1. TEACHING OF THE WESTMINSTER CONFESSION
The
Westminster Confession states the doctrine of Efficacious Grace thus: — "All
those whom God has predestinated unto life, and those only, He is pleased, in
His appointed and accepted time, effectually to call, by His Word and Spirit,
out of that state of death, in which they are by nature, to grace and
salvation by Jesus Christ; enlightening their minds spiritually and savingly,
to understand the things of God; taking away their heart of stone, and giving
them a heart of flesh; renewing their wills, and by His almighty power
determining them to that which is good; and effectually drawing them to Jesus
Christ, yet so as they come most freely, being made willing by His grace.
"This effectual call is of God's free and
special grace alone, not from any thing at all foreseen in man, who is
altogether passive therein, until, being quickened and renewed by the Holy
Spirit, he is thereby enabled to answer this call, and to embrace the grace
offered and conveyed by it." (Chapter 10 Section 1 and 2).
And the Shorter Catechism, in answer to the
question "What is effectual calling?" says, "Effectual calling is the Work of
God's Spirit, whereby, convincing us of our sin and misery, enlightening our
minds in the knowledge of Christ, and renewing our wills, He doth persuade and
enable us to embrace Jesus Christ, freely offered to us in the Gospel." (Q.
31).
2. NECESSITY FOR THE CHANCE
The merits of Christ's obedience and
suffering are sufficient for, adapted to, and freely offered to all men. The
question then arises, Why is one saved, and another lost? What causes some men
to repent and believe, while others, with the same external privileges, reject
the Gospel and continue in impenitence and unbelief? The Calvinist says that
it is God who makes this difference, that he efficaciously persuades some to
come to Him; but the Arminian ascribes it to the men themselves.
As Calvinists we hold that the condition of
men since the fall is such that if left to themselves they would continue in
their state of rebellion and refuse all offers of salvation. Christ would then
have died in vain. But since it was promised that He should see of the travail
of His soul and be satisfied, the effects of that sacrifice have not been left
suspended upon the whim of man's changeable and sinful will. Rather, the work
of God in redemption has been rendered effective through the mission of the
Holy Spirit who so operates on the chosen people that they are brought to
repentance and faith, and thus made heirs of eternal life.
The teaching of the Scriptures is such that
we must say that man in his natural state is radically corrupt, and that he
can never become holy and happy through any power of his own. He is
spiritually dead, and must be saved by Christ if at all. Common reason tells
us that if a man is so fallen so to be at enmity with God, that enmity must be
removed before he can have any desire to do God's will. If a sinner is to
desire redemption through Christ, he must receive a new disposition. He must
be born again, and from above (John 3:3). It is easy enough for us to see that
the Devil and the demons would have to be thus sovereignly changed if they
were ever to be saved; yet the innate sinful principles which actuate fallen
man are of the same nature, although not yet so intense, as are those which
actuate fallen angels. If man is dead in sin, then nothing short of this
supernatural life-giving power of the Holy Spirit will ever cause him to do
that which is spiritually good. If it were possible for him to enter heaven
while still possessed of the old nature, then, for him, heaven would be as bad
as hell; for he would be out of harmony with his environment. He would loathe
its very atmosphere and would be in misery when in the presence of God. Hence
the necessity for the inward work of the Holy Spirit.
In the nature of the case the first movement
toward salvation can no more come from man than his body if dead could
originate its own life. Regeneration is a sovereign gift of God, graciously
bestowed on those whom He has chosen; and for this great re-creative work God
alone is competent. It cannot be granted on the foresight of any thing good in
the subjects of this saving change, for in their unrenewed nature they are
incapable of acts with right motives toward God; hence none could possibly be
foreseen. In his unregenerate state man never adequately realizes his utterly
helpless condition. He imagines that he is able to reform himself and turn to
God if he chooses. He even imagines that he is able to counteract the designs
of infinite Wisdom, and to defeat the agency of Omnipotence itself. As Dr.
Warfield says,''Sinful man stands in need, not of inducements or assistance to
save himself, but precisely of saving; and Jesus Christ has come not to
advise, or urge, or woo, or help him to save himself, but to save him."
3. AN INWARD CHANGE WROUGHT BY SUPERNATURAL POWER
In the Scriptures this change is called a
regeneration (Titus 3:5), a spiritual resurrection which is wrought by the
same mighty power with which God wrought in Christ when He raised Him from the
dead (Eph. 1:19, 20), a calling out of darkness into God's marvelous light (1
Peter 2:9), a passing out of death into life (John 5:24), a new birth (John
3:3), a making alive (Col. 2:13), a taking away of the heart of stone and
giving of a heart of flesh (Ezek. 11:19), and the subject of the change is
said to be a new creature (II Cor. 5:17). Such descriptions completely refute
the Arminian notion that regeneration is primarily man's act, induced by moral
persuasion or the mere influence of the truth as presented in a general way by
the Holy Spirit. And just because this change is produced by power from on
high which is the living spring of a new and re-created life, it is
irresistible and permanent.
The regeneration of the soul is something
which is wrought in us, and not an act performed by us. It is an instantaneous
change from spiritual death to spiritual life. It is not even a thing of which
we are conscious at the moment it occurs, but rather something which lies
lower than consciousness. At the moment of its occurrence the soul is as
passive as was Lazarus when he was called back to life by Jesus. Concerning
the soul in regeneration Charles Hodge says: "It is the subject, and not the
agent of the change. The soul co-operates, or, is active in what precedes and
in what follows the change, but the change itself is something experienced,
and not something done. The blind and the lame who came to Christ, may have
undergone much labor in getting into His presence, and they joyfully exerted
the new power imparted to them, but they were entirely passive in the moment
of the healing. They in no way co-operated in the production of that effect.
The same is true in regeneration." (Systematic Theology, Vol. 2 p.
688). And again he says: "The same doctrine on this subject is taught in other
words when regeneration is declared to be a new birth. At birth the child
enters upon a new state of existence. Birth is not its own act. It is born. It
comes from a state of darkness, in which the objects adapted to its nature
cannot act on it or awaken its activities. As soon as it comes into the world
all its faculties are awakened; it sees, feels, and hears, and gradually
unfolds all its faculties as a rational and moral, as well as a physical
being. The scriptures teach that it is thus in regeneration. The soul enters
upon a new state. It is introduced into a new world. A whole class of objects
before unknown or unappreciated are revealed to it, and exercise upon it their
appropriate influence." (Vol. 2 p. 35).
Regeneration involves an essential change of
character. It is a making the tree good in order that the fruit may be good.
As a result of this change, the person passes from a state of unbelief to one
of saving faith, not by any process of research or argument, but of inward
experience. And as we had nothing to do with our physical birth, but received
it as a sovereign gift of God, we likewise have nothing to do with our
spiritual birth but receive it also as a sovereign gift. Each occurred without
any exercise of our own power, and even without our consent being asked. We no
more resist the latter than we resist the former. And as we go ahead and live
our own natural lives after being born, so we go ahead and work out our own
salvation after being regenerated.
The Scriptures pointedly teach that the
pre-requisite for entrance into the Kingdom of God is a radical transformation
wrought by the Spirit of God Himself. And since this work on the soul is
sovereign and supernatural it may be granted or withheld according to the good
pleasure of God. Consequently, salvation, to whomsoever it may be granted, is
entirely of grace. The born-again Christian comes to see that God is in
reality "the author and perfecter" of his faith (Heb. 12:2), and that in this
respect He has done a work for him which He has not done for his unconverted
neighbor. In answer to the question, "Who maketh thee to differ? And what hast
thou that thou didst not receive ?" (I Cor. 4:7), he replies that it is God
who has put the difference between men, especially between the redeemed and
the lost. If any person believes, it is because God has quickened him; and if
any person fails to believe, it is because God has withheld that grace which
He was under no oblation to bestow. Strictly speaking there is no such thing
as a "self-made" man; the highest type of man is the one who can say with
Paul, "By the grace of God I am what I am."
When Jesus said, "Lazarus, come forth," a
mighty power went along with the command and gave effect to it. Lazarus, of
course, was not conscious of any other than his own power working in him; but
when he later understood the situation he undoubtedly saw that he had been
called into life wholly by divine power. God's power was primary, his was
secondary, and would never have been exerted except in response to the divine.
It is in this manner that every redeemed soul is brought from spiritual death
to spiritual life. And just as the dead Lazarus was first called back into
life and then breathed and ate, so the soul dead in sin is first transferred
to spiritual life and then exercises faith and repentance and does good works.
Paul emphasized this very point when he said
that although Paul might plant and Apollos might water, it was God who gave
the increase. Mere human efforts are unavailing. If a crop of wheat is to be
raised, man can do only the most external and mechanical things toward that
end. It is God who gives the increase through the sovereign control of forces
which are entirely outside the sphere of man's influence. Likewise, in regard
to the soul it matters not how eloquent the preacher may be, unless God opens
the heart there will be no conversion. Here especially man does only the most
external and mechanical things and it is the Holy Spirit who imparts the new
principle of spiritual life.
The Scripture doctrine of the fall
represents man as morally ruined, unable by nature to do any good thing. The
truly converted Christian comes to see his inability and knows that he does
not make himself eligible for heaven by his own good works and merits. He
realizes that he cannot move spiritually but as he is moved; that like the
branches of a tree, he can make no shoot, nor put forth leaves, nor bear
fruit, except as he receives sap from the root. Or, as Calvin says, "No man
makes himself a sheep, but is created such by divine grace." The elect hear
the Gospel and believe — not always at the first hearing, but at the
divinely appointed time — the non-elect hear but disbelieve, not because they
lack sufficient evidence, but because their inward nature is opposed to
holiness. The reason for the two kinds of response is to be traced to an
external source. "A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I
put within you; and I will make away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I
will give you a heart of flesh," Ezek. 36:26. The "heart" in Biblical language
includes the whole inner man.
Under the terms of the eternal covenant
which was made between the Father and the Son, Christ has been exalted to be
the mediatorial Ruler over the whole earth in order that He may direct the
developing kingdom. This is one of the rewards of His obedience and suffering.
His directing power is exerted through the agency of the Holy Spirit, through
whom His purchased redemption is applied to all for whom it was intended and
under the precise conditions of time and circumstance predetermined in the
covenant. We are told that it is by no ordinary providence of God that a man
believes but by the same mighty power that was exerted when Christ was raised
from the dead (Eph. 1:19, 20). As certainly as it was effective in the
resurrection of Christ it will be effective when put forth in an individual,
whether in a physical or a spiritual resurrection.
The physical and the spiritual worlds are
each the creation of God. In the physical world the water is sovereignly
changed into wine, and the leper is healed by a touch. The Arminian readily
admits God's miraculous power in the physical world; why, then, does he deny
it in the spiritual world, as if the spirits of men were beyond His control?
We believe that God can change a bad man into a good man when He pleases. That
is one form of authority which it is the right of the Creator to exercise over
the creature. It is one of the means by which the world is governed; and when
God sees that it is best for the welfare of the individual and for the
development of His kingdom to thus work, it is not only permissible but right
that He should do so. The effect follows immediately upon the volition, as
when He said, Let there be light. "The Divine saving act," says Mozley, "is
the bestowal of this irresistible grace. The subject of the Divine
predetermination is rescued by an act of absolute power from the dominion of
sin, dragged from it, as it were, by force, converted, filled with the love of
God and his neighbor, and qualified infallibly for a state of ultimate
reward." (The Augustinian Doctrine of Predestination, p.8)
As the physical eye once blinded cannot be
restored to sight by any amount or intensity of light falling upon it, so the
soul dead in sin cannot acquire spiritual vision by any amount of Gospel truth
presented to it. Unless the surgeon's knife or a miracle restore the eye to
its normal condition, sight is impossible; and unless the soul be set right
through regeneration it will never comprehend and accept the Gospel truth. In
regeneration God bids the sinner live; and immediately he is alive, filled
with a new spiritual life. Lydia, the seller of purple in the city of
Thyatira, gave heed to the things which were spoken by Paul, because the Lord
had first opened her heart (Acts 16:14). Christ taught this same truth when in
His intercessory prayer He said concerning Himself that God "gave Him
authority over all flesh, that to all whom thou hast given Him, He should give
eternal life," John 17:2; and again, "For as the Father raiseth the dead and
giveth them life, even so the Son also giveth life to whom He will," John
5:21.
Under the covenant made with Adam, man's
destiny depended on his own works. We know the results of that trial. Now if
man could not work out his salvation when he was upright, what chance has he
to do so since he is fallen? Happily for us, God has this time taken the
matter into His own hand. And if God again gave man free will by which to work
out his own salvation, what would He be doing but again instituting the
dispensation which has already been tried and which ended in failure? Suppose
a man is carried away by a torrent which he is unable to master, would it be
reasonable or wise to take him out only to recruit his strength for a second
trial? Would it not be a mockery to save him only to repeat the process? Since
God does not repeat His dispensations it follows that the second time He would
order salvation on a different plan. If further works are to be wrought, then
God, and not man, will be the author; and the new dispensation, like the old,
is adjusted to the state in which it finds man.
We are very sure that no property does, or
can, attach to the will of man, whether fallen or unfallen, that can take it
beyond the reach of God's sovereign control. Saul was called at the height of
his persecuting zeal and was transformed into the saintly Paul. The poor dying
thief on the cross was called in the last hour of his earthly life. When Paul
preached at Antioch "as many as were ordained to eternal life (and only they)
believed," Acts 13:48. If God purposed that all men should be saved He most
certainly could bring all to salvation. But for reasons which have been only
partly revealed, He leaves many impenitent. Through all of His works, however,
God does nothing which is inconsistent with man's nature as a rational and
responsible being.
One of the great short-comings of
Arminianism has been its failure to recognize the necessity for the
supernatural work of the Holy Spirit on the heart. Instead, it has resolved
regeneration into a more or less gradual change which is carried out by the
individual person, a mere change of purpose in the sinner's mind, which is a
result of moral persuasion and the general force of truth. It has insisted
upon "free will," "the power of contrary choice," etc., and has taught that
ultimately the sinner determines his own destiny. In its more consistent forms
it makes man a co-savior with Christ, as if the glory in redemption was to be
divided between the grace of Christ and the will of man, the latter dividing
the spoils with the former.
If, as Arminians say, God is earnestly
trying to convert every person, He is making a great failure of His work; for
among the adult population of the world up to the present time, where He has
succeeded in saving one He has let perhaps twenty-five fall into hell. Such a
view sheds little glory on the Divine Majesty. Concerning the Arminian
doctrine of resistible grace Toplady says that it is "a doctrine which
represents Omnipotence itself as wishing and trying and striving to no
purpose. According to this tenet, God, in endeavoring (for it seems that it is
only an endeavor) to convert sinners, may, by sinners, be foiled, defeated,
and disappointed; He may lay close and long siege to the soul, and that soul
can, from the citadel of impregnable free will, hang out a flag of defiance to
God Himself, and by a continued obstinacy of defense, and a few vigorous
sallies of free will compel Him to raise the siege. In a word, the Holy
Spirit, after having for years perhaps, danced attendance on the free will of
man, may at length, like a discomfited general, or an unsuccessful politician,
be either put to ignominious night, or contemptuously dismissed, re infecta,
without accomplishing the end for which He was sent."
It is unreasonable to suppose that the
sinner can thus defeat the creative power of Almighty God. "All authority hath
been given to me in heaven and on earth," said the risen Lord. No limit is set
to that authority. "Is anything too hard for Jehovah ?" "He doeth according to
His will in the armies of heaven, and among the inhabitants of the earth; and
no one can stay His hand, or say unto Him, What doest thou?" In view of these
passages and many others to the same effect it ill becomes us to imagine that
God is struggling along with man as best He can, persuading, exhorting,
pleading, but unable to accomplish His purpose if His creatures will
otherwise. If God does not effectually call, we may imagine Him saying, "I
will that all men should be saved; nevertheless, it must finally be, not as I
will but as they will." He is then put into the same extremity with Darius who
would gladly have saved Daniel, but could not (Dan. 6:14). No Christian who is
familiar with what the Scriptures teach about the sovereignty of God can
believe that He is thus defeated in His creatures. Is it not necessary that a
creature must have power to defy and thwart the purposes of Almighty God
before his actions can be rewarded or punished. Furthermore, if God actually
stood powerless before the majesty of man's lordly will, there would be but
little use to pray for Him to convert any one. It would then be more
reasonable for us to direct our petitions to the man himself.
4. THE EFFECT PRODUCED IN THE SOUL
The immediate and important effect of this
inward, purifying change of nature is that the person loves righteousness and
trusts in Christ for salvation. Whereas his natural element was sin, it now
becomes holiness; sin becomes repulsive to him, and he loves to do good. This
effective and irresistible grace converts the will itself and forms a holy
character in the person by a creative act. It removes a man's appetite for
sinful things so that he refrains from sin, not as the dyspeptic refuses to
eat the dainties for which he longs, lest his indulgence should be punished
with the agonies of sickness, but rather because he hates sin for its own
sake. The holy and thorough submission to God's will, which the convert before
dreaded and resisted, he now loves and approves. Obedience has become not only
the obligatory but the preferable good.
But so long as people remain in this world
they are subject to temptations and they still have the remnants of the old
nature clinging to them. Hence they are often deluded, and commit sin; Yet
these sins are only the death struggles and frenzied writhings of the old
nature which has already received the death blow. The regenerate also suffer
pain, disease, discouragement, and even death itself, although they are
steadily advancing toward complete salvation.
At this point many people confuse
regeneration and sanctification. Regeneration is exclusively God's work, and
it is an act of His free grace in which He implants a new principle of
spiritual life in the soul. It is performed by supernatural power and is
complete in an instant. On the other hand sanctification is a process through
which the remains of sin in the outward life are gradually removed, so that,
as the Shorter Catechism says, we are enabled more and more to die unto sin
and to live unto righteousness. It is a joint work of God and man. It consists
in the gradual triumph of the new nature implanted in regeneration over the
evil that still remains after the heart has been renewed. Or, in other words,
we may say that complete sanctification lags behind after the life has been in
principle won to God. Perfect righteousness is the goal which is set before us
all through this life and every Christian should make steady progress toward
that goal. Sanctification, however, is not fully completed until death, at
which time the Holy Spirit cleanses the soul of every vestige of sin, making
it holy and raising it above even the possibility of sinning.
Strictly speaking, we may say that
redemption is not fully complete until the saved have received their
resurrection bodies. In one sense it was complete when Christ died on Calvary;
yet it is applied only gradually by the Holy Spirit. And since the Holy Spirit
does thus effectually apply to the elect the merits of Christ's sacrifice,
their salvation is most infallibly certain and can by no means be prevented.
Hence the certainty that the will of God for the salvation of his people is in
no wise disappointed or made void by His creatures.
5. THE SUFFICIENCY OF CHRIST'S WORK — EVANGELICALISM
We now come to discuss the sufficiency of
Christ's work in the matter of redemption. We believe that by His vicarious
suffering and death He fully paid the debt which His people owed to divine
justice, thus releasing them from the consequences of sin, and that by keeping
the law of perfect obedience and living a sinless life He vicariously earned
for them the reward of eternal life. His work fully provided for their rescue
from sin and for their establishment in heaven. These two phases of His work
are sometimes referred to as His active and passive obedience. This doctrine
of the sufficiency of His work is set forth in the Westminster Confession when
we are told that by His perfect obedience and sacrifice of Himself He "fully
satisfied the justice of His Father; and purchased not only reconciliation,
but an everlasting inheritance in the kingdom of heaven, for all those whom
the Father had given Him." (Chapter 8 Section 5) Had He only paid the penalty
for sin without also earning the reward of eternal life, His people would then
only have been raised up to the zero point. They would then have been on the
same plane as was Adam before he fell, and would still have been under
obligation to earn eternal life for themselves. To Paul's declaration that
Christ is all in all in matters of salvation (Col. 3:11), we can add that man
is nothing at all as to that work, and has not in himself anything which
merits salvation. We should remember that the Gospel is not good advice, but
good news. It does not tell us what we are to do to earn salvation, but
proclaims to us what Christ has done to save us.
To doubt that any for whom Christ died will
be saved, or that righteousness will eventually triumph, is to doubt the
sufficiency of Jesus Christ for the work which He undertook in our behalf. On
the cross Jesus declared that He had finished the work of redemption which the
Father gave Him to do. But as Toplady remarks, "the person with power to
accept or reject as he pleases must say: "No, thou didst not finish the work
of redemption which was given thee to do; thou didst indeed a part of it, but
I myself must add something to it or the whole of thy performance will stand
for naught."
Only those views which ascribe to God all
the power in the salvation of sinners are consistently evangelical, for the
word "evangelical" means that it is God alone who saves. If faith and
obedience must be added, depending upon the independent choice of man, we no
longer have evangelicalism. Evangelicalism with a universal atonement leads to
universal salvation; and in so far as Arminianism holds that Christ died for
all men and that the Spirit strives to apply this redemption to all men but
that only some are saved, it is not evangelical.
We may further illustrate this principle of
evangelicalism by supposing a group of people who are stricken with a fatal
disease. Then if a doctor administers to them a medicine which is a certain
cure, all who get the medicine will recover. In the same manner, if the work
of Christ is effective, and if it is applied to all men by the Spirit, all
will be saved. Hence to become evangelical the Arminian must become a
universalist. Calvinism alone, which holds to evangelicalism with a limited
atonement and asserts that the work of Christ accomplishes what it was
intended to accomplish, is consistent with the facts of Scripture and
experience.
6. THE ARMINIAN VIEW OF UNIVERSAL GRACE
The universalistic note is always prominent
in the Arminian system. A typical example of this is seen in the assertion of
Prof. Henry C. Sheldon, who for a number of years was connected with Boston
University. Says he: "Our contention is for the universality of the
opportunity of salvation, as against an exclusive and unconditional choice of
individuals to eternal life." (System of Christian Doctrine, p. 417). Here we
notice not only (1) the characteristic Arminian stress on universalism, but
also (2) the recognition that, in the final analysis, all that God does for
the salvation of men does not actually save anybody, but that it only opens up
a way of salvation so that men can save themselves, — and then for all
practical purposes we are back on the plane of pure naturalism!
Perhaps the strongest assertion of the
Arminian construction is to be found in the creed of the Evangelical Union
body, or so-called Morisonians, the very purpose of which was to protest
against unconditional election. A summary of its "Three Universalities" is
fond in the creed thus: "The love of God the Father, in the gift and sacrifice
of Jesus to all men everywhere without distinction, exception, or respect of
persons; the love of God the Son, in the gift and sacrifice of Himself as a
true propitiation for the sins of the whole world; the love of God the Spirit,
in His personal and continuous work applying to the souls of all men the
provisions of divine grace" (The Religious Controversies of Scotland,
p. 187).
Certainly, if God loves all men alike, and
if Christ died for all men alike, and the Holy Spirit applies the benefits of
that redemption to all men alike, one of two conclusions follows. (1) All men
alike are saved (which is contradicted by Scripture), or, (2) all that God
does for man does not save him, but leaves him to save himself! What then
becomes of our evangelicalism, which means that it is God alone who saves
sinners? If we assert that after God has done all His work it is still left
for man to "accept" or "not resist," we give man veto power over the work of
Almighty God and salvation rests ultimately in the hand of man. In this system
no matter how great a proportion of the work of salvation God may do, man is
ultimately the deciding factor. And the man who does come to salvation has
some personal merit of his own; he has some grounds to boast over those who
are lost. He can point the finger of scorn and say, "You had as good chance as
I had. I accepted and you rejected the offer. Therefore you deserve to
suffer." How different is this from Paul's declaration that it is "not of
works, that no man should glory," and "He that glorieth, let him glory in the
Lord," Eph. 2:9; I Cor. 1 :31.
The tendency in all these universalistic
systems in which man proudly seizes the helm and proclaims himself the master
of his destiny is to reduce Christianity to a religion of works. Luther had
this very point in mind when he satirically remarked concerning the moralists
of his day, "Here we are always wanting to turn the tables and do good of
ourselves to that poor man, our Lord God, from Whom we are rather to receive
it."
Zanchius says that Arminianism gently
whispers in the ear of man that even in his fallen state he has "both the will
and the power to do what is good and acceptable to God: — that Christ's
death is accepted by God as a universal atonement for all men; in order that
every one may, if he will, save himself by his own free will and good works:
— that in the exercise of our natural powers, we may arrive at perfection,
even in the present state of life." "The issue," says Dr. Warfield, "is indeed
a fundamental one and it is clearly drawn. Is it God the Lord who saves us, or
is it we ourselves? And does God the Lord save us, or does He merely open up
the way of salvation, and leave it, according to our choice, to walk in it or
not? The parting of the ways is the old parting of the ways between
Christianity and autosoterism. Certainly only he can claim to be evangelical
who with full consciousness rests entirely and directly on God and on God
alone for his salvation." (The Plan of Salvation, p. 108).
"Not the labors of my hands
Can fulfill Thy law's commands;
Could my zeal no respite know,
Could my tears forever flow,
All for sin could not atone
Thou must save, and Thou alone.
"Nothing in my hands I bring —
Simply to Thy cross I cling;
Naked come to Thee for dress —
Helpless look to Thee for grace;
Foul, I to thy fountain fly -
Wash me, Saviour, or I die!"
7. NO VIOLATION OF MAN'S FREE AGENCY
It is a common thing for opponents to
represent this doctrine as implying that men are forced to believe and turn to
God against their wills, or, that it reduces men to the level of machines in
the matter of salvation. This is a misrepresentation. Calvinists hold no such
opinion, and in fact the full statement of the doctrine excludes or
contradicts it. The Westminster Confession, after stating that this
efficacious grace which results in conversion is an exercise of omnipotence
and cannot be defeated, adds, "Yet so as they come most freely, being made
willing by His grace." The power by which the work of regeneration is effected
is not of an outward and compelling nature. Regeneration does no more violence
to the soul than demonstration does to the intellect, or persuasion the heart.
Man is not dealt with as if he were a stone or a log. Neither is he treated as
a slave, and driven against his own will to seek salvation. Rather the mind is
illuminated, and the entire range of conceptions with regard to God, self, and
sin, is changed. God sends His Spirit and, in a way which shall forever
rebound to the praise of His mercy and grace, sweetly constrains the person to
yield. The regenerated man finds himself governed by new motives and desires,
and things which were once hated are now loved and sought after. This change
is not accomplished through any external compulsion but through a new
principle of life which has been created within the soul and which seeks after
the food which alone can satisfy it.
The spiritual law, like the civil law, is
"not a terror to the good work, but to the evil"; and we find a good analogy
for this in human affairs. Compare the law abiding citizen and the criminal.
The law-abiding citizen goes about his affairs day after day unconscious of
most of the laws of the state and nation in which he lives. He looks to the
government officials and to the police as his friends. They represent
constituted authority which he respects and in which he delights. He is a free
man. For him the law exists only as the protector of his life, his loved ones,
and his property. But when we took at the criminal the whole picture is
changed. He probably knows more about the statutes than does the law-abiding
man. He studies them in order that he may evade them and defeat their purpose.
He lives in fear. He defends his secret room with bullet-proof doors, and
carries a revolver for fear of what the police or other people may do to him.
He is under a constant bondage. His idea of liberty is to eliminate the
police, corrupt the courts, and bring into general disrepute the laws and
customs of society on which he tries to prey.
All of us have had experiences in our every
day lives in which we refuse to do certain things, but upon the introduction
of new factors we have changed our minds and have freely and gladly done what
we before opposed. Certainly there is nothing in this doctrine to warrant the
representation that, upon Calvinistic principles, men are forced to repent and
believe whether or not they choose to do so.
But some may ask, Do not the many passages
in the Bible such as, "If thou shalt obey," "If thou turn unto Jehovah," "If
thou do that which is evil," and so forth, at least imply that man has free
will and ability? It does not follow, however, that merely because God
commands man is able to obey. Oftentimes parents play with their children in
telling them to do this or that when their very purpose is to show them their
inability and to induce them to ask for the parents' help. When men of the
world hear such language they assume that they have sufficient power in
themselves, and, like the self-conceited lawyer to whom Jesus said, "This do,
and thou shalt live," they go away believing that they are able to earn
salvation by good works. But when the truly spiritual man hears such language
he is led to see that he cannot fulfill the commandment, and so cries out to
the Father to do the work for him. In these passages man is taught not what he
can do, but what he ought to do; and woe to the one who is so blind that he
cannot see this truth, for until he does see it he can never adequately
appreciate the work of Christ. In answer to the despairing sinner's cry the
Scriptures reveal a salvation which is all of grace, the free gift of God's
love and mercy in Christ. And the one who sees himself thus saved by grace
instinctively cries out with David, "Who am I, O Lord Jehovah, and what is my
house, that thou hast brought me thus far?"
The special grace which we refer to as
efficacious is sometimes called irresistible grace. This latter term, however,
is somewhat misleading since it does suggest that a certain overwhelming power
is exerted upon the person, in consequence of which he is compelled to act
contrary to his desires, whereas the meaning intended, as we have stated
before, is that the elect are so influenced by divine power that their coming
is an act of voluntary choice.
8. COMMON GRACE
Apart from this special grace which issues
in the salvation of its objects, there is what we may call "common grace," or
general influences of the Holy Spirit which to a greater or lesser degree are
shared by all men. God causes His sun to rise on the evil and the good, and
sends rain upon the just and the unjust. He sends fruitful seasons and gives
many things which make for the general happiness of mankind. Among the most
common blessings which are to be traced to this source we may name health,
material prosperity, general intelligence, talents for art, music, oratory,
literature, architecture, commerce, inventions, etc. In many instances the
non-elect receive these blessings in greater abundance than do the elect, for
we often find that the sons of this world are for their own generation wiser
than the sons of light. Common grace is the source of all the order,
refinement, culture, common virtue, etc., which we find in the world, and
through it the moral power of the truth upon the heart and conscience is
increased and the evil passions of men are restrained. It does not lead to
salvation, but it keeps this earth from becoming a hell. It arrests the
complete effectuation of sin, just as human insight arrests the fury of wild
beasts. It prevents sin from being manifested in all its hideousness, and thus
hinders the bursting forth of the flames from the smoking fire. Like the
pressure of the atmosphere, it is universal and powerful though unfelt.
Common grace, however, does not kill the
core of sin, and therefore it is not capable of producing a genuine
conversion. Through the light of nature, the workings of conscience, and
especially through the external presentation of the Gospel it makes known to
man what he should do, but does not give that power which man stands in need
of. Furthermore, all of these common influences of the Holy Spirit are capable
of being resisted. The Scriptures constantly teach that the Gospel becomes
effectual only when it is attended by the special illuminating power of the
Spirit, and that without this power it is to the Jews a stumbling block and to
the Gentiles foolishness. Hence the unregenerate man can never know God except
in an outward way; and for this reason the external righteousness of the
scribes and Pharisees is declared to be just no righteousness at all. Jesus
said to His disciples that the world could not receive the Spirit of truth,
"for it beholdeth Him not, neither knoweth Him;" yet in the same breath He
added, "Ye know Him; for He abideth with you, and shall be in you," John
14:17. The Arminian doctrine destroys the distinction between efficacious and
common grace, or at best makes efficacious grace to be an assistance without
which salvation is impossible, while the Calvinistic makes it to be an
assistance by which salvation is made certain.
Concerning the reformations which are
produced by common grace Dr. Charles Hodge says: — "lt not infrequently
happens that men who have been immoral in their lives change their whole
course of living. They become outwardly correct in their deportment,
temperate, pure, honest, and benevolent. This is a great and praiseworthy
change. It is in a high degree beneficial to the subject of it, and to all
with whom he is connected. It may be produced by different causes, by the
force of conscience, or by a regard for the authority of God and a dread of
His disapprobation, or by a regard to the good opinion of men, or by the mere
force of an enlightened regard to one's own interest. But whatever may be the
proximate cause of such reformation, it falls very far short of
sanctification. The two things differ in nature as much as a clean heart from
clean clothes. Such external reformation may leave a man's inward character in
the sight of God unchanged. He may remain destitute of love to God, of faith
in Christ, and of all holy exercises or affections." (Systematic Theology,
Vol. 3. P. 214). And says Dr. Hewlitt: "Can the corpse in the graveyard be
aroused by the sweetest music that ever has been invented, or by the loudest
thunder which seems to shake the poles? Just as soon shall the sinner, dead in
trespasses and sins, be moved by the thunder of the law, or by the melody of
the Gospel; can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? Then
may ye also do good that are accustomed to do evil (Jer. 13:23)." (Sound
Doctrine, p. 21).
The following paragraph by Dr, S. G. Craig
very clearly sets forth the limitations of common grace: — "Christianity
realizes that education and culture, that leaves Jesus Christ out of
consideration, while they may make men clever, polished, brilliant, have no
power to change their characters. At the most these things of themselves only
cleanse the outside of the cup; they do not affect the nature of its contents.
Those who place their confidence in education, culture and such like assume
that all that is needed to change the wild olive tree into a good olive tree
is pruning, spraying, cultivation and such like, whereas what the tree needs
first of all, is that it be grafted with a scion from a good olive tree. And
until this is done all labor that is spent on the tree is for the most part
wasted. We do not underestimate the value of education and culture, and yet
one might as well suppose that he could purify the waters of a river by
improving the scenery along the banks as suppose that these things of
themselves are capable of transforming the hearts of the children of men
....As an old Jewish proverb has it: "rake the bitter tree and plant it in the
garden of Eden and water it with the waters there; and let the angel Gabriel
be the gardener and the tree will still bear bitter fruit." (Jesus as He
Was and Is, pp. 191, 199).
From The Reformed Doctrine of Predestination chapter
13.