What Is The Gospel?
Calvinistic Theology Explained
From the writings of Loraine Boettner*
The Gospel is the good news about the great salvation
purchased by Jesus Christ, by which He reconciled sinful men to a holy
God. The purpose of this booklet is to set forth, in plain language and
in terms easily understood, the basic differences between the Calvinistic
(Reformed) and Arminian understanding of the Gospel, and to show what the Bible
teaches concerning these subjects. An accurate understanding is crucial; the
harmony that exists between the various doctrines of the Christian faith is such
that error in regard to any one of them produces more or less distortion in all
the others.
There are in reality only two types of religious thought: the
religion of faith, and the religion of works. The author is convinced that what
has been known in church history as Calvinism is the purest and most consistent
embodiment of the religion of faith, while that which has been known as
Arminianism has been diluted to a dangerous degree by the religion of works and
is therefore an inconsistent and unstable form of Christianity. In other words,
Christianity comes to its fullest and purest expression in the Reformed
faith.
In the early part of the fifth century these two types of
religious thought came into direct conflict in a remarkably clear contrast in
the teaching of two theologians, Augustine and Pelagius. Augustine pointed men
to God as the source of all true spiritual wisdom and strength, while Pelagius
threw men back on themselves and said that they were able in their own strength
to do all that God commanded (otherwise God would not command it). Arminianism
is a compromise between these two systems; while in its more evangelical form
(as in early Wesleyanism) it approaches the religion of faith, it nevertheless
does contain serious elements of error.
At present, practically all the
historic churches are being attacked from within by unbelief. Many of them have
already succumbed, and almost invariably the line of descent has been from
Calvinism to Arminianism, from Arminianism to liberalism, and then to
Unitarianism. The history of liberalism and Unitarianism shows that they
deteriorate into a social gospel that is too weak to sustain itself. The author
is convinced that the future of Christianity is bound up with that system of
theology historically called Calvinism. Where the God-centered principles of
Calvinism have been abandoned, there has been a strong tendency downward into
the depths of man-centered naturalism or secularism. Some have argued
convincingly that there is no consistent stopping place between Calvinism and
atheism.
1. The sovereignty of God
The basic
principle of Calvinism is the sovereignty of God. This represents the
purpose of the triune God as absolute and unconditional, independent of the
whole finite creation, and originating solely in the eternal counsel of His
will. He appoints the course of nature and directs the course of history down to
the minutest details. His decrees, therefore, are eternal, unchangeable, holy,
wise and sovereign. They are represented in the Bible as being the basis of the
divine foreknowledge of all future events, and not conditioned by that
foreknowledge or by anything originating in the events themselves.
Every
thinking person readily sees that some sovereignty rules his life. He was not
asked whether or not he would have existence, when or what or where he would be
born, whether in the twentieth century or before the flood, whether male or
female, white or black, whether in the United States, or China, or Africa. All
those things were sovereignly decided for him before he had any existence. It
has been recognized by Christians in all ages that God is the Creator and Ruler
of the world, and that as such He is the ultimate source of all power. Hence,
nothing can come to pass apart from His sovereign will; otherwise, He would not
be truly God. When the thoughtful person dwells on this truth, he finds that it
involves considerations which establish the Calvinistic and disprove the
Arminian position.
By virtue of the fact that God has created everything
that exists, He is the absolute Owner and final Disposer of all that He has
made. He exerts not merely a general influence but actually rules in the affairs
of men (Ac. 4:24-28).
Even the nations are as the small dust of the balance when compared with His
greatness (Isa.
40:12-17). Amid all the apparent defeats and inconsistencies found in human
society, God is actually controlling all things in undisturbed majesty. Even the
sinful actions of men can occur only by His permission and with the strength
that He gives the creature. Since His permission is not unwilling but willing,
all that comes to pass (including even the sinful actions and ultimate destiny
of men) must be, in some sense, in accordance with what He has eternally
purposed and decreed. To the proportion that this is denied, God is excluded
from the government of the world, and man is left with only a finite God.
Naturally some problems arise, which in man’s present state of knowledge are not
able fully to be explained. But that is not a sufficient reason for rejecting
what the Scriptures and the plain dictates of reason affirm to be
true.
Is God not able to convert a sinner when He pleases? Cannot the
Almighty, the omnipotent Ruler of heaven and earth, change the character of the
creatures He has made? He changed the water into wine at Cana and converted Saul
on the road to Damascus. The leper said, “Lord, if thou wilt, thou canst make me
clean” (Mt.
8:2)—and at a word his leprosy was cleansed! Do not believe that God cannot
control the human will or regenerate a soul when He pleases. He is as able to
cleanse the soul as the body. If He chose, He could raise up such a flood of
Christian ministers, missionaries and workers of various kinds, and could so
work through His Holy Spirit, that the entire world would be converted in a very
short time. If He had purposed to save all men, He could have sent hosts of
angels to instruct them and to do supernatural works on the earth. He could have
worked marvelously in the heart of every person, so that no one would have been
lost.
Since evil exists only by His permission, He could, if He chose,
blot it out of existence. His power in this respect was shown, for instance, in
the work of the destroying angel who in one night slew all the firstborn of the
Egyptians (Ex. 12:29) and in
another night slew 185,000 of the Assyrian army (2 Kgs. 19:35). It
was shown when the earth opened and swallowed up Korah and his rebellious allies
(Num.
16:31-35), and when King Herod was smitten and died a horrible death (Ac.
12:23). The Most High God’s dominion is “an everlasting dominion, and his
kingdom is from generation to generation: And all the inhabitants of the earth
are reputed as nothing: and he doeth according to his will in the army of
heaven, and among the inhabitants of the earth: and none can stay his hand, or
say unto him, What doest thou?” (Dan.
4:34-35).
All of this brings out the basic principle of the Reformed
faith: the sovereignty of God. God created this world in which man dwells. He
owns it and is running it according to His own sovereign good pleasure. God has
lost none of His power, and it is highly dishonoring to Him to suppose that He
is struggling along with the human race, doing the best He can to persuade men
to do right, but unable to accomplish His eternal, unchangeable, holy, wise, and
sovereign purpose.
Any system which teaches that the serious intentions
of God can in some cases be defeated, and that man (who is not only a creature
but a sinful creature) can exercise veto power over the plans of Almighty God,
is in striking contrast to the biblical idea of His immeasurable exaltation by
which He is removed from all the weaknesses of humanity. That the plans of men
are not always executed is due to a lack of power, or lack of wisdom, or both.
But since God is unlimited in these and in all other resources, no unforeseen
emergencies can arise. To Him, the causes for change have no existence. To
assume that His plan fails and that He strives to no effect is to reduce Him to
the level of His creatures and make Him no God at all.
2. Man’s
totally helpless condition
The first and perhaps most serious error
of the Arminian writers is that they do not give sufficient importance to the
sinful rebellion and spiritual separation of the human race from God, that
occurred in the fall of Adam. Some neglect it altogether, while for others it
seems to be a faraway event that has little influence in the lives of people
today. But unless the Bible-believing Christian insists on the reality of that
spiritual separation from God, and the totally disastrous effect that it had on
the entire human race, he shall never be able properly to appreciate his real
condition or desperate need of a redeemer.
Perhaps it will help to
realize more clearly what fallen man’s condition really is, if it is compared
with that of the fallen angels. Angels were created before man, and each angel
was placed on test as an individual, personal, moral being. This apparently was
a pure test of obedience, as was that of Adam. Some of the angels stood their
test (for reasons fully known only to God) and as a result were then confirmed
in a state of perfect angelic holiness; these are now the elect angels in heaven
(1 Tim.
5:21). But others fell and are now the demons mentioned in the Scriptures
(the devil apparently being the one of highest rank among those who fell). Jude
wrote that the “angels which kept not their first estate, but left their own
habitation, [God] hath reserved in everlasting chains under darkness unto the
judgment of the great day” Jude 1:6.
Furthermore, “God spared not the angels that sinned, but cast them down to hell,
and delivered them into chains of darkness, to be reserved unto judgment” (2 Pet.
2:4). The devil and the demons are totally alienated from God, totally given
over to sin, without any hope of redemption. Their fate is described by Christ
as that of being cast into “everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his
angels” (Mt.
25:41).
There is no redemption for fallen angels. The writer of the
epistle to the Hebrews says, “For verily not to angels doth he give help, but he
giveth help to the seed of Abraham” Heb 2:16. Their
fate is fixed and certain. For men and for angels, endless punishment is the
penalty for endless sinning against God. Some would try to make God appear
unjust, as though He inflicts endless punishment for sins committed only in this
life. But lost men and lost angels (or demons) are endlessly in rebellion
against God, and they endlessly receive punishment for that
rebellion.
When God created man a moral creature, He proceeded on a
different plan than He did with the angelic order. Instead of creating all men
at one time and placing them on test individually, He created one man with a
physical body, from whom the entire human race would descend, and who (because
of his union with all those who would come after him) could be appointed as the
legal or federal head and representative of the entire human race. If he stood
the test, he and all his descendants would be confirmed in holiness and
established in a state of perpetual creaturely bliss (as were the holy angels).
But if he fell (as did the fallen angels), he and all his posterity would be
subject to eternal punishment. It was as if God said, “This time, if sin is to
enter, let it enter by one man, so that redemption also can be provided by one
Man.”
Therefore, Adam, in his representative capacity, was placed on a
test of pure human obedience. The penalty of disobedience was clearly set before
him: “And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden
thou mayest freely eat: But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou
shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely
die” (Gen.
2:16-17).
Hence, the clearly-declared penalty for sin was death:
exactly the same penalty that had been inflicted on the angels who fell. As with
angels, it was purely a test of whether or not man would be an obedient and
appreciative subject in the kingdom of heaven. It was a perfectly fair, simple
test, clearly set forth, very much in Adam’s favor, for which he would have no
excuse if he disobeyed.
But—tragedy of tragedies—Adam fell, and the
entire human race fell representatively in him. The consequences of his sin are
all comprehended under the term “death” in its widest sense. It was primarily
spiritual death (or separation from God) that had been threatened (Adam did not
die physically until 930 years after he fell). But he was spiritually estranged
from God and died spiritually the very instant he sinned; from that instant his
life became an unceasing march to the grave. Man in this life has not gone as
far in the ways of sin as have the devil and the demons, for he still receives
many blessings through common grace—health, wealth, family and friends, the
beauties of nature—and he still is surrounded with many restraining influences.
But he is on his way. If not checked, man would eventually become as totally
evil as the demons. In his fallen state he fears God, tries to flee from Him,
and literally hates Him (as do the demons). If left to himself he would remain
forever in that condition because, “There is none righteous, no, not one: There
is none that understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God” (Rom. 3:10-11).
Nothing, absolutely nothing but a mighty supernatural act on the part of God,
can rescue him from that condition. Hence, if man is to be rescued, God must
take the initiative; He must pay the penalty for him, must cleanse him from his
guilt, and so reinstate him in holiness and righteousness.
That is
precisely what God does! He sovereignly picks up a man out of the kingdom of
Satan and places him in the kingdom of heaven. These are the elect that are
referred to some 25 times in Scripture: “But for the elect’s sake those days
shall be shortened” (Mt. 24:22);
“Knowing, brethren beloved, your election of God” (1 Thess. 1:4); “The
election hath obtained it, and the rest were blinded” (Rom. 11:7); “Who
shall lay any thing to the charge of God’s elect?” (Rom. 8:33). There
are many more such references.
The Bible teaches that God has rescued a
multitude of the human race from the penalty of their sins. In order to perform
that work, Christ, the second Person of the trinity, took upon Himself human
nature (through the miracle of the virgin birth) and was born into the human
race as any normal child is born. God thus became incarnate, became one of us.
Jesus lived a perfectly sinless life among men as the representative of His
people, placed Himself under His own law, and suffered in His own Person the
penalty that God had prescribed for sin. In His sinless life He perfectly kept
the law of God that Adam had broken and so earned perfect righteousness for His
people and the right for them to enter heaven. What He suffered as a Person of
infinite value and dignity was a just equivalent of what His people would have
suffered in an eternity in hell. In this manner He freed His people from the law
of sin and death. As the fruits of that redemptive work are applied to those who
have been given to the Son by the Father, they are said to be regenerated by the
Holy Spirit, that is, made alive spiritually, or born again.
Paul
expresses this broad truth in the epistle to the Romans when he says,
“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.... But not as the offence,
so also is the free gift. For if through the offence of one many be dead, much
more the grace of God, and the gift by grace, which is by one man, Jesus Christ,
hath abounded unto many.... Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came
upon all men to condemnation; even so by the righteousness of one the free gift
came upon all men unto justification of life. For as by one man’s disobedience
many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous”
(Rom.
5:12-19).
Unless one sees that contrast between the first and the
second Adam, he will never understand the Christian system. Writing to the
saints that were at Ephesus, Paul said, “And you hath he quickened [made alive],
who were dead in trespasses and sins.” The Ephesian Christians “...were by
nature the children of wrath, even as others. But God, who is rich in mercy, for
his great love wherewith he loved us, Even when we were dead in sins, hath
quickened us together with Christ, (by grace ye are saved;) And hath raised us
up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus: That
in the ages to come he might show the exceeding riches of his grace in his
kindness toward us through Christ Jesus. For by grace are ye saved through
faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any
man should boast. For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good
works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them” (Eph.
2:1-10).
In Christian theology there are three separate and distinct
acts of imputation. In the first place, Adam’s sin is imputed to all his
descendants (that is, judicially set to their account, so that they are held
responsible for it and suffer the consequences of it). This is commonly known as
the doctrine of original sin. In the second place (and in precisely the same
manner) the believer’s sin is imputed to Christ, so that the innocent Savior
suffers the consequences of it. And in the third place, Christ’s righteousness
is imputed to the believer and secures for him entrance into heaven. Adam’s
descendants, of course, are no more personally guilty of Adam’s sin than Christ
is personally guilty of His people’s sin, or that His people are personally
meritorious because of His righteousness. In each case it is a judicial
transaction. The sinner receives salvation from Christ in precisely the same way
that he receives condemnation and ruin from Adam. In each case the result
follows because of the close official union which exists between the persons
involved. To reject any one of these three steps is to reject an essential part
of the Christian system.
Thus there is a strict parallel between Adam and
Christ in the matter of salvation. In the above passages Paul piles one phrase
upon another, stressing the fact that mankind is not merely sick or spiritually
disinclined but spiritually dead. Christ emphatically taught, “Except a man be
born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God” (Jn. 3:3). Again He
said, “Why do ye not understand my speech? even because ye cannot hear my word”
(Jn.
8:43). The unregenerate man cannot see the kingdom of God nor hear in any
spiritually discerning way the words spoken concerning it; much less can he get
into it. Had the righteous been left to themselves, they, like the fallen
angels, would never have turned to God.
A spiritually dead person can no
more give himself spiritual life than a physically dead person can give himself
physical life; that requires a supernatural act on the part of God. The sinner
gets into the family of God in precisely the same way that he gets into his
human family: by being born into it. By that supernatural act, God Himself
(through His Holy Spirit) sovereignly takes him out of the kingdom of Satan and
places him in His spiritual kingdom by a spiritual rebirth.
Having once
been born into the kingdom of God, the redeemed sinner can never become unborn.
Since it took a supernatural act to bring him into a state of spiritual life, it
would take another such act to take him out of that state. Hence the absolute
certainty that those who have been regenerated (and therefore have become truly
Christian) will never lose their salvation but will be providentially kept by
the power of God through all the trials and difficulties of this life and
brought into the heavenly kingdom. “He that heareth my word, and believeth on
him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and shall not come into condemnation;
but is passed from death unto life” (Jn. 5:24). “If any
man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all
things are become new” (2 Cor. 5:17). “My
sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me: And I give unto them
eternal life; and they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out
of my hand. My Father, which gave them me, is greater than all; and no man is
able to pluck them out of my Father’s hand” (Jn. 10:27-29).
This is known as the doctrine of eternal security, or the perseverance of the
saints.
This gift of eternal life is not conferred upon all men but only
upon those whom God chooses. This does not mean that any who want to be saved
are excluded, for the invitation is, “whosoever will, let him take the water of
life freely” (Rev. 22:17). The
fact is that a spiritually dead person cannot will to come. “No man can come to
me, except the Father which hath sent me draw [literally, drag] him” (Jn.
6:44). Only those who are quickened (made spiritually alive) by the Holy
Spirit ever have that will or desire; these are the elect. But in contrast with
these, there is another group that may be called the non-elect. Concerning them,
Floyd Hamilton very appropriately wrote: “All that God does is to let them alone
and allow them to go their own way without interference. It is their nature to
be evil, and God simply has foreordained to leave that nature unchanged. The
picture often painted by opponents of Calvinism, of a cruel God refusing to save
all who want to be saved, is a gross caricature. God saves all who want to be
saved, but no one whose nature has not been changed wants to be
saved.”
3. Christ’s atonement
It is not revealed why
God does not save all mankind, when all were equally undeserving, and when the
sacrifice on Calvary was that of a Person of infinite value, amply sufficient to
save all men, had God so desired it. The Scriptures do show that not all will be
saved; however, it must be remembered that the atonement, which was worked out
at an enormous cost to God Himself, is God’s own property; He is at liberty to
make whatever use of it He chooses. No man has any claim to any part of it. The
Bible teaches repeatedly that salvation is by grace. Grace is favor shown to the
undeserving—even to the ill-deserving. If any part of man’s salvation were due
to his own good works, then indeed there would be a difference in men, and those
who had responded to the gracious offer could justly point the finger of scorn
at the lost and say, “You had the same chance that I had. I accepted, but you
refused; therefore, you have no excuse.” But no! God has so arranged this system
that those who are saved can only be eternally grateful that God has saved them.
It is not for man to ask why God does as He does, for the Scripture declares:
“Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? Shall the thing formed
say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? Hath not the potter power
over the clay, of the same lump to make one vessel unto honour, and another unto
dishonour? What if God, willing to show his wrath, and to make his power known,
endured with much longsuffering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction: And
that he might make known the riches of his glory on the vessels of mercy, which
he had afore prepared unto glory, Even us, whom he hath called...” (Rom.
9:20-24).
Only the Calvinist seems to take the fall of man seriously.
A proper evaluation of the fall and man’s present hopeless condition is the
missing element in so much of today’s thinking, teaching and preaching.
Arminianism seriously errs in assuming that man has sufficient ability to turn
to God, if only he will. The Calvinist insists that man is not merely sick or
indisposed or just needing the right incentive; he is spiritually dead. The
atonement of Christ does not merely make salvation an abstract possibility (such
that all men can turn to God if they will). The Calvinist holds that the
atonement was an objective work, accomplished in history, which removed all
legal barriers against those to whom it was to be applied. It is followed by the
work of the Holy Spirit subjectively applying the merits of that atonement to
the hearts of those for whom it was divinely intended.
Here, again, is
one of the most important verses in Scripture concerning the matter of
salvation: “No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw
him” (Jn.
6:44). Another like it is, “All that the Father giveth me shall come to me;
and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out” (Jn. 6:37). The
Apostle Paul wrote, “The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of
God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they
are spiritually discerned” (1 Cor.
2:14).
How does God cause the elect to exercise faith? The answer is
that in regeneration the Holy Spirit subdues man’s heart to Himself and imparts
a new nature which loves righteousness and hates sin. He does not force man
against his will but makes him lovingly and spontaneously obedient to God’s
will. When the Lord appeared to the hardened persecutor Saul as he was on the
way to Damascus, he immediately became obedient to God’s will. “Thy people shall
be willing in the day of thy power” (Ps. 110:3). God
gives His people the will to come! That act on God’s part, in the subconscious
nature of the person, is known as regeneration, the new birth, or being born
again. When a man is given a new nature, he reacts according to that nature. He
exercises faith and does good works characteristic of repentance as naturally as
the grape vine produces grapes. Whereas sin was previously his natural element,
now holiness becomes his natural element (though not all at once, for he still
has remnants of the old nature clinging to him; and as long as he remains in
this world he still is in a sinful environment). But as his new nature is free
to express itself, he grows in righteousness; he enjoys reading God’s Word,
praying and having fellowship with other Christians.
One must choose
between an atonement of high efficiency which is perfectly accomplished, and an
atonement of wide extension which is imperfectly accomplished; one cannot have
both. If one had both one would have universal salvation. The Arminian extends
the atonement so widely that, so far as its actual effect is concerned, it has
practically no value other than as an example of unselfish service. Dr. B. B.
Warfield used a very simple illustration to present this truth. He said that the
atonement is like pie dough: the wider you roll it, the thinner it becomes. The
Arminian, in making it apply to all men, reduces its effectiveness to such an
extent that it becomes practically no atonement at all.
Furthermore, for
God to have laid the sins of all men on Christ would mean that, as regards the
lost, He would be punishing their sins twice: once in Christ, and then again in
themselves. Certainly that would be unjust! If Christ paid their debt, they are
free, and the Holy Spirit will invariably bring them to faith and repentance. If
the atonement were truly unlimited, it would mean that Christ died for
multitudes whose fate had already been determined, who were already in hell at
the time Christ suffered. If the atonement merely nullified the sentence that
was against man (so as to give him a new chance if he would exercise faith and
obedience), it would mean that God was placing him on test again, as his
ancestor Adam. But that kind of test was tried and had its outcome long ago,
even in a far more favorable environment. Carried to its logical conclusion, the
theory of unlimited atonement leads to absurdity.
Christ’s suffering in
His human nature, as He hung on the cross those six hours, was not primarily
physical but mental and spiritual. When He cried out, “My God, my God, why hast
thou forsaken me?” (Mt. 27:46), He was
literally suffering the pangs of hell. For that is essentially what hell is:
separation from the comfortable presence of God, separation from everything that
is good and desirable. Such suffering is beyond man’s comprehension. But since
Christ suffered as a divine-human Person, His suffering was a just equivalent
for all that His people would have suffered in an eternity in hell.
As a
matter of fact, the redeemed man gains more through redemption in Christ than he
lost through the fall of Adam. For in the incarnation God literally came into
the human race and took human nature upon Himself, which nature Christ in His
glorified body will retain forever. Evidently He will be the only Person of the
Godhead that the redeemed will see in heaven. Peter says that those who have
obtained like precious faith now are “partakers of the divine nature” (2 Pet.
1:4); Paul says that believers are “heirs of God, and joint-heirs with
Christ” (Rom. 8:17). Think
of that: partakers of the divine nature, joint-heirs with Christ! What greater
blessing could God possibly confer upon sinful men? As such redeemed men are
superior to the angels, for angels are designated in Scripture only as God’s
messengers, His servants.
Ultimately the Arminian is faced with precisely
the same problem as the Calvinist: that broader problem as to why a God of
infinite holiness and power permits sin at all. In his present state of
knowledge the theologian can give only a partial answer. But the Calvinist faces
up to that problem and acknowledges the scriptural doctrine that all men had
their fair and favorable chance in Adam. God now graciously saves some of the
fallen race while leaving others to go their own chosen sinful way, manifesting
His justice in their punishment. But having admitted foreknowledge, the
Arminianism has no explanation as to why God purposefully and deliberately
creates those He knows will be lost, those who will spend eternity in
hell.
As regards the problem of evil, the Calvinist can say that God
created this world as a theater in which He would display His glory, His
marvelous attributes for all His creatures to see and admire: His being, wisdom,
power, holiness, justice, goodness and truth. How does God manifest His
justice?
God’s justice demands that goodness must be rewarded and sin
punished. It is just as necessary that sin be punished as it is that goodness be
rewarded; God would be unjust if He failed to do either. He created men and
angels not as robots who would automatically produce good works as a machine
produces bolts or tin cans (but deserves no rewards) but as free moral agents,
in His own image, capable (in Adam before the fall) of choosing between good and
evil. He manifests His justice toward those whom He purposed in grace to save,
by rewarding them for the good works that are found in Christ their Savior and
credited to them, confirming them in holiness, and admitting them into heaven.
He manifests His justice toward those whom He purposed to bypass because of
their willing continuance in sin.
Likewise, if sin had been excluded,
there could have been no adequate revelation of God’s most glorious
attributes—grace, mercy, love and holiness—displayed in His redemption of
sinners. The angels in heaven earned salvation through a covenant of works by
keeping God’s law. Like Adam, they had been promised certain rewards if they
obeyed. They did obey and were confirmed in holiness. They do not experience
salvation by grace. There is an old hymn which says, “When I sing redemption’s
story, the angels will fold their wings and listen.” So it will be in the
ultimate contrast between men and angels.
Hence the explanation of sin is
that God permits it but controls and overrules it for His own glory. If sin had
been excluded from the creation, those glorious attributes could never have been
adequately displayed before His intelligent universe of men and angels, but for
the most part would have remained forever hidden in the depths of the divine
nature.
4. God’s foreknowledge
The evangelical
Arminian acknowledges that God has foreknowledge and is able to predict future
events. But if God foreknows any future event, that event is as fixed and
certain as if foreordained. Foreknowledge implies certainty, and certainty
implies foreordination. The evangelical Arminian does not deny that there is
such a thing as election to salvation, for he cannot get rid of the words
“elect” and “election,” which occur some twenty-five times in the New Testament.
But he tries to destroy the force of these words by saying that election is
based on foreknowledge: that God looks down the broad avenue of the future and
sees those who will respond to His gracious offer, and so elects
them.
But in acknowledging foreknowledge, the Arminian makes a fatal
concession; figuratively speaking, he cuts his own throat. Why? For the simple
reason that as God foresees those who will be saved, He also sees those who will
be lost! Why, then, does He create those who will be lost? Certainly He is not
under any obligation to create them; there is no power outside Himself forcing
Him to do so. If He wants all men to be saved and is earnestly trying to save
all men, He could at least refrain from creating those who, if created,
certainly will be lost. The Arminian cannot consistently hold to the
foreknowledge of God and yet deny the doctrines of election and
predestination.
The question persists: Why does God create those He knows
will go to hell? It would be mere foolishness for Him to wish to save or try to
save those He knows will be lost! That would be for Him to work at
cross-purposes with Himself. Even man has better sense than to try to do what he
knows he will not do or cannot do. The Arminian has no alternative but to deny
the foreknowledge of God, and then he is left with only a limited, ignorant,
finite God who in reality is not God at all, in the true sense of that word. If
election is based on foreknowledge, it is so meaningless that it is more
confusing than enlightening. For even as regards the elect, what sense is there
for God to elect those whom He knows are going to elect themselves? That would
be just plain nonsense.
5. The universalistic
passages
Probably the most plausible defense for Arminianism is
found in the universalistic passages in Scripture. Three of the most quoted are:
“...not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance”
(2 Pet.
3:9). “Who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of
the truth” (1 Tim. 2:4).
“...Christ Jesus; Who gave himself a ransom for all...” (1 Tim. 2:5-6). In
regard to these verses it must be borne in mind that (as we have said earlier)
God is the absolute sovereign Ruler of heaven and earth, and man is never to
think of Him as wishing or striving to do what He knows He will not do. For Him
to do otherwise would be for Him to act foolishly. Since Scripture teaches that
some men are going to be lost (e.g., Mt. 25:46), Peter
cannot mean that God is earnestly wishing or striving to save all individual
men. For if it were His will that every individual of mankind should be saved,
then not one soul could be lost. As Paul said, “For who hath resisted his will?”
(Rom.
9:19).
These verses simply teach that God is benevolent and does not
delight in the sufferings of His creatures, any more than a human father
delights in the punishment that he sometimes must inflict upon his son. The word
will is used in different senses in Scripture (as in everyday conversation). It
is sometimes used in the sense of “desire” or “purpose.” A righteous judge does
not will (desire) that anyone should be hanged or sentenced to prison, yet he
wills (pronounces sentence) that the guilty person shall be punished. In the
same sense, for sufficient reason a man may will to have a limb removed (or an
eye taken out), even though he certainly does not desire it.
Arminians
insist that in 2 Peter 3:9 the
words “any” and “all” refer to all mankind without exception. But it is
important, first of all, to see to whom those words were addressed. The epistle
is addressed not to mankind at large but to Christians: “...to them that have
obtained like precious faith with us” (2 Pet. 1:1). At the
beginning of this very chapter Peter addressed those to whom he was writing as
“beloved” (3:1). An
examination of the verse as a whole, and not merely at the last half, reveals
that it is not primarily a salvation verse at all but a second-coming verse! It
begins by saying, “The Lord is not slack concerning his promise [singular].”
What promise? “The promise of his coming” (v. 4). The
reference is to Christ’s second coming when He will come for judgment, and the
wicked will perish in the lake of fire. The verse has reference to a limited
group. It says that the Lord is “longsuffering to us-ward”; that is, to His
elect, many of whom had not yet been regenerated and who therefore had not yet
come to repentance. Hence verse 9 may quite
properly be read as follows: “The Lord is not slack concerning his promise as
some count slackness, but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any of
us should perish, but that all of us should come to repentance.”
What
about 1
Timothy 2:4-6, “Who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the
knowledge of the truth... Who gave himself a ransom for all”? It must be noted
that “all” is used in various senses. Oftentimes it means not all men without
exception but all men without distinction: Jews and Gentiles, bond and free, men
and women, rich and poor. In this context it is clearly used in that sense.
Through many centuries the Jews had been, with few exceptions, the exclusive
recipients of God’s saving grace. They had become the most intensely
nationalistic and intolerant people in the world. Instead of recognizing their
position as that of God’s representatives to all the people of the world, they
had kept those blessings to themselves. Even the early Christians for a time
were inclined to appropriate the mission of the Messiah only for themselves. The
salvation of the Gentiles was a mystery that had not been known in other ages
(Eph.
4:6; Col. 1:27). So
rigid was the pharisaic exclusivism that the Gentiles were regarded as
“unclean,” “common,” “sinners of the Gentiles”—even “dogs.” It was not lawful
for a Jew to keep company with or have any dealings with a Gentile (Jn. 4:9, Ac.
10:28, 11:3). After an
orthodox Jew had been out in the marketplace where he had come in contact with
Gentiles, he was regarded as unclean (Mk. 7:4). After
Peter preached to the Roman centurion Cornelius and the others who were gathered
at his house, he was severely taken to task by the church in Jerusalem. One can
almost hear the gasp of wonder when, after Peter told them what had happened,
they said, “Then hath God also to the Gentiles granted repentance unto life” (Ac.
11:18)—that is, not to every individual in the world but to Jews and
Gentiles alike. Used in this sense the word “all” has no reference to
individuals but simply to mankind in general.
When it was said of John
the Baptist that “there went out unto him all the land of Judaea, and they of
Jerusalem, and were all baptized of him in the river of Jordan, confessing their
sins” (Mk.
1:5), it is obvious that not every individual did so respond. After Peter
and John had healed the lame man at the door of the temple it is said that “all
men glorified God for that which was done” (Ac. 4:21). Jesus
told his disciples that they would be “hated of all men” for His name’s sake (Lk.
21:17). Thus, when Jesus said, “And I, if I be lifted up from the earth,
will draw all men unto me” (Jn. 12:32), He
certainly did not mean that every individual of mankind would be so drawn. What
He did mean was that Jews and Gentiles, men of all nations and races, would be
drawn to Him—and it is evident that this is what is actually
happening.
In 1 Corinthians
15:22 it says, “For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made
alive.” This verse is often quoted by Arminians to prove unlimited or universal
atonement. This verse is from Paul’s famous resurrection chapter, and the
context makes it clear that he is not talking about life in this age (whether
physical or spiritual) but about the resurrection life. Christ is the first to
enter the resurrection life; then, when He comes, His people also enter into
their resurrection life. What Paul says is that at that time a glorious
resurrection life will become a reality, not for all mankind, but for all those
who are in Christ. This point is illustrated by the well-known fact that the
race fell in Adam, who acted as its federal head and representative. What Paul
says, in effect, is this: “For as all born in Adam die, so also all born again
in Christ shall be made alive.” This verse, therefore, refers not to something
past, nor to something present, but to something future; it has no special
bearing at all on the Calvinist-Arminian controversy.
Two other verses
that also are often quoted in defense of Arminianism are: “Behold, I stand at
the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in
to him, and will sup with him, and he with me” (Rev. 3:20); and
“...whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely” (Rev. 22:17). This
general invitation is extended to all men. It may be (and often is) the means
the Holy Spirit uses to arouse in certain individuals the desire for salvation,
as He puts forth His supernatural power to regenerate them. But these verses,
taken by themselves, are silent about the truth that fallen man is spiritually
dead and totally unable to respond to the invitation, as are the fallen angels
or demons. Fallen man is as dead spiritually as Lazarus was dead physically
until Jesus cried with a loud voice, “Lazarus, come forth!” He is as dead
spiritually as the Pharisee Nicodemus, to whom Jesus said, “Except a man be born
again, he cannot see the kingdom of God” (Jn. 3:3). Christ
said to the Pharisees, “Why do ye not understand my speech? even because ye
cannot hear my word” (Jn. 8:43). Apart
from divine assistance, no one can hear the invitation or put forth the will to
come to Christ.
The declaration that Christ died for all is made clearer
by the song that the redeemed sing before the throne of the Lamb: “Thou wast
slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kindred, and
tongue, and people, and nation” (Rev. 5:9).
Oftentimes the word all must be understood to mean all the elect, all His
Church, all those whom the Father has given to the Son (as when Christ says,
“All that the Father giveth me shall come to me” (Jn. 6:37), but not
all men universally and every man individually. The redeemed host will be made
up of men from all classes and conditions of life: princes and peasants, rich
and poor, bond and free, male and female, Jews and Gentiles, men of all nations
and races. That is the true universalism of Scripture.
6. The two
systems contrasted
It is the author’s conviction that Christianity
comes to its fullest expression in the Reformed faith. The great advantage of
the Reformed faith is that in the framework of the five points of Calvinism it
sets forth clearly what the Bible teaches concerning the way of salvation. Only
when these truths are seen as a unit and in relation to each other can one
really understand or appreciate the Christian system in all its strength and
beauty. The reason that so many Christians have only a weak faith, and that so
many churches present only a rather superficial form of Christianity, is that
they never really see the system in its logical consistency. It is not enough
for the professing Christian to know that God loves him and that his sins have
been forgiven; he should know how and why his redemption has been accomplished
and how it has been made effective. This is set forth systematically in the five
points of Calvinism.
Historically the five points of Calvinism have been
held by the Presbyterian and Reformed churches and by many Baptists, while the
substance of the five points of Arminianism has been held by the Methodist and
Lutheran churches and also by many Baptists. The five points of Calvinism may be
more easily remembered if they are associated with the word T-U-L-I-P:
T
- Total inability
U - Unconditional election
L - Limited atonement
I -
Irresistible (efficacious) grace
P - Perseverance of the saints
Appendix
The following material (taken from
Romans: An Interpretive Outline, by David N. Steele and Curtis Thomas) contrasts
the five points of Calvinism with the five points of Arminianism in a
particularly clear and concise form. It is also included as an appendix in The
Reformed Doctrine of Predestination, by the present writer. (Each of these books
is published by Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., Phillipsburg,
N.J.)
The Five Points of Arminianism
1. Free-will or human ability. Although human
nature was seriously affected by the fall, man has not been left in a state of
total spiritual helplessness. God graciously enables every sinner to repent and
believe but does not interfere with man’s freedom. Each sinner possesses a free
will, and his eternal destiny depends on how he uses it. Man’s freedom consists
in his ability to choose good over evil in spiritual matters; his will is not
enslaved to his sinful nature. The sinner has the power to either cooperate with
God’s Spirit and be regenerated or resist God’s grace and perish. The lost
sinner needs the Spirit’s assistance but he does not have to be regenerated by
the Spirit before he can believe, for faith is man’s act and precedes the new
birth. Faith is the sinner’s gift to God; it is man’s contribution to
salvation.
2. Conditional election. God’s choice of
certain individuals unto salvation before the foundation of the world was based
upon His foreseeing that they would respond to His call. He selected only those
whom He knew would of themselves freely believe the Gospel. Election therefore
was determined by or conditioned upon what man would do. The faith which God
foresaw, and upon which He based His choice, was not given to the sinner by God
(it was not created by the regenerating power of the Holy Spirit) but resulted
solely from man’s will. It was left entirely up to man as to who would believe
and therefore as to who would be elected unto salvation. God chose those whom He
knew would, of their own free will, choose Christ. Thus the sinner’s choice of
Christ—not God’s choice of the sinner—is the ultimate cause of
salvation.
3. Universal redemption or general atonement.
Christ’s redeeming work made it possible for everyone to be saved but did not
actually secure the salvation of anyone. Although Christ died for all men and
for every man, only those who believe on Him are saved. His death enabled God to
pardon sinners on the condition that they believe, but it did not actually put
away anyone’s sins. Christ’s redemption becomes effective only if man chooses to
accept it.
4. The Holy Spirit can be effectually
resisted. The Spirit calls inwardly all those who are called outwardly
by the gospel invitation. He does all that He can to bring every sinner to
salvation. But inasmuch as man is free, he can successfully resist the Spirit’s
call. The Spirit cannot regenerate the sinner until he believes; faith (which is
man’s contribution) precedes and makes possible the new birth. Thus, man’s free
will limits the Spirit in the application of Christ’s saving work. The Holy
Spirit can only draw to Christ those who allow Him to have His way with them.
Until the sinner responds, the Spirit cannot give life. God’s grace, therefore,
is not invincible; it can be— and often is—resisted and thwarted by man.
5. Falling from grace. Those who believe and are truly
saved can lose their salvation by failing to keep up their faith, etc. All
Arminians have not been agreed on this point; some have held that believers are
eternally secure in Christ, that once a sinner is regenerated, he can never be
lost.
According to Arminianism, salvation is accomplished through the
combined efforts of God (who takes the initiative) and man (who must respond);
man’s response being the determining factor. God has provided salvation for
everyone, but His provision becomes effective only for those who, of their own
free will, choose to cooperate with Him and accept His offer of grace. At the
crucial point, man’s will plays a decisive role; thus man, not God, determines
who will be recipients of the gift of salvation.
The Five Points
of Calvinism
1. Total inability or total depravity. Because of
the fall, man is unable of himself to savingly believe the Gospel. The sinner is
dead, blind and deaf to the things of God; his heart is deceitful and
desperately corrupt. His will is not free; it is in bondage to his evil nature;
therefore, he will not—indeed he cannot—choose good over evil in the spiritual
realm. Consequently it takes much more than the Spirit’s assistance to bring a
sinner to Christ—it takes regeneration, by which the Spirit makes the sinner
alive and gives him a new nature. Faith is not something man contributes to
salvation but is itself a part of God’s gift of salvation; it is God’s gift to
the sinner, not the sinner’s gift to God.
2. Unconditional
election. God’s choice of certain individuals unto salvation before the
foundation of the world rested solely in His own sovereign will. His choice of
particular sinners was not based on any foreseen response of obedience on their
part, such as faith, repentance, etc. On the contrary, God gives faith and
repentance to each individual whom He selected. These acts are the result, not
the cause, of God’s choice. Election therefore was not determined by or
conditioned upon any virtuous quality or act foreseen in man. Those whom God
sovereignly elected He brings through the power of the Spirit to a willing
acceptance of Christ. Thus God’s choice of the sinner—not the sinner’s choice of
Christ—is the ultimate cause of salvation.
3. Particular
redemption or limited atonement. Christ’s redeeming work was intended
to save the elect only, and actually secured salvation for them. His death was
the substitutionary endurance of the penalty of sin in the place of certain
specified sinners. In addition to putting away the sins of His people, Christ’s
redemption secured everything necessary for their salvation; including faith
which unites them to Him. The gift of faith is infallibly applied by the Spirit
to all for whom Christ died, therefore guaranteeing their
salvation.
4. The efficacious call of the Spirit or irresistible
grace. In addition to the outward general call to salvation (which is
made to everyone who hears the Gospel), the Holy Spirit extends to the elect a
special inward call that inevitably brings them to salvation. The external call
(which is made to all without distinction) can be—and often is—rejected; whereas
the internal call (which is made only to the elect) cannot be rejected; it
always results in conversion. By means of this special call, the Spirit
irresistibly draws sinners to Christ. He is not limited in His work of applying
salvation by man’s will, nor is He dependent upon man’s cooperation for success.
The Spirit graciously causes the elect sinner to cooperate, to believe, to
repent, to come freely and willingly to Christ. God’s grace, therefore, is
invincible; it never fails to result in the salvation of those to whom it is
extended.
5. Perseverance of the saints. All who are
chosen by God, redeemed by Christ, and given faith by the Spirit are eternally
saved. They are kept in faith by the power of Almighty God and thus persevere to
the end.
According to Calvinism, salvation is accomplished by the
almighty power of the triune God: the Father chose a people, the Son died for
them, the Holy Spirit makes Christ’s death effective by bringing the elect to
faith and repentance, thereby causing them to willingly obey the Gospel. The
entire process (election, redemption, regeneration) is the work of God and is by
grace alone. Thus God, not man, determines who will be the recipients of the
gift of salvation. This is the biblical Gospel.
If you have never bowed
the knee to the Lord Jesus Christ, then call upon Him today to save you.
Scripture offers this hope: “Who is a God like unto thee, that pardoneth
iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage? he
retaineth not his anger for ever, because he delighteth in mercy” (Mic. 7:18). Cast
yourself upon God’s mercy, seeking Him with all your heart, putting your full
confidence and trust in Jesus Christ alone for your salvation. “Whosoever
believeth on him shall not be ashamed” (Rom.
10:11).
* About the author:
Loraine Boettner was born in
northwest Missouri. He was a graduate of Princeton Theological Seminary (Th.B.,
1928; Th.M., 1929), where he studied Systematic Theology under the late Dr. C.
W. Hodge. Previously he had graduated from Tarkio College, Missouri, and had
studied at the University of Missouri. In 1933 he received the honorary degree
of Doctor of Divinity, and in 1957 the degree of Doctor of Literature. He taught
Bible for eight years in Pikeville College, Kentucky. A resident of Washington,
D.C., eleven years and of Los Angeles three years. His home was in Rock Port,
Missouri. His other books include: Roman Catholicism, Studies in
Theology, Immortality, and The Millennium.
See more articles by Loraine Boettner at http://www.theologue.org/