1.
Calvinism's Total Depravity and Irresistible Grace

Let us first consider points one and four of Calvinisms
TULIP: Total Depravity and Irresistible Grace. Without a doubt
they are intrinsically linked, and thus it is almost impossible to consider
one without mentioning the other. (Moreover, the other three points are built
upon these pillars, and if these fall, the others must follow.)
All Christians rightly maintain that humanity is sinful by nature, born with
a propensity to sin. This fact is easily proved from Scripture (not to mention
human experience). In Romans 3:9-12, for example, Paul records a sampling of
Gods assessment of sinful humanity as found in various Psalms: There
is none righteous, not even one
there is none who seeks for God
there
is none who does good. Paul writes in Ephesians 2:1, 3 that we were dead
in [our] trespasses and sins
.by nature children of wrath. Unregenerate
people are slaves to sin (Rom. 6:6) and are held captive
by Satan to do his will (2 Tim. 2:26).
Clearly, the Bible affirms that, in general, humanity is very corrupt and sinful.
In fact, unless God did something to get our attention and draw us to Him, we
would never turn from our sins. Moreover, no person can escape his slavery to
sin apart from Gods gracious help. We thus affirm mans depravity,
Gods prevenient grace (i.e., a grace shown by God that precedes regeneration)
and His enabling grace that empowers us to live holy lives once we are born
again.
Calvinists, however, go further than that when they speak of mans depravity
and Gods grace. They believe that unregenerate people are so corrupt that
it is actually impossible for them to submit to God or believe in Jesus;
thus they are totally depraved. Moreover, unless God sovereignly changes
their wills by a grace that is irresistible, they will never submit
to God or repent. Even though people might think they have the choice
to repent, they are making a wrong assumption according to the Calvinist. If
they dont repent, they are actually doing the only thing they can
do, because God didnt grant to them His irresistible grace. If they do
repent, they are actually doing what would be impossible for them not to do, because God is sovereignly influencing and changing them by a grace that
is irresistible. Thus, they are making no choice at all in the matter of
salvation. Rather, God is choosing them and making them into believers.
He is changing their wills, because totally depraved people, according to the
Calvinist, would never, and could never, humble themselves or choose to repent.
Interestingly, however, many Calvinists maintain that unregenerate people do possess free wills to some degree. John Piper states,
There is no doubt that man could perform more evil acts toward
his fellow man than he does. But if he is restrained from performing more evil
acts by motives that are not owing to his glad submission to God, then even
his virtue is evil in the sight of God (p. 5, prgh 2, emphasis added).
If unregenerate man could perform more evil acts toward his fellow man
but doesnt because he is restrained by some wrong inward
motive (thus the man is restrained by himself, and not some outside force),
then unregenerate man is making a moral decision by his own free will. Piper
also states, Except for the continual exertion of saving grace, we will
always use our freedom to resist God (p. 9, prgh. 6, emphasis added).
Note again the affirmation of the free will of regenerate and unregenerate man
("use our freedom"), but Piper believes that unregenerate man will
always use his freedom to resist God, because he is totally depraved.
If this is so, then it is not too strong of a statement to say that Calvinists
believe that God causes people to believe in Christ and be born again against
their wills, because they would never and could never have chosen to believe
and be born again otherwise. Given the choice, they would have preferred to
stay in sin, not repent or believe, and never be born again. Just before God
bestowed His irresistible grace upon them, had you asked them if
they wanted to repent and follow Jesus, they would not have answered in the
affirmative. But, moments later, God forces them into doing what they would
have resisted moments earlier, would never have wanted, and could not have done.
Thus, every person whom God causes to be born again, He causes them to be born
again against their wills, and that is what Calvinists believe even if they
say they dont.
Piper explains that some influence by the Holy Spirit can be resisted,
but that the Holy Spirit can overcome all resistance and make His influence
irresistible (p. 9, prgh. 1). Thus, God can send two kinds of influence:
that which is resistible and that which is irresistible, whichever kind He wills.
Piper further elaborates on this as he explains how God can sovereignly give
someone the ability to repent, which, according to Piper, is another way of
describing how God sends His irresistible grace upon a person:
When a person hears a preacher call for repentance he can resist that call.
But if God gives him repentance he cannot resist because the gift is the removal
of the resistance. Not being willing to repent is the same as resisting the
Holy Spirit. So if God gives repentance it is the same as taking away the resistance.
This is why we call this work of God irresistible grace (p. 10,
prgh. 6).
Directly after this explanation, Piper declares: Note: It should be obvious
from this that irresistible grace never implies that God forces us to believe
against our will. That would even be a contradiction in terms (p.
10, prgh. 7, emphasis added).
I must ask, how could irresistible grace work on a totally depraved person so
as not to be forcing him to believe against his will? If the unregenerate person
is initially able to resist Gods grace as he hears the gospel preached,
then God must at that time be sending him a grace that is resistible. The totally
depraved man, according to Piper, will always continue to resist Gods
grace as long as it is of the resistible type. But as soon as God
bestows some irresistible grace the man immediately can no
longer resist (because the grace is irresistable, which means it cant
be resisted for even a second), and so he is immediately born again and
believes. But just a moment ago, he was resisting! How can Piper then say that it should be obvious from this that irresistible grace never implies that
God forces us to believe against our will? Not only is that not obvious, it stands in direct contradiction to what Piper has just said!
Pipers logic becomes even more convoluted as he continues: On the
contrary, irresistible grace is compatible with preaching and witnessing that
tries to persuade people to do what is reasonable and what will accord with
their best interests (p. 10, prgh. 7). Piper apparently realizes that
the concept of irresistible grace raises an immense problem regarding the necessity
of persuasive preaching, a problem he hopes to avoid with a one-sentence disclaimer
that only exposes his problem. Pipers concept of irresistible grace is
clearly not compatible with persuasive preaching.
Here is my question to the Calvinist: Why must we preach the gospel in
order for people to be saved? If man plays no part at all in his conversion,
why must he hear the gospel to be saved, as Paul says he must in Romans
10:14? A consistently logical Calvinist could never say that persuasive preaching influences the unregenerate person to yield to God, because the unregenerate
person will always use his freedom to resist God (Piper, p. 9, prgh. 6). Thus
the only way an unregenerate person becomes regenerate is if God sovereignly
bestows upon him His irresistible grace. So all the persuasive preaching in
the world wont make a bit of difference in the saving of anyone. In fact,
to even attempt to persuade someone is an attack on Gods supposed
sovereign grace in salvation, because to do so implies that salvation rests,
in part, on the hearer and also rests, in part, on the preacher.
According to the Calvinist who is consistent, our preaching cannot have
any persuasive power over one who is totally depraved, and if it does, then
we must admit that unregenerate man can do something (be persuaded) that leads
to his salvation.
If man has nothing to do with his repentance because the ability to repent is
Gods gift, then why did Paul so often reason with the Jews from
the Scriptures to prove that Jesus was the Messiah (e.g., see Acts 17:2-4)?
Why did he attempt to persuade men (2 Cor. 5:11) and beg people to be reconciled to God? (2 Cor. 5:20). Why do we read in
Acts 28:24 (as Paul reasoned with the Jews about Jesus), And some were
being persuaded by the things spoken, but others would not believe (emphasis added)? Why did Paul write, I have become all things to all
men, that I may by all means save some (1 Cor. 9:22, emphasis added)?
Why did he write that the Jews hindered him from speaking to the Gentiles that they might be saved (1 Thes. 2:16, emphasis added)?
Clearly, Paul believed that what he said and did affected the results of his
evangelism, because peoples wills played a part in their salvation. Again,
a preachers attempt to persuade an unregenerate man would be an
admission that man plays a part in his repentance, and it would be an affront
to Gods sovereigntyif no man can be saved apart from Gods
irresistible grace. In fact, to try to persuade an unregenerate person to yield
to Christ is to mislead him into thinking that he is not so totally depraved
after all, because he can choose to repent!
To a Calvinist who remains consistent with his theology, persuasive preaching
is ineffectual and useless, and the Calvinist can draw no other conclusion,
lest he be guilty of believing that salvation is not completely the sovereign
work of God. There is no escape from this: If people must hear preaching in
order to be saved, then people (and preachers) play a part in their salvation,
because preaching persuades them to do something, and thus they must have free
wills that can choose to repent. This is just one more proof that salvation
is not solely the work of God. Man must play a part, otherwise there would be
no need for preaching.
Calvinists attempt to answer this particular objection by saying that preaching
the gospel is simply a means God uses in saving people. I must ask then, Is it a meaningless means or a meaningful means? If it is a meaningless
means, then why do you call it a means? If something is a means to something
else, then it serves a purpose to a certain end. There is no such thing as a
meaningless means.
If it is a meaningful means, then it serves some purpose that needs to be served
to reach the desired ends. According to Scripture, preaching the gospel is an essential means (see Rom. 10:14), because by it Gods message is
communicated to people who, if they are to be saved, must believe Gods
message and repent. Thus, peoples salvation is dependent on preachers
preaching and hearers responding.
If salvation is supposedly a sovereign act of God who bestows on some people
His irresistible grace, why dont Calvinists simply stand in front of unregenerate
audiences and recite nursery rhymes? Then they could prove the truth of their
doctrine of irresistible grace as people are sovereignly born again. Yet I notice
that Calvinists try to appeal to the minds and hearts of their hearers in order
to persuade them to repent and believe, something their audiences, by
definition, cant do unless God sovereignly regenerates them. The
preaching of Calvinists contradicts what they say they believe.
There are many biblical examples of the effects of persuasive preaching
that could be cited. For example, Acts 17:11-12 tells us:
Now these [Berean Jews] were more noble-minded than those in Thessalonica, for
they received the word with great eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily,
to see whether these things were so. Many of them therefore believed
[note that they believed because they were noble-minded and thus
searched the Scriptures daily] along with a number of prominent Greek women
and men (emphasis added).
Their receptivity had something to do with their salvation, as Jesus plainly
taught in the Parable of the Sower and the Soils (see Mark 4:1-20).
If Calvinists are consistent with their theology, what is the gospel that they
should proclaim? Should they deceive their audiences, calling on them to repent
and believe in Christ, misleading them into thinking that they can do something in regards to their salvation, thus strengthening their listeners
pride and increasing their spiritual darkness? Or do they tell them the truth
that they are so depraved that they are incapable of submitting to God, and
unless God shows them His irresistible grace, they can never be saved? How does
faith come from hearing (Rom. 10:17) that?
Obviously, such a gospel leaves nothing for the hearer to cling
to in faith. That is why Calvinists keep their unique doctrines secret from
the unregenerate, only to reveal them at a later time to Christians when they
are ready to receive the truth. Truly, the five points of Calvinism
are the family secret. Even though they are supposedly the foundational
truths of salvation, they dare not be revealed to the unsaved. This, by itself,
shows the fallacy of Calvinism. Calvinists intuitively know that if they tell
unregenerate people the truth, they will have no converts. So they
preach a deceptive Arminian gospel, hope for a response, and later let their
converts know what really happened.
Calvinistic Converts
I cant help but wonder how God takes pleasure in people who are, against
their wills, supposedly regenerated by Gods irresistible grace. They are
really nothing more than robots. If they love Him, it is only because they had
no choice but to love Him, because they would have preferred to continue hating
Him. This means, of course, that they really dont love Him, because
love is predicated upon choice. Their warm feelings toward Him are pre-programmed;
thus true love is impossible. I encourage the reader to take a puppet made from
a sock, put it on his hand, have it turn and look at him, and then have it say, I love you! Does that give the reader the same feeling as when his
spouse or child says those words? And why not? Because free will has been eliminated.
The puppet is only saying what you are making him say.
I also cant help but wonder about the validity of Pipers belief
that unregenerate man will always use his freedom to resist God. Imagine a man
who is an adulterer. His God-given conscience condemns him continually (see
Rom. 2:15), but he continues in his adulterous relationship. Thus he is using
his freedom to resist God, which Piper says is all he can or will ever do since
he is totally depraved. But imagine that he finally breaks off his adulterous
relationship due to guilt. Now can it still be said that he has only used his
freedom to resist God? No, it cannot. He used his freedom to repent of adultery,
and yielded to his God-given conscience. If he can use his freedom to do that,
why cant he, with the help of the Holy Spirit, repent of a lifestyle of
rebellion and humble himself before God?
How could someone who has the free choice to remain unrepentant possibly not have the freedom to choose to repent? How could a person have
the capacity to choose to become more evil but not have the capacity to choose
to become less evil? Merely by choosing to not become more evil is by default,
a choice for good. If we can use our freedom to resist God but cant use
it to yield to God, we really have no freedom at all. Were robots, programmed
to do evil, having no freedom. It is utterly impossible to have freedom to resist God if one doesnt have freedom to yield to God. Calvin
himself certainly admitted this fact, writing in his Institutes,
Nothing is more absurd than to think anything at all is done but by the
ordination of God
.Every action and motion of every creature is so governed
by the hidden counsel of God, that nothing can come to pass, but what was ordained
by Him
.The wills of men are so governed by the will of God, that they
are carried on straight to the mark which He has fore-ordained (Cal.
Inst., book 1, chapter 16, sect. 3).
At least Calvin was consistent in this respect. He admitted (unlike some modern
Calvinists) that there really was no room for free will in this theology. If
depraved man can do nothing other than sin, then he has as much free will as
a bullet shot from a gun.
Calvinists clearly add to what Scripture states regarding humanitys depravity
and Gods grace. Although unregenerate people are indeed, dead in
[their] trespasses and sins, hundreds (if not thousands)
of scriptures clearly state or imply that spiritually dead people can choose
to humble themselves and repent, especially while they are under the influence
of the gracious drawing of Gods Spirit. Gods drawing, however, never
forces anyone to repent, nor does it change anyones will apart from the
consent of his heart.
Although Scripture repeatedly decries the sinful state of humanity, at the same
time it calls on all people to repent; thus it is obvious that all spiritually dead people still have the capacity to repent. For example, Paul
publicly proclaimed, Therefore having overlooked the times of ignorance,
God is now declaring to men that all everywhere should repent (Acts
17:30, emphasis added). If Paul believed that people were so depraved that they
had no capacity to repent, he would not have said that God was calling all
people everywhere to repent, unless he was a deceiver. Moreover,
if it were impossible for spiritually dead people to repent, God would be unrighteous
to expect all of them to do what they are incapable of doing and then
hold them guilty for not doing it.
Like Paul, John the Baptist, Jesus, and all the other apostles preached the
gospel, calling on all people to repent (see Matt.3:2; 4:17; 11:20; Mark
6:12; Luke 5:32; 13:3, 5; 24:47; Acts 2:38; 3:19; 5:31; 11:18; 20:21; 26:20;
Rom. 2:4: 2 Pet. 3:9). Several times in the book of Revelation, John is amazed
that unregenerate people dont repent while suffering Gods judgments
(see Rev. 9:20-21; 16:9, 11). Jesus pronounced woe upon all the people of Chorazin
and Bethsaida because they didnt repent, obviously indicating He believed
they had the capacity to repent (see Matt. 11:21). He also declared that the
wicked people of Tyre and Sidon, who didnt repent, would have repented
if they had seen miracles like the people of Chorazin and Bethsaida had seen!
In both cases, Jesus believed that those who didnt repent had the
capacity to repent and should have repented, in contrast to Calvinists,
who believe unregenerate people have no capacity to repent outside of God changing
their wills and forcing them to repent (which He only does for some). Thus,
Calvinism portrays Jesus as a liar and a deceiver, because Jesus gave all indication
that people could do what He knew full well they couldnt do. This also
makes God the Father a liar, as Jesus only spoke His words (see John 12:49).
Jesus expected everyone of His generation to repent, because He stated
that the men of Nineveh, who repented at Jonahs preaching, would rightfully
condemn His generation for not repenting. Again, if they had no capacity to
repent, He would not have condemned them, as that would make God unrighteous.
Moreover, what right would the repentant people of Nineveh have to condemn Jesus
unrepentant generation? The people of Jesus generation could rightly say,
How can you, who by Gods sovereign decree could do nothing other
than repent, condemn us, who by Gods sovereign decree could do nothing
other than remain unrepentant?
Thus, the Calvinist, who believes God condemns people for not doing what they
are incapable of doing, makes God grossly unjust. God is thus somewhat equivalent
to the parent who spanks his baby for not walking, but He is a million times
worse. Why? Because to the Calvinist, God tortures people eternally in hell
for not doing what they were absolutely incapable of doing.
The Calvinist also makes God ultimately responsible for all the evil in the
world. Why? Because God could put an end to all evil by influencing everyone
with His irresistible grace, but He sovereignly chooses not to, thus evil remains
only because of Gods sovereign choice. Depraved man can supposedly do
nothing but sin unless God keeps him from it by choosing to show him His irresistible
grace, so the ultimate reason for evil is because God doesnt keep evil
people from sinning.
Calvinists often decry the position of non-Calvinists, accusing them of making man responsible for his own salvation (which is a false accusation).
Yet Calvinists make God responsible for the damnation of billions!
Clearly, the God of Calvinism hates people even before they are born, when He
determines that their eternal fate will be incarceration and agony in hell.
If God is solely responsible for the salvation of certain people, He
is also solely responsible for the damnation of everyone else, because
only He could have rescued them from their fate, but He decided not to do so.
And that decision was not predicated on Gods inability to stop
sin, but His unwillingness to stop it. Thus God wills sin in select peoples
lives. To the Calvinist, man doesnt stop sinning because he has no choice,
but because God, who can stop sin, chooses not to! God is thus even more totally
depraved than we are!
Calvinists should not object to this point, because Calvin himself believed
that Adam fell, not because Adam chose by his own free will to sin, but because
God ordained his fall:
God not only foresaw that Adam would fall, but also ordained that he should
.I
confess it is a horrible decree; yet no one can deny but God foreknew Adams
fall, and therefore foreknew it, because he had ordained it so by his own decree
(Cal. Inst., b. 3, c. 23, sec. 7).
The Calvinist also portrays God as a very confused God who is actually working
against Himself, hating sin and evil, yet promoting the very thing He hates
by creating people who have no capacity but to do evil and who are predestined
to never change. Moreover, the Calvinists God is a hypocrite, as He practices
sins that He condemns in others, such as deception and showing partiality.
In summary, the Calvinist makes God a lying, deceiving, bigoted, malicious,
unjust, confused hypocrite who is responsible for the worlds evil and
who creates people for the expressed purpose of torturing them forever. If any
man did the things Calvinists say God does, every person on the earth would
rightly consider that man worthy of immediate execution, and certainly not worthy
to be worshiped. Who is really robbing God of glory? Is it the non-Calvinist
who says that man must yield to Gods Spirit using his God-given free will
in order to be saved, or is it the Calvinist, who turns God into a monster?
Unlike the Calvinist who (whether he admits it or not) places the responsibility
on God for peoples lack of repentance, Jesus placed the blame on
the unrepentant people themselves. He said as He wept over Jerusalem,
O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent
to her! How often I wanted to gather your children together, the way a hen gathers
her chicks under her wings, and you were unwilling (Matt. 23:37,
emphasis added).
Notice that Jesus loved them all and wanted them all to repent, but they refused
to yield to His love. The Calvinist, however, makes Jesus say, O Jerusalem,
Jerusalem, who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her, proving
that you are totally depraved. I never wanted to gather your children
together, the way a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, thus I chose not
to grant you My irresistible grace, and I predestined you to eternal damnation.
Im weeping now, not for you, because Ive hated you from the beginning.
Rather, Im weeping for no good reason. Perhaps Im weeping for Myself,
an unrighteous hypocrite, because I expect people to do what they cant
do and I command people to do what I dont practice Myself. The Calvinist,
who claims he is zealous for Gods glory, makes God into an immoral, repugnant
monster.
Jesus also rebuked the religious Jews, saying, You search the Scriptures,
because you think that in them you have eternal life; and it is these that bear
witness of Me; and you are unwilling to come to Me, that you may
have life (John 5:39-40, emphasis added). Clearly, Jesus believed that
people had the capacity to choose to repent or not. This cannot be denied by
any honest reader of Scripture.
Does Being Dead in Sin Make Repentance Impossible?
But how can one who is dead in his sins possibly repent and believe?
some Calvinists ask. Isnt it true that dead people can do nothing and are
unable to respond to outside influences?
Such logic, however, is seriously flawed, because it forces more meaning into
the _expression, dead in your trespasses and sins than was obviously
meant by the apostle Paul. Using such logic, we could just as well conclude
that those who are dead in their sins cannot think, breath, speak or hope, since
dead people cant do those things either. Like all metaphors, there are
similarities that can be drawn between physical and spiritual death, but, like
all metaphors, there comes a point where similarities turn to dissimilarities.
Pauls phrase, dead in your trespasses and sins expresses the
fact that unregenerate man has no relationship with God because of his sins
and is void of spiritual life in Christ as well as eternal life. It does not
express the idea of man being incapable of making a choice to repent, just as
it obviously does not imply mans inability to make any other choice, including
moral choices. Unregenerate people have the capacity to choose between doing
what God commands or not doing what God commands (irrespective of their
motives for doing either), and this is quite obvious, because unregenerate people
make choices all the time to obey or disobey their own God-given consciences
(see Rom. 2:14-15). They are not so evil that they are incapable of choosing
to obey, for example, one of Gods commandments. Sometimes unregenerate
people even stop practicing certain sins while they continue in others, such
as when the adulterer ends his affair because of his overwhelming guilt, or
when the thief stops stealing for fear of being caught. So what is the difference
between any other moral choice that an unregenerate person makes and the moral
choice to repent and follow Jesus?
It is obvious from scores of scriptures that Paul did not believe that
people who are dead in their trespasses and sins are incapable of submitting
to God. From the time of Pauls conversion, Jesus made it clear to him
that unregenerate people have the capacity and responsibility to turn
from their sins. We read in Acts 26:16-20 Pauls narration before King
Agrippa of his own conversion and calling, when Jesus said to him:
But arise, and stand on your feet; for this purpose I have appeared to you,
to appoint you a minister and a witness not only to the things which you have
seen, but also to the things in which I will appear to you; delivering you from
the Jewish people and from the Gentiles, to whom I am sending you, to open their
eyes so that they may turn from darkness to light and from the
dominion of Satan to God, in order that they may receive forgiveness
of sins and an inheritance among those who have been sanctified by faith in
Me (Acts 26:16-18, emphasis added).
Paul continued:
Consequently, King Agrippa, I did not prove disobedient to the heavenly vision,
but kept declaring both to those of Damascus first, and also at Jerusalem and
then throughout all the region of Judea, and even to the Gentiles, that they
should repent and turn to God, performing deeds appropriate to repentance
(Acts 26:19-20, emphasis added).
But are non-Calvinists saying that a sinful person can repent and believe apart
from Gods gracious assistance? Any who do are in error. God graciously
attempts to get the attention of the unregenerate man, speaking to Him through
His creation (see Rom. 1:18-20), His providence (see Acts 14:17), and each persons
conscience (see Rom. 2:14-16). By His Spirit and by His grace, God calls and
anoints messengers who take the message of His saving grace to the sinner. By
His Spirit and grace, God warns and convicts every sinner of sin, righteousness
and judgment (see John 16:8). All of this God does by His grace in order that
the sinner might be saved, and He does it all before the sinner has taken a
single step towards repentance! Without Gods prevenient grace, certainly
no person would ever repent. Jesus is, as He declared, draw[ing] all men to [Himself] (John 12:32, emphasis added) since He has been lifted
up from the earth by crucifixion. And as Jesus also declared, No one can
come to Me, unless the Father who sent Me draws him (John 6:44a). The
Calvinist, ignoring the testimony of so much of Scripture that declares Gods
universal love, His universal atonement, and His universal call to salvation,
wrongly concludes that the Father is only drawing some, but not all,
to Jesus. Yet Jesus plainly stated that He would draw all men to Himself.
This fact cannot be denied by any honest reader of Scripture.
Note, however, that although Jesus is drawing all men to Himself, not all men
are saved. This again proves that man has something to do with his salvation.
He must yield to Gods drawing.
John 6:64-65
Another similar Calvinistic misinterpretation revolves around Jesus words
in John 6:64-65. We read Jesus saying, But there are some of you who do
not believe.
John then interjects: For Jesus knew from the beginning who they were
who did not believe, and who it was that would betray Him. John then continues
his narrative: And He [Jesus] was saying, For this reason I have
said to you, that no one can come to Me, unless it has been granted him from
the Father.
Disregarding the greater context of John 6:41-71 as well of scores of other
scriptures that reveal Gods desire for all people to come to Jesus (e.g.,
Matt. 11:28; 16:25; 22:9; Mark 16:15; Luke 9:23; John 3:16-17; 5:34-40; 7:37;
12:47; Acts 17:30; 1 Tim 2:3-6; 2 Pet 3:9; 1 John 4:14), Calvinists conclude
that Jesus statement, No one can come to Me, unless it has been
granted him from the Father proves that God sovereignly chooses only some
to be saved.
This interpretation, however, stands in contradiction to so many other plain
scriptures that declare Gods love for all, Jesus death for all,
and Gods desire that all be saved. Since inspired Scripture cant
contradict itself, we must find an interpretation that harmonizes rather than
contradicts the rest of Scripture.
When Jesus said, There are some of you who do not believe, it wasnt
the first time He mentioned believing in Johns sixth chapter. Jesus spoke
in 6:28-29, 35-36, 40, 47 of believing in Him, and He spoke of it in such a
way that anyone who reads what He said without a preconceived bias would conclude
that believing in Him was something anyone could do, and something that
God desires every person to do.
Thus, in 6:64, Jesus indicts some of His audience for not believing, just as
He did to the crowd in 6:36. Clearly, believing is something they were
supposed to do, not something that God did for them. Jesus said, Some
of you do not believe. Those words strongly affirm the non-Calvinist
view of human responsibility in salvation.
John then explains that Jesus possessed foreknowledge of those who would not
believe, which of course is no surprise. Non-Calvinists maintain (and rightly
so) that God knew before the foundation of the world who would and who would
not believe in Jesus. John is only endorsing that truth, again affirming the
non-Calvinist view. And John again supports the non-Calvinist view that each
individual is held responsible to believe. Notice that John said, Jesus
knew from the beginning who they were who did not [not could not]
believe, and who it was that would [not had no choice but to]
betray Him (6:64).
Finally, John quotes Jesus as saying, For this reason I have said to you,
that no one can come to Me, unless it has been granted from the Father (6:65). Contextually, Jesus must mean that God grants that people can come to
Jesus only by believing, and that is in perfect harmony with what Jesus said
in the two preceding verses, the entire context of 6:26-71, and the whole of
Scripture.
Calvinists also use this portion of Scripture to support the theory that the
reason Judas betrayed Jesus is because salvation was not granted to Judas. This,
of course, makes God the real betrayer of His Son Jesus, as it eliminates Judas responsibility in the matter. To the Calvinist, Judas had no choice but to betray
JesusHe
was acting out his predetermined destiny. But if this were true, why would Jesus
pronounce woe upon Judas for what he did, clearly holding him responsible for
his treacherous act? If Judas had no choice but to betray Jesus because God
didnt grant him salvation, why would Jesus say, Woe to that man
by whom the Son of Man is betrayed! It would have been good for that man if
he had not been born (Matt. 26:24). How could Jesus rightly hold Judas
responsible for his actions if he really had no free choice in the matter? To
the Calvinist, it was actually God the Father who betrayed Jesus, and Judas
was just a tool in Gods hand. Thus Jesus should have said, Woe to
My Father for betraying Me!
God Granting Repentance
But what about the biblical statements that indicate that God grants repentance? For example, Peter proclaimed of Jesus before the Sanhedrin, He
is the one whom God exalted to His right hand as a Prince and a Savior, to
grant repentance to Israel, and forgiveness of sins (Acts 5:31).
There are only two possible interpretations that can be made from Peters
statement. Either God was sovereignly giving each and every totally-depraved,
unable-to-repent Israelite the ability and the will to repent by His irresistible
grace (note that Peter said that Jesus granted repentance to Israel,
not some Israelites), or God was granting all Israel, individually and
corporately, the opportunity to repent, as well as His gracious help in their
repentance.
If the first interpretation is correct, then every Israelite would have been
saved, because, as already noted, God granted repentance to Israel, that
is, the whole nation, and not certain individual Israelites. If Calvinists apply
their doctrine to this scripture, they would have to conclude that God was bestowing
His irresistible grace upon every Israelite. Of course, all Israel was
not saved, thus proving that the first interpretation is incorrect.
This leaves us with only the second interpretation remaining, and it is the
only one that makes sense and harmonizes with the rest of Scripture. Because
God has given man free will, man has a part (albeit a very small part compared
with Gods part) in his own salvation. He must cooperate with God if he
is to be saved. God takes the initiative, loves the sinner, dies for him, draws
and convicts him by His creation, His providence and Spirit, sends messengers
to him, sometimes performs miracles before him, offers him salvation, and gives
him the opportunity to repent and believe. If the man yields to all this influence,
believing the gospel and humbling his proud heart, Gods grace continues
to work, graciously helping him to repent by the Holy Spirits power, just
as He helps the man all the rest of his Christian life to obey God. Both God
and man play a part in mans repentance and ongoing sanctification.
Peter, of course, did not believe when he said that Jesus has granted
repentance to Israel, that mans free will played no part in his
salvation. He would later write, The Lord is not slow about His promise,
as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not wishing for any to
perish but for all to come to repentance (2 Pet. 3:9, emphasis added).
Clearly, Peter believed that God wants everyone to repent, but just as clearly,
not all do, because they play a part in their repentance. On the other
hand, we must never neglect to say that there is no man who could repent apart
from Gods grace. We must have His help to come to the light, repent and
believe. Piper cites John 3:20-21 as proof that those who come to the light
are those in whom God does His work. I agree. No man will come to the light
unless God works in him. Piper, however, elevates scriptures such as John 3:20-21
that highlight Gods part in mans salvation, and does not acknowledge
the many scriptures that would serve to balance his position, those that emphasize
mans part in his salvation. Salvation occurs when man does not abort Gods
plan for him, but cooperates with God, who sent his son to be the true
light which, coming into the world, enlightens every man (John
1:9, emphasis added). Why doesnt Piper mention that verse?
When Peter reported to the Jerusalem elders that Gentiles had been saved and
God had poured His Holy Spirit upon them, they acknowledged, Well then,
God has granted to the Gentiles also the repentance that leads to life (Acts 11:18, emphasis added). They were amazed that God was granting salvation
to sinful Gentiles.
Again, according to the Jerusalem elders, God granted repentance to the
Gentiles, that is, all the Gentiles, not just some pre-selected individuals.
Thus, weve now learned from Scripture that God has granted repentance
to Israel (see Acts 5:31) and the Gentiles (see Acts 11:18). That
includes everyone. Since not all Israelites and Gentiles have repented, we can
safely conclude that Gods granting them repentance does not mean that
man plays no part in his repentance, which is also obvious from scores of other
scriptures. Piper neglects to mention the scores of other scriptures that help
us understand mans obvious part in repentance, and quotes only one scripture
(2 Tim 2:24-26) that he misuses to buttress Calvinisms lop-sided view.
Let us consider that one scripture about repentance that Piper mentions. Paul
wrote,
The Lords bond-servant must not be quarrelsome, but be kind to all, able
to teach, patient when wronged, with gentleness correcting those who are in
opposition, if perhaps God may grant them repentance leading to the knowledge
of the truth, and they may come to their senses and escape from the snare of
the devil, having been held captive by him to do his will. (2 Tim. 2:24-26,
emphasis added).
Again, Paul couldnt have been saying that man plays no part in his repentance
and that repentance is a sovereign gift of God, otherwise he would have been
contradicting so much of what he himself wrote. For example, Paul wrote in 1
Timothy 2:3-4: This is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior,
who desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth (emphasis added).
So if we are to harmonize Paul with Paul, we must conclude that he was emphasizing
Gods part in mans repentance. No one can repent without Gods
help, because unregenerate man is a slave to sin (see Rom. 6:6). God wants all to repent. He is granting every person the opportunity to repent. And He is
offering the ability to repent to all who humble themselves. God
gives
grace to the humble (Jas. 4:6). He, not they, is the one who frees them
from their slavery to sin. And that is more likely to happen if the Lords
bond-servants are kind and gentle to their opponents, as their kindness has
a softening affect on their opponents hearts.
Again, if God was sovereignly granting repentance apart from mans willingness,
what is the point of Pauls admonition to the believers to be kind and
gentle to their opponents? If God is sovereignly granting repentance, it makes
no difference if the believers are kind and gentle to their opponents! But because
God is not sovereignly granting repentance, believers actions can make
the difference in an unbelievers receptivity to the freedom from sin that
God is offering them. (Incidentally, why didnt John Calvin follow Pauls
instruction to be kind and gentle to ones opponents when he had Michael
Servetus slowly burnt at the stake for doctrinal differences?)
In the Calvinistic interpretation of scriptures like those just mentioned, we
can see the primary flaw in their methods of interpretation, that of ignoring
context. Calvinists focus on certain supportive scriptures and ignore
those that clearly contradict their interpretation of the supportive
ones. Thus, their interpretation does not harmonize with the whole of Scripture.
They have emphasized Gods sovereignty to the extreme, to the point of
excluding what Scripture says about mans responsibility and God-given
free will. Calvinists dive into a haystack to find a needle, and when they are
pricked by something sharp, they exclaim, This isnt a stack of hay,
its a stack of needles, just as I suspected!
The Mind Set on the Flesh Cannot Submit to God
By ignoring context, Calvinists misinterpret many scriptures. For example, Piper
cites Romans 8:7 to support the Calvinistic ideas of unregenerate mans complete
inability to repent and his need of Gods irresistible grace. In Romans
8:7 Paul writes, Because the mind set on the flesh is hostile toward God;
for it does not subject itself to the law of God, for it is not even able to
do so (emphasis added). Piper points to this scripture as proof that
unregenerate people are not able to submit to Gods law. Thus they are totally
depraved and in need of Gods irresistible grace if they are to be saved.
But is this one verse the only verse in Scripture that explains anything about
the state of unregenerate man? Does this one sentence in Romans 8 nullify or
supercede everything else the Bible says about salvation? Was Paul a fool who
contradicted his own teaching earlier in the book of Romans (e.g. Rom. 2:14-15)?
No! Thus, we must interpret this one verse so that it harmonizes with everything
else the Bible says. And that is quite easy to do. Paul is simply saying in
Romans 8:7 that a mind that is set on the flesh, which is a hostile
mind, does not submit to God and cannot submit to God. But does this prove that
one cant, with Gods gracious help, soften his hostile mind, yield
to Gods call, and repent of setting his mind on the flesh? No, it does
not. All of Scripture leads us to believe that such a thing is quite possible.
In the very next verse we read, And those who are in the flesh cannot please God (Rom. 8:8, emphasis added). Does this verse prove that it is impossible
for one to repent, no longer be in the flesh but be in the
Spirit? Obviously not.
Moreover, did Paul write what he wrote in Romans 8:7 to prove the truth of mans
total depravity and his need for Gods irresistible grace? No, he was writing
to Christians to describe the difference between them and nonbelievers (see
8:4-11), to help them understand their obligation to put to death the deeds
of the body by the Spirit, and to warn them against living according to
the flesh lest they die (see 8:12-14). Again we see the classic error
of the Calvinist who ignores context.
Calvinisms Inconsistency
Piper contradicts his own theology at one point, when, after elaborating on
mans total depravity and complete inability to submit to God, he states.
If we think of ourselves as basically good or even less than totally at
odds with God, our grasp of the work of God in redemption will be defective.
But if we will humble ourselves under this terrible truth of our total
depravity
(p. 8, prgh. 1, emphasis added). Surely, Piper is not
speaking here to people who have been regenerated and indwelled by Gods
Spirit, who are forgiven, clothed in Christs righteousness and set free
from sins dominion! Those kinds of people are not totally depraved!
Every Calvinist admits that regenerate people can make the choice to
obey God, thus no regenerate person can be considered to be totally depraved
by Calvinistic terms and definitions. Thus, Piper is speaking to the unregenerate
at this point, those whom he says are totally depraved and will always use their
freedom to resist God (see p. 9, prgh. 6) since, of course, they have no capacity
to do otherwise. Yet he counsels these depraved people to humble themselves,
something that is impossible for them to do apart from Gods sovereign
choice to show them His irresistible grace! Like all other Calvinists, Piper
finds it very difficult to remain consistent with his own conclusions.
There is no better illustration of Calvinistic contradiction than at the end
of his booklet, where Piper complementarily quotes renowned Reformed theologian
J.I. Packer, who attempts to explain what a person must do who desires to be
saved. We would expect Packer to say that one can do absolutely nothing to be saved, since salvation is supposedly all the work of God and none of man.
The very question, What must I do to be saved? reveals that the
inquirer, according to the Calvinist, doesnt understand that salvation
is the sovereign work of God. The consistent Calvinist must tell such an inquirer,
You cant do anything! If God has pre-selected you, He will change
your will by His irresistible grace, regenerate you, and give you the gift of
repentance and faith. Your very question is presumptuous and reveals your pride.
But you can do nothing about your sin of pride, because you are totally depraved,
and will only use your freedom to resist God! In fact (according to page 6 in
Pipers booklet) you are so totally depraved that any attempts you make
at repentance are actually evil in Gods eyes, because everything you do
is a sin.
Keep in mind that Piper has already declared that God first sovereignly regenerates
the sinner, who then immediately receives Christ. According to the Calvinist,
one doesnt believe in Christ and then God regenerates him; God regenerates
him and then he believes, because he had no capacity to believe as one dead
in his sins. Says Piper,
We believe that new birth is a miraculous creation of God that enables a formerly dead person to receive Christ and so be saved. We do not think that
faith precedes and causes new birth. Faith is the evidence that God has begotten
us anew
.The two acts (regeneration and faith) are so closely connected
that in experience we cannot distinguish them. God begets us anew and the first
glimmer of life in the newborn child is faith. This new birth is the effect
of irresistible grace, because it is an act of sovereign creation (p.
11, prgh. 7, p. 12, prgh. 1, emphasis added).
And so I must then ask, who is this person who is asking, What must I
do to be saved? He must be unregenerate, as he is confessing that he does
not believe he is saved, indicating that God has not regenerated him nor given
him the gift of faith. As an unregenerate person, he is either predestined to
be sovereignly changed by Gods irresistible grace or he is not predestined
to be changed. (We will later consider the Calvinistic doctrine of Unconditional
Election.) If he is not predestined to be sovereignly changed, then there is
nothing he can do to be saved because he will never be saved. He has no chance
of ever being saved.
If he is predestined to be sovereignly changed, either God is currently showing
him his irresistible grace, or God is not. If God is currently showing him His
irresistible grace, then he cant resist for a moment and
so he must now be regenerate; but he cant be regenerate because he is
confessing that he does not believe that he is saved, indicating that God has
not regenerated him and given him the gift of faith. Thus we can be certain
that God is not currently, at that moment, changing him by His irresistible
grace, and if he is to ever be regenerated, he must wait until God does show
him His irresistible grace.
So we have left only two possibilities: Either the man is predestined to be
changed by Gods grace at some point in the future or he is not. Currently,
though, there is nothing he can do but continue to sin (hes totally depraved),
wait, and hope (which, of course, he does not, will not, and cannot do, since
he is totally depraved). To tell the man to believe in Jesus is absurd, because
he cant do that until after he is regenerate, according to Calvinists.
(Yet that is what Paul told the Philippian jailer to do in order to be saved,
because Paul believed in Jesus plan and method of salvation rather than
Calvins.)
Now, read how Calvinistic theologian, J.I. Packer, answers the person who asks, What must I do to be saved? My comments are contained within brackets.
To the question: what must I do to be saved? The old gospel (Calvinism) replies:
believe on the Lord Jesus Christ. [Yet why would Packer tell a person who is
obviously unregenerate to do something he cant possibly do?] To
the further question: what does it mean to believe on the Lord Jesus Christ?
its reply is: it means knowing oneself to be a sinner, and Christ to have died
for sinners; abandoning all self-righteousness and self-confidence, and casting
oneself wholly upon Him for pardon and peace; and exchanging ones natural
enmity and rebellion against God for a spirit of grateful submission to the
will of Christ through the renewing of ones heart by the Holy Ghost. [Note:
Did the Philippian jailer know and do all this in order to be saved?]
So, to believe in Christ to be saved, I must, among other things, abandon all
self-righteousness and self-confidence and exchange my natural enmity and rebellion
against God for a spirit of grateful submission. Yet, according to the Calvinist,
I can do none of these things unless God first regenerates me! And if He regenerates
me, he also gives me faith in Christ! If I have faith in Christ, I dont
need to be saved! So why is Packer telling me that I must do these things through the renewing of [my] heart by the Holy Ghost? If my heart
is renewed through the Holy Ghost, Ill automatically do those things,
because God has sovereignly changed me. Im saved! I dont need to
be saved!
Packer, no doubt, is aware of his inconsistency and the problem he is creating.
But in an attempt to dig himself out of his inconsistency, he only digs himself
deeper. He continues:
And to the further question still: how am I to go about believing and repenting,
if I have no natural ability to do these things? [Great question!]
It [Calvinism] answers: look to Christ, speak to Christ, cry to Christ, just
as you are [a depraved person who would never and could never look, speak or
cry out to Christ, who cant submit to God, and whom God is obviously not
currently giving His irresistible grace, otherwise you would already be regenerate];
confess your sin, your impenitence, your unbelief, and cast yourself on His
mercy; ask Him to give you a new heart, working in you [what you obviously dont
have yet:] true repentance and firm faith; [Yet all of these things the Calvinist
says it is impossible for you to do as a totally depraved person until you are
regenerated by Gods irresistible grace! And Packer doesnt stop contradicting
his own theology! He continues:] ask Him to take away your evil heart of unbelief
and to write His law within you, that you may never henceforth stray from Him
[How could one who is predestined before time and regenerated by Gods
sovereign choice ever turn away from God?]. Turn [!!!!!] to Him and trust Him
[!!!!] as best you [!!!!!] can [but you cant!], and pray for grace
to turn and trust more thoroughly; use the means of grace expectantly, looking
to Christ to draw near to you as you seek to draw near to Him [Now theres a scripture that emphasizes mans part in salvationJas. 4:8yet
Packer interestingly reverses the order of it and adds the word seek, a pathetic attempt to make Scripture a little more acceptable to his theology,
because he knows that totally depraved people cant draw near
to God]; watch, pray, read and hear Gods Word, worship and commune
with Gods people, and so continue till you know in yourself beyond doubt
that you are indeed a changed being [When did that happen?], a penitent
believer, and the new heart which you desired [Amazing! A totally depraved person
wanted all those things and a new heart before God sovereignly gave it to him
against his will!] has been put within you.
Packers advice to the one who is sincerely seeking salvation repeatedly
contradicts his own theology. In fact, according to his own theology, there
are no unregenerate people sincerely seeking to know how to be saved, because
people are totally depraved and use their freedom only to resist God and do
evil. Packer would have been more consistent with his theology if he had answered
the question, What must I do to be saved? by saying, You cant
be sincere in asking that!
Not only is Packers advice to salvation seekers inconsistent with his
own theology, it is also potentially very dangerous to ones spiritual
health. Let us say that a sincere seeker takes Packers advice and follows
his list of things he must do to find salvation. Let us also say that after
he does all those things that he feels he is saved. On what does his faith
rest? His faith cannot rest on any of Gods promises, because, to the
Calvinist, there is no promise of salvation that any individual may claim, because
it is only Gods will for some to be saved, and the names of those people
are not listed in the Bible. Thus the only real basis for his faith can be what
he has done and is doing. His faith thus rests in his works, not in Christ,
something Scripture repeatedly warns against.
The non-Calvinist, in contrast, can take Jesus at His word, who said, For
God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes
in Him should not perish, but have eternal life (John 3:16). He can cry
out in faith, Lord Jesus, I believe in You, and so according to your promise
to everyone (that includes me), I have eternal life by faith! His works
will immediately validate his faith in Christ. While the non-Calvinist believer
is rejoicing in the gift of His salvation and manifesting the Spirits fruit,
the Calvinist is still wondering if he is one of the chosen ones, and is looking
at his works to try to convince himself that he is.
God Opens Hearts
Rather than allowing scripture to balance scripture, Calvinists consistently
focus on scriptures that emphasize Gods part in salvation and consistently
ignore those that focus on mans part. They thus conclude that salvation
is all the work of God and that man has no responsibility in the matter. For
example, Piper points to Acts 16:14, where we read about Lydia listening to
the preaching of Paul: And a certain woman named Lydia, from the city
of Thyatira, a seller of purple fabrics, a worshiper of God, was listening;
and the Lord opened her heart to respond to the things spoken by Paul.
See! the Calvinist exclaims. God opened Lydias
heart! That is just another way of saying that God showed Lydia His irresistible
grace!
Because such an interpretation stands in absolute contradiction to what thousands
of scriptures say about God and salvation, the one who wants to harmonize Acts
16:14 with the rest of the Bible comes up with a better interpretation: Luke
is simply emphasizing Gods part in salvation. God succeeded in doing to
Lydias heart what He desires to do in everyones heart. The reason
He succeeded in Lydias heart is because she, unlike some others,
first submitted to listen to Pauls preaching, and then yielded to the
Holy Spirits conviction and drawing. Lydia (the supposedly totally-depraved
worshiper of God) believed. Over the years, Ive watched numerous
people open the hearts of even their adversaries by various means,
but I never thought that they did it without their adversaries consent!
In the very same chapter in Acts, Luke clearly reveals that man has a
part to play in his salvation. When the Philippian jailer asked what he must
do to be saved (see Acts 16:30), Paul didnt respond, You cant do anything! You may only be saved if it is Gods preordained
will, and if it is, He will show you His irresistible grace and you will be
regenerated and given faith! Rather, Paul told the jailer, Believe [something you must do] in the Lord Jesus, and you shall be saved, you
and your household (Acts 16:31).
Paul could make this promise to the jailer and his entire household, because
Paul knew that salvation was open to anyone who would believe in the Lord Jesus.
Paul then spoke the word of the Lord to him together with all who were
in his house (Acts 16:32), because faith comes by hearing (Rom 10:17). They all believed, were saved and received baptism.
Here is how a Calvinist must understand the salvation of the Philippian jailer:
When the jailer asked what he must do to be saved, he was obviously not yet
under the influence of Gods irresistible grace, or else he would already
have been regenerate and would have already received the sovereign gifts of
faith and repentance. Thus he was still totally depraved, always using his freedom
to resist God. (That being so, we must wonder why a totally depraved person
is sincerely asking what he must do to be saved. If the Calvinist says it is
because this totally depraved person is under conviction from God, it must be
that God is bestowing resistible grace rather than irresistible
grace. Yet the totally depraved sinner, according to Piper, will always
use his freedom to resist God, so he would never sincerely seek to be saved.
This jailer, however, was obviously sincerely seeking.)
When Paul told the jailer to believe in the Lord Jesus and he would be saved
along with his household, Paul didnt know if the jailer was predestined
to be saved or not, and so he must have been thinking to himself, I hope
this guy is one of the predestined ones and that God is just about to bestow
His irresistible grace upon him, because what Ive just told him to do
is absolutely impossible for him to do. Ive actually deceived him, giving
him a false hope if hes not predestined to be saved. I also hope that
all the members of his household are predestined to be saved and that God is
about to bestow His irresistible grace on them as well, otherwise Ive
deceived the jailer about them also. Perhaps I should have just told him the
truth about his total depravity and Gods irresistible grace. How
could any consistent and thoughtful Calvinist tell people that they will be
saved if they believe in the Lord Jesus without having such thoughts go through
his mind?
The book of Acts is full of indications that man plays a part in his salvation
(e.g., Acts 2:37-41; 3:19-26; 7:51; 8:6-14, 22-23, 36-37; 9:35, 42; 10:34-35,
43; 11:21; 13:8-13, 38-41, 46-47; 14:1, 15:19; 16:30-34; 17:2-4, 11-12, 17,
30-31; 18:4-8, 19, 27-28; 19:8-9, 18; 20:21, 22:18, 26:17-20, 28:23-24). It
is also full of indications that God is very active in trying to get
people to respond to His love. Thus, once again, we see the primary error of
the Calvinists. They focus on those scriptures that seem to support their doctrines,
and ignore those that stand in direct contradiction, thus failing to harmonize
scripture with scripture.
An example: Because Acts 2:47 says, The Lord was adding to their number
day by day those who were being saved, should we rightly conclude, from
that single verse, that God is the only one who plays a part in the salvation
of people and that man plays no part because that verse only speaks of God doing
something? Or could we rightly conclude that no one repented or believed
the gospel, because that single verse doesnt say anyone did
those things? Could we rightly conclude that no one preached the gospel
to those the Lord added to the church, because that one verse says nothing about anyone preaching? No intelligent Calvinist would make such conclusions!
Yet that is precisely what Calvinists are doing with verses such as Acts 16:14,
where we read that the Lord opened Lydias heart. Searching for the needle
in the haystack, they are pricked by something sharp, and thus conclude the
whole stack is not hay, but needles.
Satan Blinds the Minds of Unbelievers
Piper also cites 2 Corinthians 4:3-6 to support the Calvinistic idea of Gods
irresistible grace. There Paul writes,
And even if our gospel is veiled, it is veiled to those who are perishing, in
whose case the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelieving, that
they might not see the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the
image of God. For we do not preach ourselves but Christ Jesus as Lord, and ourselves
as your bond-servants for Jesus sake. For God, who said, Light shall
shine out of darkness, is the One who has shone in our hearts to give
the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ.
Does this passage prove
that God only shines His light into the darkened hearts of certain ones whom
He shows His irresistible grace? No, it does not, except to one who has a preconceived
bias and is looking for verses to support his bias. This passage highlights
Satans part in keeping people in his clutches and Gods part in releasing
them from Satans clutches. It does not emphasize mans part in that
process of being freed from Satan. This passage is not everything the Bible
has to say on the subject of salvation!
Certainly no Calvinist would conclude from this passage that the only reason unregenerate people perish is because Satan blinds them through no fault
of their own! Rather, the Calvinist would be quick to say that there is more
to it than thatthethat-the unsaved man is totally depraved and always
uses his freedom to resist God. Thus, this passage doesnt explain everything
about why man is sinful, and neither does it explain everything about
how man is freed from his sins. Rather, this passage focuses on Satans
influence and Gods influence on unregenerate man. Gods truth can
break through Satans lies that are believed in the hearts of unregenerate
man.
I would also maintain that something of mans responsibility is implied
in this passage, as Paul refers to the perishing as the unbelieving.
Unbelieving people are people who dont believe, and believing is something
that Scripture repeatedly says is mans responsibility. In fact, everybody,
regenerate and unregenerate, believes. The unregenerate believe Satans
lies and can thus be said to be blinded by Satan, and the regenerate believe
Gods truth and are thus no longer blinded by Satan. Additionally, scores
of scriptures, such as the most well known verse in the BibleJohn 3:16,
tell us that the reason people perish is because they dont believe.
Second, Paul refers to Satan as the god of this world. Satan is
the god of this world because he is the one whom the world has chosen
to serve. But when they (to borrow Jesus exact words) turn
from
the dominion of Satan to God ( Acts 26:18), Jesus then becomes their Lord
and Satan is no longer their Master. God frees them from Satans power.
2 Corinthians 4:6 does not prove that God sovereignly shines His light into
the hearts of those He has pre-selected for salvation, and that He does not
shine it into the hearts of those He has pre-selected for damnation. It simply
says that God has shone His light into our hearts, contrasting that with Satan
who had previously blinded our minds with his lies. To extract the Calvinistic
concept of irresistible grace from this particular passage is to force more
meaning into the passage than is actually there, and to pry out an interpretation
that doesnt harmonize with the rest of Scripture. Moreover, if God sovereignly
preordains who will and who will not be saved, this passage creates more problems
for Calvinists than they want to handle. The reason is because they can only
then conclude that God is the true force behind Satanic deception that blinds
unbelievers, and that Satan is not the enemy of God but actually His obedient
helper.
Does the New Birth Precede Faith?
Piper connects irresistible grace with the new birth on page 11 of his booklet,
and states that God sovereignly regenerates us, which results in our having
faith. The only scriptural support he offers for this view is 1 John 5:1, which
he quotes from the Revised Standard Version: Every one who believes
that Jesus is the Christ has been born of God. Pipers argument is
that Johns words, has been, indicate that faith in Jesus is
the evidence that one has been, prior to his having faith, born
again.
This is pathetic exegesis. John is not revealing that the new birth precedes
faith, but is simply describing one result of faith in Jesus.
Johns clear purpose in writing this verse was not to establish the order
of the process of salvation, but to state one of the main points of the theme
of his entire first epistle, which is the evidence of the true Christian.
John repeatedly lists three tests that one must pass in order to validate his
authentic relationship with God: (1) he must love the brethren, (2) he must
keep Christs commandments, and (3) he must believe that Jesus is the Christ.
In the verse under consideration (1 John 5:1), John touches on the third test,
just as he does in other places in his epistle (see 1 John 2:18-27; 4:1-6, 14-15;
5:5, 10, 13).
Clearly, John did not believe that regeneration precedes faith. He wrote at
the close of his Gospel: But these have been written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing you may have
life in His name (John 20:31, emphasis added). Neither did Jesus believe
that regeneration preceded faith: While you have the light, believe in the light, in order that you may become sons of light
(John 12:36, emphasis added). Neither did Paul: For you are all sons of
God through faith in Christ Jesus (Gal. 3:26, emphasis added).
Incidentally, the NASB translation of 1 John 5:1 does not contain the past tense
upon which Pipers interpretation rests: Whoever believes that Jesus
is the Christ is [not has been] born of God. Pipers
interpretation of 1 John 5:1 is another imaginary needle in the haystack.
On this same subject, Piper attempts to explain away the obvious contradiction
between his doctrine of the new birth preceding faith and John 1:12-13, which
states, But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become
children of God, even to those who believe in His name, who were born not of
blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.
Reading these words without a Calvinistic lens, any normal reader would think
they meant that anyone could receive Christ by believing in His name, and as
many as do, God gives them the right to become His children. (Thus, believing
in Christ comes before regeneration.) This regeneration is not a physical birth,
and it doesnt happen because man willed it, but because God wills it.
Obviously, no person could cause himself to be spiritually reborn. But God will
regenerate anyone who believes in Jesus and make that person His child.
In his explanation of these two verses, Piper contradicts himself as well as
John when he writes: In other words, it is necessary to receive Christ
[note his next words] in order to become a child of God [that means one
receives Christ before he becomes a child of God, and receiving Christ
is a condition that must first be met], but the birth that brings one into the
family of God is not possible by the will of man. Man is dead in trespasses
and sins. He cannot make himself new, or create new life in himself. He must
be born of God. Then, with the new nature of God, he immediately receives
Christ (emphasis added). This directly contradicts what Piper has
just said a few sentences ago, and what John actually wrote.
In conclusion, under the scrutiny of Scripture, the Calvinistic ideas of total
depravity and irresistible grace are found to add to and contradict the revelation
found in the Bible. These particular Calvinistic doctrines nullify Scriptures
clear teaching regarding mans free will and his responsibility to respond
to the gospel and cooperate with God. They make human beings into robots who
are incapable of making moral choices and who have no capacity to love. They
make Christians to be people whom God forced against their wills to become His
children. They make the preaching of the gospel senseless, and make liars out
of all gospel preachers who lead people to believe that they have a choice to
make. They make meaningless Christs and His apostles appeals to
repent and the hundreds of scriptures that state that people have the ability
to do so. They make God an unjust judge who condemns people for doing what they
are incapable of not doing. They also make Him into a confused mad man who works
against Himself yet cooperates with Satan, and a hate-filled hypocrite who condemns
others for what He is guilty of Himself. Moreover, they make Him responsible
for the damnation of billions and ultimately responsible for all the suffering
in the world, since only He can stop sin but He chooses not to regenerate billions
of sinners.
Finally, Calvinists are not able to live consistently with their own doctrine,
as they preach a deceptive Arminian gospel if they preach any gospel at all.
They must lie (according to their beliefs of what the truth is) to anyone who
asks them, What must I do to be saved? as J. I. Packers advice to
sincere seekers revealed. All of this is done at the expense of Scripture, upon
which they force their interpretations and twist, to the end that millions of
people are currently deceived by their doctrine. How many people have given
up hope of salvation because of Calvinistic teaching, thinking that they are
not among the elect since they have felt no irresistible grace? Dear Calvinist,
the blood of such people is on your hands.
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