of the preacher of the free offer who claims to be a Calvinist? Before God and man, he must boldly and unashamedly proclaim the biblical and Reformed doctrine of sovereign, unconditional, double predestination. Yet he believes that God ardently desires to save the reprobate. His is the difficult task of preaching two contradictory messages and trying to reconcile them some way both in his own mind and in those of his hearers.6 No easy task! In the face of this conundrum and given the more palatable nature of the free offer (both to his own sinful flesh and to Arminian hearers), it is no wonder that both in the preaching and in the minds of the preacher and people, the truth of reprobation recedes into the background as an indistinct and hazy doctrine, loaded with all sorts of difficulties and problems. The seven lean kine eat up the seven fat kine, for biblical reprobation is silenced as the alleged passionate desire of the Almighty to save everybody takes centre stage.

Limited Atonement

Another doctrine to go, logically and historically, is the doctrine of limited or particular atonement. Think about it. God really desires and wants to save everybody. But salvation is impossible unless Christ dies for them. Then surely God must have sent the Lord Jesus to die for everybody. Thus we have the heresy of universal atonement which the Canons of Dordt describe, in connection with the whole doctrine of Arminianism, as the Pelagian heresy dragged out of hell (Canons 2:R:3).

In the 1960s Harold Dekker of the Christian Reformed Church argued, “Hold on a minute, if God really wants to save everybody, and the creeds say that Christ died for the elect only, we have a problem. Since God really wants to save everybody—if that means anything at all—then He must have sent Christ to die for everybody.”

Thus today you have alleged Calvinists quoting John 3:16: “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son,” and arguing for a love of God in the cross of Christ for everybody. Never mind that this is one of the key texts that the Arminians abuse, and that modern so-called Calvinists actually agree with their interpretation of John 3:16. Then they say, “We are the true Calvinists and people who do not hold to the free offer are hyper-Calvinists.” The definitions are changing. Scripture is being twisted. People are being deceived.

Irresistible Grace

Irresistible grace is the fourth point of Calvinism. The notion that God ardently desires to save everybody, including the reprobate, is by definition a resistible grace. God ardently desires to save everybody—there is some sort of grace for the reprobate, a resistible and always resisted grace. Thus, you have a resistible grace and an irresistible grace—two graces. What in the world are two graces? There is one God. One God has one grace. But the free offer teaches two graces. There is a resistible grace and there is an irresistible grace. What is happening here?

Total Depravity

What about total depravity? If God wants to save everybody, why is everybody not saved? Maybe they rejected God’s grace while other people were a bit more willing. This is how free will comes in. This departure takes you further over the line between God’s truth and error, and a lot of people who wish to hold on to the free offer and some form of Calvinism would repudiate it. But that is where it has gone with many people, and that is where it is going with other people.

Calvinism, the truth of God’s sovereign particular grace as taught in Scripture and summed in the Canons of Dordt, and free offer theology are not consistent and cannot be reconciled. There are many advocates of the free offer who are very explicit about this. “Calvinism and a desire of God to save the reprobate,” they acknowledge, “I can not square them. I can not make them fit.” However, instead of concluding, “Hold on, there is a problem here, since God’s truth is one and always consistent,” they declare, “It is a paradox, a mystery, an antimony.” What they really mean is that it is a downright contradiction. But they gave it a fancy sounding word; they say it is a mystery or a paradox.

A desire of God to save the reprobate has been taught and promoted in Reformed circles especially in the last 100 years, and still no one has managed to show how the free offer and the Synod of Dordt’s five points of Calvinism (including their “Rejection of Errors”) fit. Yet all true doctrines, like the doctrines of the Trinity; the Deity, Person and two natures of Christ; creation; providence; irresistible grace; etc., are not contradictory but coherent. Consistency is a mark of truth; contradiction is a mark of the lie.

Moreover, principles work through. False doctrine, especially as it is more fully incorporated into one’s theology and preached and defended, will seriously affect one’s knowledge of the true and living God. In the history of the church and in the faith and lives of professing Christians this is clearly seen.

Here is one example. In seventeenth-century France, there was a heretic called Moses Amyrault. Amyrault’s doctrine came to be called Amyraldianism or Hypothetical Universalism. Amyrault taught that there were two elections pertaining to the salvation of mankind. The first election is God’s choice of absolutely everybody to be saved, on condition that they believe. But, of course, nobody will believe because we are all totally depraved. So God has a second election according to which He chooses to save those to whom He will give faith. What a contorted system! Amyrault also taught a double-reference theory of Christ’s atonement. Christ died for absolutely everybody head for head, if they believe. But nobody will believe, because all are in the bondage of iniquity. So God sent Christ to make atonement for the sins of those to whom He will give faith, those predestinated. Amyrault claimed that this was true Calvinism, the doctrine of John Calvin, founded upon the sacred Scriptures.

Within a relatively short time, through this Amyraldian “modification” of Calvinism, the Reformed church in France headed further towards Arminianism. Amyraldianism divided the church and sapped its spiritual power. The church’s synods were not strong enough to deal with it. One analyst and historian of Gallic Calvinism called Amyrault “the gravedigger of the French Reformed Church.”7 If you go to France today, you would never guess that at one point almost half the country was Calvinistic. Why are there so few Reformed churches in France? Why are the few French Reformed churches so weak doctrinally? It started with Amyrault and his “modified Calvinism.” He was the gravedigger and Amyraldianism was his spade. Principles work through.

Free offer theology and preaching finds its most suitable soil amongst those who do not know, love and rejoice in the robust biblical and Reformed doctrine of God—His perfect unity, His absolute immutability, His irresistible power, His infinite wisdom, and His sovereign decree—and the sharply antithetical Calvinism of the Canons of Dordt. Thus, in our day of great departure, many in nominally evangelical and Reformed churches who are not properly grounded in the truth are wide open to the free offer. This way they can claim to be Calvinistic and Reformed and compromise with Arminians and Arminianism. You can have your cake and eat it! What a wonderfully useful doctrine!

Ironically, apart from undermining the truth of God and His sovereign grace, the free offer does not actually do anything positive. According to God’s eternal decree the number of the elect and the number of the reprobate are unchangeably fixed (Westminster Confession 3:4; Canons I:11). The elect are saved by God’s irresistible grace in Christ and the reprobate perish in their sin and stubborn unbelief.

The free offer does not actually save anybody. The free offer has not saved anybody; not one single person has ever been saved by the free offer. The free offer will not save anybody. Why? Because the free offer can not save anybody. It cannot save even one single person by definition. The free offer is a desire of God to save the reprobate, but the reprobate by definition cannot be saved! Thus God has a fervent desire to save those who can not be saved. He has an ardent passion to save those whom He decreed can not be saved. What a strange and useless doctrine! Yet, according to its advocates, unless you preach it, you are not truly preaching the gospel! That is, unless you preach a weak and always resisted desire of God to save those who can not be saved according to God’s eternal reprobation, you are not really preaching the gospel. You are then denounced as a hyper-Calvinist! Yet the biblical and Reformed “gospel of Christ” is “the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believeth” (Rom. 1:16)! That is why we are “not ashamed” of it (v. 16) and that is why the free offer is such a shameful parody of the “gospel of the [irresistible] grace of God” (Acts 20:24) of apostolic Christianity!

Note the radical differences between free offer theology and “the true grace of God” (I Peter 5:12). The free offer is resistible and always resisted; God’s grace is always irresistible. The free offer is ineffectual and always ineffectual; God’s grace is always effectual. The free offer is finite and has not saved anybody or brought one single sinner even an inch nearer the kingdom of heaven; God’s grace is omnipotent and always saves. The free offer is a changeable, temporal grace; God’s grace is unchangeable and eternal, “for his mercy endureth forever” (Ps. 136:1-26).

So how can this alleged desire of God to save the reprobate really be ascribed to the true and living God? By definition, the free offer is a resistible, impotent, changeable and temporal grace, whereas the true grace of God is irresistible, omnipotent, unchangeable and eternal. The free offer has the attributes of the Arminian god, that is the attributes of man: resistible, impotent, changeable, and temporary.

There is always this tendency in the church to make God more like ourselves. In Psalm 50, God rebukes Israel, “thou thoughtest that I was altogether such an one as thyself” (v. 21). For this sin of making a god after their own image, God says that He will “reprove” them (v. 21) and “tear [them] in pieces” (v. 22).

Evangelism

Though the free offer itself is not part of that “doctrine which is according to godliness” (I Tim. 6:3) through which the Son of God “gathers, defends and preserves” His church (Heidelberg Catechism, A. 54), it does have its “uses” for its advocates. It is “useful” with regard to evangelism. Consider a professing Calvinist who holds the free offer. He has, in effect, two gospels. There is Calvinism which teaches God’s particular grace in election, in the cross, in regeneration, in justification, in preservation, in glorification, etc. There is also free offerism and Arminianism: “God loves you and wants to save you.”

From my time as a student at Queen’s University in Belfast, I remember a young man who was an exponent of this same two-track theology. In witnessing to unbelieving students, he would come with this line: “God loves you and wants to save you.” Yet when he was talking to me, he would say he was a Calvinist and produce his Calvinist credentials. But God’s sovereign grace was not his message to the unconverted. He had two different messages for two different parties. I brought the same gospel to all, unconverted or converted, for there only is one gospel of God’s sovereign grace (Acts 20:24).

You can see how this nicer, softer, gentler, non-threatening approach is much “easier” for the Christian to adopt as he approaches unbelievers. Just tell them that God loves them and wants to save them! Oh, how “useful” the free offer is! It avoids the biblical offence in evangelism: the reproach of the cross, the offence of the gospel. I am not saying, of course, that we should be offensive in evangelism. No, we must be gracious, “speaking the truth in love” (Eph. 4:15). But we must speak “the truth in love” and not the lie. What ought we testify? “… ye are my witnesses, saith the Lord, that I am God” (Isa. 43:12). We have no authority to witness of a failing, frustrated, contradictory, lying god who is not perfectly one, immutable, omnipotent and wise, that is, a god who does not save the reprobate even though he ardently and passionately desires to do so. We proclaim that God is God, not that He is altogether such an one as ourselves (Ps. 50:21).

Fellowship with Arminians

Not only is the free offer “useful” in evangelism, but it is also “useful” in enabling fellowship with Arminians. Let us be quite clear about this: Calvinism, as summed in the Canons of Dordt, teaches that Arminianism is not an alternative form of the gospel but deadly heresy. Yet most free offer men who claim to be Calvinists (and who dub those who do not agree with them “hyper-Calvinists”) praise Arminians like John Wesley who hated Calvinism—God’s sovereign grace in Jesus Christ!—with a passion and who called predestination “blasphemy.”8 John Wesley told people that they should never go to any church that teaches Jesus Christ died for the elect alone. He even said—in so many words!—that the blood of Christ was shed for people who go to hell.9 His brother, Charles Wesley, wrote many hymns opposing election, reprobation, particular atonement, irresistible grace, etc. In praising Arminians, like John and Charles Wesley, “free offer Calvinists,” like Iain Murray, reveal that theirs is not the orthodox, biblical Calvinism of the Canons of Dordt.10

The vast majority of “free offer Calvinists” fellowship with Arminians. See how useful the free offer is! You can claim to be a Calvinist (thus gaining a name for orthodoxy) and keep the Arminians happy by preaching a love and desire of God reaching out for the salvation of everybody. Thus you do not have to take a stand for the truth of God against the lie of Arminianism, and you can fellowship with those who deny the truth of the gospel.

It ought to be pointed out too that the vast majority of “free offer Calvinists” have Arminians in their churches as members or even deacons, elders or ministers. These “free offer Calvinists” refuse to admonish and discipline them, even though their own confessions teach that Arminianism is heresy. Their pulpits are significantly silent regarding the heresy of Arminianism, yet those who hold the pure, antithetical Calvinism of the Canons of Dordt are denounced as hyper-Calvinists!

John Owen rightly warns against fellowship with Arminians and their free willism: “One church cannot wrap in her communion Austin [i.e., Augustine] and Pelagius, Calvin and Arminius.”11 Those who hold to the truth of God’s sovereign, particular grace in Christ must not seek a carnal peace with Arminians:

The sacred bond of peace compasseth only the unity of that Spirit which leadeth into all truth. We must not offer the right hand of fellowship, but rather proclaim … “a holy war,” to such enemies of God’s providence, Christ’s merit, and the powerful operation of the Holy Spirit.12

Those who tolerate Arminians in their congregations and berate those who hold to God’s unadulterated sovereign grace as “hyper-Calvinists” reveal that they are not true Calvinists. Their criticism of those who love and maintain the truth of the Canons of Dordt ought to be exposed for what it is: sheer hypocrisy.

We ought to say, though, that there are other people, who have been told by those with a reputation for orthodoxy that God loves everybody and wants to save everybody, and who have simply accepted the free offer without really having thought about it. Now is the time to search the Scriptures and try the free offer spirits (Act 17:11; I John 4:1)!

Preaching

What then is the reason for preaching the gospel, if it is not a desire of God to save everybody? The command of God: “Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature” (Mark 16:15; cf. Matt. 28:18-20). The Lord exhorts us, “Preach! Proclaim to the gospel to all!” The gospel is taught in all the word of God, especially as it centres on Christ crucified, risen and exalted, and on reconciliation, righteousness, forgiveness and peace though His cross. This gospel comes with commands and exhortations. All those who hear the gospel are commanded to repent and believe in Jesus Christ, the only saviour. The Bible requires us to call everybody to come to Christ for salvation. Scripture uses words like repent, convert, turn or believe and its synonyms, such as, trust, come, eat, drink, hear and look. These exhortations are to be brought in the proclamation of the gospel of God.

The command of Matthew 11:28 (“Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest”) is more specific, for here Jesus is specifically addressing those who “labour and are heavy laden,” those for whom sin and guilt have become a burden that oppresses them, like an animal with a heavy load upon its back. This sense of the burden of sin is itself the fruit of election (Canons I:12). Jesus calls those who are burdened with their sins to believe in Him to find rest. Come to Him with all your sins and guilt and shame! All who flee to Christ in repentance and faith will certainly be saved (John 6:37).13

The Bible also teaches that we must address those who are outside of Jesus Christ who do not feel the burden of sin. Turn from your sins and come to Him! The minister should reprove and exhort the unconcerned unconverted, calling them to repentance and faith.

Hyper-Calvinism, on the other hand, denies duty repentance and duty faith, that everyone is to be called to forsake their sin and to believe in Jesus Christ. We, however, teach duty repentance and duty faith. God “commandeth all men everywhere to repent” (Acts 17:30). All must repent. All must believe. If they do not repent and do not believe, this is a heinous transgression that greatly offends God. The Almighty is angry with this sin too, as well as all their other sins. God’s wrath is particularly against the sin of unbelief because it shows the stubbornness of man’s heart, his proud self-righteousness and his despising the Father’s well-beloved Son. We oppose hyper-Calvinism and preach against it. And yet we are called hyper-Calvinists for all that! A new definition of hyper-Calvinism is drafted up and then Reformed Christians and churches are falsely branded with this term of opprobrium.14 Thus people do not have to study the issues. Advocates of God’s particular grace are summarily dismissed as hyper-Calvinists by many people who would be hard-pressed even to state what Calvinism is.

Desiring the Salvation of Our Neighbour

This, however, also needs to be stated: although God does not desire the salvation of all men head for head, the Christian’s calling—your calling and my calling—is to desire the salvation of our neighbours. This is biblical. The apostle Paul said to King Agrippa: “I would to God, that not only thou, but also all those that hear me this day, were both almost, and altogether such as I am, except these bonds” (Acts 26:29). Paul desired or wished or wanted (“I would to God”) that everybody there (Agrippa and “also all those that hear me this day”) would become a Christian, though not a prisoner, like himself (“altogether such as I am, except these bonds”). This apostolic desire is our example for emulation.

Paul says something similar at the very start of Romans 9, that great chapter on unconditional, double predestination (even in the generations of believers). First, he affirms three times that he is speaking the truth: “[1] I say the truth in Christ, [2] I lie not, [3] my conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy Ghost” (v. 1). His solemn assertion is that he is deeply grieved and burdened: “That I have great heaviness and continual sorrow in my heart” (v. 2). About what is he so heart-broken? “For I could wish that myself were accursed from Christ for my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh” (v. 3). In other words, the apostle so sincerely desired the salvation of the Jews, his fellow countrymen, that if his going to hell for them would achieve it, he would do it. This is an earnest and ardent desire! This zeal puts all of us to shame. This is the passion of the apostle Paul.

But this is Paul’s attitude or desire; not God’s.15 Paul, of course, says I “could wish,” that is, “I know I can not perish for them and atone for their sins. Only Christ can do that. But if I could, I would do it.” The true Christian also feels this; not to the extent that Paul did, for the apostle was a particularly godly man. If, by our suffering, we could see our unbelieving family members or neighbours or countrymen saved in Christ, we would do it.16

But there is a difference between what we are called to do as creatures and what God does as the Creator whose will is one, undivided, sovereign, omnipotent and irresistible (Ps. 115:3; 135:6). This is a difference as high as heaven and a whole lot higher, for He is Almighty God and we are but men of the dust.

God does not desire the salvation of the reprobate, but He approves of and delights in people repenting and believing. Unbelief and disobedience are sins before Him which He detests. On the other hand, the righteous Sovereign approves of and delights in faith and repentance and in people keeping the Ten Commandments by hallowing His name, loving His truth, honouring their parents, etc.

But there is a vital distinction here. Truly, God delights in people believing, repenting and keeping His commandments. But to say that God desires the salvation of the reprobate is not the same thing. This does not come to pass, and so the Almighty is presented as having a frustrated desire, which is contrary to His attributes, His decree and His blessedness.

Let me restate this, relating it to God’s will of command and His will of decree:

1. God’s will of command (what He tells us we must do—repent, believe and obey Him) indicates behaviour He approves of and delights in as the infinitely just, righteous and holy Lord.
2. God’s will of decree (His eternal, all-embracing purpose, including election, reprobation and everything which comes to pass) expresses what He desires, wishes and wants (and always affects for His glory), as the eternal, unchangeable, omnipotent, all-wise and perfectly simple Jehovah.

The free offer position confuses God’s command to unbelievers (some of whom are reprobate), indicating His approval, delight and pleasure in repentance and faith, as meaning that He desires the salvation of the reprobate (though He fails to affect this desire). This error (wittingly or unwittingly) impugns God’s character, counsel and salvation, as we have seen.

Moreover, it likens the Almighty to the lazy fool of Proverbs 13:4: “The soul of the sluggard desireth, and hath nothing.” According to free offer theology, the “soul” of Jehovah ardently “desireth” the salvation of the reprobate, yet everyone of them, by definition, perish in their sins and so, with respect to them, the ever-blessed God “hath nothing.” Biblical Calvinism affirms that the God of all glory realises all His desires and wishes according to His eternal decree: “The desire accomplished is sweet to the soul” (v. 19)!

This is God’s desire in the preaching of the gospel with regard to the elect and the reprobate: God wishes and wants (and affects) the salvation of the elect and—this is the terrible part—the hardening of the reprobate. What the Most High desires actually happens (Job 23:13; Ps. 115:3; 135:6). Thus Paul declares that apostolic preachers are to the one (the reprobate) the savour of death unto death and to the other (the elect) they are the savour of life unto life (II Cor. 2:15-16). This is the divine result and intention with the true preaching of the gospel.

God’s command to Christian ministers is: “Proclaim My Word—all of it—as a faithful herald. Do not keep parts back and do not mix it with falsehood” (cf. II Cor. 2:17; 4:2). He who proclaims the gospel must will that God’s will be done through the preaching: the salvation of His elect church and the hardening of His reprobate enemies. The minister must face these questions: Am I willing to preach God’s Word faithfully and not add to or subtract from it? Am I willing to preach knowing that this two-fold effect of the Word is God’s purpose and desire? Even though some of those who are hardened by the Word I preach may be members of my family or my friends? We need to remember that those who love father or mother or friends or wife or anyone more than Christ are not worthy of Him (Matt. 10:37). The minister must be able to say that although, personally speaking, he would desire to see everybody saved who comes under the preaching (Acts 26:29; Rom. 9:1-3), God’s sovereign will must be done.

Christ Himself, that great preacher of God’s grace, declared, “I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes. Even so, Father: for so it seemed good in thy sight” (Matt. 11:25-26, quoted in Canons I:R:8). The minister who is not willing to be a means of hardening for the reprobate, as well as saving the elect, and who can not add his “Amen” to these words of our Lord Jesus, he is the one who is not truly preaching the gospel.

Appendix

Augustine: “Hence, as far as concerns us, who are not able to distinguish those who are predestinated from those who are not, we ought on this very account to will all men to be saved … It belongs to God, however, to make that rebuke useful to them whom He Himself has foreknown and predestinated to be conformed to the image of His Son” (On Rebuke and Grace, ch. 49).

Calvin: “… the obedience we render to God’s providence does not prevent us from grieving at the destruction of lost men, though we know that they are thus doomed by the just judgment of God; for the same mind is capable of being influenced by these two feelings: that when it looks to God it can willingly bear the ruin of those whom he has decreed to destroy; and that when it turns its thoughts to men, it condoles with their evils. They are then much deceived, who say that godly men ought to have apathy and insensibility, lest they should resist the decree of God” (Comm. on Rom. 9:2).

Herman Hoeksema: “What the apostle means is: were I placed before the alternative that my brethren according to the flesh be saved, or I; were I permitted to choose between their salvation and my own, could I effect their salvation by my being accursed, I could indeed wish to be accursed from Christ in their behalf …

… let us note that the apostle’s attitude in approaching the tremendous subject of God’s absolute sovereignty in election and reprobation is intended by the Word of God as an example for us. When, as children of God, we approach this subject, and speak of God’s sovereign predestination, it is but proper that our attitude should be deeply spiritual. It may not be, it could not possibly be the attitude of pride and self-exaltation; for if it pleased God to ordain us unto salvation in distinction from others, it certainly is no cause for us to boast in self. One who really understands the truth of this point will humble himself deeply before God. Let no flesh glory in His Presence. And this also implies that one cannot very well speak of the subject of God’s sovereign rejection of the reprobate, who in time are our fellow men, our kinsmen according to the flesh, without feeling to an extent the same heaviness, the same continual sorrow for them which the apostle here so emphatically declares to feel in his heart. No cold-blooded rejoicing in the damnation of our fellow men may characterize our contemplation of God’s sovereign dealings with the children of men. The fact that God’s predestinating purpose divides our race, makes separation between men of the same flesh and blood, always remains a matter of suffering as long as we are in this present time. And this leads me to another remark. From the viewpoint of our flesh, of our earthly, natural life and relationships, it is not so strange—barring some theological objections—to hear the apostle declare that he could wish to be accursed from Christ for his kinsmen according to the flesh.

Without wishing to place ourselves on a par with the apostle, we may safely say that, in a degree, we can often repeat these words after him. Just imagine a parent who experiences the grief of seeing one or more of his children walk the way of sin and destruction. Just imagine a pastor, who, in the course of years becomes attached to his flock and earnestly desires their salvation, but who beholds many of them that are not the objects of God’s electing love. And what is true of our own flesh and blood in the narrowest sense of the word and of the Church of Christ in the world in general can be applied to mankind as a whole. Out of one blood God has made the whole of the human race, and they are, according to the flesh, all our brethren. And we can understand a little, at least, of the attitude of the apostle when he speaks of the great heaviness that burdens his soul and says that he could wish to be accursed from Christ for his kinsmen according to the flesh. And in as far as we could wish in our present flesh and blood, we could indeed desire all men to be saved” (“Our Approach to the Doctrine of Predestination [Rom. 9:1-3]”).

Endnotes:

1. The speech from which this series of articles was derived can be listened to here.
2. John Murray, “The Free Offer of the Gospel” in Collected Writings of John Murray (Great Britain: Banner, 1982), vol. 4, pp. 113-114.
3. Cf. John Calvin: “the reprobate are hateful to God, and with very good reason. For, deprived of his Spirit, they can bring forth nothing but reason for cursing” (Institutes 3.24.17).
4. The eternal God is, of course, timeless, transcending time as well as space.
5. Augustine, The Enchiridion on Faith, Hope and Love, ed. Henry Paolucci, trans. J. F. Shaw (Chicago: Henry Regnery Co., 1961), xcv, p. 109; ciii, pp. 121-122.
6. Free offer preachers try various tacks here, such as “mystery,” “paradox,” two levels in God, God decreeing a sequence of dispositions in Himself, etc.
7. Professor Georges Serr, as quoted by Roger Nicole, Westminster Theological Journal, vol. 54, no. 2 (Fall, 1992), p. 396.
8. Wesley railed that the “blasphemy” of predestination “represents the most holy God as worse than the Devil, as both more false, more cruel, and more unjust” (quoted in Stephen Tomkins, John Wesley, A Biography [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2003], p. 78).
9. The Works of John Wesley (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1996), vol. 10, p. 297.
10. Cf. Iain Murray, Wesley and Men Who Followed (Great Britain: Banner, 2003).
11. The Works of John Owen (Great Britain: Banner, repr. 1967), vol. 10, p. 7.
12. Ibid., p. 7.
13. Cf. Roger Nicole, Standing Forth: Collected Writings of Roger Nicole (Great Britain: Christian Focus Publications, 2002), pp. 295, 340.
14. E.g., Phil Johnson even calls A. W. Pink a “hyper-Calvinist” (“A Primer on Hyper-Calvinism”.
15. Ezekiel 33:11, Matthew 23:37, I Timothy 2:4, II Peter 3:9, etc., are wrongly interpreted and scraped up in defence of a desire of God to save the reprobate. Their true interpretation lies outside the scope of this article. Some or all of them are explained in the following: Augustine, The Enchiridion on Faith, Hope and Love, ed. Henry Paolucci, trans. J. F. Shaw (Chicago: Henry Regnery Co., 1961); John Calvin, Calvin’s Calvinism (Grandville, MI: RFPA, 1987); John Knox, Against an Anabaptist: In Defense of Predestination (Edmonton, AB: SWRB, no date); John Owen, The Death of Death: in the Death of Jesus Christ (Great Britain: Banner, 1983); Francis Turretin, Institutes of Elenctic Theology, trans. George Musgrave Giger, ed. James T. Dennison, Jr., 3 vols. (Philippsburg, NJ: P&R, 1992-1997); John Gill, The Cause of God and Truth (Grand Rapids: Sovereign Grace Publisher, 1971); Abraham Kuyper, Particular Grace (Grandville, MI: RFPA, 2001); Arthur W. Pink, The Sovereignty of God (Grand Rapids: Baker, 2005); David Engelsma, Hyper-Calvinism and the Call of the Gospel (Grandville, MI: RFPA, 1980); Garrett P. Johnson, “The Myth of Common Grace,” Trinity Review (March, 1987). For a superb treatment of many of the issues raised in the 3 parts of this article, see the famous work by Italian Reformer, Jerome Zanchius (1516-1590), Absolute Predestination (USA: The National Foundation for Christian Education, no date).
16. The “Appendix” to this article contains quotes from three stalwart defenders of particular grace which make the same point.

Marked up by Lance George Marshall

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Justification : By Kenneth D. Macleod / A penetrating exposition of the cardinal doctrine of our most holy faith.

Justification1

By Kenneth D. Macleod

I. From the Fathers to the Reformation

We are familiar with the concise, scriptural definition of The Shorter Catechism: ‘Justification is an

act of God’s free grace, wherein He pardoneth all our sins, and accepteth us as righteous in His sight, only for

the righteousness of Christ imputed to us, and received by faith alone’ (Ans. 33). James Buchanan explains the

term as meaning ‘man’s acceptance with God, or his being regarded and treated as righteous in His sight – as the

object of His favour and not of His wrath, of His blessing and not of His curse’.2

Accordingly this is not man’s inward righteousness, his sanctification; it is his legal standing before God. The

question is: Does God now accept the sinner, or does he still stand condemned before his holy Judge? Louis

Berkhof brings out this point clearly with his definition: ‘Justification is a judicial act of God, in which He

declares, on the basis of the righteousness of Jesus Christ, that all the claims of the law are satisfied with

respect to the sinner’.3 Justification is not the infusing of righteousness

into a sinner; it is appropriate to use these words in describing regeneration and sanctification but not

justification. In the same category as justification is condemnation; they are opposites, but they are

both legal concepts. So John Owen points out that ‘condemnation is not the infusing of a habit of wickedness

into him that is condemned . . . but the passing a sentence upon a man with respect unto his wickedness’. Then

he comes to his main point: ‘No more is justification the change of a person from inherent unrighteousness unto

righteousness by the infusion of a principle of grace’, but the passing of a sentence declaring ‘him to be

righteous’.4

It is vitally important, as we will see, to keep this distinction between justification and sanctification very

clearly in view; in God’s revelation of religious truth in Scripture these are distinct ideas. The

Westminster Confession stresses that sinners are justified, ‘not by infusing righteousness into them, but

by pardoning their sins, and by accounting and accepting their persons as righteous: not for anything wrought in

them, or done by them, but for Christ’s sake alone’ (11:1). Much of the doctrinal confusion that has plagued the

Christian era has arisen through a failure to keep distinct the two ideas of justification and

sanctification.

One other general point at this stage: Buchanan notes what is ‘characteristic of all human systems as

distinguished from the divine method of justification’; it is ‘self-righteousness or self-sufficiency in one or

other of its manifold forms, which are all, more or less, opposed to dependence on the grace of God’. This

error, he says, is universal, and manifests itself in human beings in three distinct ways: (1) ‘in reliance on

the general goodness of their character and moral conduct’, (2) ‘in their observance of religious forms and

ceremonies, as a compensation for any shortcoming in moral obedience’, (3) ‘in their possession of peculiar

privileges, viewed as special tokens of God’s favour’.5

With these points in mind, let us now proceed to consider how the doctrine of justification has fared at the

hands of the Church – and, in particular, its theologians – in the period since the Apostles. The Fathers, the

Church leaders during the centuries immediately following the Apostles, do not provide an elaborate exposition

of the doctrine of justification. But in their writings we find indications of what they believed on the

subject. For instance, in the Epistle to Diognetus, we read:

In whom was it possible that we, transgressors and ungodly as we were, could be justified, save in

the Son of God alone? O sweet interchange, O unsearchable operation, O unexpected benefit, that the

transgression of many should be hidden in one righteous Person and that the righteousness of One should justify

many transgressors!6

However, after Constantine established Christianity as the religion of the Roman Empire, persecution became a

thing of the past and professing Christians began to lose their sense of sin. Accordingly they no longer felt

their need of an effective remedy; they lost sight of the significance of the blood of Christ and turned their

backs on the doctrine of justification by faith.

There can be no doubt that the unscriptural teachings of Romanism on this subject can in part be traced back to

the writings of Augustine of Hippo (354-430); he was the greatest of the Fathers and did much to oppose the

teachings of Pelagius – the British monk who denied original sin and maintained that man has power to save

himself. However, Buchanan argues that, while Augustine’s use of the term justification included the idea

of sanctification, he did not confound the two ideas. Augustine’s ‘was not a mind’, Buchanan insists,

that could confound things so different as the guilt of sin and its defilement, the remission of sin

and the renewal of the sinner, a man’s external relation to God and his inherent spiritual character. And . . .

there is no evidence to show that he made a sinner’s forgiveness and acceptance with God to rest on his own

inherent righteousness as its procuring cause.7

Buchanan describes the views of Anselm on this subject (died 1109) as ‘thoroughly Protestant’ and quotes Bernard

of Clairvaux (died 1115) saying, ‘The Apostle says, "If one died for all, then were all dead," meaning thereby

to intimate that the satisfaction made by One should be imputed to all, even as One conversely bore the sins of

all’.8 The most prominent of mediaeval theologians was Thomas Aquinas (died 1274),

whose massive writings have been fundamental for later Roman Catholic thinking. His idea of justification

included three components: the forgiveness of sin, the infusion of grace, and the turning of the will to

God. And in the theology of the Middle Ages the justification of a sinner became dependent on the grace that is

infused into him; further, the good works which result from the infused grace have merit before God. It is that

merit which leads to pardon and acceptance with God. There was even a kind of merit in doing one’s best; what it

amounted to was that people could have some claim on God for spiritual blessings on the basis of their good

works.

And in Baptism, it was said, God first renews the soul and then forgives, completely removing all the effects of

original sin – though, if the Baptism is to be thus effective in adults, they must be properly prepared by

exercising the seven virtues of faith, fear, hope, love, penitence, with a purpose to receive the sacrament of

the Lord’s Supper, and a purpose to lead a new and obedient life – a whole series of good works. We may note the

form in which the Roman teaching on Baptism is put in the present-day Catechism of the Catholic Church:

‘By Baptism all sins are forgiven, original sin and all personal sins, as well as all punishment for sin’; and,

further: ‘Baptism not only purifies from all sins, but also makes the neophyte [that is, the one who has just

been baptized] "a new creature", an adopted son of God, who has become a "partaker of the divine nature", member

of Christ and co-heir with Him, and a temple of the Holy Spirit’.9 This is what is

claimed to take place merely as a result of the priest taking some water, sprinkling it on the person and

repeating the requisite words.

It was in such a climate that the sale of indulgences flourished in the early sixteenth century – people were

given the impression that a monetary contribution would lead to the forgiveness of their sins; it was even

possible for them to deliver themselves from the agonies of purgatory on account of sins they had not yet

committed. And it was when these indulgences began to be sold among his own people that Martin Luther prepared

the 95 theses that he nailed to the door of the Wittenberg church, which was effectively the beginning of the

Reformation.

Luther had previously come to realise, through painful personal experience, that the way of salvation which God

has provided for sinners is by faith in Jesus Christ, not through the ceremonies of the Church. He had suffered

terribly at the thought of the righteousness of God, which he had understood as God dealing righteously with the

sinner – which for him could imply nothing else but God’s inflexible severity in punishing sin.

But Luther relates his deliverance:

At last I came to apprehend it thus: through the gospel is revealed the righteousness which avails

with God, a righteousness by which God, in His mercy and compassion, justifies us, as it is written: ‘The just

shall live by faith’. Straightway I felt as if I were born anew; it was as if I had found the door of paradise

thrown wide open. The expression, ‘the righteousness of God’, which I so much hated before became now dear and

precious . . . I see the Father – inflexible in justice, yet delighting in mercy – ‘just’ beyond all my

terrified conscience could picture Him; He ‘justifies’ me a sinner.”10

God had showed the future Reformer – with whom the idea of justification by faith is so closely associated –

that sinners are saved by faith alone, not by their good works.

So during the winter of 1515-16 Luther, lecturing on Romans 3:28, was declaring to his students:

We hold, recognise and affirm, we conclude from what is said that a man is justified, reckoned

righteous before God, whether Greek or Jew, by faith, apart from the works of the law, without the help and

necessity of the works of the law.11

The Lord had led him to a thorough understanding of the doctrine of justification, which William Cunningham

describes as

the great fundamental distinguishing doctrine of the Reformation . . . regarded by all the Reformers

as of primary and paramount importance. The leading charge which they adduced against the Church of Rome was

that she had corrupted and perverted the doctrine of Scripture upon this subject in a way that was dangerous to

the souls of men; and it was mainly by the exposition, enforcement and application of the true doctrine of God’s

Word in regard to it that they assailed and overturned the leading doctrines and practices of the papal

system.12

Thomas M‘Crie was impressed by two particular points in the writings of the Reformers:

The first is the exact conformity between the doctrine maintained by them respecting the

justification of sinners and that of the Apostles. The second is the surprising harmony which subsisted among

them on this important doctrine. On some questions respecting the sacraments and the external government and

discipline of the church, they differed; but on the article of free justification, Luther and Zwingli,

Melanchthon and Calvin, Cranmer and Knox spoke the very same language. This was not owing to their having read

each other’s writings, but because they copied from the same divine original . . . Some of their successors, by

giving way to speculation, gradually lost sight of this distinguishing badge of the Reformation and landed at

last in Arminianism, which is nothing else but the popish doctrine in a Protestant dress.13

II. Reformation Teaching

As time went on, the Reformers may have expressed more clearly their understanding of justification, but they

taught the substance of it from the beginning. They were clear that justification describes a change in the

sinner’s legal state, not in his moral character – yet they were equally clear that a change of moral character

must inevitably accompany his justification. When sinners are justified, their guilt has been removed; they are

no longer under condemnation; they have been forgiven; they have been accepted before God as if they had always

kept his law perfectly. And sinners are justified, not because of anything they have done to deserve it, but

only by God’s grace, for the sake of the righteousness of Christ – which has been imputed to them and received

by faith alone.

Yet while regeneration and sanctification form no part of justification, every justified sinner is regenerate;

his sanctification has begun and it will continue. Thus Calvin corrected Cardinal Sadoleto:

You touch on justification by faith. But this doctrine, which stands supreme in our religion, has

been effaced by you from the memory of men. You allege that we take no account of good works. If you look into

my catechism, at the first word you will be silent. We deny, it is true, that they are of any avail in man’s

justification, not even so much as a hair, for the Scripture gives us no hope except in the goodness of God

alone. But we attribute worth to works in the life of the just, for Christ came to create a people zealous of

good works.14

The Roman Catholic response came ultimately from the Council of Trent, which gathered for three periods between

1545 and 1563 in what is now a northern Italian town but was then within the Holy Roman Empire. On the subject

of justification, the Council produced 16 chapters and 33 canons which, says Cunningham, are ‘characterised by

vagueness and verbiage, confusion, obscurity and unfairness’. Indeed he adds, ‘It is not very easy on several

points to make out clearly and distinctly what were the precise doctrines which they wished to maintain and

condemn’.15 But it is important to note that, despite Vatican II, Rome has not

rejected the Canons of the Council of Trent; they are still central to her teaching. Pope John Paul II described

Trent’s declarations on justification as ‘one of the most valuable achievements for the formulation of Catholic

doctrine’, adding significantly that ‘the Council intended to safeguard the role assigned by Christ to the

Church and her sacraments in the process of sinful man’s justification’.16

The Council was adamant that justification not only includes the forgiveness of sins but also sanctification, a

renovation of man’s moral nature.17 The critical point here, of course, is how the

term justification is used in Scripture. In various contexts, it is used as the opposite of

condemnation; for instance: the judges in Israel were to ‘justify the righteous and condemn the wicked’

(Deut. 25:1); and in a context that is more directly relevant to our present concerns, Paul encourages

believers with the words: ‘It is God that justifieth. Who is he that condemneth?’ (Rom. 8:33). In each

case, to justify and to condemn are clearly legal terms; to justify is the opposite of to

condemn and means to declare righteous; justification is not a term which can be used to

describe the infusion of righteousness into anyone – any more than condemnation can be used to describe

making that person’s moral character worse.

We may note one further piece of evidence: David’s plea in Psalm 143:2: ‘Enter not into judgement with Thy

servant: for in Thy sight shall no man living be justified’. Here justification is again placed in the context

of an act of judgement. In the particular context of a sinner entering the kingdom of God, his

justification does not refer to him being made righteous; it refers to him being accounted righteous; it

is a statement of how God, as judge, views him. For the sake of Christ, the justified sinner is viewed as free

from guilt and as having always kept the law of God perfectly.

Yet in somewhat different contexts, we have what Buchanan16 refers to as the

declarative sense of justification – for example, Luke 7:29, where we are told that ‘all the people . . .

justified God’. In other words, the people declared, or acknowledged, that God was righteous. Similarly when

James asks, ‘Was not Abraham our father justified by works, when he had offered Isaac his son upon the altar?’

(2:21), he intends us to understand that Abraham’s works declared the genuineness of his spiritual state.

James is not discussing how Abraham entered the kingdom of God. He did so by faith; but where there is faith,

good works will follow. Here James is referring to Abraham’s good work of offering his son Isaac on the altar.

Good works declare that the faith in the justified person’s heart is genuine.

But not all that seems to be faith is actually genuine. This is what James has in mind when he says, ‘Even so

faith, if it hath not works, is dead, being alone’ (v 17). This is why James can ask, ‘What doth it profit, my

brethren, though a man say he hath faith, and have not works? Can faith save him?’ (v 14). The question is: Can

the dead faith, the faith from which good works do not flow, save anyone? And the answer must be, No, for it is

not genuine, living faith – which is clear because there are no works to evidence spiritual life, neither before

God or before other human beings. Those individuals whose works justify them, in the sense in which James uses

the word, have already been justified by faith without works; and that is now to use the word in a

somewhat different sense to how James used it and, more importantly, in a rather different context – that of

entering the kingdom of God. In this context it is of unspeakable importance to understand that no works of ours

can in the least degree contribute to our acceptance with God.

Trent thundered its anathema against anyone who would deny the need for divine grace in justification –

which for the Council included sanctification. But, in the Christian Church, the number of outright Pelagians

must always have been minimal (Pelagians claim that human beings are able to make themselves acceptable to God

by what they can do, without help from above). The vast majority of professing Christians would allow some place

for grace; by far the commoner error is to attempt to divide up the basis for salvation between divine grace and

human works – which is semi-Pelagianism, its best-known branch being Arminianism.

But Trent thundered a further anathema against ‘anyone [who] says that the sinner is justified by faith

alone, meaning that nothing else is required to co-operate in order to obtain the grace of

justification’.19 This was the main error confronting the Reformers: not a

doctrine, at least in theory, of works alone – but semi-Pelagianism, the doctrine of works plus grace.

Cunningham comments that, when we view Trent’s scheme as a whole and ‘in connection with the natural tendencies

of the human heart’, it is

so constructed as to be fitted to foster presumption and self-confidence, to throw obstacles in the

way of men’s submitting themselves to the divine method of justification, and to frustrate the great end which

the gospel scheme of salvation was, in all its parts, expressly designed and intended to accomplish.20

And he expresses that divine purpose in the words of the Westminster Confession: ‘that both the exact

justice and rich grace of God might be glorified in the justification of sinners’ (11:3).

We need not go beyond the Epistles of Paul to understand that our works can form no part of the basis for our

salvation. Works rule out grace; ‘to him that worketh’, Paul stresses, ‘is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt’. But, on the other hand, ‘to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth

the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness’ (Rom. 4:4,5); it is the ungodly who are

justified. ‘No place is left’, says Owen emphatically, ‘for any works to make the least approach towards our

justification before God’.21

We may note, at slightly greater length, the views of the English Reformers, as expressed in their Homily on Salvation:

The true understanding of this doctrine – we be justified freely by faith, without works; or that we

be justified by faith in Christ only – is not that this our own act to believe in Christ, or this our faith in

Christ, which is within us, doth justify us and deserve (or merit) our justification . . . but the true

understanding and meaning thereof is that although we hear God’s Word and believe it; although we have faith,

hope, charity, repentance, dread and fear of God within us, and do never so many works thereunto, yet we must

renounce the merit of all our said virtues . . . which we either have done, shall do, or can do, as things that

be far too weak and insufficient and imperfect to deserve remission of sins and our justification. And therefore

we must trust only in God’s mercy and that sacrifice which our High Priest and Saviour Jesus Christ, the Son of

God, once offered.22

It cannot be too strongly stated that the one basis for the forgiveness of sinners and for accepting them as

righteous before God – that is, for their justification – is the work of Christ in this world as the substitute

of sinners. That basis is the righteousness of Christ imputed to them and received by faith alone. So John

Calvin states:

The power of justifying which belongs to faith consists not in its worth as a work. Our

justification depends entirely on the mercy of God and the merits of Christ; when faith apprehends these, it is

said to justify . . . We say that faith justifies, not because it merits justification for us by its own worth,

but because it is an instrument by which we freely obtain the righteousness of Christ.23

Again in the words of the Westminster Confession, God justifies,

nor by imputing faith itself, the act of believing, or any other evangelical obedience, to [sinners]

as their righteousness; but by imputing the obedience and satisfaction of Christ unto them, they receiving and

resting on Him and His righteousness, by faith: which faith they have not of themselves; it is the gift of God

(11:1).

And this issue remains one of the great dividing lines between true, scriptural Christianity and the errors of

Rome. For instance, Karl Keating, described as ‘a Roman Catholic apologist’, wrote in 1988, ‘The Bible is quite

clear that we are saved by faith. The Reformers were quite right in saying this, and to this extent they merely

repeated the constant teaching of the Church. Where they erred was in saying that we are saved by faith

alone.’24 The error, of course, lies on Keating’s side of the argument but,

as we will notice again later, any omission of that significant word alone in this context is downright

dangerous.

While justification is by faith alone, faith is not the only activity in the regenerated soul. When God implants

new life in the soul – the new life which makes faith possible – he also implants every other grace. Otherwise

it would be, to hark back to James’ expression, a dead faith. The Westminster Confession expresses the

matter with characteristic conciseness: ‘Faith, thus receiving and resting on Christ and His righteousness, is

the alone instrument of justification; yet is it not alone in the person justified, but is ever accompanied with

all other saving graces’ (11:2). We may also note that saving faith is not, as Roman Catholics and others are

encouraged to believe, only assent – a mere intellectual acceptance that particular teachings are true.25 Faith includes assent, of course, but it is more than assent; it includes trust. In the

exercise of the faith that justifies, the sinner receives and rests upon Jesus Christ ‘as He is offered to us in

the gospel’.26

When sinners believe, they are justified. In other words, the righteousness of Christ is imputed to them. Just

as the sin of the human being – his guilt – is put to the account of Christ, so the righteousness of Christ is

put to the account of the sinner when he believes, and he is accounted righteous. Charles Hodge explains the

righteousness of Christ to mean: ‘all He became, did and suffered to satisfy the demands of divine justice, and

merit for His people the forgiveness of sins and the gift of eternal life’.27

Christ was in the world as the substitute of his people. In his sufferings, he was bearing the punishment due to

those who would believe on him; in his law-keeping, he was also acting as their substitute. What Christ did as

the substitute of sinners is imputed to them – that is, it is put to their account.

Hodge remarks that ‘Philemon had no doubt what Paul meant when he told him to impute to him the debt of

Onesimus’.28 Believers are treated, in a legal sense, as if they had brought about

these blessings themselves. Because Christ suffered in their place, they are forgiven; because Christ kept the

law in their place, they are treated as if they had kept the law perfectly themselves and so they have a right,

in Christ Jesus, to eternal life.

Justification is not merely forgiveness. In W G T Shedd’s words:

The law is not completely fulfilled by the endurance of penalty only. It must also be obeyed. Christ

both endured the penalty due to man for disobedience and perfectly obeyed the law for him; so that He was a

vicarious substitute in reference to both the precept and the penalty of the law.29

This was the understanding of the Reformers but was denied by Rome and by the followers of Arminius.

The Arminians believed that God treated faith as if it was complete obedience to the law – on the grounds that

the believer’s faith ‘is counted [or reckoned, or imputed] for righteousness’ (Rom. 4:5). Their idea is

that God accepts the sinner on the basis of his faith and of the perfect obedience which flows from it, and thus

faith becomes the ground of justification. But this is to treat faith as a work, in spite of the fact that this

verse refers to the one who is justified as’him that worketh not’. Commenting on this verse, Hodge states: ‘It

must express the idea that it was by means of faith that Abraham came to be treated as righteous, and not that

faith was taken in lieu of perfect obedience’. And Matthew Poole notes that faith is ‘not considered in

itself as a work, but in relation to Christ, the object of it, and as an act of receiving and applying Him’; so

that the sinner by faith lays hold of the righteousness of Christ, which is imputed to him. Thus Calvin

comments: ‘Faith adorns us with the righteousness of another, which it begs from God’. Faith has no merit

whatever in itself; it is just the instrument which lays hold of the glorious provision which God has made in

Christ for needy sinners.

To see what is imputed to the sinner in justification we must note the teaching of 2 Corinthians 5:21. There

Paul says in the name of all believers: ‘He [God] hath made him [Christ] to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that

we might be made the righteousness of God in him’.

Charles Hodge comments as follows:

There is probably no passage in the Scriptures in which the doctrine of justification is more

concisely and clearly stated than in this. Our sins were imputed to Christ, and His righteousness is imputed to

us. He bore our sins; we are clothed in His righteousness. Imputation conveys neither pollution nor holiness.

Christ bearing our sins did not make Him morally a sinner, any more than the victim was morally defiled which

bore the sins of the people [of Israel]; nor does Christ’s righteousness become subjectively ours; it is not the

moral quality of our souls. That is what is not meant. What is meant it is equally plain. Our sins were the

judicial ground of the sufferings of Christ, so that they were a satisfaction of justice; and His righteousness

is the judicial ground of our acceptance with God, so that our pardon is an act of justice. It is a

justification; or a declaration that justice is satisfied . . . it is not mere pardon, but justification alone,

that gives us peace with God.

III. The Influence of Ecumenical Thinking

We have lingered for some time with the Reformers, as it was in their age that the details of this vital

doctrine of justification were hammered out on the basis of Scripture. Let us now move on to notice how the

forces of twentieth-century ecumenism have impinged on this doctrine. We may look first at the Anglican-Roman

Catholic International Commission, originally established in 1970. What is of interest to us at the moment is

the second report of this body, ARCIC II, entitled Salvation and the Church, which was published in

1987.

The Commission was intended to further an ecumenical agenda, though Pope John Paul II suspended further talks in

the wake of the appointment of an openly-homosexual Anglican bishop in the United States. Salvation and the Church claims that ‘the doctrine of justification . . . can be properly treated only within the wider

context of the doctrine of salvation as a whole’. This is intended to allow the doctrine to be treated within

the bounds of the Roman Catholic concept of justification, as inclusive of sanctification. Not unexpectedly

then, the report merely states: ‘It is by faith that [salvation] is appropriated’30. The report thus lacks the necessary emphasis on faith alone, which, on the other

hand, is the emphasis of the eleventh of the Thirty-Nine articles of the Church of England: ‘We are accounted

righteous before God, only for the merit of our Lord Jesus Christ, by faith, and not for our good works

or deservings . . .’31

The report attempts to minimise the differences between the two sides at the Reformation and describes ‘the

disagreements as largely the result of misunderstandings, suspicions and fears’.32

In woolly language it affirms: ‘The righteousness of God our Saviour is not only declared in a judgement made by

God in favour of sinners, but is also bestowed as a gift to make them righteous’ – where no attempt is made to

differentiate between justification and sanctification, which are, in Scripture, two distinct doctrines. Not

surprisingly, the report concludes that ‘this is not an area where any remaining differences of theological

interpretation or ecclesiological emphasis, either within or between our Communions, can justify our continuing

separation’.33 The tragedy is, of course, that while the Roman Catholic Church has

always blatantly allowed tradition an equal place with Scripture as a source for their doctrines, the Anglican

Churches have departed from their historic stance of giving to Scripture fundamental authority over their

teachings. If they respected God’s authority, the Church of England representatives would never have dared to

desert their Reformation heritage so readily.

The words of William Cunningham on the subject of free justification are highly relevant at this point:

This was what Luther called the article of a standing or a falling Church; and the history of the

Church, both before and since his time has fully justified the propriety of the description. There has perhaps

been no department of divine truth against which the assaults of Satan have been more assiduously directed ever

since the origin of the Christian Church than the Scripture doctrine of justification, and there has probably

been no doctrine, the profession and preaching of which have more generally indicated with correctness the state

of vital religion in the Church in all ages.34

Obviously the unwillingness of the representatives of the Church of England to hold fast the doctrine of

justification indicates clearly the low state of true religion in that body today.

Sadly also, present-day Lutheranism must be similarly described in the light of discussions between the Lutheran

World Federation and the Roman Catholic Church. These discussions resulted in a Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification in 1999, which was published on October 31, the day on which, 482 years earlier,

Luther had nailed up his theses in Wittenberg. The choice of date was no coincidence, but the Joint Declaration is a betrayal of the work of Luther and the other Reformers. While it acknowledges that real

difficulties did exist at the time of the Reformation, it aims ‘to show that, on the basis of their dialogue,

the subscribing Lutheran Churches and the Roman Catholic Church are now able to articulate a common

understanding of our justification by God’s grace through faith in Christ’ – but not by faith alone. And

it claims to show ‘that the remaining differences in its explication are no longer the occasion for doctrinal

condemnations’.35

However, the ‘common understanding’ seems to rest on a willingness to allow each party in the discussions to

follow their own distinctives. ‘God’s saving work’, it is claimed, ‘can be expressed in the imagery of God as

judge who pronounces sinners innocent and righteous . . . and also in a transformist view which emphasises the

change wrought in sinners by infused grace.’36 Now, it is wrong to use the word

imagery in this context, for God does actually judge sinners. But, more fundamental to our present

discussion is the fact that, while true Protestants believe that salvation includes both justification and

sanctification, they are also clear that the sinner’s acceptance with God is his justification – when the

sinner, who has no righteousness of his own, receives the righteousness of Christ by faith alon.

IV. Destroying Paul’s Doctrine

Let us turn finally to what has become known as the ‘New Perspective on Paul’. The story may begin with E P

Sanders, who calls himself a liberal, modern, secularised Protestant and was a Professor of Religion at Duke

University in America. His book, Paul and Palestinian Judaism, published in 1977, focuses on Judaism

between 200 BC and 200 AD and attempts to answer the question: What type of religion was Paul reacting against?

His conclusion is that in the Judaism of Paul’s time ‘election and ultimately salvation are considered to be by

God’s mercy rather than human achievement’.37

The implication is that Paul could not have been arguing against a reliance on works in his Epistles; however,

it would seem that Sanders and the writers who have followed him have concluded that, because the Judaism of

Paul’s time did not deny grace, it was clear from every charge of resting on works. However, Sanders has

actually acknowledged that the Apocryphal book, 4 Esdras, does promote ‘a religion of individual

self-righteousness’38, and it is unlikely to have been the only explicit statement

of legalism from that era; indeed others have pointed to writings of Josephus, the Jewish historian of the first

century AD. What has become known as Second-Temple Judaism may have been cleared of the charge of Pelagianism,

but it has by no means been cleared of semi-Pelagianism.39

Building on Sanders’ work are the writings of James Dunn, another liberal Protestant, who was a Professor of

Divinity at Durham University. Dunn, who is credited with coining the expression ‘New Perspective on Paul’,

claims that Sanders did not succeed in explaining Paul’s relation to Judaism. He argues that Paul was objecting

to Jewish exclusivism, not to legalism – that the Apostle was opposing the Jews’ use of ‘the works of the law’

to exclude the Gentiles from the covenant community. Dunn claims that the Jews used certain of these ‘works of

the law’ – particularly circumcision, food laws and feast days – as what he calls ‘boundary markers’, to

distinguish those who belonged to God’s covenant people from those who did not.

Dunn’s thinking destroys Paul’s doctrine of justification: he redefines the righteousness of God as his covenant

faithfulness, and sees justification as an acknowledgement that someone is already among God’s covenant people,

while claiming that ‘Paul is ready to insist that a doing of the law is necessary for final acquittal before

God’.40 If this looks very much like justification by works, we must notice an even

more fundamental error: Dunn rejects the substitutionary death of Christ; he sees it merely as a

‘representative’ death in which believers share. We are left with an ongoing justification which will be

finalised on the day of judgement.

In the words of Professor Cornelis P Venema’s critique, this justification concludes ‘with God’s vindication of

the believer who remains steadfast by the obedience of faith to the end’.41 But it

is important for us to distinguish the final judgement, at the end of the world, from justification by faith,

which, as we have repeatedly noted, is a divine, legal declaration that the believing sinner is, for the sake of

Christ and his righteousness, perfectly righteous; the law is perfectly satisfied as far as this sinner is

concerned because of what the Saviour has done in his place. This declaration can never be changed; it does not

need to be confirmed, even on the day of judgement; it most certainly can never be reversed. What will take

place at the judgement is that evidence will be led to prove, beyond any possible doubt, that those who are

called to enter heaven in their resurrected bodies are indeed truly godly. We must not lose sight of the

finality of the sentence that is pronounced in justification, when the sinner first believes.

We turn now to a third ‘New Perspective’ writer, the present Bishop of Durham, Tom Wright,42 who has an Evangelical background. He is a prolific author and has written a number the

books promoting his New Perspective views. Among his books is What Saint Paul Really Said, which is

addressed to a popular audience. There is no doubt that Wright is a first-class communicator, which makes his

departures from Scripture all the more dangerous. He claims that what the Apostle Paul really said was very

different from what the Reformers understood by his writings. What then is the gospel according to Tom Wright?

This gospel is not an answer to the question, How can I find favour with God? but an answer to a very different

question, Who is Lord?

Paul was proclaiming, Wright declares, ‘that the crucified Jesus of Nazareth had been raised from the dead by

Israel’s God; that He had thereby been vindicated as Israel’s Messiah; that, surprising though it might seem, He

was therefore the Lord of the whole world’. Thus men and women are liberated ‘from paganism which had held them

captive’ and are enabled ‘to become, for the first time, the truly human beings they were meant to be’.43 Obviously there is far more to the salvation proclaimed by the biblical gospel than

this. Professor Venema complains that ‘one of the most vexing features of the New Perspective is its failure to

explain the connection between the justification of believers and Christ’s atoning work’.44 This applies to Wright in particular.

Clearly the New Perspective has an unscriptural view of justification. Lying behind it is an inadequate view of

the atonement, and lying behind that again must be an inadequate view of sin. But let us listen to Cunningham:

All false conceptions of the system of Christian doctrine assume, or are based on, inadequate and

erroneous views and impressions of the nature and effects of the Fall – of the sinfulness of the state into

which man fell; producing, of course, equally inadequate and erroneous views and impressions of the difficulty

of effecting their deliverance, and of the magnitude, value and efficacy of the provision made for accomplishing

it. Forgiveness and regeneration, even when admitted to be in some sense necessary, are represented as

comparatively trivial matters, which may be easily cured or effected – the precise grounds of which need not be

very carefully or anxiously investigated, since there is no difficulty in regarding them as, in a manner, the

natural result of the mercy of God, or, as is often added, though without any definite meaning being attached to

it, of the work of Christ.45

But why spend time on the unscriptural ideas of the New Perspective? It is the concern which has prompted more

than one author to write on the subject. One of them has said, probably reflecting particularly his own,

American, scene: ‘Some within the Reformed churches have enthusiastically heralded the NPP and its supposed

compatibility with Reformed and biblical teaching. Upon examination, however, the NPP, both in its particulars

and as a system, will evidence marked differences with Reformed and biblical teaching.’ He goes on to assess the

‘sympathies’ of the NPP with the doctrine of salvation; he asserts: ‘To the extent that these sympathies exist,

[they] are not with Protestantism but with Roman Catholicism’. And he points to ‘the potential dangers to the

Church that are occasioned by enthusiastic and uncritical receptions of the NPP’.46

Wright spells out as follows his view of the ecumenical implications of his ideas:

Paul’s doctrine of justification by faith impels the churches, in their current fragmented state,

into the ecumenical task . . . The doctrine of justification, in other words, is not merely a doctrine which

Catholic and Protestant might just be able to agree on, as a result of hard ecumenical endeavour. It is itself

the ecumenical doctrine, the doctrine that rebukes all our petty and often culture-bound church groupings, and

which declares that all who believe in Jesus belong together in the one family.

Enough has been said surely to make it clear that the New Perspective teachings on justification are not those

of Paul, or of Scripture generally. But sinners conscious of their guilt can rest assured that the Reformers’

teaching on justification – which is the doctrine of justification revealed in the Bible – does give a safe

answer to that most vital of questions: How can I, a sinner, be accepted by God? It was because the Philippian

jailor was taught the doctrine that the Lord Jesus Christ had died in the place of sinners that he believed and

was justified. And it was because the Publican believingly understood something of the doctrine of substitution

– which was illustrated in the sacrifices being offered as he stood at the temple – that he went down to his

house justified.

The Reformers have left this generation with a precious heritage; let us not turn our backs on it. The Lord in

his kindness gave the Holy Spirit, to a remarkable extent, to them and to other godly theologians in the

immediately succeeding generations. John Owen, one of the greatest theologians of the century following the

Reformation, gave this as the substance of what he was pleading for at a particular stage of his work on

justification: ‘that men should renounce all confidence in themselves and everything that may give countenance

thereunto, betaking themselves unto the grace of God by Christ alone for righteousness and salvation’.47 If the Church holds to this doctrine it will have a solid, scriptural answer for seeking

souls. To the extent that the Church today has given up its Reformation heritage, it is losing the capacity to

give a helpful answer to anyone who has come under conviction of sin.

Let us close with a warning and an encouragement from the Covenanter, James Fraser of Brea:

Look not to what you have done, but to what Christ has done; you neither share in whole nor in part

with Christ. Good works are mentioned, not to buy or purchase glory by, but to evidence an interest in Christ

and sincerity in grace; if there be as much as will evidence sincerity, there is enough.48

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Potoweet : How I learned to stop worrying and love Theology

It is either SOLI DEO GLORIA or HOMO MENSURA ( man is the measure of all things )…." The battle of the Gods "…The True God vs the pagan deities fabricated in the minds of men…Calvin said the mind is idolatrum fabriculum….Most people miss the true reason for the Reformation…it was idolatry….The RC system is idolatrous and promotes little god substitutes ( John called them " anti-christs NOT THE Anti-Christ )…anti means : " in place of "….the church in the dark ages was so corrupted by pagan practices it transmogrified into the monstrous church-state entity that ruled Europe with the iron fist of intolerance and religious inspired hatred….There was NO Arminianism( YES,semi-pelagianism ) until Dordrecht defined it with its counter arguments against the Remonstrants…It was quite political btw…we moderns tend to stay ensconced in our post-modern reverie defining what democratic governments are…this is anachronistic and quite short-sighted….most Calvinists don’t seem to know much at all about church history, biblical theology, systematic theology or anything deep about their most holy faith but will sadly prattle on like gossiping old biddies, not knowing whereof they speak in its proper theological & historical perspective…All is deconstructed to reductio ad absurdum, ad hominum, ad baculum, ad nauseum, ad infinitum persiflage….facebook is a woefully inadequate forum for in depth study and discussion. The inchoate nature is an ample illustration of McLuhan’s journalistic apothegm : " The medium is the message "…..and so it is & as Vonnegut wrote…and so it goes. Potoweet! Shalom.

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The Efficacy and Benefit of Christ’s Resurrection / Excerpt from The Christian’s Reasonable Service by Wilhelmus a`Brakel / A MASTERPIECE of Sublime Divinity from a wonderful Dutch Puritan from ” The Naderie Reformatie “

Excerpt from The Christian’s Reasonable Service by Wilhelmus a Brakel

The Efficacy and Benefit of Christ’s Resurrection

by Wilhelmus a Brakel

In the third place we must consider the efficacy and benefits of the resurrection of Christ. This is most extraordinary, and therefore Paul was so desirous and continually occupied in reflecting upon the resurrection of Christ. “That I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection” (Phil. 3:10).

The first fruit is justification. “But for us also, to whom it shall be imputed, if we believe on Him that raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead, who was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification” (Rom. 4:24–25). As long as the Surety still suffered and death had power over Him, the final penny had not as yet been paid. His conquering of the last enemy, death, and His triumphant appearance as being alive, were evidences that sin had been fully atoned for, the ransom had been paid, God’s justice had been satisfied (being satisfied with this atonement), and that thus the Surety was justified (1 Tim. 3:16). Consequently all God’s children have been reconciled in Him. There is not one sin, not even the least part thereof, for which satisfaction has not been made, and therefore they are free from all guilt and punishment. If someone senses the dreadfulness of guilt and punishment, views God as being provoked by sin so that there is no peace but only terror within the conscience (to such justification is most desirable), let him then turn about and by faith behold this Surety as having risen from the dead, which is the evidence of perfect satisfaction. Receive Him by faith who calls you and offers His fullness without price. Let such a person go to God and ask the Lord, while pleading upon the resurrection of Christ from the dead (1 Pet. 3:21), “Are not my sins punished? Has not my guilt been atoned for? Has not my Surety risen from the dead and thus entered into rest? Art not Thou my reconciled God and Father? Am I not at peace with Thee?” May such a person thus wrestle to apply all this to himself on the basis of the promises made to all who receive Christ by faith, until he experiences the power of Christ’s resurrection unto his justification and being at peace with God.

The second fruit is sanctification. The apostle demonstrates this in Romans 6:4–5, “Therefore we are buried with Him by baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life, for if we have been planted together in the likeness of His death, we shall be also in the likeness of His resurrection” (Rom. 6:5). The apostle emphasizes this also when he states, “And you, being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh, hath He quickened together with Him, having forgiven you all trespasses” (Col. 2:13); “If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above” (Col. 3:1). Even if believers may know themselves to be justified, they cannot find satisfaction in this. Their whole desire and life is to discern the image of God within themselves, to be conformed to that image, to thus be united to Him and to live in Him—that is their salvation. They cannot but find delight in knowing God, in loving Him, in fearing Him, in being subject to Him, and thus in thoughts, words, and deeds be in a spiritual frame which is fully and entirely in agreement with His will. Sin is therefore despicable to them: they abhor themselves: they are ashamed before God and inwardly sorrow over their deeds. How it would be their delight to be delivered from the sins which so grieve them! How this causes them to long for heaven, knowing that they will there behold God’s face in righteousness, being satisfied with His likeness when they awake (Ps. 17:15)! Oh, yield to this heartfelt desire and let it motivate you to be engaged in the way of holiness, for it is the Lord’s way to cause His children, while thus engaged in battle, to increase and proceed with joy in sanctification.

(1) View Christ’s resurrection as an example and a pattern. Christ arose in the morning. Accustom yourself to meditate upon Christ’s resurrection as you awake. Let every occurrence of waking up and arising out of bed stir you up to arise with Christ. Christ arose on the first day of the week . Therefore commemorate the resurrection of Christ on each Sabbath day and, uniting yourself with Him in the resurrection, let it be a renewed revival of your spiritual life. Christ departed from the grave , the place of the dead. You likewise must avoid (as much as your profession will suffer you to do so) familiar interaction with worldly and ungodly men. They are dead, they stink, and their stench is contagious. Christ left His burial garment behind in the grave. You likewise ought to hate the garment which has been polluted by the flesh. Leave all that is sinful behind in Sodom and Egypt, that is, in the grave, and depart from honor, goods, entertainment, and whatever belongs to the world. Christ appeared alive . Let your light therefore also shine and let everyone perceive that there is much distance between you and sinners. Show by your actions that you denounce whatever the world cleaves to. Manifest your love, humility, and heavenly–minded 54 life in the love and fear of God. Let the image of God and the likeness of Christ within you be manifested, doing all this not to be perceived by others as such, but to the glory of Christ, the conviction of the world, and the encouragement of the godly. The purpose of Christ’s association with men was only to convince His own of the veracity of His resurrection and to strengthen them. He also did so to the benefit of His church unto the end of the world, even though this lasted but forty days, after which He ascended into heaven. Let it likewise be the objective of your life to walk godly upon the earth in order that those who are acquainted with you may be convinced and encouraged. Let it also be a preparation for going to heaven itself.

(2) Let Christ’s resurrection motivate you to live a holy life. This is taught by the apostle, “Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord, for if we have been planted together in the likeness of His death, we shall be also in the likeness of His resurrection” (Rom. 6:11, 5) ; “Because we thus judge, that if one died for all, then were all dead: . . . that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto Him which died for them, and rose again” (2 Cor. 5:14–15). Follow the example of the apostle and thus arrive at the following conclusion: Since the Lord Jesus as my Surety has removed all my sin by His death, and as evidence of this has arisen from the dead, should I then yet live in sin? Should not I then arise with Him from the death of sin and live with Him in all holiness?

The power needed for our spiritual resurrection is inherent in the resurrection of Christ, “which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead” (1 Pet. 1:3); “That I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection” (Phil. 3:10). Every believer is a member of the Lord Jesus. The same Spirit which is in Christ is also in them, and they live by that selfsame Spirit. Whatever the Head experiences, the members must also experience. Since Christ the Head has arisen, life–giving power flows into all His members. Believers are ingrafted into Him as the trunk, for as a graft becomes the recipient of sap and life–giving power, it likewise cannot but be that all believers receive the life–giving power of Christ. If one then unites himself with the risen Christ by faith, one will also become aware of the life–giving power which proceeds from Christ to quicken our souls.

The third fruit of Christ’s resurrection is the blessed resurrection of believers . It is God’s way to lead His children to heaven by way of many crosses. Temporal death also belongs to this. This is not a punishment upon sin as such, but is nevertheless a difficult and painful way which they must traverse together with all men. Their death, however, by virtue of the death of Christ, is without sting and curse, and thus is but a departing in peace. In consequence of Christ’s resurrection, they will be resurrected unto salvation. “But if the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, He (the Father) that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by His Spirit that dwelleth in you” (Rom. 8:11). The resurrection is attributed to the Father here; however, the reason that Christ’s resurrection is mentioned together with ours is to demonstrate that His resurrection is the meriting cause of ours. “For if we be dead with Him, we shall also live with Him” (2 Tim. 2:11); “But now is Christ . . . become the firstfruits” (1 Cor. 15:20); “And He is . . . the firstborn from the dead; that in all things He might have the preeminence” (Col. 1:18). This will therefore transpire with the entire harvest, that is, with all believers after Him, since the church is the fullness of Him that filleth all in all, that is, Christ (Eph. 1:23). The entire congregation of Christ, being members of His body, must therefore arise so that the entire mystical body of Christ may live. Believers may and must apply this to themselves and rejoice in the hope of glory, saying, “For we know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God, an house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens” (2 Cor. 5:1). They may also say with Job, “For I know that my Redeemer liveth, and that He shall stand at the latter day upon the earth: and though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God: whom I shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold, and not another; though my reins be consumed within me” (Job 19:25–27). So much concerning the first step of the exaltation of Christ, the resurrection.

Excerpt from The Christian’s Reasonable Service by Wilhelmus a Brakel

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Reformation Basics: Freedom of the Christian Man by R. Scott Clark / A wonderful essay on Christian Liberty

Reformation Basics: Freedom of the Christian Man

by R. Scott Clark

There is a great lot of talk in the evangelical and Reformed world(s) about sola Scriptura but one has the growing sense that not only is the Reformation scripture principle not well understood (e.g., it is often misconstrued as an endorsement of biblicism) its implications for the doctrine of Christian liberty or what Martin Luther (1483-1546) described as The Freedom of the Christian Man are also not well understood anymore.

Luther articulated the fundamental principle of Christian freedom at the risk of his own life, at the Diet of Worms (1521): “Unless I am convinced by Scripture and by plain reason and not by Popes and councils who have so often contradicted themselves, my conscience is captive to the word of God. To go against conscience is neither right nor safe. I cannot and I will not recant.”

When Luther said “Scripture and plain reason” he was not making them coordinate but, despite his frequent condemnations of “that whore reason” neither did he reject a role for reason in theology. See David Bagchi’s terrific essay on this in Protestant Scholasticism: Essays in Reassessment.

When Luther spoke of “conscience” he had in mind the conscience that is bound by God’s perspicuous Word. The authority resides not in the conscience but in the Word. The conscience has been taken captive by the Word of God.

Luther was articulating briefly the genuine Protestant doctrine of Scripture alone, i.e., that Scripture (not Luther) has a unique, final authority for the Christian faith and the Christian life. Implicit in the Scripture principle is the Protestant conviction that Scripture is inherently and sufficiently perspicuous so that what must be known for faith and the Christian life can be known.

The Protestant principle is not the autonomy of the individual believer. The church reads the Scripture but where the Roman communion places the church coordinate to or even over Scripture, the Protestants place the church under Scripture. We serve the Word, the Word does not serve us. Thus, we say that the church (as an institution and in her assemblies) has only ministerial authority. She did not produce the Word. She can never contradict the Word. She cannot change the Word. The church only administers the Word.

This means that though the Word is incorrigible, the church is corrigible. Historically, the church has always become corrupt and needed Reformation. That was true in the 16th century and it’s true today. This is why the Westminster Divines wrote what they did in Westminster Confession of Faith 25.5, “The purest churches under heaven are subject both to mixture and error; and some have so degenerated, as to become no churches of Christ, but synagogues of Satan. Nevertheless, there shall be always a church on earth, to worship God according to his will.”

The church as such is indefectible. There will always be an expression of the visible church on the earth. Nevertheless, particular expressions of the church are not necessarily indefectible. That is why we speak of “deformation” and “reformation.”

The sole, unique authority of the Bible, God’s inerrant, infallible Word is provides and guards our liberty against the tyranny of human opinion, as Luther knew, even when that opinion is ecclesiastical.

Many of us have spent time in forms of Christianity that are very strong on rules and slavery and very weak on grace and freedom. By “rules and slavery” I refer to the imposition of man-made rules by which sanctity is measured. There was the law of the “quiet time.” There was the (usually) unspoken law against smoking and drinking alcohol. Then there are rules about television, about clothing, and the list could go on.

The first aspect of the freedom of the Christian, is the unique, normative authority of the Scriptures (sola Scriptura) as confessed by the churches. The second aspect of Christian freedom is liberty from the tyranny of human opinion. Rules are inevitable. They are necessary. Church orders are unavoidable, but they must remain subordinate to Holy Scripture. They must serve Scripture. They must have some Scriptural foundation. One of the great errors of the medieval church is that the church reversed that order. Scripture was subordinated to ecclesiastical authority and rules (e.g., monastic rules) proliferated.

Grace, on the other hand, liberates. Grace, in the nature of things, is given freely to sinners. Where sin abounded, grace abounded more. Grace brings freedom to helpless captives. Christ did not die for his people because they were good or even because he foresaw what they would do. He obeyed, died, and was raised for us with the knowledge of what we really are by nature, after the fall: sinners, rebels against God. Nevertheless, for Christ’s sake, God has freely loved us in Christ and lavished his favor upon us, made us alive, given us faith, and united us to Christ.

As recipients of such rich and richly undeserved favor freely given we are free. Because it was freely given it it was not earned. Because it was not earned it cannot be kept. We do not “keep” it. Grace keeps us. In that case, we are free from the tyranny of human expectations at least when it comes to approval from God. This is not antinomian counsel. Because we have been freed from the shackles of the demands of the law, for acceptance with God, we are free to obey God’s law, in the Spirit (who gave the law!), in Christ, in gratitude. We are also free to push to the side purely man-made laws and rules. Arguably the sorts of rules that prevail in some forms of American fundamentalist Christianity may once have had a purpose but such rules often become disconnected from their original purpose and take on a life of their own.

One of the great blessings of the Reformation is that it not only delivered us from the tyranny of purely human (ecclesiastical) tradition. It also delivered us from the tyranny of informal rules. No one has to drink or smoke. Wisdom may dictate that abstaining is the best course of action but whether one does or doesn’t isn’t a matter of righteousness (conformity to God’s law) but wisdom and freedom. You might not approve of the sorts of people with whom one associates. People didn’t always approve of the sorts of people with whom our most Holy Savior associated. You may be right but we’re free before the Lord obey him according to God’s Word, even if we disagree.

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The Real Scandal of the Evangelical Mind By Carl Trueman / Excellent Polemic / Courtesy of 9 Marks Blog

The Real Scandal of the Evangelical Mind
By Carl Trueman

A few years ago I edited a volume of essays on the doctrine of Scripture with Paul Helm. Just before the deadline for submissions, the project was “named and shamed” by a speaker at an influential evangelical theological conference as being a modern attempt to reaffirm B.B. Warfield’s doctrine of Scripture. Within days, one of the contributors emailed me, concerned that his name was going to be associated with such a project. I was able to reassure him that the project was not intended as a defense of Warfield’s position but as an exploration of the notion of trustworthiness as it connects both to God and to his Word. The gentleman was reassured and remained on board, but the incident simply served to confirm in my mind what I had long suspected: too many evangelical academics want to have their cake and eat it too. They want the piety, and perhaps the platform, which evangelicalism provides them, but they also want to be accepted by those who hang around the senior common room in the university.

The problem, of course, is that one cannot serve two masters: as someone once said, one ends up hating one and loving the other, or being devoted to one and despising the other.

STRANGE TIMES AND SLIPPERY THEOLOGY

We live in strange times. Hardly a year goes by without some conference on the future of the evangelical church somewhere having at least one speaker, or sometimes even a slate of speakers, who arguably represent precisely the kind of theology that has emptied pews, castrated preaching, and disemboweled commitment to the gospel.

I saw a flyer for just such a conference recently, honoring a great evangelical thinker and critic, where one of the keynote speakers represented precisely the kind of slippery theology which the honoree had devoted his life to debunking. Strange times, indeed.

What is going on? Why this craven need for acceptability by the wider world?

WHY DO EVANGELICAL ACADEMICS CRAVE WORLDLY ACCEPTANCE?

I suspect there are a number of reasons for this problem. First, the context of evangelicalism lends itself to just such confusion. Evangelicalism really does not understand what it is. Is it a movement based on an experience (the new birth), or on theological commitments, or on parachurch institutions? Yet here’s the rub: The first (experience) will degenerate into mere subjective mysticism if not connected to the second (theological commitments). The second is now highly disputed among evangelicals, who cannot even agree on the answer to Pilate’s question, “What is truth?” And the third (parachurch institutions) too often either forms part of the problem of defining the second, or, in the USA in particular, becomes less a ministry and more a vehicle for a cult of personality, vulnerable to the kind of criticism made by Eric Hoffer, who said that every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and ends up as a racket. Evangelicalism is a sorry mess, neither pure nor simple.

Second, if a movement does not understand what it is, then it cannot make any really satisfactory determination on who belongs and who does not. The boundaries of a movement are ultimately revealed by the person who comes closest to belonging but who nonetheless does not. Arius is a good early church example. As high and exalted as was his view of Christ, he could still only regard Christ as a creature and not fully God. The boundary was drawn and he was outside of it. Combine the problems of defining evangelical identity with the current cultural penchant for not excluding anybody and you have a heady recipe for total disaster. Say nice things about Jesus, have a warm feeling in your heart when somebody lights a candle, and be kind to your grandmother and—hey presto!—you belong; you too can be an evangelical. Thus we have deniers of penal substitution, of any meaningful notion of biblical authority, of the uniqueness of Christ for salvation, of justification by grace through faith, of the particularity of salvation. No matter: just stress that Jesus was a jolly good bloke, mouth a few orthodox sounding phrases, speak with a bit of engaging passion, and you too can get a membership pass and a speaking gig. And, if the conferences I mentioned above are anything to go by, we fall for such ruses every time.

Third, there would seem to be a pervasive evangelical inferiority complex. This means that, while we do not wish to exclude anybody, we dread being excluded ourselves. Indeed, for the evangelical academic, in a world so ill-defined, it is always tempting to cut just a few more corners, or keep shtum on just a couple of rather embarrassing doctrinal commitments, in order to have just that little bit more influence, that slightly bigger platform, in the outside world. This is particularly the temptation of evangelical biblical scholars and systematicians whose wider guilds are so utterly unsympathetic to the kind of supernaturalism and old-fashioned truth claims upon which their church constituencies are largely built. In so doing, we kid ourselves that we are doing the Lord’s work, that, somehow, because we have articles published in this journal or by that press, we are really making real headway into the unbelieving culture of the theological academy. Not that these things are not good and worthy—I do such things myself—but we must be careful that we do not confuse professional academic achievement with building up the saints or scoring a point for the kingdom.

It remains true (as James Barr pointed out years ago) that evangelical academics are generally respected in the academy only at precisely those points where they are least evangelical. There is a difference between academic or scholarly respectability and intellectual integrity. For a Christian, the latter depends upon the approval of God and is rooted in fidelity to his revealed Word; it does not always mean the same thing as playing by the rules of scholarly guild.

WHAT OUR ACADEMICS NEED: AMBITION…BUT NOT THAT KIND

Finally, too few evangelical academics seem to have much ambition. Perhaps this sounds strange: the desire to hold a tenured university position, to publish with certain presses, to speak at certain scholarly conferences, to be in conversation with the movers and shakers of the guild—these seem like ambitions that are all too common. Yet true ambition, true Christian ambition, is surely based in and directed towards the upbuilding of the church, towards serving the people of God, and this is where evangelical academics often fail so signally. The impact evangelical scholars have had on the academy is, by and large, paltry, and often (as noted) confined to those areas where their contributions have been negligibly evangelical. Had the same time and energy been devoted to the building up of the saints, imagine how the church might have been transformed.

This is not to say that high-powered scholarship should be off-limits, nor that the immediate needs of the man or woman in the pew should provide the criteria by which relevance is judged; but it is to say that all theological scholarship should be done with the ultimate goal of building up the saints, confounding the opponents of the gospel, and encouraging the brethren. The highest achievement any evangelical theological scholar can attain is not membership of some elite guild but the knowledge that he or she has done work that strengthened the church and extended the kingdom of God through the local church.

The day is coming when the cultural intellectual elites of evangelicalism—the institutions and the individuals—will face a tough decision. I see the crisis coming on two separate but intimately connected fronts. The day is coming, and perhaps has already come, when, first, to believe that the Bible is the Word of God, inspired, authoritative, and utterly truthful, will be seen as a sign at best of intellectual suicide, at worst of mental illness; and, second, to articulate any form of opposition to homosexual practice will be seen as the moral equivalent of advocating white supremacy or child abuse. In such times, the choice will be clear, those who hold the Christian line will be obvious, and those who have spent their lives trying to serve both orthodoxy and the academy will find that no amount of intellectual contortionism will save them. Being associated with B. B. Warfield will be the least of their worries.

Years ago, Mark Noll wrote a book, The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind, in which he argued that the scandal was that there was no such thing. When it comes to evangelical scholars and scholarship, I disagree: the scandal is not that there is no mind; it is that these days there is precious little evangel.

Carl Trueman is professor of Historical Theology and Church History at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia.

January/February 2010

© 9Marks

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CALVINUS—AUTHENTIC CALVINISM: A CLARIFICATION by A C. Clifford/ Reviewed by Jean Marc-Berthoud / ” Christianity & Society ” Vol 10 # 4 / A scathing rebuttal of Clifford and an affirmation of ” the ” Calvin and the Calvinists ” theory.

Book Reviews
CALVINUS—AUTHENTIC CALVINISM:
A CLARIFICATION
A C. Clifford
Norwich: Charenton Reformed Publishing,
pages, paperback,

It is always an encouragement for someone coming from
the French-speaking world to discover foreign scholars who
manifest an interest in the history and the heritage of French
Protestantism. Dr Alan Clifford is to be commended for his
zeal in this field. His abundantly documented extended
essay, Calvinus, is a substantial effort at a theological interpretation
of the history of the Reformed Churches in France
from the Sixteenth-century Reformation to the middle of
the Eighteenth century. His thesis is simple. The true Reformed
tradition (i.e. faithful to the teachings of John Calvin)
is not that which has often been proposed by the central
thrust of Calvinist theology and scholarship, as going from
Calvin to his immediate successor, Theodore
de Bèze , to Simon Goulart , the
Canons of Dort , Pierre Du Moulin ,
François Turrettini and Benedict Pictet , and ending with the latter’s remarkable disciple,
Antoine Court . Not at all! For Clifford the line
would rather go from John Calvin to Moïse Amyraut , to Jean Claude and then to Antoine
Court and J. F. Ostervald . Indeed, for Dr
Clifford the central test of his orthodox tradition is nothing
else but the explicit rejection of the doctrine of particular
redemption as it can be found in the formulations of Dort, of
Westminster and of the Helvetic Consensus, which all affirm this
specific point of doctrine. For Dr Clifford (as is the case for
many academic historians) the teachings of Bèze, by its
scholastic rationalism, is considered to have marked a decisive
break in the true Calvinistic tradition, even though neither
Bèze himself, nor any of his contemporaries or immediate
successors, were in any way aware of being party to such a
betrayal. For Dr Clifford, Moïse Amyraut and the Academy
of Saumur (and their like) are thus the only genuine heirs of
the biblical theology of the great Genevan Reformer. This
thesis is well known in its Anglo-Saxon version in Great
Britain and is largely (though not exclusively) associated
with the name of Dr R. T. Kendall of Westminster Chapel.
It requires critical assessment.
. The modern French Calvinist tradition, whose resurrection
began with the conversion of Auguste Lecerf
through his reading of Calvin’s Institutes, and
which includes theologians of the stature of Jean Cadier,
Pierre Charles Marcel, Pierre Courthial and
Pierre Berthoud, goes flat against such an interpretation of
the history of French Protestantism. For these scholars the
traditional interpretation is the correct one. The Canons of
Dort, Pierre Du Moulin, François Turrettini and Antoine
Court stand fully (with minor differences) in the fundamental
tradition of the French Reformation. And it is this
heritage that they claim as their own. For these Reformed
historians Moïse Amyraut and the Saumur Academy represent
a radical breach (in the line of Arminian humanism and
Cartesian rationalism, though prudently avoiding explicit
identification with these) with the tradition of Calvin, Bèze
and Dort. These crypto-Arminian influences led to the New
Orthodoxy of such men as J. F. Ostervald and J.
A. Turrettini —the son—who had both been
strongly influenced by the teachings of Saumur and whose
theology opened the way to the thoroughgoing infection of
French Protestant theology in the latter part of the eighteenth
century by Enlightenment rationalism. Pierre Courthial
briefly summarises this point of view:
The period after was the period of the decline of Calvinism
in France. As a Provençal proverb says, “The rotting of a fish
begins with the head,” and under the regrettable influence of
theologians of the Academy of Saumur, such as Moïse Amyraut
(). Louis Cappel (), and Josué de la Place
(–), the faith of a growing number of pastors and churches
was impregnated with Arminianism.1
. Pierre Courthial, The Golden Age of Calvinism in France, –
, in W. Stanford Reid, ed., John Calvin: His influence in the Western
World (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, ), p. .
Christianity & Society—
It is indeed striking to observe that nowhere does Dr Clifford
make even the slightest mention of this modern Calvinist
French theological and historiographical school.
. Dr Clifford’s representation of the history of French
Protestantism can thus be characterised as clearly standing
in the line of nineteenth-century liberal German
historiography and can also be associated with the Kantian
position of Karl Barth and of his school of dialectical
theology, which opposes the supposedly dead scholastic
orthodoxy of the seventeenth century to the biblical theology
of the Reformation and to the neo-orthodoxy of the
twentieth century. In addition, Dr Clifford’s interpretation
renders the tragic history of the French Reformed Churches
quite incomprehensible for it ignores the influence within
the churches of the yeast of heresy and unfaithfulness and its
consequence within the covenant, the judgement of God on
the unfaithful Church.
For Amyraut what separated him from the orthodoxy of
his time was what he called a difference of method. In fact this is
manifestly a reference to Descartes’ Discours de la methode
and to the Cartesian rationalism which exercised such
a baneful influence on large sections of the French Reformed
pastorate during the latter part of the seventeenth century.
What Descartes New Philosophy did to Nature, this new
hermeneutic did to the Word of God, atomising it and then
seeking to reorganise rationally the multitude of fragmented
texts thus obtained. This new theological organisation of the
biblical material functions, not according to the biblical
standards of the confessions of faith, but according to the
subjective lights of each individual theologian. Modern
subjectivistic and individualistic Protestantism had been
born. In fact this procedure removes the biblical texts from
their theological and exegetical context.
This method forgets that the Word of God is an organic
whole which must be interpreted according to its inherent
fundamental confessional structure, its proper substantial
form, a structure expressed in the faithful confessions and
creeds of the Church. Such a nominalist2 fragmentation of
God’s pre-ordered reality (whether it be his Word or the
Creation) makes truly systematic thought well-nigh impossible.
Both Amyraut and his latter day disciple, Dr Alan
Clifford, seem to be quite incapable of seeing (what was
evident for the Divines of Dort and of Westminster) the inner
structure and coherence of Calvin’s thought. This method
of mental fragmentation leads Dr Clifford to limit himself to
the study of a particular doctrine—limited atonement—in
isolation from and at the expense of a proper understanding
of that coherent and systematic whole which is the Calvinistic
(and essentially biblical) system of divine Truth. As in all
nominalistic thinking the part is played over against the
whole (here a particular doctrine as against the ordered
body of systematic truth) at the expense of a proper understanding
of the coherent meaning of the whole. This of
course is exactly what Cartesian rationalism did both to
metaphysics and to science and in consequence to theology
itself, which thereby lost its overarching ordering office
placed in final authority over every expression of human
thought and bringing all human thinking captive to the
obedience of faith. But this is another matter.
. This leads us to the question of Dr Clifford’s scholarship,
of his knowledge and use of the source material and
of the secondary studies today available in French. If he
seems (to the best of my judgement) reasonably well-informed
on the material available in English, his French
documentation appears to be astonishingly full of the most
amazing gaps. The great expert on Amyraut and on the
French Protestantism of the seventeenth century is François
Laplanche, a very thorough and able Roman Catholic
scholar. His works are absolutely indispensable reading for
a proper understanding of the issues raised by Dr Clifford,
who never even mentions him.3 He also seems completely to
ignore the major work of Lucien Rimbault on Pierre Du
Moulin.4 This study is also vital to an understanding of the
reasons why Du Moulin so strongly opposed the teachings
of Amyraut. But worse still.
The nature of Du Moulin’s real opposition is minimised
(see p. where Dr Clifford speaks of the proto-Amyraldian
language of so-called early Du Moulin) thus divesting the
debate of any substantial significance. For Du Moulin was
not merely concerned with a proper understanding of the
third of the five points defined at Dort. However important
the doctrine of particular redemption might be, it is clear
that the Christian faith does not stand or fall on its correct
formulation. And the denial by such a godly man as Richard
Baxter of the doctrine of limited atonement does not ipso facto
make of him a heretic! Du Moulin’s basic work on the
question, Eclaircissements des doctrines Saumuriennes (),5
which is not even mentioned by Dr Clifford, makes it
abundantly clear that the issues raised by Amyraut involved
far more than the precise question of limited atonement. For
Du Moulin it was nothing less than the orthodox structure
of the Reformed confessions and the biblical faith itself that
was being attacked by the new theology from Saumur. This
new doctrine, as he clearly demonstrates, is nothing else but
a disguised form of Arminianism modified by the influence
of the thought of Descartes. The following were under attack
by Amyraldism: the nature and the character of God; the
nature of salvation, the nature of the grace of God and of his
law; the attitude the theologian was to hold with regard to
the very words of Scripture in theological development etc.
But here it would be good to let Du Moulin speak for himself:
. In this nominalistic view the name—e.g. a tree—has a purely
formal, arbitrary character and does not refer to any substantial (sub
stare, to stand under) stable reality in the created order. It is thus Man
(not God) who eventually by the use of his autonomous reason (free
from the ordered constraints of created reality, of the realism of
human language and the authority of Scripture) then impresses on all
naturally chaotic reality, the order we perceive in it. The pre-existent
order created by God at the beginning is thus not discovered as a
given, but imposed arbitrarily on nature by man’s purely subjective
autonomous God-like mind, his cogito as Descartes would say. Within
such a perspective no such thing as absolute truth can exist. A clear
example of such nominalistic thinking is, of course, Darwinian
evolution. For evolutionary thought is utterly contemptuous both of
the stable given created order of biological reality (every kind
reproduces itself according to its kind with limited genetic variations
within each kind), and of the real relation between words and the
reality they name. There is a clear resemblance between what
Amyraut did to theology and what Darwin was later to do biology,
a parallelism to which Dr Clifford would be wise to pay some
attention.
. Francois Laplanche, Orthodoxie et Predication. L’oeuvre d’Amyraut
et la querelle de la grace universelle (Paris: Presses Universitaire de France,
), pp.; L’Ecriture, le sacre et l’histoire. Erudits et poiitiques Protestants
devant la Bible en France au XVIIe siecle (Amsterdam and Maarssen: APA
Holland University Press, ), pp.
. Lucien Rimbault, Pierre Du Moulin, : Un pasteur
classique a lage classique, (Paris: Vrin, ), pp.
Christianity & Society—
Even though the doctrine of Monsieur Amyraut changes the very
nature of God, of the Law and of the Gospel; makes God
changeable and hesitant in his decisions and incapable of bringing
his plans effectually to pass; forges for us a form of saving faith
different from that of which the Gospel speaks; teaches that the
reprobate can be saved if they so wish; that the Law offers us only
earthly promises; provides two different predestinations to salvation
and two redemptions; and teaches that all men have the
natural capacity to believe and to convert themselves; nonetheless,
in spite of such enormous differences, the partisans of this new
doctrine affirm that they differ from us only with regard to method
and to certain expressions. But in spite of the apparently unimportant
nature of this question, they nonetheless labour mightily
night and day at making new proselytes through the printed page
and by means of texts copied out by hand.6
And speaking of the abundant new vocabulary with which
this new doctrine clothed itself, Du Moulin adds:
As this doctrine is new so they clothe it in words so novel that such
theological expressions have never before been heard. They speak
of a first and a second act of divine mercy, of two predestinations,
and distinguish between a natural and a moral incapacity in man.
Monsieur Amyraut says that God forces himself to act, that he
overcomes his reticence, that he would eventually be pleased to do
this or that. He says that if the decree to save all men is of no use
to men, it is nonetheless useful to God himself and that it causes
him a certain satisfaction. That God’s nature is too serious for him
to do this or that. That his mercy is irritated by the obstacles
impeding the exercise of his justice. That God has desires and
disappointments. That he would like much better this or that.
That he feels emotions similar to those which agitate our bosoms,
insofar as his nature can bear them. That his mercy overcomes
obstacles, leaps over dykes and abandons its proper limits, etc. In
brief, the language and the Spirit of God by which Scripture
speaks to us is to these theologians a language lacking in necessary
savour and decidedly of too low a style for men of good taste to
bear.
However, anyone accustomed to discussions with Arminians
knows full well that all these doctrines (which they call hypotheses)
are nothing but the theories common to Arminianism. In their
defence they use precisely the same arguments and proof texts as
do the Arminians and indeed they say almost nothing which has
not previously been formulated by them.7
Du Moulin comes to the root of Amyraut’s errors when he
writes: “The Arminians draw their objections from Scripture.
They always fall into the same error which is to
exchange the commandments and promises of God for the
decrees of his Providence. The promises of God are conditional,
but this is not the case for his decrees.”8 And he adds:
“I indeed recognise that God often changes what he has
done. He makes a man die after having made him live. He
will destroy the world after having created it. But the change
here is in the thing itself, not in God’s counsel. This change
is produced according to the immutable decision taken by
God in all eternity. God is in no way thwarted in his
intention.”9
Du Moulin explains this Amyraldian itch for novelty in
these terms:
Why do they so labour, basing their action on the most uncertain
hopes, to attain ills which can in no way be avoided? It is manifest
that what motivates these men to sow new doctrines and to
propagate them with such ardour is their itch and ambition to
appear above what is ordinary, common. For such great spirits
consciously abandon the path common to all, fearing that the light
of their originality be extinguished in the crowd . . . There can be
no doubt that a sublime spirit like that of M. Amyraut could have
been employed to encourage men to piety, to good works or to
bring light to our discussions with the Roman Church. In such
useful tasks he would have accomplished much excellent work.
But he considers such labours as too menial and too vulgar for his
high genius and has in consequence undertaken his first efforts
against the doctrine of our Churches. To attain the notoriety he
seeks he has undertaken the subject of the secret counsels of God,
matter in which he imagines having received greater light than his
predecessors.10
For Du Moulin the popularity of these teachings was to
be explained by what he calls their humanity: “What makes
his doctrine plausible to the people is that it makes God
speak according to the manner of men, clothing him thus
with purely human sentiments.” But such a popularisation
of Christian doctrine, then as now, is not without dramatic
consequences for the Christian faith itself:
But M. Amyraut does not consider that by making God speak in
this fashion, he attributes to Him changeable counsels, hesitant
and conditional decrees, all these submitted to the most illusory
and impossible conditions. He wants God to predestine to salvation
the very men to whom he does not wish to give the means
without which it is clearly impossible to be saved. Farther, such a
God with the most ardent of love calls to salvation those very
persons whom he has previously, and from all eternity, hated and
condemned. One names Anthropomorphism the act of attributing
to God the form of a human body, our Amyraldians are not
less mistaken. They clothe God with human affections, assigning
to him regrets, frustrated desires and changes of opinion.
Would it not have been a worthier enterprise to seek to
elevate man’s spirit to the heights of divine thoughts rather than
to reduce Him to mere human affections and reflections?11
We thus see that the issues facing Du Moulin were of the
greatest import and are not very different from those we
have before us today.
. Amyraut, and Dr Clifford after him, seeks to find in
the writings of John Calvin the indispensable confirmation
for such novelties. To do this, in the manner proper to the
atomistic hermeneutics described above, both Amyraut and
Dr Clifford quote a number of isolated texts extracted from
Calvin’s works which are thus used to buttress their theories.
Such an arbitrary method makes it impossible properly to
understand the exact meaning of Calvin’s texts for they are
not read within the context of Calvin’s complete theological
system but in terms of the artificially constructed thesis
. Pierre Du Moulin, Eclaircissements des doctrines Saumuriennes
(Genève: Pierre Aubert, ). It is urgent that this brief work by
Pierre Du Moulin be rapidly translated into English to help counter
Dr Clifford’s revival of Amyraut’s heresies. The original edition
appeared in , some years after that of an unauthorised, pirated
and inaccurate edition (published by Du Moulin’s adversaries),
entitled Examen de la doctrine de MM Amyraut et Testard (Amsterdam,
). Du Moulin suspended publication out of respect for the
decision of the National Synod of Alençon forbidding the
discussion of these questions. The Saumurian party characteristically
refused to comply with this Synodical decision.
Pierre Du Moulin, Eclaircissements des doctrines Saumuriennes.
(Genève: Pierre Aubert, ), Preface. . Ibid.
Quoted from Eclaircissements by L. Rimbault, in Pierre Du
Moulin, p. .. Pierre Du Moulin, Eclaircissements des doctrines Saumurie p.. Ibid., Preface. . Ibid.
Christianity & Society—
formulated by those who thus miserably abuse the texts they
quote. Such a method, all too common today, makes proof
texts say whatever those who use them wish them to express.
Here again it is useful to quote Du Moulin himself who had
perfectly understood the manoeuvre:
Calvin never speaks of a general predestination; nor of a first and
a second act of mercy; nor of salvation without knowledge of Jesus
Christ; nor of faith in Jesus Christ without knowledge of the
Saviour; nor of imputation of forgiveness of sins without its
application to the sinner nor of sanctification without the Gospel;
nor of a moral incapacity without a natural incapacity, nor of two
redemptions; nor of three Covenants.
For Calvin—as for later orthodox Calvinists—the eternal
predestination of the elect to salvation could not in fact be
separated from the proclamation of the gospel indiscriminately
to all men, some of whom only were eternally destined
to be saved. In addition, for classical Calvinistic thought the
redemption of the whole creation (Romans ) was also
implied in the act of redemption of the elect Church.
Du Moulin concludes with these remarkable words:
Above all one stands amazed to see that although Calvin had,
towards the end of his life and after having completed his Institutes,
expressly written a book on the very themes of general predestination,
of God’s conditional decree to save all men and of
universal grace, which we are now examining, M. Amyraut
nonetheless passes this book over as if he had never even seen it.12
Instead he amuses himself with gleaning various isolated passages
where Calvin incidentally speaks of predestination and grace.
These passages merely touch in passing on these matters and, for
the most part, are not in fact even related to these questions. This
book by Calvin is written against Pighius and Georgius Siculus
who, amongst other errors, taught a conditional general predestination,
saying that God had preordained all men to salvation
and that Christ had died equally for all men.13
. Finally, it is of interest to note that if Du Moulin was
all his life very active in promoting the international unity of
the Reformed cause in the face of an aggressive Roman
Catholicism, Amyraut, on his side, was very favourable to
ecumenical dialogue with Roman Catholics.14 This is not
surprising as certain aspects of his theology mark the return
to a type of semi-Pelagianism not very different from that of
many of his Catholic contemporaries. Do we not find in
Thomas Aquinas’ Summa a treatment of the question of
universal atonement remarkably similar to that developed
by Moïse Amyraut?15 And a brief perusal of John Calvin’s
Commentary on Romans would rapidly convince the attentive
reader that on the doctrine of salvation Thomism and
Calvinism stand miles apart. C&S

. Dr Clifford does worse. He abuses Calvin’s very purpose by
quoting passages from this book in order to refute Calvin’s explicit
meaning and aim.
. Pierre Du Moulin, Eclaircissements des doctrines Saumuriennes p.
f. See John Calvin, Calvin’s Calvinism: Treatises on the Eternal Predestination
of God and the Secret Providence of God (Grand Rapids: Reformed
Free Publication Association, ).
. Richard Stauffer, Un precurseur francais de l’Oecumenis. Moïse
Amyraut (Paris: Les Bergers et les Mages, ).
. Jonathan R. Rainbow, The Will of God and the Cross. An Historical
and Theological Study of John Calvin’s Doctrine of Limited Redemption (Allison
Park, Penn.: Pickwick Publications, ), p.

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The Holiness of God by Professor R A Finlayson / A Superior Address, superbly rendered on a subject of surpassing importance yet sadly and tragically neglected, or worse avoided in modern Evangelical discourse / I urge you to indeed, Read, Learn, Mark and Inwardly Digest

The Holiness of God

Professor R A Finlayson

“Rejoice in the Lord, ye righteous, and give thanks at the remembrance of His holiness”

Psalm 117:12

I. THE REVELATION OF HOLINESS

“There is not in Scripture a word more distinctly Divine in its origin and meaning than the word holy. There is not a word that leads us higher into the mystery of Deity, nor deeper into the privilege and blessedness of God’s children”. These are the words with which Andrew Murray prefaced his valuable little book, “HOLY IN CHRIST”, to which the pages that follow bear indebtedness at more than one point.

DEFINITION

Notwithstanding the fact that we owe the word and the concept so distinctly to revelation, it is a conception of God that is very difficult to define. In the words of John Morley, it is “the deepest of all the words that defy definition”.[1]1 Voltaire, p175. We are not helped by the fact that there is a wide divergence of view among theologians as to its precise meaning. The etymology of the Hebrew word qadosh is uncertain. It may come from a Hebrew root “to shine”, or from an Arabic root “to cut or separate”. While in either case the general connotation is clear, there is considerable difference of opinion as to its precise meaning in relation to God.

To many writers, arguing from the supposed root of the word in the Arabic “to separate”, holiness is identified with God’s separateness from the Creation and His elevation above it. It is that which gives God His transcendence, for He only is holy. This incomparable glory is exclusive to God. This is, doubtlessly, a common Old Testament use of the term. Jehovah as the Holy One stands out in contrast to all false gods: “Who is like Thee among the gods? Who is like thee glorious in holiness?” was the adoring exclamation of Moses (Exodus 15:11). So also in opposition to all that is created, God is holy, as when He says through Isaiah: “To whom will ye liken Me, or shall I be equal? Saith the Holy One” (Isaiah 40:25). Thus God’s transcendence over all creation, and over all that is not God, is connected with His holiness.

Many, however, regard holiness as the expression of relationship. Of Goodness Ernest Neville says that it “is not an entity – a thing. It is a law determining the relation between things; relations”, he adds, “which have to be realized by free-wills.”[2]2 The Problem of Evil, p17. Thus holiness in God is His fixed determination to maintain intact the relationship or the order which ought to reign among all beings that exist and to preserve intact His own position relative to free beings. This, too, finds support from Old Testament usage. Initially what was set apart for God’s service was regarded as holy, and so the fact of belonging to God constituted a person or a thing holy. It was relationship to God that constituted Israel a holy people. It was, in the highest sense, expressive of the Covenant relationship. But that very fact itself presupposed the holiness of God. Not only was God holy in that He claimed the exclusive ownership of the entire nation, but Israel was holy to Jehovah as His covenanting people. But this scarcely gives holiness an ethical content. Its meaning as God-devoted does not touch the inner significance of the word.

For this reason, holiness is regarded by many as a moral attribute of God, having the sense, positively, of purity, and, negatively, of complete freedom from sin. It is thus a general term for the moral excellence of God, and His freedom from all moral limitations in His moral perfection, or as Habakkuk called Him: “of purer eyes than to behold evil and cannot look upon sin” (Habakkuk 1:13). – a declaration expressive of the moral sensitiveness of God, shrinking from all evil and sin. Though this view is a definite advance in our understanding of holiness, it is, nevertheless, more negative than positive.

Part of the difficulty in definition lies in the difficulty of defining perfection. If it be replied that anything is perfect when it is in all respects as it ought to be, then it merely poses the question: What ought God to be?

Godet tells us that “holiness is that attribute in virtue of which Jehovah makes himself the absolute standard of Himself”. In this respect holiness is God’ self-affirmation. It decides the law of His existence, inflexible and inviolate. The self-existing I AM is thus equated with holiness.

Bengel, however, brings us further along the road of definition when he asserts that holiness is “the whole complex of that which we are wont to look at and represent singly in the individual attributes of God”. Thus Bengel looked upon holiness as the Divine nature in which all the attributes are contained, and other writers agree with him by calling it “an attribute of attributes”. Thus the old Scottish writer, John Howe, says: “It is a transcendental attribute that runs through the rest and casts a glory upon every one of them”; and again, “it is an attribute of attributes and so it is the very lustre and glory of His other perfections”.[3]3 Works, vol I, p 87. Jonathan Edwards, in typical strain, puts it thus: “The holiness of His nature is the cause and reason of holy determination. . . The foundation of all His will, purpose and decrees”. He calls it “the beauty of God’s moral attributes”, and asserts that “no other attribute is truly lovely without this, and no otherwise than it derives its loveliness from this”.[4]4 Ibid, vol II, p143.

This will suffice to indicate the difficulty encountered by the best minds of the church in attempting to define the holiness of God. Our survey has led us to the place where we must define holiness as more than a mere attribute of God, and accept it as the sum of all His attributes, the outshining of all that God is. It means that as the sun’s rays, containing all the colours of the spectrum, come together in the sun’s shining and blend into light, so all the attributes of God come together in His self-manifestation and blend into holiness. This is, over all, the Biblical presentation of God. To conceive of His being and character as merely a synthesis of abstract perfections is to deprive God of all reality. In the God of the Bible these perfections live: they function, operate, burn, in holiness! Our God is a consuming fire!

If we regard holiness, thus, as the comprehensive expression of all the Divine perfection, we will understand why His holiness and His glory are so frequently associated in Scripture, as the One who is “glorious in holiness, fearful in praises”, and as the One who “swears” by His holiness, as though it were the fullest expression of Himself. It is not surprising, therefore, that holiness is expressly attributed in Scripture to each Person in the Trinity, not only to the Father, but also to the Son and the Spirit, as the highest expression of divinity, as claiming for them the excellence of the Divine nature.

HOLINESS REVEALED

Holiness, as the very essence of God’s being, is entirely a matter of revelation. It is, in a pre-eminent degree, God’s self-disclosure, and we could not have attained to this knowledge of God if He had not specially revealed Himself. The Divine holiness is God’s self-revelation, the testimony that He bears to Himself, the aspect under which He wills His creatures to know Him. This seems implied in the very etymology of the word, if we accept its Hebrew source, for it implies “breaking forth in shining,” as the breaking forth of brilliant light, thus explaining how the Holy One of Israel was also referred to as “the Light of Israel” (Isaiah 10:17). Thus the Divine holiness contains not only the Divine self-preservation, but also the Divine self-disclosure. God must specially reveal Himself to us if we are to understand what holiness is. This is not necessarily true of the “natural” attributes of God. Every attribute of God has its reflection in the man He made in His own image, and so it is possible to rise from the creature to the Creator. His wisdom, power, justice, mercy, love are all reflected in the moral and rational constitution of man’s nature, and all find a place in the religious and philosophical contemplation of God outside the Hebrew-Christian tradition. But perfect holiness is inconceivable to us: it has to be revealed. The Bible, in its entirety, is the revelation of a holy God.

HOLINESS COMMUNICABLE

Inherent in the self-revelation of a holy God there is the glorious fact that His holiness is communicable. The idea of holiness combines the two conditions of separateness and communion. While it is true that God is the Alone Holy and that His holiness is the ground of His separateness from the universe, constituting Him a light that is inapproachable, yet His holiness must not be conceived of as mere exclusiveness. The creatures nearest to God cry: “Holy, Holy, Holy”, both in adoring contemplation and in blessed participation. The Thrice Holy One, in virtue of His very nature is a Holy Fellowship, or a Fellowship of Holiness. A Tri-personal God in His essential life is a God in relationship, a God in self-revelation and self-communication. While this must be essentially and eternally true of inter-relations within the Blessed Trinity, it has pleased God in His personal relations with His creatures to communicate His holiness. “I am holy” is the Divine self-assertion, lifting Him immeasurably above His creation; “be ye also holy” is the Divine self-communication that brings His creatures into His communion to become – to use the Biblical expression – “partakers of His holiness” (Hebrews 12:10). It is this imparting of His holiness alone that makes His creatures holy. The character of holiness never rests on a natural quality. Nothing created is itself holy. The holiness of the creature goes back to an act of the Divine will, the Divine election, and the Divine calling. It is a state in which the creature is bound to God by the appointment of God Himself.

HOLINESS REDEMPTIVE

In the Bible the holiness of God is revealed in a redemptive context. The holiness of God is redemption. The designation of God as the Holy One appears first in the Old Testament at the redemption of Israel and the founding of the theocracy. It is indeed significant that the first mention we have in the Old Testament of a person being sanctified by God is in Exodus 13:2, where we have the Divine injunction: “Sanctify unto Me all the first-born”. The reason for this demand is given in Numbers 3:13, where God makes the claim: “All the first-born are Mine, for in the day I smote all the first-born in the land of Egypt, I sanctified unto Me all the first-born in Israel”. This very definitely associates holiness with redemption and it links us up with the revelation given in the later Prophets, where redemption is ever associated with the holiness of God. In Isaiah God’s Name as the Holy One occurs some 26 times, and it is constantly linked with His Name as Redeemer. Thus we have omnipotence directed to a redemptive and holy end. In other words, holiness ensures that power is constructive and redemptive, and not employed, as in the human sphere, merely to suppress and destroy.

II. THE REDEMPTIVE OPERATION OF HOLINESS

This leads us to a study of the redemptive operation of holiness in Jesus Christ. Holiness defines the Divine self-assertion; it also characterizes the Divine self-exertion.

We have defined holiness as the perfection of God’s moral excellence, and we must expect its outward manifestation to vary as it operates upon different objects in different relations. Here and now, we are to consider the holiness of God in its supreme manifestation – in His opposition to sin manifesting itself in Incarnation, Atonement, and Redemption. In Jesus Christ we have the purity of God meeting with sin in redemption.

Sin was the supreme challenge to the holiness of God and to the Divine order in the universe. The problem of reconciling God’s fore-ordination of sin with His holiness has occupied the minds of the ages, and will never be fully reconciled in this life. We must agree with A A Hodge that “if the cause which produced the universe did not foresee the sin which the present system embraces, then the cause was a blind unintelligent force, and not God”.[5]5 Evangelical Theology, p130. If he did foresee it and, notwithstanding, proceeded to bring that system into existence, then He fore-ordained it. He, nevertheless, is holy and He hates, forbids, and punishes sin. In the light of God’s holiness we do not find the mystery less a mystery, but in the presence of the Cross of His Son we have His character vindicated, and His holy purposes in relation to sin unveiled.

Because God is holy, He cannot be indifferent to sin. He cannot pass it by by the mere exercise of His clemency. And because God is holy, He cannot be appeased by the sinner’s own effort. In all other religions salvation is sought by self-effort, because God is not conceived of as absolutely holy. There are but two religions in the world: salvation by grace and salvation by works. Salvation by works is based on too low a view of the holiness of God. There is so much aesthetic religion which is nothing else than bringing man’s artistically conceived religion to God in an attempt to know and please Him. True religion consists in the sinner coming into the presence of God that he may get Divine religion. The one makes religion his God, the other makes God his religion.

The God who reveals Himself in the Bible takes sin so seriously that no effort of human hands can erase its guilt, no human merit can cover its stain. A holy God must deal with it. And it is only in the Biblical conception of God’s holiness and of man’s sin that there arose the need for an atonement. In the classical passage in Romans 3:20-24, Paul produces two reasons why God must give a display of the Divine righteousness and holiness. The one is retrospective: “To declare his righteousness for sins that are past”; and the other with the immediate intention of “declaring at this time his righteousness that he might be just and the justifier of him that believeth in Jesus”. The forbearance of God towards gross and universal sin in the pre-Christian era presented a moral problem of the first order, and, according to Paul, the Cross had to come to put God right with Himself and with the moral universe. In the death of Christ He was displaying His unchanging attitude to sin, His unalterable relation to moral evil.

From the Godward side, therefore, atonement was a necessity if God was to be vindicated as holy before His moral universe, and His purpose of salvation towards His sinful creatures fulfilled. Christ has fully satisfied this two-fold condition, because in Him we have a manifestation of the holiness which God demands, and of the holiness which God provides.

The holiness which God demands became visible in Christ’s life and character, who was “holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners”. In Jesus Christ the holiness of God appeared in human life, in a human character, and it was this perfect holiness that, in the highest degree, constituted the supernatural in the life of Christ. The supernatural at its highest, as Godet points out,[6]6 Godet: Defence of the Christian Faith, p227. is not the miraculous as commonly understood, it is the holy. In the miraculous, as Godet insists, we see omnipotence breaking forth to act upon the material world in the interest of the moral order; but holiness is morality itself in its sublimest manifestation. In Christ we have the holiness of the invisible God translated into the forms of human life, and human character and conduct, and, in His Manhood, tested and proved and manifested. In Him, therefore, the Divine holiness is embodied and brought nigh to men. That is the holiness that God demands from all His moral creatures, and nothing less than this will pass with a holy God.

But in Christ’s redemptive work we have a manifestation also of the holiness which God provides. Here we have a vindication of God’s right to impute and to impart holiness to those who, in state and condition, are not holy. In the atoning work of Jesus Christ we have an act of God, removing all that would hinder our participation in His holiness. The Bible presents the total situation in these words: “For He made Him to be sin for us who knew no sin, that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him” (2 Corinthians 5:21). There we have imputation and counter-imputation, the reversal of states by which the Holy One was identified with sin that the sinner might be identified with His righteousness, and become partaker of His holiness.

Thus in Jesus Christ we have holiness manifested and holiness vindicated, inasmuch as He who performed this priestly act on our behalf had upon His brow, as had Aaron of old, the flaming inscription: “Holiness unto the Lord”.

HOLINESS AND LOVE

The Cross has this significance that it reconciles holiness and love. It has been common to regard love as the fundamental feature of the Divine character. A modern theologian[7]7 Carl Henry: Notes on the Doctrine of God, p103. has been complaining that in much modern religion Divine holiness has been subordinated to Divine love, with the effect of distorting both holiness and love. Thus Divine holiness is compromised and Divine love is transmuted into sheer sentimentality. Without the Cross love and holiness are often regarded as rival qualities, negating or cancelling each other, either holiness overruling love, or love obscuring holiness. But in the Cross of Christ the Divine love and the Divine holiness come into relations with mankind that are altogether unique. This is what Godet has in mind when he says: “The necessity of the expiatory sacrifice arises from His holy character, in other words, from His holiness, the principle at once of His love and righteousness, and not of His righteousness exclusively”.[8]8 Godet: Commentaries: Romans 3:25,26. It must be so, since it is in the Divine holiness that love and righteousness meet in perfect harmony.

HOLINESS AND CHRISTIAN EXPERIENCE

All this falls naturally and harmoniously into place in the experience of the redeemed sinner, to whom his God manifests Himself in holy love. Election unto life, repentance, sanctification, and full redemption all find their true setting in the holiness of God. These are the forms in which holiness appears in the sphere of Christian experience, and every one of them is in Scripture associated specifically with the holiness of God. The Decrees of God, for example, must be based on what God is, and not be presented as abstract hypotheses. They are manifestations of God’s essential being, the natural and necessary consequence of what God is as a holy God. God, the Holy One of Israel, gave effect to His holiness of old in electing a people out of the nations, accepting them as His own, and giving them His Holy Law. “I the Lord am holy, and have severed you from other people that ye should be mine” (Leviticus 20:26). This is the ground of His election. Though God passed judgement in holy rectitude upon all sin, He made an election unto holiness, an election whose source is the holy love of God, and whose goal is the creation of holy character.

Penitence is also placed by Scripture in the context of Divine holiness. The great implication of holiness in the personal life is sin-consciousness, and where there is little sin-consciousness there is little conception of the holiness of God. The holiness of God becomes significant to us only when it reveals our own sinfulness in relation to God. Sin is a wilful act of trespass on a holy God, and penitence results in self-loathing before God and a desire, not to escape from the holiness of God, but to accept it, to open up the life to its scrutiny, and receive its just judgment. This comes the repentance that leads, not to despair and death, but to hope and life. If God is holy, there is still hope that the sinner may be holy; if a holy God is dealing with our sin we shall be holy.

In like manner the holiness of God bears intimately on our Sanctification. It makes its impact upon our wills and its demands upon our conduct. As sin affected the entire man, leading to depravity that reached him in the totality of his parts, so holiness affects the entire man, giving light to his mind, sensitiveness to his conscience, purity to his heart, and power to his will.

And so, like a Psalmist of old, we thank God upon every remembrance of His holiness. It thought of man in a holy purpose, took hold of him in holy love, redeemed him with a holy power. Love, omnipotence, mercy – a trinity to which the sinner must trace his redemption – all meet in the unity of God’s holiness.

III. HOLINESS TRIUMPHANT

Holiness, as we have seen, is purely a matter of revelation. God made this self-disclosure to man in the line of special revelation in the Scriptures. The difficulty of how to reconcile this revelation of holiness with the Divine administration in relation to sin, received its answer in the Cross of Christ. There holiness is not only vindicated but made available to men. The problem of how God could hate and condemn sin and yet love and save the sinner has found its solution in the death of Jesus Christ His Son.

If we look at the goal to which the holiness of God is moving, the goal to which the moral universe and every creature in it is moving, then we shall see holiness triumphant and the grand and glorious purpose of God’s holiness fully and finally decided.

We have already indicated that God’s holiness decides and declares the end for which He creates and conducts the universe. The end is to produce holiness. His moral administration shall, therefore, create conditions in which holiness is supreme. God’s holiness is thus of significance to the whole universe: it is, indeed, that which gives significance to the entire universe. Much of the universe in its boundless extent is beyond our ken, but this one significance must pervade it all, that it is directed to a moral end. Holiness ensures that. This must mean, however, that conditions are now operating by which the whole of the moral universe shall be purged from sin. Sin is the antithesis of the moral goodness for which God created the universe, and sin, if permitted to go unrestrained, would defeat God’s purpose. As long as sin remains there must thus be uncompromising opposition in God as a holy Being to moral evil in the wills and characters of His creatures.

HOLINESS AND JUDGMENT

Since God is a holy God we must believe that His administration is directed to create conditions in which holiness is supreme. All moral beings have, therefore, to do with the holiness of God: to them it is as central and vital as is the sun to the planets; it is the shining glory of God! To good beings, the holiness of God is that on which they rest, the anchor of their security, the source of their blessedness, and the theme of their adoration and praise. To evil beings, the holiness of God is the most serious and fearsome of all realities, because it measures the evil unerringly, it condemns it, and asks for its doom.

Holiness, therefore, brings all life, here and hereafter, under the moral judgment of God. While there is judgment going on continuously in the world as a process for testing and vindicating or condemning human character, as there is also a providential judgment between sin and righteousness in the present affairs of mankind, so also there is a judgment to come relating to the destinies that follow this life.

This judgment the Scriptures bid us all expect. We are not our own masters in going out of this world and our going has its just and holy purpose. Our place and lot in the world that is beyond will be determined righteously. God’s holiness ensures that He is guided in all actions toward His creatures by the righteousness that is the essence of His own being and character. He will wrong no one. He judges all in perfect fairness. He insists on all that ought to be insisted on and on nothing more. God is not vindictive: He is holy and just, and will only do what is right for God to do.

For that reason Divine judgment is ever based on character. Since holiness is the regulating principle of judgment, it must be moral character that comes under review. It is, therefore, not surprising that the only judgment the Scriptures portray is a judgment according to character: it is a decision founded upon an estimate of character discovered and proved by conduct.

And Christ, in His holy character, is the standard of judgment. This is not in any way different from saying that the standard is the Moral Law of God summarised in the Ten Commandments, which itself is but a transcript of the moral character of God. And Christ is the effulgence of His moral glory, the express image of His character. But the Moral Law given of old on Sinai found its perfect exemplification and application in the teaching of Jesus Christ and in the laws of His Kingdom. It is, therefore, correct to say that the Divine judgment upon man is to consist in the application of the principle and law of Christ’s Kingdom as the test of our moral state. The law of His Kingdom is, thus, the final law for man. This is the arresting teaching of the great Parables of the Judgment uttered by our Lord. In each case, the conduct referred to is that which corresponds to the laws of the Kingdom. The pictorial details of the Last Judgment but express the holiness of God in dealing with human character. The Great White Throne but symbolizes the unsullied purity of God as the background against which human character is tested. The entire imagery indicates that character is determined by conduct, and destiny by character. This is fully in accord with the great pre-suppositions of our evangelical faith, that justification, regeneration, conversion, are all means to an end, the end being holiness of character and perfect conformity to the mind and will of God. Thus it is that what comes under the scrutiny of judgment at the last, is the finished product, the attainment of moral character.

HOLINESS AND RETRIBUTION

Since the Divine holiness could not make a universe in which sin would ultimately prosper, the retributive quality in the Divine government becomes perfectly intelligible. From a moral necessity in God, life is so ordered that in holiness is welfare, in sin is doom. If holiness is regarded as the self-preserving element in perfect love, then it follows that in order to secure the ends of righteousness it must exert a reaction of wrath in self-defence against all that would impair its purity.

This retributive character in life, here and hereafter, is understood when once the relation of perfect goodness to God and to man is understood. It is ever a serious matter to do with a God who is holy. It is a serious matter to live in a moral world, all the more serious when living is concentrated in a personal relation to a holy God. The final sentence on the false prophets as given from the mouth of our Lord is: “Depart from me, ye that work iniquity”. This would seem to indicate that the experience of retribution is a continuous departing. It does not deprive the spirit of its true character as moral and responsible life. If men are still men they must be real moral agents even in Hell. A life of mere passive retribution, without present responsibility, would not be a human life. Therefore the good and the bad indicate drifts of moral life that continue endlessly. The man who enters the after-life morally separated from God and united to his sin will remain alienated from God and united to the sin which he has made his own. He moves on in a life of progressive sin, growing more and more like the moral evil he has chosen. He is in a life of action, even though the action tend downwards, since, for a moral creature, there appear to be no stagnation and no standing still. Is not this the solemn teaching of the declaration on which the Book of Revelation all but closes? “He that is unjust, let him be unjust still: and he which is filthy, let him be filthy still: and he that is righteous, let him be righteous still: and he that is holy, let him be holy still” (Revelation 22:11). This is not only being, it is becoming. It indicates, not only the permanence of moral character, good and bad, but also the development of moral character in the direction of its ruling principle. This is the life that the soul has chosen, the life for which it is fitted, the life in which it finds its natural expression. If it is the life of sin’s punishment, it is but the working out of a reasonable moral necessity.

Retribution, therefore, is as certain as the holy being and character of God. Sin continues in hell, and so the punishment of sin continues. Life there is not merely passive, it is also active, even though its activity be the continuing disintegration of life and character.

The New Testament imagery of Hell offends the aesthetic tastes of to-day. Even were we to eliminate that imagery in all its graphic portrayal of active and passive deprivation, the holiness of God is still the fundamental reality to reckon with. The holiness of God is the greatest reality of hell, and it antagonises the soul that does not desire it and that struggles to escape it. It is a light which hurts and torments all who love darkness. The soul who is wedded to evil hates God because He is holy, and he is brought into eternal conflict with all that God is. And from that conflict man will never desire to escape: his will is fixed in eternal defiance of a holy God. Divine wrath and Divine love come together within their common centre – the holiness of God. This is the wrath of the Lamb!

HOLINESS AND RESTORATION

Scripture makes it clear that there will be a final restoration, a Palingenesis, a regeneration of the moral universe. God’s holiness ensures that. The Divine holiness would not make a universe in which sin would triumph. Sin has challenged the sovereignty of God, and God’s holiness is God’s “No” to sinful man. This can be read in the broad pattern of history. Someone has described history as “a protracted civil war between man and God for the right of sovereignty”. Even is this be one-sided, it must be recognized as true. Just as in a nation there can be but one government, so, too, in a universe there can be but one sovereign. God’s holiness ensures that it shall be so: it ensures His eternal sovereignty in the moral universe.

There is, thus, every assurance that sin will be finally and completely overcome. But there is no indication that it will be so overcome that it will be annihilated. Sin is a moral quality inherent in the wills of moral creatures, and there is no hint that spiritual beings will be put out of conscious or even active existence. But there is the assurance that sin will eventually be confined to its own domain, and there placed under eternal restraint, so that it will never break through again to disturb God’s universe or ever again exert its disruptive power.

And we have every assurance that redemption will go as deep as sin has gone, and that it will sweep the universe of God. Paul speaks of a reconciliation of all things to God whether in earth or in heaven (Colossians 1:20). This suggests the reconciliation of the entire universe, as of a temple that has been desecrated by sin, to become eventually a temple in which God manifests His glory, to be worshipped and admired in all them that believe. Then holiness will permeate the entire universe, setting its stamp on small and great, as it is written: “And there shall be upon the bells of the horses ‘Holiness unto the Lord’ ” (Zech 14:20).

Thus the holiness of God fills us with hope. It does not sadden the universe; rather does it constitute the glory of existence. Not only does it preserve intact the position of God in His universe as the Alone Holy, but it maintains intact the harmony of the universe and the order that brings all His creatures into the unity of a common realization of supreme blessedness. It means that God has in Himself in infinite fulness the qualities by which He can perfectly fulfil and satisfy all the relations in which He has placed Himself to His moral creatures. What heights and depths of goodness this holds out for the creation of God!

Our reflections on so sublime a theme should inspire us with awe before the Holy One, and should re-introduce into Christian thought and life the fear and reverence that it has all but lost. It humbles the creature and fills life with purpose and hope. For it puts the distinctions of right and wrong upon eternal foundations, it gives moral quality to human living, and it justifies and maintains the moral meaning and impulse of life. It accounts also for the moral element which cannot be eliminated from our destiny. Holiness tells man what his highest glory is to be, and what his darkest doom: on the one hand to be made partakers of the Divine holiness, and on the other, to be repelled by it into eternal antagonism. It ensures that at the last God will be seen to be all and in all. Let us, therefore, give Him thanks upon every remembrance of His holiness.

“The Holiness of God” was delivered by Professor R A Finlayson as the Dr G Campbell Morgan Memorial Lecture at Westminster Chapel, on Wednesday, 22nd June 1955.

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