The Gospel and the Enslaved Will 5

May 7, 2010

The primary reason that we must hold to the will as enslaved to sin and no ability to do anything spiritual is because of the beauty of God’s grace in salvation. Any human ability in the Gospel and coming to Christ detracts from the grace of God. The grace of God is unmixed glory that shines out of the triune God in Christ with blazing glory and beauty. When humans bring in human ability or work(s) into the Gospel, it sullies the purity of grace and makes it to be something other than grace. The grace of God comes to sinners that are dead in sins and trespasses and who are by nature children of wrath (Eph 2:1-3). There is nothing in the sinner that is attractive to God or worthy to Him. There is no ability in the dead sinner. If that sinner is to be made alive and delivered from his or her deadness in sin, that will be by grace alone. The only ability as sinner has is to sin.

Ephesians 2 goes on to speak of grace, but chapter 1 has already set out that God saves sinners to the praise of the glory of His grace (1:6). He does not diminish His glory by having sinful humans help Him save them. It would be less than a pure and holy grace to do so. Did Luther really think that “The doctrine of the bondage of the will in particular was the corner-stone of the gospel” was true? Yes, for until a person understands that the will is in bondage to sin and the devil that person would trust in self to some degree. It was because God is God-centered and not man-centered. It is because God manifests the glory of His grace in sinners based on Himself rather than sinners. To assert that God saves sinners because they respond to Him destroys the biblical teaching of grace apart from works. By definition God saves by grace rather than anything found in man. If God responds to something in man or what man does and so gives salvation, then salvation is not utterly of grace and grace alone. As Romans 11:6 puts it, “But if it is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of works, otherwise grace is no longer grace.”

Romans 9 teaches this: “15 For He says to Moses, “I WILL HAVE MERCY ON WHOM I HAVE MERCY, AND I WILL HAVE COMPASSION ON WHOM I HAVE COMPASSION.” 16 So then it does not depend on the man who wills or the man who runs, but on God who has mercy.” Verse 15 is a quote from Exodus. Verse 16 is Paul’s application of it. If God will have mercy on whom He will have mercy and compassion on whom He will have compassion, then it does not depend on the will or works of man. It all depends on God’s mercy and compassion. Despite the clear teaching of Scripture on these things, man does not want to depend on grace in all things. Even those who say salvation is totally the work of grace want to leave the application of that salvation up to men. But salvation is not totally and wholly of grace unless the grace is applied by grace as well.

We move on to see again a quote of Packer and Johnson: “The denial of free-will was to Luther the foundation of the Biblical doctrine of grace, and a hearty endorsement of that denial was the first step for anyone who would understand the gospel and come to faith in God.” Here is a massive statement that we have to seriously deal with. To put it plainly, the first step to understanding the Gospel and coming to faith in God is to deny our free-will. The free-will says, though Reformed folks brain says differently, that it will act and apply grace to itself. A free-will says that God will save me if I make a choice. The free-will preacher tells those things to people. The professing Reformed simply tell people to repent and believe, but that can be using biblical words without biblical content.

“The man who has not yet practically and experimentally learned the bondage of his will in sin has not yet comprehended any part of the gospel.” This is a haunting statement. This quote tells us that not only must a person intellectually learn about the bondage of the will in sin, but s/he must have an experimental knowledge of that in the soul. It is not just that this doctrine is true, but that this doctrine must be felt in the weight and burden of my sin. Apart from that, a person has not comprehended any part of the Gospel. This is a massive statement that shows how much the Gospel has been hidden from our generation. Jesus invited all who were weary and heavy-laden to come to Him (Mat 11:28). This is the person that is weary of the burden of sin and it is heavy to him or her. This is the person who has given up trying to deal with his or her sin and feels the utter bondage of it. John 7:37 puts it like this: “Now on the last day, the great day of the feast, Jesus stood and cried out, saying, “If anyone is thirsty, let him come to Me and drink.” Those who are thirsty for life are those who are weary of sin which is death.

One can accuse Luther of many things, but beating around the bush is not one of them. He gets to the heart of the issue and holds it before our eyes. It is not just a theoretical proposition that a person must learn about to know about his or her sin and then what grace really means, but the person must feel the weight and power of sin itself and the utter helplessness of self in sin to really know the power of sin and the need of grace.. This is the person that looks outside of self to the power of another because that person experientially knows that s/he has no power to come to Christ. That person looks to Divine help to bring him or her to Christ because they are now like a little child in the hands of the Divine Potter (Mat 18:1-4). Unless one is converted and becomes like a child, that person will not enter the kingdom. It is not just a prayer or an act of the will, that person must be converted and become like a child. This is a person that rests in grace to bring him or her to Christ and then to save him or her completely by grace. It is to experimentally learn the depths of our own depravity so that the depths of grace may be rested on in all ways. It is grace alone that gives a new heart and draws the sinner to the Father through Christ by the Spirit.

The Gospel of the Enslaved Will 4

May 6, 2010

Luther’s The Bondage of the Will can be read for pleasure only if one reads it without thinking. This book, as one has said about another book, has fingers and claws with which it gets hold of you and makes you hurt. He said it was the very heart of the Gospel and the heart of the Reformation, yet in the modern day we are like Erasmus who desired peace at virtually all cost and did not think of the will as a very important doctrine at all. For Luther there was no preaching the Gospel apart from this teaching of the will. In the modern day it is thought that to preach and teach the bondage of the will is to cross the line into hyper-Calvinism or to simply go beyond the simple Gospel. Below are three quotes from Packer and Johnson from the introduction to The Bondage of the Will:

The whole gospel of the grace of God, he held, was bound up with it, and stood or fell according to the way one decided it…The doctrine of the bondage of the will in particular was the corner-stone of the gospel and the very foundation of the faith…The denial of free-will was to Luther the foundation of the Biblical doctrine of grace, and a hearty endorsement of that denial was the first step for anyone who would understand the gospel and come to faith in God. The man who has not yet practically and experimentally learned the bondage of his will in sin has not yet comprehended any part of the gospel; for this is ‘the hinge on which all turns,’ the ground on which the gospel rests.

While this may seem repetitive, it is simply an effort to drive a point home to myself and any other person that might read this. It is shocking to the modern sensibilities and our desires to be gracious for the purpose of peace that our ears can hardly hear it and our eyes can barely see it. It is almost as if the modern day has been blinded to the Gospel and that in the guise of Reformed theology at times. The Gospel that was preached during the great revival that we know as the Reformation had at its very core the bondage of the human will. It was not just something that a person nodded to after s/he was converted; it was considered the very core of the whole Gospel of the grace of God. To put it another way, the soul that fell away from the teaching of the bondage of the will was considered to have fallen away from the Gospel of the grace of God. The Gospel of the grace of God was bound to it (see the quote above) and could not stand apart from it. Yet in our day we want to have a Gospel of grace without this doctrine of the will. What we can’t seem to see is that if we waffle on the doctrine of the will we waffle on the Gospel of grace alone. If we are ashamed of the doctrine of the enslaved will, we are ashamed of the Gospel of grace alone. If we deny the doctrine of the enslaved will, we deny the Gospel of grace alone. If we think that the doctrine of the enslaved will is not necessary, then we think that the true Gospel of grace alone is not necessary. How we will hear howls of protest from those who hear that, but that is what the Reformers stood for.

If a soul comes to God by grace, then the soul must be worked on and drawn to God by grace. The working and calling of God must bring the soul to Himself or salvation is not completely by grace alone. If the will is not dead and enslaved to sin, it can do some of the work of salvation itself. But if the will can do some of the work of salvation, then salvation does not rest on grace alone. If faith is the requirement for having salvation and Christ, but faith is the work of free-will, then salvation is at least partially by a work of man and is not entirely of grace. This is why the Gospel of the grace of God is bound to the doctrine of the will. If the will is not entirely enslaved to sin and under the dominion of the devil, then the Gospel is not wholly of grace.

Let me quote again: “The denial of free-will was to Luther the foundation of the Biblical doctrine of grace.” Luther was either right or he was wrong. If he was right, then our day needs to repent and preach what he preached. If we do not preach the doctrine of the will that he taught, then we are not going to preach the same justification by faith alone that he taught. If we cannot deny free-will without shame in our presentation and preaching of the Gospel, then we deny the foundation of the biblical doctrine of grace. “A hearty endorsement of that denial was the first step for anyone who would understand the gospel and come to faith in God.” Hardly anyone believes that today. We would rather just tell men to agree that they are sinners (if even that) and then to repent and believe. But how can one understand the Gospel of a whole grace unless a whole grace is needed to save the sinner?

“The man who has not yet practically and experimentally learned the bondage of his will in sin has not yet comprehended any part of the gospel.” How can this statement be true? If this is true, then what of people and “churches” who will not teach this at all? Can we call ourselves Reformed if we deny an essential part of the Gospel of grace alone that the Reformers taught? If the Bible teaches something different, then we must go with Scripture. If we preach a different Gospel than the Reformers did, then we need to quit paying homage to them and quit calling ourselves Reformed or Calvinists. If we preach a different Gospel than the Reformers, we must remember that there is only one Gospel. If this teaching is the hinge on which the Gospel turns, then if we are missing the hinge we have missed the Gospel.

Jesus said this in John 6:44: “No one can come to Me unless the Father who sent Me draws him.” The word “can” is a word of ability, so no man has the ability to come to Jesus unless the Father draws him. This is a hard teaching, but it is clear that no man can will to come to Jesus freely. That man must have the Father draw him or he will not come. Later on in John 6 we read how hard that teaching was: 65“And He was saying, “For this reason I have said to you, that no one can come to Me unless it has been granted him from the Father.” 66 As a result of this many of His disciples withdrew and were not walking with Him anymore.” Many left over His words and many will leave over them today. Many religious people left then and they will leave now. But these are still the words of the living God. We must bow in submission to them regardless of what others say or will say. If no one has the ability to come to Christ, then they need to know that. If the true way to Christ is by the drawing of the Father, then that is part of the good news of the Gospel. We need to proclaim the good news as it is set out in the Bible. It is good news that I don’t have to work up repentance and faith by my own ability. Instead, I am to look to Christ alone for the whole Gospel of the grace of God. That includes the ability to come to Christ and faith itself.

The Gospel and the Enslaved Will 3

May 5, 2010

Perhaps the most compelling reason that we should believe in the enslaved will is the very nature of God and of His grace. Human beings tend to look at God as centered and focused on human beings, but He is not. The greatest command of human beings is to love God with all of their being and no one is to come between their hearts and God. For a human being to love human beings (either self or other humans) rather than God is simply idolatry. We can know for sure that God loves Himself more than humans because He will not give His glory to another (Isa 42:8). He will not forgive sin on the basis of anyone but Christ Himself and Christ is the Beloved Son. As a holy God He must love that alone which is holy and perfect, and He Himself alone is holy and perfect.

Nothing can please God but Himself and so a human being cannot please God apart from having God Himself work that in the human soul. This is so vital. In John 15:5 Jesus told us this: “I am the vine, you are the branches; he who abides in Me and I in him, he bears much fruit, for apart from Me you can do nothing.” It is not apart from Jesus that we love Him, but only by His work in us. The fruit of the Spirit is love (Gal 5), so love is the work of the Holy Spirit in us. But fallen human beings want to share in this work. It is hard for the proud heart to give up all hope in self. But that is exactly what faith in Christ alone demands. That is what Luther preached and that is the heart of the Gospel that changed the world during the Reformation.

In the past two posts on this topic the following quote of Luther was given. It is an amazing quote that is hard for people to wrap around in the modern day. But there are reasons for it. Here is the quote again:

Moreover, I give you hearty praise and commendation on this further account—that you alone, in contrast with all others, have attacked the real thing, that is, the essential issue. You have not wearied me with these extraneous issues about the Papacy, purgatory, indulgences, and such like—trifles, rather than issues—in respect of which almost all to date have sought my blood (though without success); you, and you alone, have seen the hinge on which all turns, and aimed for the vital spot.

In the words of Packer and Johnson, “the whole gospel of the grace of God, he held, was bound up with it, and stood or fell according to the way one decided it. In The Bondage of the Will, therefore, Luther believes himself to be fighting for the truth of God, the only hope of man.” This tells us why Luther was so vigorous and almost (if not more) bombastic in the defense of the bondage of the will of man. This tells us why he thought that what he was doing was defending that which the hinge turned on and was the vital spot. Luther thought that the whole gospel of the grace of God stood or fell on this issue. This is an issue that is that vital. If it was that vital then, it is that vital now. If the whole gospel of the grace of God was bound with it then, it is bound with it now. Luther fought for this issue hard and seriously because it was at the very heart of the Gospel. Believers now must fight hard and seriously for this issue because it is still at the very heart of the Gospel. After all, it is the same Gospel now as it was then and it is the eternal Gospel.

One again in the introduction, Packer and Johnson say that “the doctrine of the bondage of the will in particular was the corner-stone of the gospel and the very foundation of the faith.” Erasmus, on the other hand, thought “peace in the Church was of more value than any doctrine.” We are at the same point again today. There are no Luther’s around, but there are a lot of those like Erasmus. But this is the work of the evil one. He wants men to have a quiet religion and not cause a lot of trouble over these troublesome issues. As long as men have a general belief about Jesus and are moral, the devil has them in his unrighteous arms. He does not care if men go around crying peace, peace when there is no real peace. False prophets have cried that peace since the dawn of history and they are exceedingly numerous today as well. But the devil will really fight when men begin to preach and teach about the Gospel of grace alone. If they are going to do that, they are compelled to deal with the bondage of the will. That idol of what men call “free-will” constantly wants to do something by the strength of self rather than the strength of grace. That idol is the ‘free-will’ that men think determines their eternal destiny rather than grace.

Packer and Johnson gives us another statement that should jolt our hardened and peace-loving hearts awake: “The denial of free-will was to Luther the foundation of the Biblical doctrine of grace, and a hearty endorsement of that denial was the first step for anyone who would understand the gospel and come to faith in God.” The ramifications of that statement are enormous. If it is correct to say that about Luther, and it is, then the next question is to ask if it is biblical. Do we really want to know? If it is true, are we really ready to pray the price of what that means? Are we ready to deal with the ramifications of a statement like that? If that statement is true, then the number of believers on the planet (in our understandings) has just shrunk dramatically. To continue on with the quote from above: “The man who has not yet practically and experimentally learned the bondage of his will in sin has not yet comprehended any part of the gospel; for this is ‘the hinge on which all turns,’ the ground on which the gospel rests.” What Luther believed about this was the same thing all the Reformers believed about this. That was the Gospel they preached. God used that Gospel. Does He use the modern gospel? Maybe we simply don’t want to hear these things because they (the books of the older writers) have been published again and again for years. At some point, however, each person needs to face this issue once again. There is no Gospel without it.

Pelagianism, Hyper-Evangelism, and Hyper-Calvinism, Part 4

May 4, 2010

The monstrous conception of Pelagianism in its fullest sense is expressed in the thinking of various forms of liberalism and humanism. It is nothing more than the poison of self-sufficiency that the serpent of old has injected into the human race with his venomous bite. As the poison of a viper begins to have effects on the nervous system and/or circulatory system of the one bitten, so the venom of the serpent of old has many effects. It brings a delusion of ability to the subject. It also brings pride into the soul which hides the effects of the poison. The proud heart enamored with its own ability will become religious in order to avoid punishment for its sin, but it simply hates the idea of having to be saved by grace alone. The proud heart that has taken hold of religion is ensnared with itself in religion. That proud heart gives lip service to the grace of God while living in its own power. That proud heart will change the grace of God into licentiousness, but another proud heart will turn grace into strict morality. The proud heart that is so enamored with its own ability can also hide itself in the creeds of Reformed thinking.

In Ashamed of the Gospel MacArthur points this out:

Finney did not distinguish between Calvinist orthodoxy and hyper-Calvinism. ..But the doctrines Finney enumerates are not doctrines unique to hyper-Calvinism; they are simply Calvinist orthodoxy—and in most cases, plain biblical teachings. Finney jettisoned them all—and thus repudiated the heart of biblical theology.

This is what is happening today, though somewhat differently. Warfield said that Finney was a Calvinist in many ways except his Pelagian view of the will. Luther thought of the doctrine of the enslaved will as the very hinge of the Gospel and of the Reformation. Pelagianism is really dangerous to the Gospel of grace alone, and is an attack on the Gospel of grace itself. It can do so in the guise of Reformed theology. Regardless of our professed doctrine and creed we hold to or confess, if we have a view of the will that is Pelagian in some form, we have rejected the Gospel of grace alone. In MacArthur’s words, we have “thus repudiated the heart of biblical theology.” If we jettison the true doctrine of the bondage of the will we have jettisoned the Gospel. Again, we may claim to be Reformed and preach in accordance with the creeds in some way, but if we hold to some form of Pelagianism in the way we view the Gospel then the heart of the Gospel we preach and hold to is Pelagian despite some Reformed externals. The heart of our message would be Pelagian because our doctrine of the will is Pelagian while the externals are simply that.

What was the result of his hyper-evangelism when he rejected Calvinism as hyper-Calvinism?

To put it briefly—that everyone who was concerned in these revivals suffered a sad subsequent lapse; the people were left like a dead coal which could not be reignited; the pastors were short of all their spiritual power; and the evangelists—“among them all,” he says, “and I was personally acquainted with nearly every one of them—I cannot recall a single man, brother Finney and father Nash excepted, who did not after a few years lose his unction, and become equally disqualified for the office of evangelist and pastor.” Thus the great “Western Revivals” ran out into disaster.

This is what happens when true Reformed theology is rejected even if it is rejected as hyper-Calvinism and done so with a Reformed covering. In our day we have various degrees of Pelagianism hiding itself in the guise of Reformed theology. One way it does this is by hiding under human responsibility. Calvinists have been attacked and accused as saying that human beings are robots and they respond by making excuses and saying that they are not like those other people. But it is easy to flee from hyper-Calvinism and run right into Pelagianism. It is easy to say that we are simply Calvinists who are zealous in evangelism because it makes us fit in with Pelagians better. But a person that holds to the biblical doctrine of the enslaved will cannot evangelize in the same way that a person that does not. It makes a massive difference when this is seen as reality and something more than semantics.

While Finney did not distinguish between hyper-Calvinism and Calvinism, we absolutely must because Pelagianism utterly destroys the Gospel of grace alone even when it is held by a professing Calvinist. We will be guilty of what Finney did in throwing out the Gospel though we may do it in a different way and do it with different motives. But we will still be throwing out the biblical Gospel if we confuse hyper-Calvinism with true Calvinism and so resort to some form of Pelagianism in our thinking and in the way we preach the Gospel. On the one hand true Pelagians are attacking the Gospel while on the other hand professing Calvinists are attacking the Gospel because they think they are fleeing from hyper-Calvinism. They have misunderstood the historical teaching of the bondage of the will and are giving themselves to teaching a form of Pelagianism. It is still a form of Pelagianism and it is still heresy.

The Gospel and the Enslaved Will 2

May 3, 2010

A BLOG/website with the title of God Loves Himself must never stray far from the main theme of the site, especially since that is the deepest theme of the whole Bible. As quoted in the introduction of the O.R. Johnson and J.I. Packer introduction of Luther’s Bondage of the Will, one man called this book “the finest and most powerful Soli Deo Gloria to be sung in the whole period of the Reformation.” To quote Warfield again, speaking of this same book, “it is…in a true sense the manifesto of the Reformation.” This is not just any doctrine that is set out that for a person to intellectually believe or dismiss with no important result. This teaching is at the heart of the glory of God in the Gospel of grace. This can be seen by Luther’s statement below (quoted once again).

Moreover, I give you hearty praise and commendation on this further account—that you alone, in contrast with all others, have attacked the real thing, that is, the essential issue. You have not wearied me with these extraneous issues about the Papacy, purgatory, indulgences, and such like—trifles, rather than issues—in respect of which almost all to date have sought my blood (though without success); you, and you alone, have seen the hinge on which all turns, and aimed for the vital spot.

It may seem surprising that Luther thought that the list of extraneous issues included such “trifles” as the Papacy, purgatory, and indulgences. Indeed it was the issue about the indulgences that was the main theme with his 95 theses that were used to get the Reformation going. His death was desired by the pope over such issues. But he saw those as trifles as compared with this great doctrine of the bondage or enslavement of the will. The doctrine of the will was and is the essential issue of the Reformation as touching the Gospel and the glory of God. How we understand the Gospel of grace alone depends on how we understand the depths of man’s enslavement to sin. The issue of God’s glory in the Gospel is vitally linked with how free His grace is versus how free the will is.

We must understand this point in the thinking of Luther and his understanding of Scripture if we are going to understand the issue of the Gospel that was used in the Reformation and is so needed in our day and any other day as well. While many want to limit the Gospel to believe in Jesus, though others will say repent and believe, Luther thought that people must understand from the depths of their being just how depraved they really were. This is not an intellectual doctrine alone; it is one that must reach the depths of the soul. A person cannot understand the doctrine of depravity in a real sense apart from seeing and feeling it as true of him or herself. Until a person arrives at the point of seeing and understanding him or herself from the deepest parts of the soul that s/he is utterly undone unless God shows grace, that person will not really understand the nature of grace itself in the Gospel.

Many Protestants today oppose quite stringently the teachings about the Pope, purgatory, and the indulgences. They do this thinking that they are quite in line with the Reformation. What they don’t see is that they are dealing with mere trifles as compared to the teaching of the enslaved will which they quite ignore. Luther said that this is “the hinge on which all turns.” By that, we can safely say, he meant that this is the hinge on which the Gospel turns. The Gospel of grace alone to the glory of God alone must also be declared. God saves by grace alone in order that it would be His glory alone that shines. There is no other Gospel. There is no other hinge on which the Gospel turns. If we deny the enslavement of the will in reality, whether we deny it in our creed or not, we deny the hinge of the Gospel itself. When we practically deny the enslavement of the will we deny the heart of the glory of God in the Gospel. If this is the “vital spot” as Luther said, then to deny this is to deny a vital spot of the Gospel. We are not dealing with trifles here.

Stephen Charnock wrote in the 1600’s on the Existence and Attributes of God. In it he had a very powerful section (about ninety pages) on practical atheism. He said that people denied certain truths about God in practical ways while they held to them in their heads. He said that in many ways it was worse for a person to be a practical atheist than to be one in reality. Perhaps, then, we should take that to heart and understand that those who hold to creeds that uphold the enslaved will and yet deny it practically are worse than those who deny it openly. Certainly it is far more dangerous for people to say they believe it and then deny it in a practical way than those who simply deny it. Those who say they believe it and then deny it practically are far more deceptive than those who simply deny it. One greater than Luther told us that “No one can come to Me unless the Father who sent Me draws him; and I will raise him up on the last day” (John 6:44). If we deny the enslavement of the will, in creed or practically, we are saying that men can come to Him apart from the work of the Father. We should and must believe Jesus.

The Gospel and the Enslaved Will 1

May 2, 2010

The trumpet of the Gospel that blasted forth from Luther and the Reformers is virtually unknown today. The power of that Gospel was also the Gospel that changed the world in the New Testament times before the Reformation. There are many who go forth preaching things about Jesus, but they miss the Gospel. There are many who go out telling people that they are sinners in need of a Savior, but they miss the Gospel. There are many who sound forth the teaching of grace, but they miss the Gospel. There are many today who want to call themselves Reformed or Calvinists, but they have missed the Gospel itself. There are many gospels that are not the Gospel.

Interestingly enough, there are many who call themselves Reformed who fight the heart of the teachings that came forth in power during the Reformation. The Gospel of the power of God can be hidden beneath the outward teachings of Calvinism and so the real power of the Gospel is not preached. The Gospel itself can be hidden beneath the cries of preachers to repent and believe, no matter how loudly they proclaim it. The Gospel itself can be hidden beneath the cries of men who attack what they call hyper-Calvinism and go forth preaching a false Gospel themselves because what they call hyper-Calvinism is really the truth of the Gospel.

Perhaps this sounds arrogant to some who read it, but so be it. Luther and all the Reformers were thought to be arrogant. The Lord Jesus was hated and abused for being Truth and preaching truth. The Reformers who preached the Gospel of Christ were abused and hated as well. It is no surprise that the true Gospel will be hated by unbelievers whether open sinners, religious people, and even those who claim to be Reformed. It should not surprise us when the truth of the depravity of men is preached that even very religious people don’t like it. What should surprise us is when all men speak well of us. Jesus said “Woe to you when all men speak well of you” (Luke 6:26). 1 John 4:5 tells us that “They are from the world; therefore they speak as from the world, and the world listens to them.” This is true even of those who are very religious. Paul tells us that “all who wish to live godly in Christ Jesus will be persecuted” (II Tim 3:12). Being gracious may simply be a way of avoiding true godliness. The Gospel of Jesus Christ will not go forth apart from abuse and persecution from religious people. The Gospel of Jesus Christ will not go forth apart from that hated teaching of the enslaved will of sinners who can do nothing but sin apart from God giving grace. Yet that is the Gospel that thundered forth in the New Testament, the Reformation, and real revivals. The Gospel will not thunder forth again until the truth of it is captured and proclaimed. Until it does, the Gospel of grace alone cannot be understood or declared.

Luther’s Bondage of the Will can and has been translated as The Enslaved Will. His book on that topic was not written as some metaphysical musing, but was his effort to defend the heart of the Reformation and of justification by faith alone. While many today will agree that justification is by faith, fewer will agree that it is by faith alone. Even fewer will declare the connection between the enslaved will and the Gospel preached by the Reformers as the New Testament teaching. The Gospel preached by all the Reformers was that the very heart of the Gospel was the enslaved will of sinners. That meant that the Gospel of grace alone could be taught. Erasmus thought that the doctrine of the will was rather insignificant, but Luther saw it as the very heart of the Gospel. Here are his words:

Moreover, I give you hearty praise and commendation on this further account—that you alone, in contrast with all others, have attacked the real thing, that is, the essential issue. You have not wearied me with these extraneous issues about the Papacy, purgatory, indulgences, and such like—trifles, rather than issues—in respect of which almost all to date have sought my blood (though without success); you, and you alone, have seen the hinge on which all turns, and aimed for the vital spot.

That was and is Luther’s response to all who diminish the importance of this doctrine and the necessity of what it means to know the sin of the heart. The thinking of so many today is that we can simply go tell people to repent and believe and not deal with the real sin of a person’s heart. But when that is not done, the Gospel will not be set out in truth. Until the nature of the disease is seen, the cure will not be seen. Until the rotten and corrupt hearts of sinners are set out for what they are, they will not see the need for a real Savior. It is because this book of Luther’s was the very heart of the Reformation that Warfield termed it “the manifesto of the Reformation.” There is no preaching of the Gospel of the Reformation without the teaching of the enslaved will. We do not preach the Gospel to sinners until we have opened them to the depths of their corruption and their desperate need for Christ to save them from their own hearts. This is, after all, what the old catechisms teach us is at the heart of irresistible grace.

Humility, Part 84

April 28, 2010

The humility of Christ is important to study or at least meditate on it is only in doing so will we see the glory of God and then what the life of God in the soul will be in believers. The view of His majesty is simply breathtaking when we behold it shining through the humble and suffering Messiah. Believers are commanded to put on Christ (Rom 13:14). As we behold His life of humility on earth, we see something of what that really is.

And above His head they put up the charge against Him which read, “THIS IS JESUS THE KING OF THE JEWS.” 38 At that time two robbers were crucified with Him, one on the right and one on the left. 39 And those passing by were hurling abuse at Him, wagging their heads 40 and saying, “You who are going to destroy the temple and rebuild it in three days, save Yourself! If You are the Son of God, come down from the cross.” 41 In the same way the chief priests also, along with the scribes and elders, were mocking Him and saying, 42 “He saved others; He cannot save Himself. He is the King of Israel; let Him now come down from the cross, and we will believe in Him. 43 “HE TRUSTS IN GOD; LET GOD RESCUE Him now, IF HE DELIGHTS IN HIM; for He said, ‘I am the Son of God.’” 44 The robbers who had been crucified with Him were also insulting Him with the same words. 45 Now from the sixth hour darkness fell upon all the land until the ninth hour. 46 About the ninth hour Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying, “ELI, ELI, LAMA SABACHTHANI?” that is, “MY GOD, MY GOD, WHY HAVE YOU FORSAKEN ME?” (Mat 27:37-46)

The sinless Lamb of God was hung on the cross between two wretched sinners. He had been beaten and mocked by the soldiers, and now He was nailed to the cross with a sign intended to mock Him. The sign, however, declared the absolute truth. So first the soldiers abused and then mocked Him, and then they nailed Him on the cross. He was put between two wicked men who also insulted Him (v. 44). The people going past were hurling abuse at Him as well. It seems as if the abuse was coming from all sides. Here the Son of God was hanging in extreme physical pain while enduring the wrath of God on His soul. The religious leaders of the day were mocking Him as well saying things like He cannot save Himself and let Him come down from the cross and we will believe in Him. One interesting point, however, is if Christ had of come down from the cross there would have been no way of salvation. It was only by humbling Himself to take the abuse that there would be souls converted to God. In this the glory of God shone through Christ because He humbled Himself and so the glory could shine.

It was the religious leaders of the land that also said that if God delighted in the Son then let God rescue Him. In the human way of looking at things this would have been a show of Divine glory. But in the Divine scheme those who truly believed saw the glory. Isaiah 53:10 tells us what the Lord was really pleased with: “But the LORD was pleased To crush Him, putting Him to grief; If He would render Himself as a guilt offering, He will see His offspring, He will prolong His days, And the good pleasure of the LORD will prosper in His hand.” While the fallen and depraved minds of the religious leaders thought that if God was pleased with the Son He would get Him off of the cross, the pure and holy plan of God was different: “For truly in this city there were gathered together against Your holy servant Jesus, whom You anointed, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, along with the Gentiles and the peoples of Israel, 28 to do whatever Your hand and Your purpose predestined to occur” (Acts 4:27-28). God had predestined for things to happen this way. He had predestined and ordained for the Son to go to the cross. It was His pleasure to crush the Son (Isa 53:10) because it was His pleasure to manifest His glory through the Son. The humility of the Son made this avalanche of glory possible.

There is no measure to the humility of Christ because no human mind can conceive of the wrath that He suffered on the cross and of the love that He loved the Father while on the cross. There was an infinite degree of holiness, wrath, and justice also displayed at the cross. The fiery wrath of the Father was overpowered (so to speak) by His love and His justice was satisfied by His love as well. By the violent and wrathful death of the Son peace was accomplished. All of this was only possible because of the humility of Jesus Christ. It is only when the life of the humble Savior is the life of the believer will the glory of God shine through the believer as well. Humility is necessary for love to flow through the believer and humility is necessary so that the glory of God will shine and be manifested in and through the believer. As the glory of God is beheld in the face of Christ and the believer realizes that this was possible because of His humility, the great example and need of humility is seen. If we love the glory of God we will seek humility so that His glory would be seen through us.

Humility, Part 83

April 25, 2010

The Lord Jesus Christ was and is the standard and life of humility. If Christ is the life of the believer, then believers will reflect the humility of Christ in some way because it is the life of His humility in them. But of course the world has a form of humility which is not a true humility and it has seeped into the professing Church. But there is no true humility apart from human beings being emptied of self rather than full of the humility self tries to work up and are then filled with the life of Christ which is also the humble life of Christ.

Mat 27:27 Then the soldiers of the governor took Jesus into the Praetorium and gathered the whole Roman cohort around Him. 28 They stripped Him and put a scarlet robe on Him. 29 And after twisting together a crown of thorns, they put it on His head, and a reed in His right hand; and they knelt down before Him and mocked Him, saying, “Hail, King of the Jews!” 30 They spat on Him, and took the reed and began to beat Him on the head. 31 After they had mocked Him, they took the scarlet robe off Him and put His own garments back on Him, and led Him away to crucify Him.

Here is simply a display of the humility of Christ that the human mind and the human language cannot begin to truly describe. The soldiers of the governor took Jesus and gathered around Him. But the angels who were all around Him held their peace. The very infinite power of God could have destroyed each and every person there instantly, but they were spared though they did not know a thing about it. The perfectly pure and holy King of kings and Lord or lords was stripped by wicked and sinful hands. He who never knew sin was in some hands that were reeking with sin and blood. Yet in humility He bowed His head and endured because He was called to this by the Father and He loved His Father more than all. What humility it took to endure what these vile men were doing to Him! It was nothing but mockery as they put a scarlet robe on Him. It was even more of a mockery when they twisted together thorns that they fashioned into a crown. They then put that on His head. The very King of the universe was before them and they mocked Him. The depths of humility that He is putting on display should drive all human beings to their knees in utter amazement. While people were amazed at His teaching, they should have been even more amazed at His humility. It is the very power of God in His soul.

After these men had put a crown of thorns on His head they put a reed in His hand. They then mocked Him by saying “Hail, King of the Jews!” The irony of the situation that Divine wisdom put on display should strike us virtually speechless. These men loved power and yet He who had infinite power was before them and in perfect humility took their vile words. They mocked Him as King of the Jews which in fact He was, but His was a different realm. The whole earth was and is but a drop in the bucket compared to Him and these very small men were mocking the One that all was created through. The humility of Christ shines. He who created water and all things was spat on by these wicked men. He who gave them their breath and sustained their every breath by His mercy meekly took their spittle and their using the reed to beat Him on the head with. The humility of Christ shines with great glory. Do we see it?

After what would have been more shame than most human beings could endure without passing out the soldiers tired of their fun and so took the scarlet garment off of Him and put His own clothes back on Him in order to lead Him away to crucify Him. They “led Him away to crucify Him” should be shocking words to us if we only had ears to hear and eyes to see. The Lord of the universe bowing in meekness and humility and being led away to one of the most painful deaths every devised by fallen humanity. The Lord of the universe was mocked by these vile miscreants who did not utter a word in His defense and was now being led away to be crucified. The humility of Christ shines. Do we see the beauty of this glory?

When human beings think of the greatness of the injustice, the mocking, ridicule and perhaps shame that Christ suffered and did not say a word, it makes our little problems seem small. Fallen people will treat us badly and we will be shamed. But let us remember that Christ was treated far worse. The humility and meekness that He had will be our life and expressed through us if He is our life. Instead of seeking revenge and in some cases justice, let us remember the humility of Jesus. May the glory of His humility shine through us. It is simply so Divine.

Humility, Part 82

April 20, 2010

The humility of Christ is something of great beauty in Scripture and is only seen if one is looking for it. When Scripture tells us to be like Christ, it is not telling us to be like Him in our actions as much as it is telling us to be like Him in terms of our hearts. Our actions will never begin to be anything like His until our hearts are shaped and formed by His inner work in the soul. Until our hearts are like His heart our actions will not be like His actions and certainly will not be with the same intents and motives that He had.

Luke 22:42 is the text where the famous words of Jesus are found: “Father, if You are willing, remove this cup from Me; yet not My will, but Yours be done.” It was where Jesus knew that He had to go to the cross and bear the wrath of the Father for the sins of sinners. He did not want to have the stench of sin imputed to Him and He did not want to bear the wrath of the Father. Human flesh shrinks and shrieks at the thought of that. But Christ bowed in humility before the Father in a way that the world has never seen before and will never be seen again. It is true that we cannot imagine the humility of the Son of God who humbled Himself to be born as a tiny and helpless human infant. Not only did He take human flesh, He took on the flesh of a human infant. He subjected Himself to helplessness in the flesh of a human while He was infinite in power in terms of the Divine. We simply cannot imagine the depths of His humility. But being found in human flesh, He bowed in submission to the Father to endure the pain and sufferings of the wrath of the Father and then of death.

The deepest form of humility is the emptiness of self and the presence of Divine life and love in the soul. Whatever one wants to say, there can be no deeper humility than to be emptied of self and to have the presence of the Divine life in the soul. To the degree that God by His grace empties the soul of self is the degree of the Divine life in the soul. The deeper the soul grows in humility the more the soul is capable of having the Divine presence and life in it. In Christ we see a perfectly sinless being with all rights to perfect happiness without any discomfort or pain submit to enduring more suffering than anyone in history will ever have to suffer. The human part of Him must have screamed at the thought of such suffering, but the perfect love in His heart led Him to bow in submission to the pleasure of the Father. When the pleasure of the Father is the loving desire of our heart, we must bow to whatever it His pleasure to ask or command of us.

The comparison of ourselves and Christ is not pleasant at this point. When we take an honest view of self in our past we see that self has asserted itself in so many places. We can see our selfishness and tempers putting themselves into the forefront rather than Christ. We can remember that little trials that God brought our way and how we were angry with how He would treat us. We can remember praying for His will to be done because we knew they were the right words and that we were supposed to pray like that. But our hearts did not really desire it. We can think of times when we have looked upon others and despised them rather than stoop to their level. This can be those who are lowly and so we refuse to be with the lowly, though we assure ourselves that we have good reasons for doing so. At other times we have refused to be with the non-lowly but that was our of fear of self being looked down on and so in a sense self refused to stoop to serve or do something in the name of Christ. The humility of Christ demands our all before the rich and the poor.

But again, do I really see the glory of God shining in and through me as if Christ Himself truly lived in me? Do I really behold the glory of God shining through me through Christ because I have been emptied of self? Whose glory is it that I seek during the day? Whose glory do I really desire in my religious actings? I can have the theology of the best and be as conservative as anyone, but if I am full of self I am nothing but a Pharisee. To put it even more plainly, until I have been humbled or emptied of self I am full of self just like the Pharisees were. To put it another way, if I am not truly living for the glory of God I am living for the glory of self. I cannot have two masters and I will love and live for the glory of God or I will love and live for the glory of self. When our greatest love is self, we will try to make God our servant. When our greatest love is God, we will bow ourselves to be the servant of God. It is His will that must be done on earth as it is in heaven, not mine. Soli Deo Gloria.

Provocation to Prayer, Part 36

April 18, 2010

The following quote is taken from John MacArthur’s Ashamed of the Gospel:

“Many of those who remained true to the faith were nevertheless reluctant to fight for what they believed in. Evangelical preaching was often cold and lifeless, and even those who held to sound doctrine were careless about where they drew the line in their associations with others: “Those who were really orthodox in their sentiments were too often lax and unfaithful as to the introduction of heretical ministers into their pulpits, either as assistants or occasional preachers. In this way…heresies were introduced…Within only a few decades, the Puritan fervor that had so captured the soul of England gave way to dry, listless apostate teaching. Churches became lax in granting membership privileges to the unregenerate. People who were, in Shindler’s words, “strangers to the work of renewing grace” nevertheless claimed to be Christians and were admitted to membership-even leadership…These people “chose them pastors after their own hearts, men who could, and would, and did, cry ‘Peace, peace,’ when the only way of peace was ignored or denied.”

The above quote is built around a man who wrote at the time of Spurgeon and the Down-Grade Controversy. As these were the things happening sometime after revival happened and reflect churches on the way down, a look at them may be helpful in order to focus on the things that need to happen. Without any question Spurgeon thought that the Down-Grade was a deadly serious business. In fact, the struggle over it and the surrounding troubles most likely brought on his death. The issue, however, is not just what happened in history, but what is happening now. When Spurgeon withdrew from the Baptist Union, things were not as bad as now. He was appalled at what he was hearing, but they were not as bad then as now. “With all prayer and petition pray at all times in the Spirit, and with this in view, be on the alert with all perseverance and petition for all the saints” (Eph 6:18). Revival is a many-faceted issue, but we must be alert and start to pray. We all live in a nation and professing Church which are on the down-grade. We cannot get away from this fact. But we must know that we should also pray in terms of these things. There are many points from the past that need our present attention from the quote above. Some are:

1. Careless about the truth and so reluctant to fight for the truth
2. Careless to allow or have come from us cold and lifeless preaching
3. Careless about our associations with others
4. Careless about letting people who are not sound in theology preach and teach
5. Careless in attitude about admitting unregenerate people into membership
6. Careless about admitting unregenerate men into the leadership of churches and even the pastorate
7. Careless to have men who cry “peace, peace” while they ignore the only true way of peace

We must begin to be more alert as to those around us and pray. We must pray that we will begin to love the truth so much that we are willing to fight for it. Scripture tells us to “contend earnestly for the faith” (Jude 3). It is sin to be careless about the truth and not fight for it. We must pray for the Spirit to give warmth and affection in our preaching. It is sin to coldly preach the glory of God and the Gospel. We must think seriously about our associations with others. In many ways we are commanded to come out and be separate (II Cor 6:17). It is only when that happens that He says then “you will be sons and daughters to Me.” We must not be careless about who we are allowing preach and teach. Not only does it matter to the souls of people, but it matters to God what people say about Him. We are commanded to preach the word (II Tim 4:2) and to preach the Gospel (Mark 16:15).

The local church consists of believers, so we must have some standards of membership. While those may not be perfect, if we don’t have solid standards we are allowing non-spiritual people into membership and the church will be filled with unbelievers deciding things for the church. When unbelieving men, though nice and sincere about many things, are allowed into the ministry, it is utterly destructive. Then a false gospel will be preached. We are in a spiritual war. Ministers must wake up and pray for true revival and reformation in the Church. All must pray for these things. We must earnestly seek revival and God’s face for spiritual fervor to correct these things.