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SOVEREIGNTY
PLUS RESPONSIBILITY
Miles J. Stanford
Concerning God's sovereignty
and man's responsibility in the realm of soteriology, Covenant theology stresses
God's sovereignty, and eliminates man's responsibility.
Covenant Calvinism correctly maintains the doctrine of Total Depravity:
"For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh) dwelleth no good thing" (Rom.
7:18). But their definition of total depravity is "total inability."
For this their proof text is Ephesians 2:1: "And you hath He
made alive, who were dead in trespasses and sins." Their illustration of
this total inability is a man physically dead, who cannot see, hear, speak or move.
Hence he is totally unable to respond to God in any way--he cannot believe.
Chapter IX, Section 3, of the Westminster Confession of Faith,
makes it official:
Man, by his fall into the state of
sin, hath wholly lost all ability to will to any spiritual good accompanying salvation; so
as a natural man, being altogether averse from good, and dead in sin, he is not able by
his own strength, to correct himself, or to prepare himself thereto.
The Reformed solution to this self-inflicted error is regeneration.
[Regeneration: (Gr. paliggenesia, a being born again), the spiritual change
wrought in a man by the Holy Spirit, by which he becomes possessor of a newly-created life
(Unger's Bible Dictionary, p. 916)].
Covenantism teaches that the Holy Spirit first regenerates those
whom God has elected. Israel's New Covenant is erroneously resorted to for this
"regeneration." "A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit
will I put within you" (Ezek. 36:26). It is supposed that God thereby gives one
the new life so that he is enabled to exercise faith, and live. In other words,
according to Calvinism, one must be born again in order to be born again!
In their book titled The Five Points of Calvinism, Defined,
Defended, and Documented (Presbyterian & Reformed Publishing Company, 1971),
Drs. D. Steele and C. Thomas wrote:
The Holy Spirit creates within
the elect sinner a new heart and a new nature. This is accomplished through
regeneration--or the new birth by which the sinner is made a child of God and is given
spiritual life.
Because he is given a new nature so that he loves
righteousness, and because his mind is enlightened so that he understands and believes the
biblical gospel, the renewed sinner freely and willingly turns to Christ by the inward
supernatural call of the Spirit, who through regeneration makes alive and creates within
him faith and repentance.
The late Dr. John Murray, professor of Systematic Theology at Princeton
is Seminary and then Westminster Seminary, taught the same error:
It should be especially noted that even faith
that Jesus is the Christ is the effect of regeneration. We are not born again
by faith or repentance or conversion; we repent and believe because we have been regenerated
(Redemption Accomplished & Applied, p. 103).
Regeneration is that which is wrought
inwardly by God's grace in order that we yield to God's call with the appropriate and
necessary response. In that case the new birth would come after the call and prior
to the response on our part. It provides the link between the call and the response
on the part of the person called (Ibid., p. 94).
The venerable Plymouth Brethren, Dr.
Samuel Ridout, stood against this error:
"Being born again [regenerated], not
of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible seed, by the Word of God, which liveth and
abideth forever" (1 Pet. 1:23). The new birth is "by the Word of
God." That it is a sovereign act of God, by the Spirit, none can question.
But this verse forbids us to separate, as is often done, new birth from faith in
the Gospel.
It is being taught that new birth precedes
faith, but here we are told that the Word of God is the instrument in the new birth. "Faith
cometh by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God"; "the Word by the Gospel is
preached." John 3:3 and 3:16 must ever go together. There is no such
anomaly possible as a man born again, but who has not yet believed the Gospel.
As Dr. John F. Walvoord put it, in his
book, The Holy Spirit, (p. 132):
The important fact, never to be forgotten in
the doctrine of regeneration, is that the believer in Christ has received eternal life.
This fact must be kept free from all confusion of thought arising from the concept
of regeneration which makes it merely an antecedent of salvation, or a primary quickening
to enable the soul to believe.
Although the sinner is dead in sins, he is
not an unresponsive corpse, he is not annihilated; rather, he is separated from
God. He is certainly alive enough to adamantly reject the Saviour!
Although dead to God, the Holy Spirit enables him to believe the Word in order to accept
the Saviour and thereby be regenerated--born again. The Word of God is perfectly
clear as to the sequence of salvation!
"As many as received Him, to them gave He power to
become the children of God, even to them that believe on His name" (John
1:12).
"By the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe"
(1 Cor. 1:21).
"Of His own will begat He us with the Word of truth"
(James 1: 18).
If the Word of God is not presented in its proper sequence, and if it
is not rightly divided, the result could be ruinous. Therefore, "Study to show
thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the
Word of truth" (2 Tim. 2:15).
Dr. Lewis Sperry Chafer totally repudiated the Calvinistic error as to
Sovereignty and Responsibility in the realm of Soteriology. He clearly did so in his
classic Systematic Theology:
The Bible clearly asserts that the influence
of God upon the unsaved must be exercised if ever they are to turn to Him in saving faith.
Christ declared, "No man can come to Me, except the Father which hath sent
Me draw him" (John 6:44). The will of man is a creation of God and in
relation to it He sustains no timidity or uncertainty. He made man's will as an
instrument by which He might accomplish His sovereign purpose and it is inconceivable that
it should ever thwart His purpose.
When exercising his will, man is conscious
only of his freedom of action. He determines his course by circumstances, but God is
the author of circumstances. Man is impelled by emotions, but God is able to
originate and control every human emotion. Man prides himself that he is governed by
experienced judgment, but God is able to foster each and every thought or determination of
the human mind. God will mold and direct in all secondary causes until His own
eternal purpose is realized.
How else could He fulfill His covenants which
commit Him to the control of the actions and destinies of men to the end of time and into
eternity? His election is sure; for whom He predestinates, them--not more nor
less--He calls; and whom He calls, them--not more nor less--He justifies; and whom He
justifies, them--not more nor less--He glorifies. When predestinating, He assumes
the responsibility of creating, calling, saving, and completing according to His own
purpose.
In calling He moves those to believe to the
saving of their souls, whom He has chosen. In justifying He provides a
substitutionary, efficacious Saviour by whose death, resurrection, and ascension He is
legally able to place the chief of sinners in as perfect a relation to Himself as that of
His own Beloved Son.
And in glorifying He perfects all that
infinite love has designed. The precise number that will be glorified will be the
precise number and the same individuals--not more nor less--that he predestinated.
Each one will have believed, have been saved, have been perfected and presented like
Christ in glory.
Men enter consciously into this great
undertaking only at the point of believing, or responding to the efficacious call.
Naturally, it seems to them that they, acting in freedom within the restricted sphere of
their consciousness, determine everything. Their action is vital, for no link in
God's chain can be lacking.
The point where misunderstanding arises is
with reference to the fact that, so far as their cognizance serves them, they are certain
that they act freely; yet every truly regenerated person will testify that he would not
have turned to God apart from that all-important divine drawing of his heart.
Divine election is absolute. If this
seems to come to be taking things out of the hands of men and committing them into the
hands of God, it will at least be conceded that, when thus committed to God, things are in
better hands and this, after all, is God's own universe in which He has sovereign right to
do after the dictates of His own blessed will.
It will also be conceded that the sphere of
human action, so far as it can mean anything in the sphere of human consciousness, is left
in perfect freedom of action. It should be deemed no crime on the part of God that
He discloses to His own elect that His sovereign power and purpose are working through and
over all human forces and secondary causes (1:241,242).
"Moreover whom He did predestinate,
them He also called: and whom He called, then He also justified: and whom He justified,
them He also glorified. What shall we then say to these things? If God be for
us, who can be against us? He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for
us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things? Who shall lay
anything to the charge of God's elect? It is God that justifieth" (Rom. 8:30-33).
It is certain that, in the vast range of
creation, God has manifold purposes and there will be no question raised about whether His
will is done in other spheres. It is only within the restricted realm of certain
human beings that doubt is engendered relative to the sovereignty of God; and it is
significant that such doubt springs from men and not from God.
His Word may be taken as the declaration of
what He deems to be true, and He asserts His own sovereignty with no condition of
qualification. After all, the opinions of men, who are steeped in self-exalting
prejudice and afflicted with satanic independence of God, are of no value whatsoever.
The entire theme of predestination is outside the human horizon.
In the verses cited above, the Holy Spirit,
the divine Author, asserts that precisely what God purposes He brings to glorious
fruition. By specific steps and by wholly adequate means God realizes what He
purposes. Whom He predestinates, He calls; whom He calls, He justifies; and whom He
justifies, He glorifies. These are among the things which "work together
for good" to those who are the called according to His purpose.
The divine call not only invites with a
Gospel appeal, but inclines the mind and heart of the one called to accept divine grace.
Here the human will--a secondary cause--is recognized. The will of man is
guided by what he knows and what he desires.
The divine method of reaching the will is by
increasing man's knowledge and by stimulating his desires, while on the divine side of
this method there remains not a shadow of possible failure. The end is as certain as
any eternal reality in God.
On the human side, man is conscious of doing
only what he actually does; he chooses in an act of his own volition to receive the grace
God offers in Christ Jesus. It is a problem to the mind of man how God can
predetermine and realize the eternal salvation of a precise number which no human being
has ever counted, and guarantee that not one will fail, and yet each one of that
incomprehensible company is allowed the free exercise of his own will, and could, if he so
determined, reject every offer of divine grace.
By loving persuasion and gracious
enlightenment God realizes His purpose to the point of infinite completeness; yet no human
will has been coerced, nor will one ever be. God's call is efficacious, for
all who are called are justified and glorified.
All that enters into the problem of
qualifying a sinner for heaven's holy associations is perfected in justification, it being
the consummation of all that enters into salvation both as a dealing with demerit and as a
provision of infinite merit before God--the very merit of the Lord Jesus Christ.
As a divine undertaking, justification, which
is secured without reference to any human cause (Rom. 3:24), incorporates, as essential to
it, not only the value of the death, resurrection, and ascension of Christ, but every step
of that which justification incorporates that leads the Apostle to declare, as he does in
verse 31 and 32, that God is "for us."
This is a marvelous truth and His attitude of
love is demonstrated by the fact that He did not spare the supreme gift of His Son, but
delivered Him up for us all. Having given the supreme Gift, all else will easily and
naturally be included. God gives unqualified assurance that He justifies all whom He
predestinates and He bases that justification on the death, resurrection, and ascension of
Christ, which basis renders it at once a divine act altogether righteous in itself--even
to the point of infinity.
"Who shall lay anything to God's
elect?" is "It is God that justifieth." That is, the
very thing which would serve as a charge against the believer has been so dealt with
already that there can be no charge recognized.
From the standpoint of infinite holiness, it
is no slight achievement for God to justify eternally an ungodly enemy who himself does no
more than believe on Jesus, and to do this in such a manner as to shield the One who
justified from every complication which mere leniency with sin and unworthiness would
engender.
This is not a human disagreement where one
believer is charging another with evil; it is an issue of far greater proportions.
It is God who is challenged to take account of the sin of His elect. The Arminian
contends that God must judge and condemn the one He has saved if there is ought to charge
against him.
Over against this notion, which notion seems
never to have comprehended the workings of divine grace, is the clear assertion that God
has already justified the one who has given full proof of his election by believing on
Christ, and this in spite of not just one evil being charged against him, but in spite of
every sin--past, present, and future (Vol. 3, pages 350,351).
No human will was ever created to defeat the
will of God, but rather the human will is one of the instruments by which God realizes His
purposes for humanity. It has always been thus and must be so of necessity, since
God is what He is. The one who meditates on the Person of God, the eternity of God,
the omnipotence of God, the sovereignty of God as Creator of, the Ruler over, all things,
and the elective purpose of God, will be fortified against that form of
rationalism--subtle in character and natural to the human heart--which imagines that, in
his creation, God has unwittingly so tied His hands that He cannot with that absoluteness
which belongs to infinity realize His eternal purpose (Vol. 1, page 235).
Having designed that man shall be possessed
of an independent will, no step can be taken in the accomplishment of God's sovereign
purpose which will even tend to coerce the human volition. God does awaken the mind
of man to spiritual sanity and bring before him the desirability of salvation through the
Lord Jesus Christ.
If by His power, God creates new visions of
the reality of sin and of the blessedness of Christ as Saviour, and under this
enlightenment men choose to be saved, their will is not coerced nor are they deprived of
the action of any part of their own beings (Vol. 3, page 284).
When God by His Spirit inclines one to
Christ, that one, in so doing, acts only in the consciousness of his own choice. It
is obvious that to present a convincing argument to a person which leads that one to make
a decision, does not partake of the nature of a coercion of the will. In such a
case, every function of the will is preserved and, in relation to the Gospel, it remains
true that "whosoever will may come"; yet back of this truth is the
deeper revelation that no fallen men will to accept Christ until enlightened [not
regenerated] by the Holy Spirit (John 16:7-11).
If God fore-ordained certain actions, and
placed man in such circumstances that the actions would certainly take place agreeably to
the laws of the mind, men are nevertheless moral agents, because they act voluntarily, and
are responsible for the actions which consent has made their own.
Liberty does not consist in the power of
acting or not acting, but in acting from choice. The choice is determined by
something in the mind itself, or by something external influencing the mind; but, whatever
is the cause, the choice makes the action free, and the agent is responsible. --Dr. John
Dick (Lectures on Theology, p. 186).
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