PREFACE
There
is scarcely another word that arouses such suspicion, mistrust, and
even animosity among professing Christians as the word Calvinism. And
yet much of the zeal that is levelled against this system and those who
hold and preach it is most certainly a zeal which is not according to
knowledge. The following articles are written in the hope that much of
the abuse that is hurled at the Calvinistic system of theology will be
withdrawn, and that the truth of that great teaching, which was the
backbone of our fathers in the faith, and the strength of the church in
a far more glorious era than our own, will be clearly seen.
Introduction
We must take our starting point in
The Five Points of Arminianism were presented to the State and a National Synod of the church was called to meet in
T Total Depravity (i.e. Total Inability)
U Unconditional Election
L Limited Atonement (i.e. Particular Redemption)
I Irresistible Calling
P Perseverance of the Saints
As
can be readily seen, these set themselves in complete opposition to the
Five Points of Arminianism. Man is totally unable to save himself on
account of the Fall in the Garden of Eden being a total fall. If unable
to save himself, then God must save. If God must save, then God must be
free to save whom He will. if God has decreed to save whom He will,
then it is for those that Christ made atonement on the Cross. If Christ
died for them, then the Holy Spirit will effectually call them into
that salvation. If salvation then from the beginning has been of God,
the end will also be of God and the saints will persevere to eternal
joy.
These are the so-called Five Points of Calvinism. We shall
now proceed to examine them in more detail, firmly based as they are
upon the Word of God, and held tenaciously by our forbears in 'the
faith once delivered to the saints'. For that faith we are to contend
earnestly. We shall see the truth of what Charles Haddon Spurgeon meant
when he declared, 'It is no novelty, then, that I am preaching; no new
doctrine. I love to proclaim those strong old doctrines that are
nicknamed Calvinism, but which are surely and verily the revealed truth
of God as it is in Christ Jesus.'
1. TOTAL DEPRAVITY
As
we come to consider the first of the five main points of Calvinism,
surely the thing that should impress us is the fact that this system
begins with something that must be fundamental in the matter of
salvation, and that is, a correct assessment of the condition of the
one who is to be saved. If we have deficient and light views about sin,
then we are liable to have defective views regarding the means
necessary for the salvation of the sinner. If we believe that the fall
of man in the Garden of Eden was merely partial, then we shall most
likely be satisfied with a salvation that is attributable, partly to
man, and partly to God. How full of common sense are the words of J. C.
Ryle on this subject! 'There are very few errors and false doctrines,'
he says, 'of which the beginning may not be traced up to unsound views
about the corruption of human nature. Wrong views of a disease will
always bring with them wrong views of a remedy. Wrong views of the
corruption of human nature will always carry with them wrong views of
the grand antidote and cure of that corruption.'
Fully aware
that this was the case, the theologians of the Reformation and those
who formulated the Reformed teaching into these Five Points at the
Synod of Dort, basing their findings firmly on the Scriptures,
pronounced that man's natural state is a state of total depravity and
therefore, there was a total inability on the part of man to gain, or
contribute to, his own salvation.
When Calvinists speak of total
depravity, however, they do not mean that every man is as evil as he
could possibly be, nor that man is unable to recognise the will of God;
nor yet, that he is unable to do any good towards his fellow man) or
even give outward allegiance to the worship of God. What they do mean
is that when man fell in the Garden of Eden he fell in his 'totality'.
The whole personality of man has been affected by the Fall, and sin
extends to the whole of the faculties the will, the understanding,
the affections and all else. We believe this to be irrefutably taught
by the Word of God to which we now refer. The following are merely a
selection of the Scriptures that confirm the Calvinistic teaching of
total depravity.
The Bible teaches with absolute clarity that
man, by nature, is DEAD: 'Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the
world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all
have sinned.' [Rom 5.12]. It tells us that men are BOUND: 'In meekness
instructing those that oppose themselves; if God peradventure will give
them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth; and that they may
recover themselves out of the snare of the devil, who are taken captive
by him at his will.' [2 Tim 2.25 f]. It shows us that men are BLIND AND
DEAF:'. . . but unto them that are without, all these things are done
in parables; that seeing they may see and not perceive, and hearing
they may hear and not understand.' [Mark 4.1 if]. It shows us that we
are UNINSTRUCTABLE: 'But the natural man receiveth not the things of
the Spirit of God; for they are foolishness unto him; neither can he
know then', because they are spiritually discerned.' [1 Cor 2.14]. The
Bible speaks of us as being NATURALLY SINFUL: [i] By Birth: 'Behold, I
was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.' [Ps
51.5]. [ii] By Practice:
'And God saw that the wickedness of man
was great upon the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of
his heart was only evil continually.' [Gen 6.5].
This then, is
man's natural state. We must ask, then: Can the DEAD raise themselves?
Can the BOUND free themselves? Can the BLIND give themselves sight, or
the DEAF hearing? Can the SLAVES redeem themselves? Can the
UNINSTRUCTABLE teach themselves? Can the NATURALLY SINFUL change
themselves? Surely not I 'Who can bring a clean thing out of an
unclean?' asks Job; and he answers, 'Not one!' [Job 14.4]. 'Can the
Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots?' asks Jeremiah;
'If they can,' he concludes, 'then may ye also do good, that are
accustomed to do evil.' [Jer 13.23].
Could the Word of God show
more plainly than it does that the depravity is total? and that our
inability to desire or procure salvation is also total? The picture is
one of death spiritual death. We are like Lazarus in his tomb; we are
bound hand and foot; corruption has taken hold upon us. Just as there
was no glimmer of life in the dead body of Lazarus, so there is no
'inner receptive spark' in our hearts. But the Lord performs the
miracle both with the physically dead, and the spiritually dead; for
'you hath he quickened made alive who were dead in trespasses and
sins.' [Eph 2.1]. Salvation, by its very nature, must be 'of the Lord.'
2. UNCONDITIONAL ELECTION
Our
acceptance or rejection of total depravity as a true Biblical statement
of man's condition by nature will largely determine our attitude
towards the next point that came under review at the Synod of Dort.
Unconditional election is well set forth in the Baptist Confession of
Faith of 1689, which we here quote as a convenient summary. It is also
stated in almost identical terms in the Westminster Confession and the
Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England and all the major
confessions.
'Those of mankind who are predestinated unto life,'
says the Baptist Confession, 'God, before the foundation of the world
was laid, according to His eternal and immutable purpose, and the
secret counsel and good pleasure of His will, hath chosen in Christ
unto everlasting glory, out of His mere free grace and love, without
any other thing in the creature as a condition or cause moving Him
thereunto.' [Chapter 3, Article 5].
The doctrine of
unconditional election follows naturally from the doctrine of total
depravity. If man is, indeed, dead and held captive, and blind etc.,
then the remedy for all these conditions must lie outside man himself
[that is, with God]. We asked in the last chapter: 'Can the dead raise
themselves?' and the answer must inevitably be: 'of course not.' If,
however, some men and women are raised out of their spiritual death
'born again' as John's Gospel puts it and since they are unable to
perform this work for themselves, then we must conclude that it was God
who raised them. On the other hand, as many men and women are not 'made
alive', we must likewise conclude that that is because God has not
raised them. If man is unable to save himself on account of the Fall in
Adam being a total fall, and if God alone can save, and if all are not
saved, then the conclusion must be that God has not chosen to save all.
This
is no blind philosophy, but is drawn from, built upon, supported by,
and revealed in the Scriptures of God. The subject is one that is as
vast as the ocean itself; but we can do no more than quote just a few
key verses and scriptures that act as chart and compass across these
mighty seas.
The story of the Bible is the story of
unconditional election. It is strange that those who oppose themselves
to this doctrine fail to recognise this. Some believers have difficulty
in believing that God could pass by some and choose others, and yet
they have no apparent difficulty in believing that God called Abraham
out of heathen Ur of the Chaldees and left the others to their
heathenism. Why should God choose the nation of Israel as His 'peculiar
people'? There is no need to speculate, for Deuteronomy 7.7 gives us
the answer: 'The Lord did not set his love upon you, nor choose you,
because you were more in number than any people; for ye were the fewest
of all people; but because the Lord loved you . . .' Why should God,
completely disregarding the family laws of Israel, choose the younger
son Jacob, in place of the elder Esau? Again, 'to the law and to the
testimony'. Romans 9.11-13: '. . . that the purpose of God according to
election might stand . . . Jacob have I loved but Esau have I hated.'
What
was the doctrine that Jesus preached in the synagogue at Nazareth but
the doctrine of unconditional election? 'And I tell you, many widows
were in Israel in the days of Elias . . . but unto none of them was
Elias sent save unto a woman of Sarepta. . . and many lepers were in
Israel in the days of Eliseus . . . and none of them was cleansed
saving Naaman the Syrian.' [Luke 4.25-27]. We know the outcome of our
Lord's preaching of that message: 'They led him to the brow of the hill
that they might cast him down headlong.'
Lack of space forbids a
full account of God's sovereign choice of His people; but the truth is
clear: 'Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you' [John l5.6]; 'Has
not the potter power over the clay, to make one lump unto honour and
another to dishonour'? [Rom 9.21]. 'I will have mercy on whom I will
have mercy.' [Rom 9.15]; 'Chosen in Christ from the foundation of the
world,' 'predestinated unto the adoption of children' [Eph 1.45]; and
so on.
We grant that there is a 'kind of election' that is held
by many believers today. Broadly speaking this is based on Romans 8.29:
'For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate, etc.' The case
runs something like this: God foresaw those who were going to accept
Christ, and therefore He 'elected' them to eternal life. Against this
view we point out that:
Surely, instead of arguing against these things, we should be doing what the Holy Spirit through the apostle Peter commands us to do: 'Give diligence to make your calling and election sure.'
3. LIMITED ATONEMENT
This
third point not only brings us to the central point of the five, but
also to the central fact of the gospel, that is, the purpose of
Christ's death on the Cross. This is not accidental. The theologians
who had set themselves the task of defending the truths of the
Protestant Reformation against the attacks of the Arminian party were
following a Biblical and logical line in their formulations and had now
arrived at the very pivot of salvation. First of all, they had asked,
'Who is to be saved?' The answer was 'Man'. But the Bible's teaching
with regard to man showed that man, in his natural state, is totally
unable to save himself. Thus, we have the teaching of the Bible on man
set under the general heading of total depravity, or total inability.
Secondly, as some men and women are undoubtedly saved, then it must
have been God Himself who had saved them in contra-distinction to the
rest of mankind. This is election: 'That the purpose of God according
to election might stand . . .' [Rom 9.11]. However, this election only
'marked the house to which salvation should travel,' as Spurgeon puts
it, and a full and perfect and satisfactory atonement was still
required for the sins of the elect, so that God might be, not only a
Saviour, but 'a just God, and a Saviour.' This atonement, as we all
acknowledge, was accomplished through Christ's voluntary submission to
the death on the Cross where He suffered under the justice of this just
God, and procured the salvation that he as Saviour had ordained. On the
Cross, then and, no doubt, we all accept this Christ bore
punishment, and procured salvation.
The question now arises:
whose punishment did He bear, and whose salvation did He procure? There
are three avenues along which we can travel with regard to this:
The
first view is that held by 'Universalists,' namely, Christ died to save
all men, and so, they very logically assume, all men will be saved. If
Christ has paid the debt of sin, has saved, ransomed, given His life
for all men, then all men will be saved. The second view is the
'Arminian' one, that Christ procured a potential salvation for all men.
Christ died on the Cross, this view says, but although he paid the debt
of our sin, his work on the Cross does not become effectual until man
'decides for' Christ and is thereby saved. The third view of the
Atonement is the 'Calvinistic' one, and it says that Christ died
positively and effectually to save a certain number of hell-deserving
sinners on whom the Father had already set His free electing love. The
Son pays the debt for these elect ones, makes satisfaction for them to
the Father's justice, and imputes His own righteousness to them so that
they are complete in Him.
Christ's death, then, could only have
been for one of these three reasons: to save all; to save no one in
particular; to save a particular number. The third view is that which
is held by the Calvinist and is generally called limited atonement, or
particular redemption. Christ died to save a particular number of
sinners; that is, those 'chosen in him before the foundation of the
world' [Eph 1.4]; those whom the Father had 'given him out of the
world' [John 17.9]; those for whom He Himself said He shed His blood:
'This is my blood of the new covenant, which is shed for many, for the
remission of sins' [Matt 26.28].
This last view, we claim, does
justice to the purpose of Christ's coming to this earth to die on the
Cross. 'Thou shalt call his name Jesus, for he shall save his people
from their sins.' Not the Jews, surely, for the Jews are not saved as a
people. Jesus 'loved the church, and gave himself for it' [Eph 5.25].
'He was delivered for our offences, and raised again for our
justification' [Rom. 4.25]. Whom does the Holy Spirit mean when He
says, 'Our'? The world? If so, then the Universalist is right, for
Christ was, then, 'delivered for [the world's] offences and raised
again for [the world's] justification', so the world is justified
before God. 'As in Adam all die, so in Christ shall all be made alive'
[1 Cor 15.22]. This again can only mean that all of Adam's posterity
die in Adam, as indeed they do, for 'death has passed upon all men';
but all of Christ's posterity the Church that He gave Himself for
are made alive in Him. Why is this? Surely, it is because He gave
Himself for them! 'By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justify
many, for he shall bear their iniquities' [Is 53.11]. And when He
accomplishes this as He hangs upon the Cross, says the prophet Isaiah
in that great chapter 53 of his prophecy, He sees 'of the travail of
his soul and shall be satisfied.' The travail of His soul as He pours
out His soul an offering for our sin shall bear spiritual children to
the praise of His name, and He shall be satisfied when He sees this
work accomplished.
We do not overlook the fact that there are
some Scriptures which refer to the 'world', and many have taken these
as their starting point in the question of Redemption. However, when we
compare scripture with scripture, we see that the use of the word
'world' need not imply 'every man and woman in the world.' 'Behold, the
world has gone alter him,' they said of Jesus; every person, however,
had not 'gone after' Christ. The expression means 'every kind of
person' and normally Gentile as well as Jew. The over-riding question
must always be the Divine intention; did God intend to save all men, or
did He not? If He did not intend to save all men without exception but
only the elect, then, the work of Christ on the Cross is a glorious
success, and we right well believe: 'All that the Father giveth me
shall come to me . . .' [John 6.37]. If, on the other hand, it was
God's intention to save the entire world, then the atonement of Christ
has been a great failure, for vast numbers of mankind have not been
saved. Christ paid our debt! Whose debt? The world's, or the elect's?
Surely, if a man has been redeemed by a redeemer, then the law which he
has broken must be satisfied by reason of the work of the Surety on his
behalf.
If Thou hast my discharge procured,
And freely in my place endured
The whole of wrath Divine;
Payment God will not twice demand,
First at my bleeding Surety's hand,
And then again at mine.
4. IRRESISTIBLE GRACE
This
fourth point of the Calvinistic system of belief is, once again, the
logical outcome of all that has gone before it. If men are unable to
save themselves on account of their fallen nature, and if God has
purposed to save them, and Christ has accomplished their salvation,
then it logically follows that God must also provide the means for
calling them into the benefits of that salvation which He has procured
for them. The Calvinistic system of theology, however, although soundly
logical, is more than a system of mere logic. It is a system of pure
Biblical belief which stands firmly on the Word of God. Its doctrine of
irresistible grace, then, is not devised by the men who drew up the
Five Points of Calvinism at the Synod of Dort, but is the revelation
unfolded in God's Holy Word. For example, Romans 8.20: 'Moreover, whom
he did predestinate, them he also called.' God not only elected men and
women to salvation; He also called those whom it pleased Him to elect.
What
is meant by irresistible grace? We know that when the gospel call goes
out in a church, or in the open air, or through reading God's Word, not
everyone heeds that call. Not everyone becomes convinced of sin and his
need of Christ. This explains the fact that there are two calls. There
is not only an outward call; there is also an inward call. The outward
call may be described as 'words of the preacher', and this call, when
it goes forth, may work a score of different ways in a score of
different hearts producing a score of different results. One thing it
will not do, however; it will not work a work of salvation in a
sinner's soul. For a work of salvation to be wrought the outward call
must be accompanied by the inward call of God's Holy Spirit, for He it
is who 'convinces of sin, and righteousness, and judgment.' And when
the Holy Spirit calls a man, or a woman, or a young person by His
grace, that call is irresistible: it cannot be frustrated; it is the
manifestation of God's irresistible grace.
This is substantiated again and again in God's Word of Life, as for example in the following verses and portions.
One
outstanding illustration of this teaching of irresistible grace, or
effectual calling, is certainly the incident that we read in Acts 16.
The apostle Paul preaches the gospel to a group of women by the
riverside at Philippi; and as he does so, 'a certain woman named Lydia
heard us: whose heart the Lord opened, that she attended unto the
things that were spoken of Paul.' Paul, the preacher, spoke to Lydia's
ear the outward call; but the Lord spoke to Lydia's heart the
inward call of irresistible grace.
Arminians believe that men
and women can and do resist the call of God's gospel, and, therefore,
they contend, there can be no such doctrine as that of irresistible
grace. We believe that not only can men and women resist God's gospel,
but that they do, and must by their very natures, resist it. Therefore
there must be such a doctrine as the doctrine of irresistible grace. In
other words, some influence greater than our natures greater than our
resistance must be brought to bear upon our souls, or else we are for
ever doomed, for 'the natural man receiveth not the things of the
Spirit of God.' There are three great forces at work in the matter of a
man's salvation:
Which will be the victor? If God's will is not victorious in the matter of our salvation, then, the Devil's will must be, for the devil is stronger than we are. Thomas Watson, an old Puritan of the 17th century, puts the matter vividly in these words: 'God rides forth conquering in the chariot of His Gospel. . . He conquers the pride of the heart, and makes the will which stood out as a Fort Royal against Him, to yield and stoop to His grace; He makes the stony heart bleed. Oh! it is a mighty call! Why then do some men seem to speak of a moral persuasion? That God in the conversion of a sinner only morally persuades and no more? If God in conversion should only morally persuade and no more, then He does not put forth so much power in saving men as the Devil does in destroying them.' Whose will shall be the victor? Our will? But does it not stand out, indeed, as 'a fort royal' against the Lord; 'Ye will not come unto me that ye might have life.' The Devil's will? Then who will ever be saved, for his will must always be stronger than ours. But surely this is the gospel, that 'a stronger than the strong' appears, conquering and to conquer in the chariot of His gospel; and He does conquer! He conquers Satan, and He conquers puny man as well, to the praise of His irresistible grace.
5. PERSEVERANCE OF THE SAINTS
And
now, to the final point the perseverance of the saints. Again, for
the sake of summary, let us refer to the Baptist Confession, which
agrees on this point with the other historic confessions of faith.
'Those whom God hath accepted in the Beloved,' it says, 'effectually
called and sanctified by His Spirit, and given the precious faith of
His elect unto, can neither totally nor finally fall from the state of
grace, but shall certainly persevere therein to the end, and be
eternally saved, seeing the gifts and callings of God are without
repentance. . . '
Again let us show that this is exactly what
the Scriptures teach us. 'For whom he did foreknow, he also did
predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be
the firstborn among many brethren. Moreover, whom he did predestinate,
them he also called: and whom he called, them he also justified: and
whom he justified, them he also glorified. What shall we then say to
these things? If God be for us, who can be against us? . . . for I am
persuaded that neither death, nor life . . . nor any other creature
shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ
Jesus our Lord.' [Rom 8.27 ff].
And again, let us recognise the
fact that all that the men at the Synod of Dort [and those who teach
likewise] were doing, was putting into small compass in a systematic
form, the teaching of God's gospel of free and sovereign grace. If man
cannot save himself, then God must save him. If all are not saved, then
God has not saved all. If Christ has made satisfaction for sins, then,
it is for the sins of those who are saved. If God intends to reveal
this salvation in Christ to the hearts of those whom He chooses to
save, then, God will provide the means of effectually doing so. If,
therefore, having ordained to save, died to save, and called to
salvation those who could never save themselves, He will also preserve
those saved ones unto eternal life to the glory of His Name.
Thus
following total depravity, and unconditional election, and limited
atonement, and effectual calling, we have the perseverance of the
saints. 'He that hath begun a good work in you will perform it until
the day of Jesus Christ' [Phil 1.6]. The Word of God is replete with
references to this blessed truth. 'And this is the Father's will, that
of all He hath given me I should lose nothing, but should raise it up
again at the last day' [John 6.39]. 'I give unto my sheep eternal life,
and they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of my
hand' [John 10.28). 'For if; when we were enemies, we were reconciled
to God by the death of his son, much more, being reconciled, we shall
be saved by his life' [Rom 5.10]. 'There is therefore now no
condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus' [Rom 8.1].
This is
the believer's hallmark, that he belongs to Christ; that he is
persevering in the things of Christ; that he is 'giving all diligence
to make his calling and election sure.' The believer in Christ may fall
into temptation, but the Lord will 'not suffer him to be tempted above
that which he is able, but will with the temptation also make a way to
escape,' so that the believer comes forth, and goes forth again in the
things pertaining to his salvation to the glory of Christ. Those
matchless verses of Romans 8.28-39 show the Divine logic in God's
eternal salvation; the logic that Calvinism simply states. The
salvation that begins in the mind and purpose of God must end in the
fulfillment of His unthwartable purpose that those 'whom he did
foreknow' are eternally united with their Saviour.
CONCLUSION
This,
then, in very broad outline, is the teaching that is sometimes called
Calvinism. Far from being an innovation of man, it is the doctrine of
the Word of God clearly formulated and set forth.
The perennial
question, however, is sure to be raised: 'But does not this Calvinism
hinder the work of the gospel?' The most casual glance at the history
of the
Calvinism,
if we can use that word and not be misunderstood, was the gospel of
Robert Murray M'Cheyne, as it was of Andrew Bonar, and William Burns,
that great leader of revival and missionary to
Perhaps a word from that same giant of the
church should set a closing exhortation before us to lay firm hold upon
these blessed truths of God's Word and tell them forth to the praise of
His Name. 'The old truth that Calvin preached, that Augustine preached,
that Paul preached, is the truth that I must preach today, or else be
false to my conscience and my God. I cannot shape the truth, I know of
no such thing as paring off the rough edges of a doctrine. John Knox's
gospel is my gospel; that which thundered through
Author
W.J.
Seaton is Minister of Inverness Reformed Baptist Church. This tract is
taken from a booklet published by The Banner of Truth Trust,