The Gospel and the Enslaved Will 16

June 12, 2010

From The Gospel and the Enslaved Will 15 it can be seen with that justification by faith alone must be seen in a broader picture. If it is not seen in light of justification by grace alone, it will be seen in a remarkably different way. But not just in a little bit of a different way, but a way that is different from the Gospel. If it (justification by faith alone) is not seen as fitting in with justification by grace alone as the Reformers understood it, then even justification by grace alone can be understood in a drastically different way. If justification is simply said to be by faith alone and by grace alone today, that is thought to be enough by people today. However, it is not. Apart from understanding the utter and total helplessness of the soul in sin, even the teaching of justification by grace alone will be distorted to a great degree. If we don’t understand justification by faith alone and by grace alone in the context of the deadness and helplessness of man in sin, we will understand the Gospel a lot differently than the Reformers did. Apart from the helplessness of man in sin we will think of God as supplying the Gospel by grace and faith as what man supplies. We may even give that (faith as a gift) lip service to some degree, but apart from a sovereign grace that raises men from the dead and also gives faith as a gift, we don’t believe in a true justification by grace alone. Instead we believe (practically) in a God who alone provides grace rather than provided and applied by grace alone. At the heart of that is a different Gospel than the Reformers preached.

If the soul is able to apprehend Christ by itself, then the soul has the ability to apply grace to itself and that is a work of the soul in the most important realm that does not come by grace alone. If the soul has a free-will (by definition a free soul is free from the internal work of God), then that soul is not saved by grace alone but is free from God and has the power to apply grace to itself. If the soul is free from the internal influence of God and has the power to choose and apply grace to itself, then it is not really dead in sin and does not need to be raised from the dead by the sole working power of God in regeneration. If the soul is not saved from eternity past through all eternity future by grace and grace alone then it is not saved by grace alone. Ephesians 1 and 2 knows nothing of a salvation that is from anything but grace alone. The whole Bible is the same way as well. The demand for the soul to believe is not a demand for the soul to regenerate itself which is necessary to believe. The demand for the soul to believe is not a demand for the soul to give itself belief. It is simply a demand for the soul to be a believing soul which lives by grace alone. But God alone can give the grace of faith and all the grace for a believing soul to live.

To the Reformers, the crucial question was not simply, whether God justifies believers without works of Law. It was the broader question, whether sinners are wholly helpless in their sin, and whether God is to be thought of as saving them by free, unconditional, invincible grace, not only justifying them for Christ’s sake when they come to faith, but also raising them from the death of sin by His quickening Spirit in order to bring them to faith. Here was the crucial issue; whether God is the author, not merely of justification, but also of faith; whether, in the last analysis, Christianity is a religion of utter reliance on God for salvation and all things necessary to it, or of self-reliance and self-effort. ‘Justification by faith only’ is a truth that needs interpretation. The principle of sola fide is not rightly understood till it is seen as anchored in the broader principle of sola gratia (Johnson and Packer’s introduction to Luther’s Bondage of the Will).

The crucial issue is whether God is the author of faith and not justification only. This drives home the point that God did not just provide what is needed for justification and the sinner believes in order to apply it to self, but that God is the author of the faith or belief as well. Christianity, to teach a Gospel of grace and grace alone, teaches the “utter reliance of the sinner on God for salvation and all things necessary to it.” If the sinner is not taught an utter reliance on God for salvation and all things necessary to it, that sinner will trust in himself and his own “self-reliance and self-effort.” Oh, one might argue, “I do not teach that a sinner is to trust in himself but to believe.” But does that sinner trust in himself to believe or in God to grant Him a believing soul? If the sinner trusts in himself to believe, then the sinner is not trusting in God for salvation and all things necessary to it. This is not just some small issue, but instead it is at the heart of the Gospel and of the glory of that Gospel as declared in justification by grace alone through faith alone to the glory of God alone as the Reformers preached. It is also what Ephesians 2:4-8 declares: “But God, being rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, 5 even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved)… 8 For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; 9 not as a result of works, so that no one may boast.” If I come up with faith on my own and so am saved, I have something to boast about. The Gospel, however, teaches that justification is by grace and grace alone. We are His workmanship and not our own.

The Gospel and the Enslaved Will 15

June 10, 2010

In the last post on the Gospel and the Enslaved will, I quoted Packer and Johnson from the Introduction to Luther’s Bondage of the Will. I then made a couple of comments on it. Part of that is reproduced in the quote below:

The true core was “that the sinner’s entire salvation is by free and sovereign grace only.” Justification by faith alone was vital only because it was a safeguard to the principle of sovereign grace. We must not hurry by that statement. The importance of justification by faith alone is not because of what it is in and of itself, but because it safeguards the principle of sovereign grace.

The point or the main point of justification by faith alone from the Reformers point of view was to safeguard the principle or doctrine of justification by faith alone. This drives us to an important question. If we don’t believe or are ashamed to stand for and teach sovereign grace, how can we truly believe in justification by faith alone as the Reformers believed? When a Pelagian or Arminian claims to believe in justification by faith alone, and yet denies sovereign grace, we know that the person making that claim does not understand justification in the same way it was understood by Luther and the Reformers. Those who claim to be Reformed and yet are willing to join hands with Pelagians in some understanding of the Gospel cannot believe it as the Reformers believed it either. In our day when unity and tolerance is thought to be more important than truth, the Gospel is being sold out in the interests of unity. In our day when it is thought that to be gracious is more important than to state the truth with clarity, the Gospel is being sold out in less than clear thinking though in a very nice way. But the Gospel is still not being declared with clarity if at all. Sovereign grace is a necessary teaching for the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

To the Reformers, the crucial question was not simply, whether God justifies believers without works of Law. It was the broader question, whether sinners are wholly helpless in their sin, and whether God is to be thought of as saving them by free, unconditional, invincible grace, not only justifying them for Christ’s sake when they come to faith, but also raising them from the death of sin by His quickening Spirit in order to bring them to faith. Here was the crucial issue; whether God is the author, not merely of justification, but also of faith; whether, in the last analysis, Christianity is a religion of utter reliance on God for salvation and all things necessary to it, or of self-reliance and self-effort. ‘Justification by faith only’ is a truth that needs interpretation. The principle of sola fide is not rightly understood till it is seen as anchored in the broader principle of sola gratia (Johnson and Packer’s introduction to Luther’s Bondage of the Will).

In the quote above I underlined and highlighted the words “broader question” to make a point. To the Reformers the main issue was not (though vital) whether God justifies sinners apart from works of the Law, but what they were justified apart from the Law for and by. If the sinner is justified apart from the Law and yet is not helpless in sin, then that is something different entirely from those who teach that sinners are wholly helpless in their sin and to be saved God must save them by His unconditional and free grace. Unless sinners are wholly helpless in their sin then they are not raised from the spiritual dead but from the spiritually sick. Unless sinners are wholly helpless in their sin then they are not wholly reliant upon the Holy Spirit to make them alive to bring them to faith. If the Holy Spirit is not the One who gives them faith itself, then God is not the author of faith (Heb 12:2). It was important to Luther that in order for grace to be grace that sinners had to be utterly helpless in their sin and God has to be the author of their justification and their faith. The broader question must be taken into consideration if we are to hold to justification by faith alone as the Reformers did.

All of these things are involved in what the Gospel and Christianity are in the last analysis. Is the sinner to utterly rely on God for all things or look to self for something? If we don’t teach sinners their helplessness in sin and of the source for faith we are not teaching justification by faith alone as the Reformers taught. One may decide that they were wrong in this matter, but at least we should be clear that we don’t teach what they taught even if we use the same words. Justification by faith alone (sola fide) cannot be understood in and of itself but must be taught and can only be understood in its relation to (sola gratia). To put it a different way, justification by faith alone cannot be understood in relation to itself and it cannot stand alone by itself. It must be understood in relation to the broader principle of justification by grace alone. As Romans 4:16 teaches, justification is by faith in order that it may be in accordance with grace. It is not justification by faith alone if it is not also and more importantly justification by grace alone. It is not justification by faith or grace alone apart from the sovereign grace of God to those who are utterly helpless in their sins. We have gone far astray from this in our day. But we are nice about it.

The Gospel and the Enslaved Will 14

June 9, 2010

The issue being dealt with (the enslaved will) was not a minor issue of the Reformation. It was the issue of the Reformation. It was the issue because apart from it justification through faith alone is not explained by justification by grace alone. If there is no justification by grace alone, then there is no salvation by grace alone either. A person can believe in the words justification by faith alone in some sense without the teaching of the enslaved will, but apart from the enslaved will the Gospel of grace alone as taught by the Reformers is absent. The Reformer’s teaching on justification by faith alone cannot be held without also holding to their teaching on the enslaved will. This cannot be overstated. In fact, as the quote below shows, without this teaching man is at the center of his own justification rather than God. With this teaching God is at the center of justification and all the glory is His.

The doctrine of free justification by faith only, which became the storm-centre of so much controversy during the Reformation period, is often regarded as the heart of the Reformer’s theology, but this is hardly accurate. The truth is that their thinking was really centered upon the contention of Paul, echoed with varying degrees of adequacy by Augustine, and Gottschalk, and Bradwardine, and Wycliffe, that the sinner’s entire salvation is by free and sovereign grace only. The doctrine of justification by faith was important to them because it safeguarded the principle of sovereign grace; but it actually expressed for them only one aspect of this principle, and that not its deepest aspect. The sovereignty of grace found expression in their thinking at a profounder level still, in the doctrine of monergistic regeneration—the doctrine, that is, that the faith which receives Christ for justification is itself the free gift of a sovereign God, bestowed by spiritual regeneration in the act of effectual calling. (Johnson and Packer’s introduction to Luther’s Bondage of the Will).

This part of a longer quote shows that it is not accurate to think of justification by faith alone in and of itself as the very core or center of the Reformation. The true core was “that the sinner’s entire salvation is by free and sovereign grace only.” Justification by faith alone was vital only because it was a safeguard to the principle of sovereign grace. We must not hurry by that statement. The importance of justification by faith alone is not because of what it is in and of itself, but because it safeguards the principle of sovereign grace. Even more, and at a deeper level, the sovereignty of grace was expressed in the teaching of monergistic regeneration. Monergistic regeneration is the teaching that God bestows regeneration in His effectual calling and not in the faith of the sinner. The faith that receives Christ alone for salvation is the faith that is the free gift that comes with regeneration.

The teaching of the Reformers at this point is a bombshell to modern theology. We are more concerned with being gracious to those who differ from us than standing firm for the glory of the Gospel of grace alone. Several years ago while visiting Reformed Theological Seminary in Jackson, Mississippi Dr. John Gerstner spoke some on Roman Catholicism. One man stated that Dr. Gerstner sounded like he hated Roman Catholics. Dr. Gerstner’s response was close to vehement: “Hate them? I love them. That is why I tell them that they are going to hell.” True love is not the same thing as modern niceness and graciousness. True love will confront and even be provocative at times. True love will be mistaken as hate in modern times. The Gospel is not as easy as modern humans want it to be, but it takes a love like Jesus who told the people the truth even when it made them angry. There will always be the offence of the cross (Gal 5:11). When we are “gracious” enough to take away the offence, we are not speaking with true grace or love at all. True love speaks the truth of the cross.

The truth of the matter is that one cannot hold to the Gospel of grace alone as taught by the Reformers apart from teaching the sovereign grace of God who by grace alone regenerates sinners which by definition is the effectual call and gives faith. There is no effectual call apart from giving faith in regeneration. A teaching that relies on the free-will of man is not teaching the Reformation view of justification by faith alone. A teaching that does not depend on the regenerating act of God to produce faith is not teaching the Reformation view justification by faith alone. In our day we have become so enamored with being gracious and getting along with people that we have to deny the Reformation view of justification by faith alone in order to do so. Indeed we can be unified with people who say they believe in justification by faith alone if we drop our insistence on sovereign and monergistic regeneration, but when we do that we have just dropped the very heart of justification by faith alone. In our day we have done that and have lost the Gospel in the midst of orthodox sounding words. Is that unity and is that really being gracious? Can one be truly gracious without true grace?

The Gospel and the Enslaved Will 13

June 7, 2010

In speaking of the Reformers, in the Introduction to Luther’s The Bondage of the Will, Johnson and Packer said this:

On other points, they had their differences; but in asserting the helplessness of man in sin, and the sovereignty of God in grace, they were entirely at one. To all of them, these doctrines were the very life-blood of the Christian faith. A modern editor of Luther’s great work underscores this fact: ‘Whoever puts this book down without having realized that evangelical theology stands or falls with the doctrine of the bondage of the will has read it in vain.’

This needs to be emphasized over and over. The doctrines of man’s helplessness in sin and the sovereignty of God were considered to be the very life-blood of the Christian faith. Could it that that evangelical theology stands or falls with the doctrine of the bondage of the will? If that is true, then evangelical theology is at an exceedingly low ebb in the modern world. Even where people say they believe it, they don’t believe it as something vital. While people will speak of preaching a gospel, if they leave this out they are not preaching the same Gospel as the Reformers did. The theology and Gospel that the Reformers taught was built on the twin truths of the utter helplessness of man in sin and the sovereignty of grace. There is no pure grace apart from a sovereign grace. Apart from those twin truths the Gospel of grace alone has little if any meaning. A person helpless in sin that does not deserve anything but eternal hell cannot be saved by anything but a sovereign grace (the only kind of true grace).

What we have in modern America is a failure to teach the utter helplessness of man in sin. This means that there is no true background to set out the real nature and glory of grace in salvation from its purchase by Christ to its application by the Spirit. While grace is used in words, the very nerve of grace has been cut when the enslavement of the will is not preached and taught. God saves sinners to the praise of the glory of His grace (Eph 1:6) and He will not share His glory with anyone. The very attempt to share in His glory in salvation is sin because one definition that Scripture gives us of sin is that it is to fall short of the glory of God (Rom 3:23).

The Gospel is a Gospel of pure and glorious grace apart from any work or any contribution of the human being at all. As an older writer said, the only thing we contribute to our salvation is the sin we are saved from. Since the Reformation we have turned faith into a work because anything that comes from the human will apart from the Holy Spirit is a work of the flesh. If we concede that the act of the human will is free then we have to say that it is also free from God. But if the will is free from God, then it is doing something good and acceptable apart from the Christ and the Spirit. The office of faith is to receive grace, for as Romans 4:16 sets out it is by faith in order that it may be in accordance with grace. Yet, if we look at Romans 11:6 we see that if there is one work involved that makes grace to no longer be grace. Grace is at 100 percent or it is not grace at all.

If the will is not enslaved to sin then the will can do one work apart from the work of God in the soul and free from Christ and the Holy Spirit. This destroys the biblical teaching of what true grace is and so it destroys the truth and purity of the Gospel of grace alone. When that happens, evangelical theology has fallen. The doctrine of free-will is not compatible with the Gospel of grace alone. It is either free grace or free-will and not a combination of the two. Not only does the twain not meet, but they cannot meet because they are complete opposites. A will that is free is a will that is free from the internal working of grace and so that will cannot be saved by grace alone. The will cannot operate freely apart from God and His grace and yet work by grace alone. The will cannot do its work by a choice of the flesh and yet work by the fruit of the Spirit at the same time. A work of the will which is free from the fruit of the Spirit by grace is a will that functions and operates by the flesh.

Surely it is easy to see that the doctrine of the enslaved will is essential to evangelical theology. The Gospel of grace alone can be proclaimed to an enslaved will, but grace alone cannot be proclaimed in truth to a “free-will.” The “gospel” that is proclaimed to a free-will depends on the choice of that will that is apart from a pure and undiluted grace. Romans 9 is quite unpopular today, yet verse 16 and other verses set out the Gospel of grace with great clarity. “So then it does not depend on the man who wills or the man who runs, but on God who has mercy.” There it is. It does not depend on the man who wills, but instead it depends on God who has mercy. Verse 18 goes on to say this: “So then He has mercy on whom He desires, and He hardens whom He desires.” That verse is necessary to understand grace. For salvation to be by grace alone, it must depend on the will of God alone. Free-will cannot say that salvation depends on the will of God alone, but instead it depends on man. That is not pure grace and so it is not the Gospel of grace alone.

The Gospel and the Enslaved Will 12

June 5, 2010

In the last post I quoted from Johnson and Packer’s introduction to Luther’s Bondage of the Will. This thought must be developed and seriously looked at. For the moment, however, the statement preceding that one must also be looked at.

Historically, it is a simply matter of fact that Martin Luther and John Calvin, and for that matter, Ulrich Zwingli, Martin Bucer, and all the leading Protestant theologians of the first epoch of the Reformation, stood on precisely the same ground here. On other points, they had their differences; but in asserting the helplessness of man in sin, and the sovereignty of God in grace, they were entirely at one. To all of them, these doctrines were the very life-blood of the Christian faith. A modern editor of Luther’s great work underscores this fact: ‘Whoever puts this book down without having realized that evangelical theology stands or falls with the doctrine of the bondage of the will has read it in vain.’

Luther’s great book, The Bondage of the Will (The Enslaved Will), was not just what Luther wrote about a metaphysical and abstract philosophical teaching. It was at the very heart of the Gospel. Apart from this teaching there is no justification by grace alone through faith alone. Apart from this teaching there is no Gospel of sovereign grace and nothing but pure and sheer grace. Apart from this teaching there is no grace that can make us break forth in true doxology as Paul did. Apart from this teaching there is no praise to the glory of His grace because it is grace that has been poured out and lavished on sinners who were dead in their sins and trespasses. Instead we have fallen into human-centered thinking and so we have lost the true idea of deadness in sin and of true grace.

All of the leading Protestant theologians at the beginning of the Reformation took up this issue and there they stood. The enslaved will was at the very heart of the Gospel of grace alone at the Reformation and it is at the heart of the biblical Gospel today. There is no true Gospel apart from it. It matters not how Reformed a person says that s/he is, apart from a whole-hearted acceptance of this doctrine at the core of the Gospel neither that person nor any other holds to the same teaching that the Reformers did. It is so easy to say that I believe in a certain doctrine here and those doctrines there, but apart from the enslaved will the true Gospel is not believed nor taught.

We must learn the depths of depravity before we can learn the heights of grace. We must learn our helplessness in sin before we can see the power of God in salvation. The sinner must see that s/he has no hope in self in order to rest completely on Christ alone. The sinners must see that s/he has no strength and no ability to trust in Christ in order that the very belief that must be exercised can be wrought in the sinner by God. Until a sinner is broken from any trust, hope, belief, or anything else in self that sinner will look to self for some little something that s/he can do rather than look to Christ alone. If all we do is tell sinners to believe and we don’t help them see their utter helplessness and inability in their sin, they will not look to grace alone for salvation. How important was this teaching to the Reformers? From Johnson and Packer’s introduction to Luther’s Bondage of the Will once again:

The doctrine of free justification by faith only, which became the storm-centre of so much controversy during the Reformation period, is often regarded as the heart of the Reformer’s theology, but this is hardly accurate. The truth is that their thinking was really centered upon the contention of Paul, echoed with varying degrees of adequacy by Augustine, and Gottschalk, and Bradwardine, and Wycliffe, that the sinner’s entire salvation is by free and sovereign grace only.

If the sinner’s entire salvation is by free (uncaused by the sinner) and sovereign (caused by God alone) grace alone, then there is nothing in the sinner that can move God and nothing that the sinner can do to move God to save him or her. The teaching of so many today that all a sinner must do is to have an intellectual belief in the facts of the Gospel is to go against the Gospel of the Reformation which taught that the sinner must be wholly saved (all aspects of the soul) and wholly by God. The faith that a sinner must have comes from regeneration and not from the sinner who is dead and cannot do it. The Gospel of grace as preached and taught by the Reformers who went back to Scripture as their primary source was that grace purchased and grace applied. The dead sinner can do nothing to purchase the smallest part of salvation and the dead sinner can do nothing to apply it either. It is God’s grace and grace alone that saves. The slightest work of the human soul (even so-called faith) makes grace to be non-grace (Rom 11:6). The slightest human work, therefore, makes for a salvation that is not of grace alone.

The Gospel and the Enslaved Will 11

June 3, 2010

Can we believe that what Luther wrote has any meaning for today? If Luther set forth the Gospel of Jesus Christ in truth, then the Gospel which does not change is the same Gospel today. We cannot dismiss the teaching of Luther on the enslaved will any more than we can dismiss what he wrote on justification by faith alone. It is his teaching on the enslaved will that interprets justification for us. In quoting from Johnson and Packer’s introduction to Luther’s Bondage of the Will, this startling quote is given to us:

The doctrine of free justification by faith only, which became the storm-centre of so much controversy during the Reformation period, is often regarded as the heart of the Reformer’s theology, but this is hardly accurate. The truth is that their thinking was really centered upon the contention of Paul, echoed with varying degrees of adequacy by Augustine, and Gottschalk, and Bradwardine, and Wycliffe, that the sinner’s entire salvation is by free and sovereign grace only. The doctrine of justification by faith was important to them because it safeguarded the principle of sovereign grace; but it actually expressed for them only one aspect of this principle, and that not its deepest aspect. The sovereignty of grace found expression in their thinking at a profounder level still, in the doctrine of monergistic regeneration—the doctrine, that is, that the faith which receives Christ for justification is itself the free gift of a sovereign God, bestowed by spiritual regeneration in the act of effectual calling. To the Reformers, the crucial question was not simply, whether God justifies believers without works of Law. It was the broader question, whether sinners are wholly helpless in their sin, and whether God is to be thought of as saving them by free, unconditional, invincible grace, not only justifying them for Christ’s sake when they come to faith, but also raising them from the death of sin by His quickening Spirit in order to bring them to faith. Here was the crucial issue; whether God is the author, not merely of justification, but also of faith; whether, in the last analysis, Christianity is a religion of utter reliance on God for salvation and all things necessary to it, or of self-reliance and self-effort. ‘Justification by faith only’ is a truth that needs interpretation. The principle of sola fide is not rightly understood till it is seen as anchored in the broader principle of sola gratia.

What is so utterly vital to see in this quote is that they have it precisely right. It is not just if a person believes in justification by faith alone; it is also what they believe about the doctrine of the will that drives them to understand grace alone. There is no belief of justification by faith alone as Luther and the Reformers set it out apart from a deep belief in monergistic (mono = one, gistic = worker) regeneration and God being the sole worker in regeneration. There is no belief of justification by faith alone as Luther and the Reformers set it out apart from a free (uncaused by man), unconditional, invincible grace that raises sinners from the spiritual dead to bring them to faith. We cannot believe what they believed about the Gospel of justification by faith alone apart from believing what they believed about the things necessary to and for that Gospel.

Could it be that in our day when there is a growing use of the phrase justification by faith alone that in reality we are far from what the Reformers taught about it in its fullness? Could it be that the Gospel is virtually lost in our day in the midst of so much religious talk? Can we speak of ourselves as Reformed or as the children of the Reformation when we don’t adhere to the crucial issues of the Gospel as the Reformers did? Could it be that Rome has triumphed in a major way in the world today with people adhering to its so-called gospel without getting people to submit to Rome itself? There is no preaching of the same Gospel that Luther preached without preaching and teaching people about their enslaved will. The real issue, as we know, is the Gospel Paul preached for there is no other Gospel. But did God pour out revival in the days of the Reformation and shake the world with a false gospel in that time? How we must be on our knees with the Scriptures and our departed teachers to be sure we teach the same Gospel. While it is far easier to fit in with political and denominational people if we don’t, the Gospel demands that we do so. We cannot please men and God at the same time when the Gospel is at stake.

6 I am amazed that you are so quickly deserting Him who called you by the grace of Christ, for a different gospel, 7 which is really not another; only there are some who are disturbing you and want to distort the gospel of Christ. 8 But even if we, or an angel from heaven, should preach to you a gospel contrary to what we have preached to you, he is to be accursed! 9 As we have said before, so I say again now, if any man is preaching to you a gospel contrary to what you received, he is to be accursed! 10 For am I now seeking the favor of men, or of God? Or am I striving to please men? If I were still trying to please men, I would not be a bond-servant of Christ (Gal 1:6-10).

Pelagianism, Hyper-Evangelism, and Hyper-Calvinism 13

May 31, 2010

The basic tenants of Pelagianism in something of a logical form:
(a) Moral character can be predicated only of volitions.
(b) Ability is always the measure of responsibility
(c) Therefore, every man has always the plenary power to do all that it is his duty to do.
(d) Therefore, the human will alone, to the exclusion of the interference of an internal influence from God, must decide human character and destiny.
(e) Therefore, the only divine influence needed by man or consistent with his character as a self-determined agent is an external, providential, and educational one.

As we look at the basic thought of Pelagianism (from above), what we see is that it is the assertion of the free-will in human beings and in such a way that banished God from the heart. It is a direct and frontal attack on the sovereignty of God. If God is not sovereign over and in the human heart, then He is not sovereign at all. If God is not sovereign over and in the human heart, then He is not God of the human heart. Boiled down, Pelagianism is essentially the teaching that human beings are autonomous from God in their choices and in asserting that it is really an attempt to banish God and His sovereign rule over the human heart.

But who is regulating affairs on this earth today—God, or the Devil? Attempt to take a serious and comprehensive view of the world. What a scene of confusion and chaos confronts us on every side! Sin is rampant; lawlessness abounds; evil men and seducers are waxing “worse and worse” (2 Tim. 3:13). Today, everything appears to be out of joint. Thrones are creaking and tottering, ancient dynasties are being overturned, democracies are revolting, civilization is a demonstrated failure; half of Christendom was but recently locked-together in a death grapple; and now that the titanic conflict is over, instead of the world having been made “safe for democracy”, we have discovered that democracy is very unsafe for the world. Unrest, discontent, and lawlessness are rife every where, and none can say how soon another great war will be set in motion.”             (A.W. Pink)

To ask Pink’s question again, “who is regulating affairs on this earth today—God, or the Devil?” Perhaps, though, we should ask the question with a different control element. Who is regulating affairs on this earth today—God or man and his free-will? Perhaps it is thought that this question is something of an inflammatory point, and maybe it is. But it is a needful one. It gets to the point we need to get at. Is man really free as Pelagianism teaches, is man somewhat free as semi-Pelagianism teaches, or is man a slave to either God or the Devil as Augustinianism teaches? It is so true that sin is on the increase and governments are in increasing danger of anarchy. But what is the ultimate cause of that? Is it that man has a free-will and he is giving himself over to sin? Could it be that man will say that the devil is making him do it? Or could it be that God in His sovereignty is turning man over to his sinful heart as Romans 1:18-32 teaches?

But this points to another issue. If man is turned over to sin by God, then isn’t that a bondage of sin which points to the slavery of man in sin? Ah, and who is the puppet-master (so to speak) of those who are in bandage to sin? It is the Devil himself who works in men to do his will. Adam and Eve were in perfect subordination to God before the fall. When they fell they bought into the Serpent’s lie that they would be as God. This is the root of the teaching that man has a free-will and is free to choose what is good and evil for him or herself. The whole worldly system is described in Ephesians 2:1-3 with shocking clarity. “And you were dead in your trespasses and sins, 2 in which you formerly walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, of the spirit that is now working in the sons of disobedience. 3 Among them we too all formerly lived in the lusts of our flesh, indulging the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, even as the rest.”

Human beings are born dead in sin and walk in those according to the course of this world. The course of the world is according to the prince of the power of the air. The prince of the power of the air not only sets up the course of the world, but he works in the sons of disobedience. Those who live according to the course of the world and have the prince of the power of the air working in them are those who live in the lusts of their flesh and indulge the desires of the flesh and of the mind. They are by nature children of wrath. In other words, a human being that does not have the kingdom of God in his or her soul lives under the domain of darkness and the devil (Col 1:13).

Therefore, it is true that the world can be seen as being under the dominion of God or the Devil since each human soul is under the dominion of God or of the Devil. One of the blinding influences of the Devil on the human soul is to deceive it into thinking that it has free-will and is not under the dominion of God or the devil. The human soul is either free to live by grace in the soul alone or it is under the dominion of the Devil thinking that it is free of both God and the devil. But God is the One that can turn the soul over to sin and its power as punishment. The sinful world we live in follows the course of the evil one. But in doing so it is being turned over to sin by God Himself. This shows that God is in sovereign control and that free-will is but a blinder put on the soul by the Devil to hide the true condition of the human soul from human beings. That is Pelagianism unmasked.

Pelagianism, Hyper-Evangelism, and Hyper-Calvinism 12

May 30, 2010

Compared with our actually thoughts about Him, our creedal statements are of little consequence. Our real idea of God may lie buried under the rubbish of conventional religious notions and may require an intelligent and vigorous search before it is finally unearthed and exposed for what it is. Only after an ordeal of painful self-probing are we likely to discover what we actually believe about God (A.W. Tozer).

The basic tenants of Pelagianism in something of a logical form.
(a) Moral character can be predicated only of volitions.
(b) Ability is always the measure of responsibility
(c) Therefore, every man has always the plenary power to do all that it is his duty to do.
(d) Therefore, the human will alone, to the exclusion of the interference of an internal influence from God, must decide human character and destiny.
(e) Therefore, the only divine influence needed by man or consistent with his character as a self-determined agent is an external, providential, and educational one.

The reason for the Tozer quote is an effort to set forth for us once again that our real beliefs may be hidden in the heart under our creedal statements. Our real idea of God and our own real doctrine can be hidden from our own sight by our own religious notions and love of the thoughts of our own orthodoxy. In our modern day which likes to hide the reality of sin and sinful hearts from the probing eyes of God and ourselves, it will take a lot of painful self-probing in order for the Pelagianism that has dug in deeply and hidden under the rubbish of theology and even Reformed theology to be seen for what it is. The proud heart of Pelagianism can be easily hidden underneath the external humility of a religious heart. The proud heart of Pelagianism can be easily hidden underneath a lot of religious activity including evangelism. The proud heart of Pelagianism can be hidden beneath the most orthodox of creeds. The proud heart of Pelagianism can be hidden in pews and behind pulpits. The proud heart of Pelagianism is at war with the true God and rejects His rule in the heart. So it takes refuge in many places. When the proud heart of Pelagianism begins to be exposed by truth, it will fire out words from historical writers who are thought to be orthodox, though they many be used differently in order for the Pelagian heart to hide behind them.

One of the ways that the heart of Pelagianism can be hidden is by using the words “responsibility” and “free agent.” While these may be used in ways that are orthodox, they are also used in an effort to banish God from the human heart. Many get fired up when some attempt to banish God from His creation by asserting a materialistic form of evolution. Others get fired up when some attempt to banish God from schools by not letting people openly pray or speak of Him in speeches. However, it is even viler to attempt to banish God from being sovereign over human hearts as well. Whether a person is Reformed in name or not the heart of the Pelagian wants to ban God from His sovereignty over the human heart. It is worse that the teaching of materialistic evolution and it is worse that not having prayer in schools. The heart is the dwelling place and temple of the living God.

Not only is it denied that God created everything, by personal and direct action, but few believe that He has any immediate concern in regulating the works of His own hands. Everything is supposed to be ordered according to the (impersonal and abstract) “laws of nature.” Thus is the Creator banished from His own creation. Therefore we need not be surprised that man, in their degrading conceptions, exclude Him from the realm of human affairs. Throughout Christendom, with an almost negligible exception, the theory is held that man is “a free agent”, and therefore, lord of his fortunes and determiner of his destiny. That Satan is to be blamed for much of the evil which is in the world, is freely affirmed by those who, though having so much to say about “the responsibility of man”, often deny their own responsibility, by attributing to the Devil what, in fact, proceeds from their own evil hearts (Mark 7:21-23).                A.W. Pink

In reality, then, Pelagianism is the attempt of the human heart to rule over its own heart and life rather than bow in submission to the reign and kingdom of Christ over the life and in the heart. Pelagianism depends on the pride of heart to assert free-will and man’s responsibility in ways that deny the sovereign rule of God. It is not only the use of the words “free agent” and “responsibility,” but it is the meanings assigned to them. They banish God from the heart. In every thought, word, and deed God is either working grace in the soul or is turning that soul over to sin. Pelagianism is so deeply rooted in the proud heart that it hides itself with theology and biblical language. When Pelagianism has taken the hearts of a people, even if they have the externals of Reformed theology, the devil has deceived them. They will then use words to hide their own Pelagianism from themselves and deceive themselves into thinking that they are orthodox. Satan is so deceitful in planting his own seed (Pelagianism) and then hiding it with the externals of orthodoxy. It is painful to root out this heresy and idol from our own hearts, but we must do it. We must do it? No, we must fall on our faces in helplessness before God and ask Him to show us our hearts and then for Him to root this awful idol from our hearts and lives so that Christ would be our real life.

Pelagianism, Hyper-Evangelism, and Hyper-Calvinism 11

May 28, 2010

The basic tenants of Pelagianism are given below in something of a logical form.
(a) Moral character can be predicated only of volitions.
(b) Ability is always the measure of responsibility
(c) Therefore, every man has always the plenary power to do all that it is his duty to do.
(d) Therefore, the human will alone, to the exclusion of the interference of an internal influence from God, must decide human character and destiny.
(e) Therefore, the only divine influence needed by man or consistent with his character as a self-determined agent is an external, providential, and educational one.

What follows is taken from The Sovereignty of God by Arthur Pink. The intent is to show the difference between the basic teachings of Pelagianism with the orthodox concept of God. It is not just that the teachings of Pelagianism are wrong, but they are an attack on the character of God Himself.

The sovereignty of God. What do we mean by this expression? We mean the supremacy of God, the kingship of God, the godhead of God. To say that God is sovereign is to say that God is God. To say that God is sovereign is to declare that He is the Most High, doing according to His will in the army of heaven, and among the inhabitants of the earth, so that none can stay His hand or say unto Him what doest Thou? (Dan. 4:35). To say that God is sovereign is to declare that He is the Almighty, the Possessor of all power in heaven and earth, so that none can defeat His counsels, thwart His purpose, or resist His will (Ps. 115:3). To say that God is sovereign is to declare that He is “The Governor among the nations” (Ps. 22:28), setting up kingdoms, overthrowing empires, and determining the course of dynasties as pleaseth Him best. To say that God is sovereign is to declare that He is the “Only Potentate, the King of kings, and Lord of lords” (I Tim 6:15). Such is the God of the Bible.

How different is the God of the Bible from the God of modern Christendom! The conception of Deity which prevails most widely today, even among those who profess to give heed to the Scriptures, is a miserable caricature, a blasphemous travesty of the Truth. The God of the twentieth century is a helpless, effeminate being who commands the respect of no really thoughtful man. The God of the popular mind is the creation of a maudlin sentimentality. The God of many a present-day pulpit is an object of pity rather than of awe-inspiring reverence…

The sovereignty of the God of Scripture is absolute, irresistible, infinite. When we say that God is sovereign we affirm the His right to govern the universe, which He has made for His own glory, just as He pleases. We affirm that His right is the right of the Potter over the clay, i.e., that He may mould that clay into whatsoever form His chooses, fashioning out of the same lump one vessel unto honor and another unto dishonor. We affirm that He is under no rule or law outside of His own will and nature, that God is a law unto Himself, and that He is under no obligation to give an account of His matters to any.

Sovereignty characterizes the whole Being of God. He is sovereign in all His attributes. He is sovereign in the exercise of His Power. His power is exercised as He wills, when He wills, where He wills. This fact is evidenced on every page of Scripture. For a long season that power appears to be dormant, and then it is put forth in irresistible might. Pharaoh dared to hinder Israel from going forth to worship Jehovah in the wilderness—what happened? God exercised His power, His people were delivered and their cruel task-masters were slain. But a little later, the Amalekites dared to attack these same Israelites in the wilderness, and what happened? Did God put forh His power on this occasion and display His hand as He did at the Red Sea? Were these enemies of His people promptly overthrown and destroyed? No, on the contrary, the Lord swore that He would “have war with Amalek from generation to generation” (Ex. 17:16).

The God of the Bible as set forth by Pink is not the same God set forth in Pelagianism. The god of Pelagianism waits and depends on the will of man, yet the God of the Bible does as He pleases in all cases and at all times. The God of the Bible depends on no man and simply does all according to His own will. The God of the Bible saves those whom He pleases rather than waiting on the pleasure of man to be saved. The holy God of Scripture and all reality cannot be hindered or thwarted in doing His pleasure at any point and at any way, but Pelagianism is focused on man’s will and man doing as he pleases. The difference is infinite, stark, and has eternal consequences.

The Gospel and the Enslaved Will 10

May 26, 2010

In the deepest sense for the will to be free it must be free from God. Can there be a will that is free from the will of the all-present, all-wise, and all-powerful God? Can anything happen apart from His sovereign will and perfect wisdom? If the will is free from God, then what is it enslaved to? These questions may not be common ones, but they point to ultimate reality. In an effort to get at the reality concerning the will, we can ask several more questions. What is it that moves the will? Is it the power of grace or the power of self? Is it the power of the life of Christ in the soul or the power of self? Is it the power of love in the soul or the power of self? If the will is free to make choices according to itself, then it is free from God to do those things. But if the will is free of God, it is also “free” from the power of grace, the life of Christ, and true love. Surely no will can do one spiritual act apart from the life of God in the soul exercising Himself in and through the soul by grace, Christ, and love.

Scripture is absolutely clear on the fact that God is absolutely sovereign over all things. A bird cannot fall from the sky apart from His sovereign will. A lion will not eat if the Lord has shut its mouth. Large fish will swallow and vomit human beings at His direction. Fire will not consume bushes or human beings apart from His will. As Psalm 127:1 puts it, “Unless the LORD builds the house, They labor in vain who build it; Unless the LORD guards the city, The watchman keeps awake in vain.” Lamentations 3:37 puts it with clarity: “Who is there who speaks and it comes to pass, Unless the Lord has commanded it?” Proverbs 16:9 shows us the sovereignty of God over the mind and plans of man: “The mind of man plans his way, But the LORD directs his steps.” According to Daniel 4:35 man is as nothing and God does as He pleases. “All the inhabitants of the earth are accounted as nothing, But He does according to His will in the host of heaven And among the inhabitants of earth; And no one can ward off His hand Or say to Him, ‘What have You done?’” Just how free is man and the will of man in light of these verses?

If the sovereign and all-present God who never sleeps does as He pleases at each point of space and time, then how free can man be? As Jonathan Edwards has pointed out so clearly, we are free to will according to our nature. This is simply to say that God does not force human beings to do things against what they desire, but human beings will in accordance with the nature of who they are in their hearts. The will is enslaved to its nature and cannot desire or choose anything that is against it, or at least it cannot carry out a desire that is against its nature. The human soul is either a slave to sin or a slave to Christ because the human nature cannot do anything but act according to its nature. If the nature is sinful, it will always sin even in its most religious actions. If the human soul has been delivered from its sinful nature, then the person has Christ as his or her life and is a love-slave of Christ. There is no absolute or libertarian freedom of the will, but instead the will is always bound to either sin or Christ.

The will that is bound to sin is an enslaved will. It may feel free to the sinner, but it is bound fast in its love for sin. Not only is it a slave of sin, but it is a slave to the devil and is a child to the devil. Jesus taught us in John 8:34 that “everyone who commits sin is the slave of sin.” Paul taught that salvation is to be delivered and freed from the bondage of the kingdom or dominion of darkness (Col 1:13). We are also taught in Ephesians 2:1-3 that the soul is dead in sins and trespasses, which is to be in bondage as well. The Gospel is the Gospel of the kingdom as well as the Gospel of God and the Gospel of grace. It is also the Gospel of the glory of God. The Gospel of the kingdom is the good news of the reign and rule of Christ in the soul. This is good news because the soul that is enslaved to sin, self, and the devil is in true bondage with debts of sin that it cannot pay. The soul cannot free itself because only grace can free the soul from its sinful nature to which it is bound. The soul which is born of flesh is enslaved to the will of the flesh and cannot do anything beyond the limits of its bondage.

The bondage of the soul to sinful flesh and the fleshly nature is one that pride blinds the soul to. It is a devilish bondage to hide the depths of bondage and chains of bondage to those in bondage. If they could but see what held them in bondage they would seek the Lord and cry out to Him to be free from their bondage (salvation). The children of Israel groaned in their bondage to the Egyptians and the Lord heard them. Until men and women understand the depths of the bondage of their wills they will not cry out to the Lord to deliver from that bondage. They will seek to escape hell by praying a prayer, but they will not seek the Lord to be free of their bondage. So they will perish in their bondage even if they have been deceived by religion and by many who tell them the so-called modern gospel. But they will not have been delivered from their true bondage so they will enter into eternal flames while still in bondage. It is there that they will see how they have been deceived about their slavery but it will be too late. There is no true peace with God apart from a release from the bondage of the enslaved will.