History & Theology, Part 42: The Tentacles of Pelagianism

February 10, 2008

We have been looking at A.A. Hodge’s Outline of Theology in which he gives us three positions of doctrine in reference to human inability. This is so vital as it touches on the nature of God, the nature of man, the Gospel and sanctification. This is simply a huge issue. The first definition he gives is on Pelagianism and this is reproduced below. Read through it very carefully. All three positions can be seen together in a previous BLOG (A.A. Hodge on Human Ability). Again, this is not a minor issue. According to Luther it is the issue of the Reformation. No matter what a person professes to believe, this is the issue that determines what a person believes about those things. For example, a person can believe in the doctrine of election and yet believe it in such a way that is far different than what others believe about it. The doctrine of depravity and the will actually determines what a person believes about election. An Arminian and a Pelagian can actually believe in the doctrine of election. A person is not Reformed just because he or she believes in some form of election.

1st. Pelagian.-(a.) Moral character can be predicated only of volitions. (b.) Ability is always the measure of responsibility. (c). Hence every man has always the plenary power to do all that it is his duty to do. (d). Hence the human will alone, to the exclusion of the interference of an internal influence from God, must decide human character and destiny. 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 have seen in previous BLOGS, the Pelagian system is an external one. It relies on reason and persuasion of the outer man rather than looking to the internal work of God in the soul. It believes that man has the power to do all that God commands him to do. It looks to the human will as the thing that decides human character and destiny. It does, however, leave God a few things to do but relegates those things to the external and providential realm. We must come to grips with this and see that its tentacles reach deeply into the modern Church. Open Theism is simply and profoundly Pelagian. Many denominations have descended into Pelagianism by various routes, but they are still there. Liberals and fundamentalists have Pelagianism in common. There are other denominations that claim to be Arminian but in fact have more in common with Pelagianism. There are even those who profess to be Reformed and yet practice evangelism and teach morality more in line with Pelagianism. Perhaps we could refer to that as “Reformed Pelagianism.”

I suppose it could be stated that I am making some wild and outlandish claims. Perhaps, but let us think through the issue in terms of what we are aware of today. Where do we hear of a way of evangelizing that is doing more than informing people of some facts and then trying to persuade them to make a choice and believe? Where do we hear preaching that tells people that they need the grace of God in order to love and in order to do anything morally good? Where do we read or hear of evangelism being done in a way that takes the sinners inability seriously and the need of God to change the hearts of sinners? We might hear much about the doctrines of grace in some ways, but are they preached and taught in a way that demands that it takes grace in the heart to believe and live them? We hear a lot about the means of grace in our day, but are they taught in such a way that the sinner realizes that God is not obligated to show that person grace even if the person uses the means of grace?

We see in our day an increase in certain circles of teaching the Ten Commandments and that is good. But the Pharisees taught those as well. We see self-help books galore on how to live a better life and how to keep certain commandments and strategies to beat certain sins. But do we see it taught that the Ten Commandments were never given to people with the ability to keep them? Is it taught that the Law was given to show us our utter inability to keep them and so drive us to Christ for salvation? Is it taught that in the New Covenant it is God who works in us to keep the commandments and not simply our own self-efforts? Is grace alone taught for salvation and sanctification as well? When these things are not being taught and stressed, Pelagianism is at best lurking in the scenes and worst is at the forefront. True biblical Christianity (Augustinianism) teaches that the human will cannot do anything in the spiritual realm until it is born again by grace. It then teaches that the renewed soul is still utterly dependant on grace for its holiness. No matter what else a person professes, without that, a person is at best teetering on the edges of Pelagianism even if she or he professes an orthodox theology. The devil is not called the deceiver for nothing. He loves to take heresy and put an orthodox dress on it to deceive those who do not truly love the truth. We must be careful about ourselves and others. Pelagianism is nothing but heresy, regardless of its dress.

History & Theology, Part 41: Are You a Practical Pelagian?

February 8, 2008

In A.A. Hodge’s Outline of Theology he gives us three positions of doctrine in reference to human inability that seem to cover about any position one can come up with. They are also the three positions taken by theologians in history. The first position is Pelagianism and is given as stated by Hodge below.

1st. Pelagian.-(a.) Moral character can be predicated only of volitions. (b.) Ability is always the measure of responsibility. (c). Hence every man has always the plenary power to do all that it is his duty to do. (d). Hence the human will alone, to the exclusion of the interference of an internal influence from God, must decide human character and destiny. The only divine influence needed by man or consistent with his character as a self-determined agent is an external, providential, and educational one.

Last time we looked at the Pelagian positions premises a-c. We will look at the conclusion of this argument (d) in this BLOG. If the statements or premises (a-c) are correct, then the conclusion (d) is correct. However, I argued in the last BLOG that the premises (a-c) are not correct. Therefore, the conclusion is not correct and in fact has been declared by the Church in history to be heresy. But we must be careful in thinking through this. It is so easy to declare a historical position wrong and even heretical while we hold the same position ourselves using different words. For example, we can practice evangelism depending only on external influences of reason and persuasion. Regardless of whether we are an Arminian or a Calvinist in creed, we can practice evangelism that is consistent with the Pelagian position. When we evangelize a person and exclude the teaching that it is God who must change the heart and instead rely on reason and persuasion, we are evangelizing as a Pelagian.

The conclusion (d) of the Pelagian system must be seen for what it is and we must see this as something that is pervasive in our day. For example, the thought or the practice that God has done all He can do and is waiting on you is Pelagian. The thought that God votes for you, the devil votes against you, and now the deciding vote is yours is thoroughly Pelagian. Presenting the basic message of Christ to a person and then leaving it up to them to believe is consistent with Pelagianism. Telling people a few doctrines about sin and about Christ while trying to persuade them to make a choice (even if the person is a professing Calvinist) is consistent with Pelagianism. This thought must be driven home to our hearts over and over. Human beings are born Pelagian and do not leave the basic humanistic principles of it easily.

When we preach or teach in the church or home that morality, human character and destiny are up to the choice of the human being, we are teaching Pelagianism. Remember that the root of Pelagianism teaches us that all we need is some external influences since we have the ability to do all that we are commanded to do. While it might be rare to find a professing Reformed person who will slip into a presentation of the Gospel that depends on works for salvation, it is not so rare to find professing Reformed people relying on reason and persuasion alone in evangelism and in encouraging people to be holy and moral. True Reformed theology (historically) teaches the inward work of the Holy Spirit in salvation and also utter reliance on grace for sanctification as well. It is so hard to be consistently Reformed in the matters of the Gospel, evangelism and sanctification. But if we do not think and pray through these things, we will slip and fall into the pit of Pelagianism at the earliest possible moment. Combined with the constant pressure to fit in with the world, Christendom as a whole, and then professing Reformed people, practical Pelagianism is rampant in modern America.

What I have been trying to do in this BLOG is show how easy it is to practice Pelagianism while professing to be Arminian or Reformed. The Bible teaches that it is by grace that we are saved and that it is by grace that we are sanctified. Scripture teaches us that we must be born again to even see the kingdom of heaven. The Scripture teaches that we must die to self so that the life of Christ would live in us. Scripture teaches us that we are to live by grace and be strengthened by grace. Scripture teaches us that we must have the love of God in us to do even a single thing that is holy and good. The human will apart from the internal influences of God is nothing but a tangled mass of sin and of spiritual death and darkness. No sinner can do anything while under the power of darkness and bondage to the devil. The sinner needs more than influence and his own will, he needs the Almighty to change his heart and give grace in order to walk in holiness. After all, that is the New Covenant. Pelagianism is simply the devil tricking humanity into thinking that they have the power to do what God alone can do. He did that to Eve in Eden as well.

The State of the Church, Part 5

February 7, 2008

We have been looking at the state of the professing Church in modern America. While it is not a pretty sight, if we look at Scripture with all honesty, the truth of the terrifying judgment that is upon us should drive any hopes of man-centered activity as a method of delivery far from us. Last week we focused on Isaiah 63:17 and the judgment of God causing people to stray from His ways and hardening hearts from fearing Him. While the world and worldly people in the professing Church gives but little thought to such things, this continues to give us an awful picture of the professing Church in America for those who have eyes to see and ears to hear. This week we will focus on verse 19.

17 Why, O LORD, do You cause us to stray from Your ways And harden our heart from fearing You? Return for the sake of Your servants, the tribes of Your heritage. 18 Your holy people possessed Your sanctuary for a little while, Our adversaries have trodden it down. 19 We have become like those over whom You have never ruled, Like those who were not called by Your name (Isaiah 63:17-19).

When the professing Church becomes like the world, the professing Church is under the judgment of God because the world is under the judgment of God and His wrath abides on them. The professing Church has many people crying out that we must become more like people in order to win them over. We are told to water the teaching down and stop being so different. We are told not to preach against sin and to lighten up on so many things. We are told that people must be comfortable when they come to church and so that becomes the goal. We are told that it is a horrible thing if people are uncomfortable at church. Fine, but is God comfortable? Do we offend God by trying not to offend people? The heart of love for God is to strive to be in His presence rather than try not to offend people at a meeting of the church. We should fear offending God rather than men. The unbeliever hates God and will never be comfortable with the ways of God until s/he is converted. When we try to please men and make them comfortable at church, it is simply another way the church has become like the world and is not pleased with standing for the truth of God.

When a church (and the professing Church) becomes like those over whom God has never ruled, it has become like those who are His enemies. The command of God is to be holy as He is holy (I Peter 1:16). We are commanded to love God with all of our being in the Greatest Commandment. We are told that the world will recognize believers as disciples because they love one another (John 13:35). We are told that only believers truly love since they alone are born of God and know Him (I John 4:7-8). The true believer strives by the grace in him to love God in keeping with the Ten Commandments which tells us specifics of how to keep the Greatest Commandments. The believer has the love of God shed abroad in his heart (Rom 5:5-8). When we take these verses together, and there are many others, we see something that is very interesting. Believers are known by their love for God and other true believers. The world is known by its love for things other than God though it will dream up many idols to love and call it “God.” When a professing church becomes like those that God has never ruled over, it is simply a group of people loving what the world loves and being like the world.

When a church loves what the world loves, though it may use different terms and express it in different ways, it is simply another aspect of the world. The world is much like ancient Rome in which believers would not be persecuted as long as they were not exclusive about the claims of Christ. It was okay to worship Christ as long as one was willing to offer a little incense to a Roman god. The world does not mind if people are professing Christians as long as the professing believer does not speak of sin, the exclusive claims of Christ, and the sovereignty of God. We must be very clear that the world hates the biblical teaching on sin, the exclusive claims of Christ, and the sovereignty of God rather than the freedom of man. When a professing church waters down its teachings on sin, the exclusive claims of Christ, and then the teaching of the sovereignty of God, it has taken out that which is unique to Christianity and what is hateful to the world. When it takes away these things, it has become like the world and though the world might love it, the wrath of God is upon it. It is a terrifying judgment of God upon the professing Church when He hardens the hearts and people become like those in the world. The world is set up to run in a certain way by the prince of the power of the air (Eph 2:1-3) and he works in the hearts of the disobedient. To become like the world is to say that one is in slavery to sin and the devil just like the world.

What are the things that the world loves? I John 2:16: “For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the boastful pride of life, is not from the Father, but is from the world.” We see three things that are set out in this text that could be considered as heads over myriads of sins. The lust of the flesh could be seen as all the things that the fleshly person desires for the flesh (sinful self). Ephesians 2:3 speaks of “indulging the desires of the flesh and of the mind.” In one sense it could be the desires of the body, but the flesh in Scripture often times means the sinful self. What we must see from this is the order that God has set in the world has been overthrown by the sin of man. God has put certain desires within man and yet that was all regulated by man being made good and so all these desires were regulated by love for God. When man fell into sin these desires were no longer regulated by love for God and now man is driven by things he should not have and also lawful things beyond moderation. So this lust of the flesh refers to the desires that are inward and come from the fleshly or selfish person. The believer is regulated by love and so not governed by the lusts of the flesh. When a “church” is under judgment, it looks like the world in this.

The second thing is the lust of the eyes. The eye looks at outward things and desires them. When man fell into sin and the inward love for God didn’t rule him, external objects now had power over him. When man desires many things and is denied them, he is given over to all manner of things. The coveting eyes leads man to many conflicts and problems. The eyes lead the person rather than the heart of love for God. James 4 shows this: “1 What is the source of quarrels and conflicts among you? Is not the source your pleasures that wage war in your members? 2 You lust and do not have; so you commit murder. You are envious and cannot obtain; so you fight and quarrel. You do not have because you do not ask. 3 You ask and do not receive, because you ask with wrong motives, so that you may spend it on your pleasures. 4 You adulteresses, do you not know that friendship with the world is hostility toward God? Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God.”

The third thing is the pride of life. This refers to the things that refer to how we go through life rather than life itself. So we boast about our status or rank in life, our wealth, power, and educations. We may boast about our talent, intelligence or athletic ability. In the professing church, there is religious pride. There is nothing that a person cannot be proud about instead of desiring the glory of God in that talent or gift. We must see that all of these three things listed in I John 2:16 describes the world in a person and what happens to a person and “church” when God judges that person or “church.” He turns them over to become like those over whom He has never ruled and they become just like the world. In being a friend of the world that person has become an enemy of God.

The world loves prestige and money. So does the “Church” and this is seen by all of the money schemes of preachers and religious leaders. The world does outwardly good things to be seen by men, but so did the Pharisees and so does many religious groups who are like the world (Mat 23:5). The world loves places of honor and the important seats at meetings, but so did the Pharisees (Mat 23:6) and so many religious groups in our modern world.

The world loves respectful greetings in public places, but we see many religious groups wanting the honor and respect of the world too (Mat 23:7). The world loves to be called Rabbi or teacher, but so did the Pharisees (Mat 23:8) and many people now who love to be scholars and professors. The world loves to be honored in many ways, but so does the professing Church in modern America. I John 2:16 describes the world, but it also describes the Church in America. One problem with this mindset is that it is at enmity with God. Another and related mindset is the focus on the things that are passing away (I John 2:17). All the desires for honor and status in the world is simply a mind that is focused on the now rather than eternity. That is a judgment of God.

It does not take a great deal of insight to see that the professing Church in America is in lockstep with the world in so many ways. This is seen by the carnal ways of the professing Church which is seen in what it does and what it does not do. This is seen in what is important to the professing Church in that scholarship is more important than the Spirit of God. It is more important to have peace than it is to stand firm for the truth of God. It is more important to be gracious and winsome than it is to stand for the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The structures of denominations are thought to be important to preserve and yet the purity of the Gospel is not. Education is more important than spiritual understanding. External morality has replaced true holiness. Relevance has become more important than truth. Entertainment has become more important than reverence. Telling stories with humor has replaced preaching the glory of God in Christ. Professing churches are judged by the numbers and financial stability. These things are widespread in America. We are like the world and we are under the judgment of God.

History & Theology, Part 40: The Pelagian

February 6, 2008

In A.A. Hodge’s Outline of Theology he gives us three positions of doctrine in reference to human inability that seem to cover about any position that one can come up with. They are also the three positions taken by theologians in history. The first position is Pelagianism and is given as stated by Hodge below:

1st. Pelagian.-(a.) Moral character can be predicated only of volitions. (b.) Ability is always the measure of responsibility. (c). Hence every man has always the plenary power to do all that it is his duty to do. (d). Hence the human will alone, to the exclusion of the interference of an internal influence from God, must decide human character and destiny. The only divine influence needed by man or consistent with his character as a self-determined agent is an external, providential, and educational one.

This is simply a statement of the classical Pelagianism position. It has been condemned throughout the history of the Church as heresy. It sounds a lot like the “rugged American” position. Moral character can only be seen by what a person actually does (volitions = choices). The desires, intents, and loves of a person are not what is important, but it is only what the person does. We are told today that a person’s “emotions” (a very ambiguous and imprecise term) cannot be controlled but that the person can control the actions. We are told that the feelings are like the end of a train and if we control the behavior (the engine) the feelings will eventually follow (like the cars and caboose). All of this can be simply a restatement of the classical Pelagian position. The person is in control of the actions and the inward part of the person does not count as long as it is not expressed. But this is not in line with Scripture which teaches us that our thoughts can be evil (Mark 7:21), that our desires are evil (coveting, 10th Commandment), that we cannot love more than one master at a time (Matthew 6:24), and that all sin comes from the heart (Mark 7:21-23). We are also told in Scripture that anger in the heart is sin (Mat 5:22) and in that context it is considered as murder. We are also told that lusting in the heart is adultery (Mat 5:27). Moral character is very much of the heart and not of the volitions alone.

The second part of the Pelagian system (b) is that the ability is the measure of responsibility. The deduction from that is that man has the power to do all that he is supposed to do (c). We hear this said very loudly and clearly throughout the justice system as well as various theological systems. On the surface this makes a lot of sense. We don’t tell those who are three years of age to do those things that only those much older can do. But notice what is going on underneath and behind this point. The whole issue comes down to man’s ability to obey God and do what He commands. God commands men to be perfect, to be holy as He is holy, and to love Him with all of their heart, mind, soul, and strength. Does man have the ability to do those commands? We will water something down at this point if we think man can. We will either water down the spiritual extent of the commands or the extent of the Fall or both. If God commands a person to do something, we know that the obligation of the person is to do what is commanded. But does that mean that a person has the ability to do what is commanded? What happens at this point is very crucial. We will either accept what the Pelagian system says or we will receive what Scripture says on the issue. However, the semi-Pelagian (Arminian) system tries to find a third way (see below).

In former BLOGS this issue has been dealt with in a different way. But let us look at this carefully. The Augustinian view (Calvinism) teaches that man is dead spiritually and is unable to do anything good. It says that man has no ability in this regard. Notice the tension between the Pelagian system and the Augustinian position. The Pelagian position says that ability is the measure of responsibility and so man has no obligation to do that which he has no ability to do. The Augustinian position is that man is unable to do anything spiritually good and yet is still morally obligated to do what he cannot do. The two positions could not be more opposite. Scripture teaches that man is dead in sins and trespasses (Eph 2:1-3), that man cannot come to Christ unless the Father draws him (John 6:44) and that the mind set on the flesh cannot subject itself to the law of God and cannot please God (Rom 8:7-8). What is going on here?

On the surface it appears that the Pelagian system is correct. How could God demand of man what man cannot do? The doctrine that is under the surface here is the teaching of Scripture about the Fall of humanity into sin. How badly did the Fall drop man into sin? How fallen is mankind? How deeply into sin has humanity fallen? The texts of Scripture as given above mean something. Pelagianism in effect does not take the Fall into account very much at all. It does not see the Fall as having a radical influence on every human being that will ever be born. It does not really see that Adam was a true representative as a federal head of humanity. It is a denial of original sin in that it denies that all the children of Adam partake of his fall into sin. The Augustinian position takes the Fall very seriously and says that all fell in Adam and all are born dead in sins and trespasses and by nature are children of wrath (Eph 2:1-3). Augustinianism teaches that God commands man as to what his obligations were when man had not fallen into sin. The obligations of man have not changed because of the Fall, though after the Fall man lost all of his moral ability in the spiritual realm. However, God commands man to do what man can only do in Christ. We thus see the New Covenant in which Christ is the life of His people and by the Spirit He keeps the commandments of God in and through the believer.

The semi-Pelagian or Arminian position tries to find a third way. It says that the Fall indeed has an influence on humanity, but man is not truly dead in sin as man has responsibility before God. In order to maintain a position that is not Augustinian it wants to leave some ability in man and calls it free-will. However, it falls under the indictment of Luther on Erasmus at this point. If the will cannot do what is commanded apart from grace, is it really free at all? Doesn’t that simply deny what free-will is supposed to be? Despite the language and efforts of trying for a spot that is between Pelagianism and Augustinianism, the semi-Pelagian is really Pelagian in practice. The soul of man is not truly dead and there is enough of something in man (the will) that can act apart from grace. This is denied in one sense as the claim is that the will must have grace to assist it. However, if the will can act with assistance some of it is acting without assistance. Assistance is applied to one that only needs some help. The position of the semi-Pelagian at this point is really no better than that of the Pelagian despite its claims to the contrary.

History & Theology, Part 39: A.A. Hodge on Human Ability

February 4, 2008

In his Outlines of Theology A.A. Hodge makes a very helpful synopsis of man’s inability by comparing the central beliefs and distinctives of Pelagianism, Semipelagianism and Augustinianism. These are very helpful in the sense that they get to the core of the issues between the differing systems of thought as they have been historically understood. As the political differences between the differing parties in the United States have switched and what one party believed in the past the other party now believes, so this can happen in theological systems as well. We must be very careful to notice certain distinctions as they have been historically set out or confusion will set in and a person will call him or herself by one name but in reality believe what is in line with another system of thought.

I will produce what Hodge has written without commenting in this BLOG other than to note a few things before they are given. It is important to notice some differences as they are read. First, it is not against the central teaching of Pelagianism to have God provide influence upon man as long as it is an outward influence. It is the internal influence that is excluded in Pelagianism and that is the logical result of a position that holds to free-will. If you will think through this carefully, you will see that Pelagianism is rampant in modern America. Some who hold to the basic teachings of Pelagianism call themselves Arminian. Second, notice that the Arminian position believes that the fall was so bad that now man cannot act correctly in divine matters without divine assistance. But notice that according to this position it is only assistance that man needs. It is also important to think of how it is at the heart of Arminian teaching that an infant inherits a weakened moral state from his or her parents and not sin that deserves the wrath of God. Man must still strive to do his duty but it is only when God gives co-operative grace that man can have successful efforts. This type of thinking appears to be widespread among those who think of themselves as Reformed today and can be easily confused with Calvinism.

In the last section we see true Augustinianism (or Calvinism) set out. By nature man is dead in sin and cannot do any thing that is spiritually good or even dispose himself to that. Instead of the will being able to act right after some co-operating grace given by God, the will itself must be radically and permanently renewed. But even after the renewal of the will it must always have divine grace to prompt, direct, and enable it in every good work. What the Augustinian position sets out is a grace that is grace from beginning through eternity. It is grace alone and all of grace. The other two systems of thought are very close to each other in many ways, but both are in direct contradiction to the third system (Augustinianism or Calvinism). This great statement of the systems of thought is helpful to see the real differences and they are not just over the five points.

What are three great types of doctrine on the subject of human ability to fulfil the law of God have always coexisted in the church? [I assume he means the visible or professing church]

1st. Pelagian.-(a.) Moral character can be predicated only of volitions. (b.) Ability is always the measure of responsibility. (c). Hence every man has always the plenary power to do all that it is his duty to do. (d). Hence the human will alone, to the exclusion of the interference of an internal influence from God, must decide human character and destiny. The only divine influence needed by man or consistent with his character as a self-determined agent is an external, providential, and educational one.

2nd. Semipelagian.-(a.) Man’s nature has been so far weakened by the fall that it can not act aright in spiritual matters without divine assistance. (b.) This weakened moral state which infants inherit from their parents is the cause of sin, but not itself sin in the sense of deserving the wrath of God. (c.) Man must strive to do his whole duty, when God meets him with co-operative grace, and renders his efforts successful. (d.) Man is not responsible for the sins he commits until after he has enjoyed and abused the influences of grace.

3rd. Augustinian.-Which was adopted by all the original Protestant Churches, Lutheran and Reformed. (a.) Man is by nature so entirely depraved in his moral nature as to be totally unable to do any thing spiritually good, or in any degree to begin or dispose himself thereto. (b.) That even under the exciting and suasory influences of divine grace the will of man is totally unable to act aright in co-operation with grace, until after the will itself is by the energy of grace radically and permanently renewed. (c.) Even after the renewal of the will it ever continues dependent upon divine grace, to prompt, direct, and enable it in the performance of every good work.

History & Theology, Part 38: The New Birth is Opposed to Arminianism

February 1, 2008

The last four BLOGS we have been looking at a sermon on Regeneration from John 1:12-13 by a man named Asahel Nettleton. He was an evangelist during the 2nd Great Awakening. What should be of great interest to modern people (and was to many in his day) is that he also greatly opposed Charles Finney and his new ways of evangelism that he brought into the church. In this sermon on regeneration he is giving us reasons why he was so against the new ways of doing evangelism.

“Ever effort has been made by the ingenuity of man, by palpably erroneous schemes, and by plausible ones, to wrest the glory of this work from the hands of the divine Spirit, and to claim the operation for ourselves; at least to share in the honor of it. After all, its origin can be traced only to the free and sovereign grace and Almighty power of God. The work is all his; and the glory must and will forever belong exclusively to him.”

Nettleton is absolutely correct and in line with Romans 1:18-32. Man tries to suppress the truth of God and wants to do away with the biblical God in terms of his understanding. One way that men try to suppress the truth of God is in theology and various forms or versions of Christianity. By theology and various practical applications of that theology they deny what is true about God and erect idols of their own imaginations to serve and worship. In doing that they are like the Pharisees who erected a god that could be pleased with their own efforts and works. Others try to set up a god who is nothing but their own idea of love and grace. What we must do, however, is receive the testimony of Scripture as the Word of God Himself. Calvinists have been accused many times of trusting in philosophy rather than Scripture. In reality, however, it is the Arminian system that has done this. The doctrine of free-will is not a teaching of Scripture but is rather a logical deduction based upon certain philosophical presuppositions of man in order to escape the teaching of Scripture that God is truly sovereign in all man’s affairs.

While it may not be obvious to men or even a conscious thought or action, the teaching of free-will is in a direct confrontation with the sovereignty of God. In later BLOGS I hope to show this through the writings of John Owen. Regeneration is clearly said to be the work of the Holy Spirit and yet men continue to try to claim that operation for themselves in relying upon a free-will for the final choice in the matter of salvation.

“It is a doctrine supported by the great light of the Reformation and by the pillars of the evangelical churches ever since: that regeneration is a physical work. And by this they mean there is an actual new creation, as absolutely so as when the world was created; that a new spiritual taste or discernment, and principle is implanted by a sovereign creative operation, and not simply a new direction given to old faculties.”

This is utterly vital. At this point the differences between Arminian theology and evangelism are seen to be at clear odds with the Reformed. Nettleton is making the claim that the doctrine of the Reformation (and of the pillars of evangelical churches ever since) was that regeneration is a physical work. By this he is not saying that it is something that happens to the physical body, or that it is not spiritual. But it is a real and substantive change rather than one in name only. The new birth is something that is so grand and glorious that the recipient of it is a new creation in reality and not just in name only.The new birth is not something where a man simply makes a choice and it is done, but it is the difference between a world that was not there and then was created. Sinners are spiritually dead and then they are spiritually alive when God makes them alive. The free-will of man cannot make anyone spiritually alive nor can it give anyone a new spiritual taste and the faculties a completely different direction that is opposite to the old direction. No man can do this. It is God’s work to do this and no one else’s.

Once we begin to see what the new birth actually is, we see how impossible the Arminian practice is. An actual new birth that makes man a new creation with new spiritual tastes and gives a completely different direction is simply and certainly beyond the power of man’s will. The choice of the human being (the will) must always be in line with the desires, capacities of the man and with the direction of the faculties. Man must be born again in order to love and choose Christ rather than to love and choose Christ in order to be born again.The differences in these two positions are startling in their wide variance. Let us be honest about this and deal with them according to Scripture rather than trying to whitewash them as the Pharisees did the tombs of the prophets.

The State of the Church, Part 4

January 31, 2008

We have been looking at the state of the Church in modern America. It is not a pretty sight, but we need a good dose of Scripture on these issues in order to be delivered from all the deceptive activities and numbers that are being presented. Isaiah 63 gives us an awful picture of the Church in America if we care to look:

17 Why, O LORD, do You cause us to stray from Your ways And harden our heart from fearing You? Return for the sake of Your servants, the tribes of Your heritage. 18 Your holy people possessed Your sanctuary for a little while, Our adversaries have trodden it down. 19 We have become like those over whom You have never ruled, Like those who were not called by Your name (Isaiah 63:17-19).

This text gives us a snapshot and some guidelines that we can use as a yardstick to set along side of the Church and measure or determine something of the judgment that has been poured out on Her. The first thing to that should shake us to attention is the real cause of the wrath of the judgment. It is God Himself. The text says that God is the cause behind the Israelites straying from His ways. This is something very important and even utterly vital, though ignored in the modern day. The Church has strayed from the ways of God because She was already under the judgment of God. When we see so many individual churches that have fallen into ways of foolishness and biblical infidelity, we can know that judgment has already arrived upon them. The theology or creed of a “church” matters little in one sense if it is not following the ways of God. After all, it is still not following the ways of God. Any group that is of fallen humanity, whether Reformed or not, can have idolatrous hearts, self-centered and worldly ways that lead them to follow all sorts of man-centered actions and plans.

We are taught by Romans 1 that the wrath of God is revealed against all ungodliness which tells us that this wrath is revealed on a constant basis. We don’t have to wait for judgment day for the wrath of God to come, it is already among us. “For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who suppress the truth in unrighteousness” (Rom 1:18). Notice that this text does not limit this to professing unbelievers alone. We can look at Revelation 1-3 and note the promised judgments on the churches there and know for certain that God judges churches. A professing church can also suppress the truth in unrighteousness as well since idolatry in worship and anything else is unrighteousness. Without Christ in truth all that a church or individual does is unrighteousness. But if we go on in the text of Romans 1, we note that God punishes sin with more sin. God turns hearts over to sin as judgment and punishment for sin. God hardens hearts and turns them over to more sin. Why is that? While it may not be a popular thought, sin is the worst possible judgment on this earth. Sin provokes God to wrath now, it brings judgment now, it brings all kinds of misery upon the sinner now, and all of that increases the wrath of God for eternal judgment.

The Church in America must wake up and realize that its methodologies and practices that are not according to the ways of God, and that regardless of the numbers of people and the offerings it brings in, this is a sign of the judgment of God and not His blessing. The Church in America wants political power, moral influence, large numbers and offerings, and it wants its people to have happy, successful and fulfilling lives. That is nothing more than what the world offers. We must learn that church growth is not just about the numbers of people in the building, but the spiritual growth of the people. We must learn that spiritual growth is not just about how much people learn about the Bible, it is how much they know and walk with God. We must learn that worship is not just about people feeling wonderful about the entertaining songs and sermons on Sunday mornings, it is about entering into the presence of a holy God and being broken in His presence and adoring His glory.

Another sign of the wrath and judgment of God from Isaiah 63:17-19 is when God hardens people’s hearts from fearing Him. While this would bring a smile to many people in the land if they read this since they believe it is either a form of neurosis to fear God or that God is love and so we should not fear Him, yet the very fact that people think something is wrong with those who fear God is a sign of the judgment of God. In Genesis 20:11 Abraham thought that there was no fear of God in Gerar and that Abimelech and his people would kill him. Deuteronomy 6:13-24 shows us that we are to keep the commandments out of fear of God while Jesus taught us that without love for God we cannot keep them. This shows that Calvin was on the right path when he said that true piety was where the love and the fear of God met. In fact there is no true love for God without a reverential fear of Him and there is no true reverential fear of Him without a love for Him. The two go together. If the Lord hardens hearts from fearing Him, then there is no love for Him either. Deuteronomy 10:12 puts fear and love together in keeping the commandments.

Psalm 36:1 puts it in a terrifying way: “Transgression speaks to the ungodly within his heart; There is no fear of God before his eyes.” The ungodly have no fear of God, but true believers are to pray for the Lord’s name to be hallowed which is to glorify it and treat it with reverence and awe. There is no acceptable worship apart from this fear of the Lord either: “Therefore, since we receive a kingdom which cannot be shaken, let us show gratitude, by which we may offer to God an acceptable service with reverence and awe” (Hebrews 12:28). When the Lord hardens the hearts of people, some are given over to open transgression and others to forms of worship that are not acceptable. If we have eyes to see, what we see in this nation is many people losing any sense of shame and being given over to open sin. We also see many “churches” that are given over to all kinds of entertainment in the music and all sorts of light teaching filled with jokes and stories. There is no sense of the fear of God in the world or in the Church today. That is a sign that the judgment of God is upon us even now.

The ways of God that are kept by those with tender hearts are really quite simple. In the church the Word of God is to be proclaimed with the glory of God and the Gospel at the center. In the church there should be time for prayer and not just for a little lip service. There must be time of true worship and not just noise that excites people and gets their feelings flowing. The ways of God are always the ways of true holiness and seeking His face and glory. While seeking the face of the Lord with humility, love and holiness obtained by grace is not easy, it is the way that the Lord sets out. The believer is to live and walk by faith rather than the things that the senses are able to obtain and do. One thing that means is that the believer is to live and walk by what faith receives which is grace. The believer is to be strengthened by grace and not by the things of the world. When a church is not living by the strength that grace gives in the fear of the Lord, it is under the judgment of God.

There are so many little churches in the world that believe that they are under the judgment of God because they are not large and are not growing. They look at the mega-“churches” and wish they could be like them. But they are caught up by numbers and glamour when they think like that. Perhaps not all mega-“churches” are the same, but the appearance is that the vast majority of them are given over to things that are not following the ways of the Lord and there certainly does not appear to be a true reverential fear of God. It is far better to follow the ways of the Lord and be small rather than to be large and outwardly successful and yet be utterly blind to the judgment of God upon you. That does not mean that a small church is being spiritually blessed, but simply to say that nickels and noses can be a deceptive way to determine the blessings of God. As Jonathan Edwards preached in a sermon entitled Those Whom God Hates, He Often Gives Plenty of Earthly Things To, God will give some people many earthly things and that is His judgment. A church that has plenty of people and money might well be under the judgment of God rather than the blessings of God. That would be still another sign of judgment if the church thought its numbers, property and money were a blessing when in fact it was judgment. That is spiritual blindness.

John 3:36 teaches (just down from John 3:16) with no shame that the wrath of God abides on unbelievers. What happens when a “church” fills its pews with unbelievers in the name of religion with a false and an ear-tickling Gospel? A true church consists of true believers in Christ. When a professing church is filled with professing believers, it is doing nothing but bringing the wrath of God into it. First, it is bringing those into its midst who are under the wrath of God and proclaiming them as being under the blessing of God. Second, it brings those in who are under the dominion of the devil and have them make decisions for the “church.” Third, in doing so the theology of the “church” has been watered down to that which is less than Christian. Fourth, what should be true worship is now nothing more than idolatry. Fifth, church discipline is not being exercised and as has been said in the past that when discipline leaves Christ leaves. A “church” like that is under the awful judgment of God.

Straying from His ways can be a church resorting to entertainment, user friendly ways and all sorts of methodology that is not from Scripture and not in line with biblical doctrine. This leads to large crowds, much activity, and perhaps financial giving. However, this is not a sign of blessing; it is a sign of judgment. There is much to lament over regarding spiritual things in America. A program will not help in the slightest. Spending more money on it will not help. Conferences will not help. More entertainment will not help. Only God can return God to church.

History & Theology, Part 37: Dead People Must Be Made Alive

January 30, 2008

The last few BLOGS we have been looking at a sermon on Regeneration from John 1:12-13 by a man named Asahel Nettleton. We will continue with the following quote:

“There is only one way left for a creature dead in trespasses and sins to rise to life. This is by the power of God which quickens him-creates him anew. Observe in what language sacred writers have chosen to communicate their ideas on this subject: born of God; begotten of God; quickened; or made alive from the dead; created anew. If it be said that this is figurative language, I agree to it, but if there be any correctness in the figures, the work of regeneration must be the commencement of a new spiritual existence. On any other grounds the language of the Scriptures is of all books the most fancied, unmeaning, and obscure.”

If we truly believe that sinners are dead in trespasses and sins, then our evangelism must take that into account. It matters little what a person’s professed theological persuasion or confessional statement is, if a person does not take this into account in evangelism then that person evangelizes more like Pelagius than those who have who were Reformed from the Reformation until Finney. It is to “Pelagian-ize” rather than to evangelize. If we believe that it is all up to the free-will of the sinner rather than the power of the living God to make sinners alive and actually make them a new creation, then we are those who try to persuade sinners rather than to point them to the living God who alone can make them alive. That means we are leaving sinners with hope in themselves rather than hope in the living God. The terms of Scripture regarding the new birth are quite clear and without any equivocation. Sinners must be born and begotten of God, not begotten of their own choice. Sinners must be quickened and made alive from the dead by the power and life of God, not from their own abilities. Sinners must be a new creation which God alone can do rather than do something in their own power.

“After all there must be a new creation,–the dead must be quickened-believers must be born of God. The same energy which brought Christ from the dead-the exceeding great power of the living God must perform the work…Indeed, my friends, where else can we look for the origin of such a change as makes believers pass from death to life but the omnipotence of the divine Spirit? Is it our understanding which accomplishes this change? But our understanding is darkened… Is it our will?… Our wills are perverse and rebellious. Is it our strength? Christ died for the ungodly who are without strength. We are not sufficient of ourselves to think a good thought. Is it our merits? We merit nothing but utter rejection. Is it the ministers of God who persuade us? Paul may plant and Apollos water, but God gives the increase”

Scripture teaches us that the same energy that brought Christ from the dead must raise the sinner from the dead (Ephesians 1:15-2:10). Do we see anything in Scripture which teaches us that man can raise himself from the dead? Do we see anything in Scripture that teaches us to look for the origin of change from anyone other than God Himself? Does Scripture tell us to look to ourselves for any help at all or does it teach us to look to God alone for help and power? Follow the thought of Nettleton here and ask yourself if he or the Arminian teaching is correct on this. If what is needed is persuasion, then what is it that is to be persuaded? It will be argued that we must persuade the understanding of the sinner. But how can you persuade the understanding of one that is in complete spiritual darkness? Well, one might say, we must convince them to make a choice. What is a choice but an act of the will? We must also ask what is the will apart from the understanding? Is the will free enough to be free from a nature that is dead in sins and trespasses? Well, one might say that we have enough strength to just open and receive. Nettleton points out Scripture which tells us that Christ died for those without strength. Another might say that our little choice has merit (whether stated or implied) and God works without that. But Scripture tells us that even our righteous works are as filthy rags. What is the sinner left with to make a choice that will save him or her? The sinner is left with nothing in himself to make a choice and needs to be made a new creation by the work of God and to be given divine life by God. That is where evangelism should leave the sinner.

History & Theology, Part 36: Regeneration is Not Merely Intellectual Persuasion

January 28, 2008

The last three BLOGS we have been looking at a sermon on Regeneration from John 1:12-13 by a man named Asahel Nettleton. He was an evangelist during the 2nd Great Awakening. What should be of great interest to many people today as well as many in his day, is that he also greatly opposed Charles Finney and his new ways of evangelism that he brought into the church. In this sermon on regeneration he is giving us reasons why he was so against the new ways of doing evangelism.

“After all the preparatory means-all the promises and threats of the gospel-all the operations of common grace-and all the exertions of unregenerate sinners, they must be born of God to become his children. There must be a new creation,–a work accomplished by Almighty power-a sovereign-special-supernatural act, like making a world, or raising the dead, as to the power exerted, and without which such an act no one can ever see the kingdom of heaven. Persuasion is not sufficient to make men new creatures. If the Spirit operates on the minds of men only by setting persuasive arguments or motives before them, be the kinds never so diverse or well adapted to this purpose, yet after all, it depends on the will of man whether any shall be regenerated or not. On this scheme the glory of regeneration would belong to ourselves.”

Here is a brutal fact for all who would argue against Calvinism. Man must truly be born again and become a new creation by the work of an Almighty power which is the same power that raised Christ from the dead despite the opposition from the devil. To argue against that is to argue that the new birth will come by persuasive arguments and motives. It is to leave the glory of it all to human beings, either the one presenting the arguments or the one making the choice. There is no way around this argument. The new birth is either by God or by man. If the new birth is really changing the heart of a dead sinner and making it that of a live saint which is the life of God in the soul of man, then this is the work of God and nothing and no one else can do it. No matter how much a human being is persuaded, the human being cannot change his own heart from the spiritual dead and snatch divine life from God and give it to himself. The heart of Arminian evangelism, whether practiced by professing Calvinists or not, relies upon persuading the sinner to make a choice because of the grace already given to him. Surely it is obvious, at least from the last few BLOGS, that an evangelistic method that does that is something that has been obtained in the same spirit as Pelagius. The Gospel does not promise life to those who will raise themselves from the dead, but to those who have given up any hope in themselves and rest in His grace alone.

“Moral persuasion to a better life confers no new real, supernatural strength to the soul, which may enable it thus to live. No new taste-no new spiritual discernment springs from persuasion. If regeneration comes thus, then a man begets himself, he is born of himself, he makes himself to differ from others. On this plan the Spirit of God has no more to do than Paul or Apollos.”

As stated before, Arminian evangelism (based in a belief in free-will) relies on persuasion. If all has been done by grace and now the only thing left is an act of the free-will, then the evangelists must simply be persuasive and convince the sinner that s/he needs to make a choice. If that is correct, then we are left with a new birth as being without any real life of God in the soul and without the strength of God. This persuasion simply convinces the sinner to do what he needs to do in making the choice. As Nettleton noted, that would leave the Spirit of God with no more to do than Paul or Apollos. That would change Scripture from being Paul and Apollos planting and watering and God causing the growth to Paul and Apollos planting and watering and the sinner causing the growth. How disturbing it should be when evangelism leaves all to the persuasive powers of people and not to the grace and power of almighty God.

“Besides, this is not for what we pray; we pray not that motives may be set before us to regenerate ourselves, but that God would change us, create us anew. The ancient churches urged this prayer upon the heretics, who denied a supernatural work in regeneration, and they felt themselves sorely pressed without.”

As we look at what we pray for when we pray for the conversion of sinners or ourselves, we do not pray for someone to persuade us to make a decision. We do not pray that someone would give us better motives. What we must pray for is that God would give the person a new heart, which He alone can do. While many trust in themselves for faith or belief, can anyone trust in himself for a new heart and divine life? While I may be accused of being mean or ungracious and certainly not very winsome, there would be no real reason for an Arminian to pray if the Arminian used consistent principles. If the final decision is based on a choice of a free-will, then God could not do anything to the sinner as that would mean that the will would not be free. Prayer for the sinner, then, would be asking God to do something that is morally repugnant since violating a free-will is thought to be just that. On the other hand, the person that is dead in sins and trespasses can pray for God to give him or her a new heart that s/he can believe in and love Him. If the new birth is a supernatural work, then prayer is to God asking Him to do a supernatural work. If salvation is simply the choice of the free-will, then what can God do and leave the free-will intact? The answer is precisely nothing.

History & Theology, Part 35: The Same Words, but Opposing Meanings

January 26, 2008

The last two BLOGS we have been looking at a sermon on Regeneration from John 1:12-13 by a man named Asahel Nettleton. He was an evangelist during the 2nd Great Awakening. Interestingly enough to many people today as well as many in his day, he also greatly opposed Charles Finney and his new methods of evangelism that he brought into the church. In this sermon on regeneration he is giving us reasons why he was so against the new ways of doing evangelism:

“That the Holy Spirit makes use of the word and many other instruments to bring sinners to Christ, I have no doubt. But that men are naturally so inclined, as to approve of and obey the precepts of the gospel, unless some peculiar course of sin or prejudice prevent them, contradicts the whole tenor of the gospel, in which it is a fundamental principle, that by nature we are children of wrath, and that we are at enmity with God and blinded to the light of his truth and dead in trespasses and sins. That the Holy Spirit is communicated to all in a sufficient manner to save them, entirely overthrows the idea of any special grace, and makes one man as much born of God as another! Our text says that as many as received Christ, and believed on his name, were born of God. If so, others who did not, were not born of God, and the undistinguishing influences of the Spirit cannot be maintained.”

Here is one point of great distinction that apart from it many souls can be deluded. If all men alike are given the same power and benefits to be saved and all of those are by grace, then people will use the words “saved by grace” and yet mean something totally different by it than what has been historically thought to be meant by Scripture, Augustine, the Reformers and virtually the whole Church from the Reformation until the times and practices of Finney. What the former men meant by “saved by grace” was that grace that was planned by the Father, earned by Christ, and then applied by the Holy Spirit. This is quite opposed to any scheme or teaching which does not have the Spirit applying grace to the hearts of man but is the man himself applying the gospel by his choice. Scripture teaches us that man is dead and cannot be enticed to spiritual things much less apply them to his own heart.

“It is a great stumbling block, in the way of many, that God should give more of his Spirit to one, than another. To remove this subject of prejudice, Pelagius and multitudes ever since have maintained that all men receive gifts alike, and are alike furnished to work out their salvation. This effectually destroys the new birth, and makes it alike common to every man. On this scheme Judas had as much grace as Paul, Ahab who sold himself to work wickedness, as David, a man after God’s own heart. All the difference between them, was owing to the different manner in which they improved their privileges.”

This is why men so hate the biblical teaching of this and do all they can by scholarship and other methods to banish this truth from their minds. Nettleton has pointed this out and it would do us well to pay attention to his words. When it is maintained that all men have received the grace of God alike and what is needed for salvation is for them to make a decision, they have in effect destroyed the grace of God in the new birth though they might insist that is it by grace alone. If all men have the same amount of grace, then salvation is by grace only to a degree. The Gospel is that men are saved by grace apart from works, that is, by grace alone (Eph 2:1-10). For the Gospel to be by grace alone then it is by grace (moved by God rather than something in man) that God would regenerate the sinner. It is so vital to note this distinction because it is vital to the Gospel of grace alone and it is so different than what we see in the majority of places today. Many people who claim to be Reformed still leave it to the sinner to apply the Gospel to himself. Others will tell the sinner to believe and if the sinner says that s/he believes then they say that God gave that person his or her faith to believe. While this may sound as if it is in accordance with older orthodoxy, it is not. They have still left it in the hands of the sinner with no way for the sinner to tell if faith is coming from himself or God. They have also not told the sinner that s/he must be born by the work of God and so is in the hands of grace alone.

“I know such doctrine is agreeable to corrupt nature; and the easy reception it has met with ever since it was first preached proves how agreeable it is to carnal reason. But neither the Scriptures nor experience afford us any reason to believe it. I do not doubt that the Spirit of God strives with all men who are not reprobates. I fully admit it. I admit that the promises and threats of the gospel would be sufficient to persuade us to a holy life, if our understandings were neither darkened, nor our affections depraved. But after all this, I deny that common grace makes us the sons of God, or that we are persuaded to be Christians without any special divine influence; or that all men receive the same measure of the Spirit.”

The teaching of Pelagianism is indeed agreeable to human beings who trust in their own wisdom and power, even in the things of grace. While the teaching does not state it this way, it is much easier for carnal man to accept a teaching that leaves everything in his own hands. It is so easy for the carnal man to believe that God loves him and has done everything to save him and now it is all up to him to make that choice anytime he will. But if all of that is true, then no one is saved by the grace of God or by His love, but in reality is saved by his own will and choice. If all men receive the same measure of grace, then the only thing that distinguishes men is not grace but their own wisdom and will. It sure sounds to me a lot like the promise Satan made to Eve in the Garden that she would be like God. Rather than leaving things in the hands of men, the Gospel of Jesus Christ tells us that we have no righteousness and no sufficiency in ourselves. All the grace of salvation must not only be from Christ but be applied by the Holy Spirit. Man is sufficient for nothing good from or within himself.