2.
Calvinism's Unconditional Election

So far weve covered the T and the I of the TULIP acronym.
Now we will proceed with the U, which stands for Unconditional Election. This
Calvinistic doctrine states that God, in eternity past, chose certain individuals
for salvation. This election was not based on any merit of those chosen, and
not due to anything God foreknew about them. The Calvinist points to the many
scriptures that use words such as chosen, elected, and predestined to make his point.
No reasonable person would argue that the Bible doesnt say that Christians
have been chosen, elected or predestined by God. The debate between Calvinists
and non-Calvinists is what those terms specifically mean. Calvinists argue that
Gods election is unconditional, while non-Calvinists argue that
election is conditional. Calvinists sometimes respond by saying that
the term, conditional election, is an oxymoron and that non-Calvinists
force a meaning upon the term election. Yet every election ever
known to man has been conditional. We elect, or choose, a spouse based on criteria
we have established. We elect politicians based on their voting records and
promises. We elect, or choose, jobs based on benefits we will receive. Why then
must the term conditional election be an oxymoron? When people use
the word election in speaking of any subject other than theology,
they are always speaking of a conditional election. Who has ever heard of any
unconditional election outside of Calvinistic theology? Thus the
phrase unconditional election is much more of an oxymoron.
Non-Calvinists maintain that before the foundation of the world, God elected
to save those, and only those, who believe. Thus our election is conditioned
upon our faith. Those who believe make up the group of people whom the Bible
refers to as the elect or chosen of God. And because God is all
knowing, He foreknew those who would believe. We have been, as Peter writes, chosen according to the foreknowledge of God (1 Pet. 1:1-2,
emphasis added). This view is the only one that is consistent with all of Scripture,
as we will soon see.
The Calvinist, who believes in mans total depravity and Gods irresistible
grace, has no choice but to believe in Gods supposed unconditional election.
His foundational theology leaves him no other alternative, and that is why Calvinists
often begin, like John Piper, citing those two foundations as they begin to
defend their concept of unconditional election (see Piper, p. 19, par. 1). If
man is totally depraved and unable to repent, and salvation is all the work
of God and none of man, then those who are saved must be so only because of
Gods choosing them. There is, however, no need for me to respond to this
typical initial argument, since weve found that the two foundational assumptions
are fatally flawed. God doesnt save people by bestowing on them irresistible
grace, and no saved person was ever totally depraved by the Calvinistic definition.
Obviously, the idea of God predestining some to salvation means that He also
predestined some to eternal damnation, what is called reprobation. Calvin
wrote in his Institutes,
All men are not created for the same end; but some are fore-ordained to eternal
life, others to eternal damnation. So according as every man was created for
the one end or the other, we say, he was elected, that is, predestined to life,
or reprobated, that is, predestined to damnation (Calv. Inst., book 3,
chapter 21, section 1).
Some Calvinists who assert election foolishly deny reprobation, but there is
no escape from the fact that it is impossible to hold one without holding the
other. People who are not chosen to be saved are chosen to be damned. Calvin
himself asserts this undeniable fact:
Many indeed (thinking to excuse God) own election, and yet deny reprobation;
but this is quite silly and childish. For without reprobation, election itself
cannot stand; whom God passes by, those he reprobates. It is one and the same
thing (Calv. Inst., book 3, chapter 23, section 1).
Calvin was absolutely right on this point. Without reprobation, election
itself cannot stand. Make no mistake about this: God wants certain people
to go to hell, otherwise He would have predestined them to go to heaven and
bestowed upon them His irresistible grace. And this is what makes
the doctrine of unconditional election so repugnant to lovers of God, for it
makes their God into a monster who creates people for the express purpose of
tormenting them eternally in hell. From before the time they were born, they
were doomed, with no hope of escaping eternal fires. It would have been better
if such people had never been born. And some Calvinists say that this actually
glorifies God.
Dear Calvinist, what would you say if you discovered that people were saying
of you and your newly-wedded spouse, I hear they are planning on having
six children, five of whom they plan to cruelly torture all their lives, and
one of whom they plan to treat kindly? Would you not be greatly offended
that anyone would even entertain such an awful rumor? Yet that is what you are
saying about God! You nullify His great attributes of love and justice with
your doctrine!
How is it possible to reconcile unconditional election/damnation with the scores
of scriptures that clearly state that God desires for all to be saved?
Here is just a small sampling:
Go therefore to the main highways, and as many as you find there, invite to the wedding feast (Matt. 22:9, emphasis added).
And [Jesus] said to them, Go into all the world and preach the
gospel to all creation (Mark 16:15, emphasis added).
I say these things that you [those who persecuted Him and wanted
to kill Him; see John 5:16-18] may be saved (John 5:34, emphasis added).
[And why were they not saved? Jesus explains in 5:40:] And you
are unwilling to come to Me, that you may have life (emphasis
added).
And [God] made from one, every nation of mankind to live on all the face
of the earth, having determined their appointed times, and the boundaries of
their habitation, that they should seek God, if perhaps they might grope for
Him and find Him, though He is not far from each one of us (Acts 17:26-27).
Therefore having overlooked the times of ignorance, God is now declaring
to men that all everywhere should repent (Acts 17:30, emphasis added).
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. For there is
one God, and one mediator also between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who
gave Himself as a ransom for all, the testimony borne at the proper time
(1 Tim. 2:3-6, emphasis added).
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).
And we have beheld and bear witness that the Father has sent the Son to be the
Savior of the world (1 John 4:14, emphasis added).
Anyone who believes these scriptures at face value must abandon the idea of
unconditional election/damnation.
How is it possible to reconcile the idea of unconditional election with Gods
many universal invitations to salvation? How could He be considered anything
less than a cruel deceiver if He invites people to receive His gift when He
Himself has sovereignly decreed that they shall never receive it? What would
we think of someone who holds a rope thirty feet above a man at the bottom of
well and pleads with him to take hold of it so he can pull him out? We would
think the rope-holder was deranged at best and a cruel demon at worst. Consider
the following utterances from the lips of Gods Son; if God has unconditionally
elected some to salvation and the rest to damnation, could Christ have been
sincere in saying the following?
Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give
you rest (Matt. 11:28, emphasis added).
And He was saying to them all, If anyone wishes to come
after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow Me (Luke 9:23, emphasis added).
For whoever wishes to save his life shall lose it; but whoever loses his life for My sake shall find it (Matt. 16:25, emphasis added).
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. For
God did not send the Son into the world to judge the world, but that the
world should be saved through Him (John 3:16-17, emphasis added).
And if anyone hears My sayings, and does not keep them, I do not judge him;
for I did not come to judge the world, but to save the world (John 12:47,
emphasis added).
If God has unalterably decreed some to salvation and the rest to damnation,
then all the above scriptures are very misleading and Christ is a deceiver.
Moreover, why does God plead with people to repent if they are incapable of
doing so by His sovereign decree? Read the following small sampling of scriptures
below and ask how they can possibly be reconciled with unconditional election/damnation
without making God insincere at best and a cruel deceiver at worst:
Oh that they had such a heart in them, that they would fear Me, and keep all
My commandments always, that it may be well with them and with their sons forever!
(Deut. 5:29).
But My people did not listen to My voice; and Israel did not obey Me. So I gave
them over to the stubbornness of their heart, to walk in their own devices.
Oh that My people would listen to Me, that Israel would walk in My ways! I would
quickly subdue their enemies, and turn My hand against their adversaries (Ps.
18:11-14).
Say to them, As I live! declares the Lord God, I take no pleasure
in the death of the wicked, but rather that the wicked turn from his way and
live. Turn back, turn back from your evil ways! Why then will you die, O house
of Israel? (Ezek. 33:11)
Hundreds of scriptures like these could be cited. Why would God lament that
His people would not change their hearts and plead with them to do so if they
were unable to do so by His own sovereign decree? If that were actually the
case, God is a fool. (Neither must He understand, as Calvinists do, that people
are totally depraved and are incapable of turning from sin.)
How is it possible to reconcile the ideas of unconditional election and damnation
with the many scriptures that declare that Jesus came to save all by dying for
all, atoning for everyones sins, even those who ultimately perish in hell?
Scripture says,
All of us like sheep have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way;
but the Lord has caused the iniquity of us all to fall on Him (Is. 53:6,
emphasis added).
For the Son of Man has come to save that which was lost (Matt. 18:11,
emphasis added)
The next day he saw Jesus coming to him, and said, Behold, the Lamb of
God who takes away the sin of the world! (John 1:29, emphasis added).
For God did not send the Son into the world to judge the world, but that the
world should be saved through Him (John 3:17, emphasis added).
I did not come to judge the world, but to save the world (John 12:47,
emphasis added).
For God has shut up all in disobedience that He might show mercy to all (Rom. 11:32, emphasis added).
For the love of Christ controls us, having concluded this, that one died for
all, therefore all died; and He died for all, that they
who live should no longer live for themselves, but for Him who died and rose
again on their behalf (2 Cor. 5:14-15, emphasis added).
For there is one God, and one mediator also between God and men, the man Christ
Jesus, who gave Himself as a ransom for all, the testimony borne at the
proper time (1 Tim. 2:5-6, emphasis added).
For the grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation to all men (Tit.
2:11, emphasis added)
But we do see Him who has been made for a little while lower than the angels,
namely, Jesus, because of the suffering of death crowned with glory and honor,
that by the grace of God He might taste death for everyone (Heb. 2:9,
emphasis added).
But false prophets also arose among the people, just as there will also be false
teachers among you, who will secretly introduce destructive heresies, even denying
the Master who bought them, bringing swift destruction upon themselves (2
Pet. 2:1, emphasis added).
He Himself is the propitiation for our sins; and not for ours only, but also
for those of the whole world (1 John 2:2, emphasis added).
In the last two scriptures quoted, we plainly see that Jesus paid for the sins
of those who are not saved, including even false prophets.
How can the idea of unconditional election/damnation be reconciled with Gods
perfect justice? Even a child knows that such an idea holds intrinsic unfairness.
Shall not the Judge of all the earth deal justly?(Gen. 18:25).
How will God judge the world in justice if unconditional election/damnation
is true? When He says to the goats on His left, Depart from Me, accursed
ones, into the eternal fire which has been prepared for the devil and his angels;
for I was hungry, and you gave Me nothing to eat; I was thirsty, and you gave
Me nothing to drink and so on, might they not rightly say, But we
could not help but sin, because You created us totally depraved, and because
we were not among the elect, You never did bestow upon us Your irresistible
grace! We never had a chance to be saved, because our damnation You predestined
before we were born! How can you righteously condemn us?
Will God condemn them for what it was impossible for them not to do? Will He
punish them everlastingly for not escaping what they could not escape? He might
as justly punish people because their hearts beat within them! So do Calvinists
nullify Gods justice by elevating His sovereignty to unbiblical proportions.
How can the idea of unconditional election/damnation be reconciled with the
many scriptures that speak of Gods love? We are told in Scripture that
God is love (1 John 4:8) and that He is kind to ungrateful
and evil men (Luke 6:35). The Lord is good to all: and his tender
mercies are over all his works (Ps. 145:9). How could it be said that
God is good to those whom He creates and predestines to damnation?
Calvinists often speak of a common grace that is enjoyed by all,
contrasting it with saving grace that is extended only to those
who are predestined to salvation. In His common grace, they say, everyone experiences
Gods goodness and love, even those not predestined to salvation, in that
they enjoy His goodness to them while on earth. He supplies them with food,
covering, pleasures, and so on, all temporal manifestations of His kindness.
I would beg to differ however, that such common grace can rightfully
be considered an _expression of Gods love towards one who is predestined
to be damned. In light of what he must suffer for eternity, it would have been
better for him to never have been born! At the price he must pay for his temporal,
earthly blessings, every such blessing is really a curse. Every
kindness from God that he enjoys on earth will cost him millions of years of
hellish agony. During his life he is only being fattened for the slaughter that
awaits him, and better if he had been born an animal to be slaughtered!
Perhaps the kindest thing God did for him while he was on earth
was to hide from him his unalterable destiny. This kind of love
is enough to make ones blood run cold. What sentence would any earthly
judge bestow upon a person who displayed such love?
Pipers Argument
In his explanation of unconditional election, Piper ignores this vast wealth
of scriptural argument that contradicts his doctrine, and once again goes on
a search for needles in the haystack. He thinks he finds one in Acts 13:48: And when the Gentiles [in Pisidian Antioch] heard this [that they could
be saved], they began rejoicing and glorifying the word of the Lord; and as
many as had been appointed to eternal life believed (emphasis added).
This particular verse is certainly not found in the context of any theological
explanation of predestination. If one concludes from this one verse that God
appoints certain people to eternal life (and thus appoints others to eternal
damnation), then one must exalt this verse to the point of nullifying hundreds
of other scriptures that would stand in contradiction to it. That would hardly
be wise. We should, therefore, adopt an interpretation of this phrase that will
make it harmonize with the rest of Scripture rather than contradict it.
I have already shown that, before time, God chose to give eternal life to all
who would believe, thus all believers are members of the chosen group. They
are appointed to eternal life before time because of Gods foreknowledge
of their faith. Lukes phrase, as many as had been appointed to eternal
life believed, does not prove that a prior unconditional election was
the cause of faith in those Gentiles. If I said, As many as I appointed
to wash dishes, washed dishes, does that prove that the only reason
certain people washed dishes is because I previously appointed them, and thus
their own free will had nothing to do with the fact that they washed dishes?
May I not have appointed them to wash dishes because of some prior knowledge
I possessed about their ability to wash dishes?
Pipers error is that he again uses a biblical phrase that is simply meant
to be descriptive to try to prove a cause of salvation, and in so doing, he
arrives at a conclusion that contradicts what Scripture plainly teaches is the
cause of salvation.
A second possible interpretation is as follows: Note that Piper assigns an interpretation
of this phrase based on an assumption, telling us, Some believed while
others did not (p. 19, par. 4).
This is not at all what Acts 13:48 says. Scripture only says that as many
as had been appointed to eternal life believed. That doesnt necessarily
mean that some believed while others did not. If I said, As many children
who raised their hands were given lollipops, I probably mean that every
child present received a lollipop.
Because Jesus died for every Gentile and wants every Gentile to
be saved, it can be rightly said that God has appointed every Gentile to eternal
life. Luke may have simply been reporting that all the Gentiles who had gathered
to listen to Paul believed the gospel.
Another Needle
As Piper continues looking for needles in the haystack to support his view,
he again resorts to assigning to a single verse an interpretation that fits
his doctrine. John 10:26 says, But you do not believe, because you are
not of My sheep. Piper explains that Jesus didnt say, You
are not my sheep because you do not believe, but rather, You do
not believe because you are not of My sheep. Thus, the reason these particular
people didnt believe is because God didnt sovereignly choose them
first, thus determining that they would be among His sheep. Being a sheep
is something that God decides for us before we believe, says Piper (p.
19, par. 5).
Again, Piper makes the error of trying to derive an order in the process of
salvation from a verse that is metaphorical and merely meant to be descriptive.
If a shepherd says about certain sheep that are grazing among his own flock, These ones are not white, because they are not of my sheep, does
that prove that the wool of his sheep was black before he obtained them, and
then became white after they became his sheep? Is the shepherd declaring
that the sole reason that his sheep have white wool is because they are
his sheep? No, the only real conclusion one can draw from such a statement is
that the shepherd only has sheep with white wool in his flock. Likewise, Jesus
was simply describing His true sheep among the bigger flock. His
sheep believe. Those who are not of His flock dont believe. He was not
establishing an order in the process of salvation.
I wonder why Piper doesnt quote the two verses that follow John 10:26
in order to be certain his interpretation fits the context. There we continue
reading, My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me;
and I give eternal life to them, and they shall never perish; and no one shall
snatch them out of My hand (John 10:27-28).
Here Jesus continues to describe His relationship with His sheep. He mentions
things that they do and things that He does for them. Not only do they believe
in Him, but they also hear his voice (because they are near and attentive),
and they follow Him (because they have obediently submitted to Him). True Christians
believe in, listen to, and obey Jesus. Jesus, like any good shepherd, knows
which sheep are His. He gives them eternal life, promises that they wont
perish, and also guarantees that they wont be stolen. Clearly we see this
is a two-sided relationship, both sides having responsibility.
How would we fare if we used Piper's means of interpreting John 10:26 to interpret
Jesus' words regarding a just-converted prostitute, recorded in Luke 7:47?:
For this reason I say to you, her sins, which are many, have been forgiven,
for [because] she loved much; but he who is forgiven little, loves little."
Was Jesus teaching that the reason this prositute's many sins were forgiven
was because she first, prior to being forgiven, "loved much"? Or was
Jesus simply describing people who have been forgiven much, identifying them
as being people who love God much? The answer is obvious. Thus we should be
extremely careful in deriving an order of the process of salvation from John
10:26, grasping for a cause and effect relationship in a statement that was
only meant to describe true believers.
Romans 9
Piper next takes us to Romans 9, a favorite of Calvinists, because when certain
verses there are detached from their context, they seem to support the Calvinistic
idea of the unconditional election of certain individuals. This is exactly what
Piper does, citing several of those verses (9:11-12, 15-16). When such verses
are interpreted within the context of the entire book of Romans, however, it
becomes obvious that the Calvinistic interpretation of them stands in direct
contradiction to the entire letter itself, not to mention the rest of the Bible.
So let us take a closer look at the whole book of Romans. I will focus
on those passages that help prepare us to better understand Pauls points
in Romans 9, as well as the many passages that clearly contradict Calvinistic
doctrine.
The book of Romans stands out in the New Testament as the most lengthy and detailed
defense of the gospel. Paul, the author, defends his divinely-given message
that salvation was being withheld from unbelieving Jews (even though they were
chosen by God, descendants of Israel, circumcised, and took pride in Gods
Law) and was being freely granted to believing Gentiles. Such teaching many
Jews naturally abhorred and rejected, and so throughout his letter, Paul addressed
their various objections. This is obvious to even the casual reader, so I will
not take time to enumerate the many evidences of this fact.
Two Pillars of the Gospel
Once his introduction is behind him, Paul continues chapter 1 by focusing on
two foundational pillars upon which his gospel is builtthe
truths of humanitys sinfulness and Gods wrath. It is here that we
begin to see contradictions to the Calvinistic interpretation of certain verses
in Romans 9.
Paul first describes how Gods wrath is revealed by His judgment upon sinners
who are without excuse before God (see 1:18-23). In fact, Paul plainly declares
that peoples ever-increasing depravity and slavery to sin is an indication
of Gods judgment upon them. In the space of just a few sentences, he mentions
three times how God gives sinners over, specifically to impurity, degrading passions and to a depraved mind (see 1:24,
26, 28). There is no mistaking Paul: God judges rebels by giving them over to
depravity.
In this way, God can be said to be righteously hardening rebels. I suspect that
Paul had more in mind than here than just illuminating his readers about one
aspect of Gods wrath. If he can procure his Jewish readers early
acceptance of the fact that God righteously hardens Gentile rebels, perhaps
they will more easily accept his teaching later on in his letter that God also
righteously hardens Jews who reject His Messiah.
Note also that Pauls declarations of mans corruption clearly stand
in contradiction to the Calvinistic ideas of total depravity and irresistible
grace, as God only gives over to depravity those who have first,
by their own choice, decided to resist Him and continually yield to sin. Before He gives them over, they suppress[ed] the truth (1:18), they did not honor God or give thanks (1:21), they
exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God
for an image in the form of corruptible man and of birds and four-footed animals
and crawling creatures (1:22-23), they exchanged the truth
of God for a lie (1:25), and they did not see fit to acknowledge
God any longer (1:28, emphases added). Paul thus says, Therefore God gave them over
to impurity
.to degrading passions
.to a
depraved mind (1:24, 26, 28, emphasis added). These depraved people practice
homosexuality as well as many other vices that Paul lists in 1:27-32. Note again
that God gave them over after they, having had ample opportunity
to repent and also being without excuse, decided themselves to continue in their
rebellion.
So, although all people are born with a propensity to sin inherited from Adam,
they are not born depraved. God judges those who persist in the
path of sin by giving them over to depravity. Yet even such depraved
sinners are not so depraved that they cannot repent with Gods gracious
help while He extends His kindness during their lifetimes (see 2:4). Clearly,
Paul was not in agreement with the Calvinistic concept of total depravity, and
consequently, neither could he be in agreement with the Calvinistic concept
of irresistible grace.
Chapter 2
Through the end of chapter 1, Jewish readers of Pauls letter may have
been saying Amen. Surely Paul was only writing about the depraved
Gentiles. But the tables begin to turn on any self-righteous Jew in chapter
2. There Paul unmasks the hypocrite who passes judgment on others who sin. Any
person who condemns another for wrongdoing testifies before heavens court
that he knows there is such a thing as right and wrong. Thus, when he does wrong,
he stands self-condemned, without excuse before God. Paul points out that people
are guilty of condemning others for sins that they themselves practice (see
2:1). What person, for example, who condemns another person for lying, has never
lied himself?
Paul goes on to say that everyone knows that Gods judgment rightly falls upon such people (see 2:2). That is, we all know that such people deserve
to be punished, and they would be utterly foolish to think that they will escape
Gods punishment when they practice sins for which they condemn others.
The only thing that keeps them from being immediately punished is Gods
merciful kindness, which He shows them in hopes of it leading them to repent
(see 2:4). But if they dont repent, they will inevitably face Gods
wrath, which they have been storing up for themselves as they enjoyed Gods
kindness all their lives (see 2:5).
Pauls words here are, of course, also contrary to the Calvinistic ideas
of total depravity, irresistible grace, and unconditional election. Obviously,
Paul believed that God has patience with corrupt people who can repent and whom
He wants to repent, yet who never do repent, ultimately receiving the full dose
of His wrath. Thus, no one is so totally depraved that he cannot repent, and
thus neither is irresistible grace necessary. Moreover, saved people
are not those who are unconditionally elected, but those who by their own choice
repent while God is showing them mercy.
Paul goes on to state that because God is perfectly fair, He will one
day render to every man according to his deeds (2:6), which no Jew
could debate because Paul was quoting Scripture. God will give immortality,
eternal life, glory, honor and peace to everyone who perseveres in doing good
and who seeks for glory and honor from God. Those who do evil, who are selfishly
ambitious and do not obey God, however, will face His wrath and indignation
and suffer tribulation and distress (see 2:7-10).
No Jewish reader could at this point rightly accuse Paul of eliminating the
necessity of holiness in order for one to ultimately receive eternal life. Some
Jews who opposed Pauls gospel believed that obedience to God was very
important, because one earned eternal life by keeping the Law. Pauls message
was different in this respecthe believed that no one could keep the Law
who is a slave of sin. One who believes the gospel, however, is supernaturally
set free from sin and can keep Gods commandments by the power of the indwelling
Spirit. Thus, the Law is not nullified by faith as some of Pauls opponents
might argue. Rather, as Paul would later declare, through faith
.we
establish the Law (Rom. 3:31).
The fates of eternal life to the righteous and eternal torment to sinners are
the fates of Jews as well as Gentiles (see 2:9-10). The reason is because, as
Paul says, there is no partiality with God (Rom. 2:11). He is perfectly
fair. Clearly, this point also stands in direct contradiction to the Calvinistic
idea of unconditional election, which completely voids Gods impartiality.
The God of the Calvinists has favoritesthose whom He elects for salvation
before the foundation of the world.
Paul expands the concept of Gods impartiality to Jews and Gentiles in
2:12-16. God gave the Law only to the Jews, and so He will judge them by the
standard of the Law. Paul adds what no Jew can argue againstjust because
they are hearers of the Law doesnt make them righteous in Gods sight.
It is the doers of the Law who will be justified.
Likewise, God didnt give the Law of Moses to the Gentiles, so He will
not judge them by that standard. God did, however, give them all consciences
that condemn them when they do what is wrong and commend them when they do what
is right. They will be held accountable to that law in their hearts.
Paul next challenges his Jewish opponents to logically apply to themselves what
he has just said. He exposes the common Jew who knows Gods Law, boasts
in it, and teaches it to others, but who transgresses it himself, and asks him
to compare himself to an uncircumcised Gentile who instinctively obeys the Law
by following his divinely-given conscience. Such upright Gentiles can rightfully
condemn such hypocritical Jews. By his example, Paul exposes the absurdity of
the common Jewish belief that their being circumcised somehow made them right
before God. He even goes so far as to say that in such a case, God would consider
such a hypocritical Jew to be uncircumcised, and such an upright Gentile to
be circumcised. The reason is because true circumcision is of the heart. Paul
writes, For he is not a Jew who is one outwardly; neither is circumcision
that which is outward in the flesh. But he is a Jew who is one inwardly; and
circumcision is that which is of the heart, by the Spirit, not by the letter;
and his praise is not from men, but from God (2:28-29). A true Jew has
had his heart changed by the Spirit and pleases God by his heart obedience.
Within the second chapter, Paul has been setting up his Jewish opponents so
they wont be able to logically argue against his doctrine that God is
freely granting salvation to believing Gentiles while rejecting unbelieving
Jews. If Jews can be justified by obeying the Law that God gave them, then certainly
Gentiles can be justified by obeying the consciences that God gave them. If
not, then God would be unfair, and this the Jews had to acknowledge. Now they
are set up for the next point of Pauls argument.
As Paul will next explain in chapter 3, Jews and Gentiles are both under
sin (3:9), both stand equally condemned before God, and thus neither can
obtain salvation by obedience to Gods law. Thus, if either are to be saved,
it must be by another way, and if God offers that way to Jews, He must in fairness
also offer it to Gentiles. That way, of course, is the way of faith. Thus God
can righteously reject unbelieving Jews and righteously accept believing Gentiles,
just as much as He can righteously reject unbelieving Gentiles and righteously
accept believing Jews. If this is not true, then God is partial, which stands
against what Scripture teaches.
Chapter 3
From the start of chapter 3, Paul anticipates an inevitable Jewish objection
to what he has just written about uncircumcised Gentiles being accepted by God
while circumcised Jews are rejected by Him: Then what advantage has the
Jew? Or what is the benefit of circumcision? (Rom. 3:1).
Paul responds by saying that Jews are greatly advantaged because they were entrusted
with the oracles of God (3:2). That is, they were given Gods
word in what we call the Old Testament.
Yet some of the Jews to whom Gods oracles were given did not believe what
God said, for example, those Jews who didnt enter the Promised Land. Paul
thus asks, What then? If some did not believe, their unbelief will not
nullify the faithfulness of God, will it? (Rom. 3:3). Paul responds to
this question by exclaiming, May it never be! Rather, let God be found
true, though every man be found a liar (Rom. 3:4).
Here Paul begins to respond to a Jewish objection that he later expands upon
in chapter 9. His Jewish opponents apparently argued that if his gospel were
true, then Gods word had failed (see 9:6), because by Pauls criteria,
most of the Jews had failed to obtain the salvation God promised them. Here
Paul reminds Jewish readers that it is not Gods fault that some Jews didnt
or dont believe. Neither does their unbelief nullify Gods faithfulness
to His promises.
Because all people, Jew and Gentile, stand condemned for their sin and fall
short of Gods glory, Paul says that by the works of the Law no flesh
will be justified in [Gods] sight (3:20). The Law doesnt save
anyone; it only brings the knowledge of sin (3:20) and reveals Gods
righteousness (see 3:21). God has, however, provided a salvation that is granted
by His grace to all sinners, Jew and Gentile, if they will believe in Jesus
(see 3:22-23).
Another primary Jewish objection to Pauls gospel is that it made God look
unfair or unrighteous, in that He was accepting wicked, sinful Gentiles but
rejecting law-abiding Jews. But in light of the fact that Jews stood
just as condemned before God as Gentiles, Pauls gospel did not make God
unrighteous in the least. On the contrary, it made God look perfectly righteous
in several ways.
First, because God showed no distinction (3:22) between Jews and
Gentiles. Since all Jews and Gentiles sinned and stood equally condemned, God
made atonement for all their sins, and offered them all, by His grace, the gift
of salvation, conditioned on each persons faith. What could be more fair
or righteous to Jews and Gentiles?
Second, Pauls gospel vindicated God before those who accused Him of being
unrighteous when He showed forbearance and passed over the
sins previously committed (3:25), that is, when God didnt immediately
punish peoples sins in the past. Pauls gospel revealed that as Christ
hung on the cross, He died for all sins for all time as a propitiation
(3:25), that is, as a sacrifice that appeased Gods wrath against sin.
Thus all sin was punished in Christ, and His sacrifice made it possible for
God to show forbearance to sinners without compromising His own righteousness.
Apart from Jesus substitutionary death, God could have been rightly accused
of unrighteousness when He showed forbearance to those who committed sin. Christs
death is the basis for all mercy He has ever shown.
Third, Pauls gospel revealed Gods righteousness in that when it
was believed by Jews and Gentiles, they were made righteous, legally and practically.
Pauls gospel revealed Gods righteousness in all these ways, and
thus the Jews objection that his message made God unrighteous was completely
unfounded.
Again, it is obvious that what Paul has written in the third chapter stands
against Calvinistic doctrine. Calvinism does not uphold Gods righteousness,
as it makes God partial to certain people and makes Him unjust. Pauls
gospel made salvation equally accessible to Jews and Gentiles. There is no hint
of unconditional election in this third chapter.
Paul asks a final question at the end of chapter 3, an objection that he either
anticipates or has heard: Do we then nullify the Law through faith?
and answers, May it never be! On the contrary, we establish the Law (3:31).
This could be paraphrased, In light of what Ive just written, does
my gospel of salvation by faith nullify the Law, making words of God Himself
meaningless, as some accuse? That, you surely now realize, is an absurd accusation!
My gospel doesnt nullify the Law, it establishes the Law,
because it harmonizes perfectly with, supports and upholds the Law. It reveals
Gods righteousness even better than the Law does. It puts the Law in its
proper and intended place. It is the fulfillment of many promises, types and
shadows found in the Law that pointed to Jesus. It results in people becoming
obedient to Gods Law. How could any intelligent person say that my gospel
nullifies the Law?!
Chapter 4
In chapter 4, by quoting Genesis 15:6, Paul proves that Abraham, revered ancestor
of all Jews through his son, Jacob, was justified by faith and not by works
(see 4:1-3). This is a strong argument in Pauls favor, putting Abraham
on his side. Additionally, Paul points out that Abraham was justified before he received the rite of circumcision (see 4:10-11), something the Jews considered
essential for salvation, if not the very guarantee of salvation. Because Abraham
was declared righteous before he received circumcision, this proves that non-circumcised
Gentiles can be justified before God without being circumcised. Thus Abraham received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the
faith which he had while uncircumcised, that he might be the father of all who
believe without being circumcised (4:11). In this way, Abraham becomes
a father even to those who are not of his physical lineage, but who follow his
faith, and this was even foretold in Scripture when God promised to make him
a father of many nations (4:17).
Perhaps anticipating that some Jews might retort that Abraham wasnt required
to keep the Law for salvation since he lived before God gave the Law of Moses,
Paul also cites some words of David, a man who lived under Mosaic Law. Davids
words also prove that, even under the dispensation of the Mosaic Law, justification
was by faith and not works, as he wrote of the blessed man whose lawless
deeds have been forgiven, and whose sins have been covered
whose sin the
Lord will not take into account (4:7-8).
Going a step further, Paul declares that Gods promised blessing to Abraham
and his descendants was conditioned on faith and not on the Law. Therefore,
those who try to inherit that blessing by keeping the Law nullify Gods
promise to Abraham and his posterity (see 4:13-14). Paul argued this same point
in Galatians 3:17: The Law, which came four hundred and thirty years later
[after Gods promise to Abraham and his seed], does not invalidate a covenant
previously ratified by God, so as to nullify the promise.
So we see that Paul is still addressing Jewish objections to his gospel.
Chapter 5
In the second half of chapter 5, Paul answers yet another objection. Some might
say, How is it possible for one mans act to make salvation
possible for all people? Paul responds by relating how one mans
act brought death to the entire world, and then compares the negative results
of Adams sin with the positive results of Jesus death (see 5:12-21).
Within his comparison, Paul writes, So then as through one transgression
there resulted condemnation to all men, even so through one act of righteousness
there resulted justification of life to all men (5:18, emphasis
added). From reading everything else Paul wrote, we can safely assume that he
was not asserting here that all people will be justified, but that all
people can be justified through Jesus act of righteousness.
There is no difference between the all men who are condemned by
Adams sin and the all men who can be justified by Jesus
obedience. This, of course, flatly contradicts the Calvinistic idea of unconditional
election, as well as the Calvinist idea that Jesus only died for the sins of
those predestined to be saved (what Calvinists call the limited atonement).
If Paul affirms an unconditional election in chapter 9, we would have to wonder
why he contradicted himself in chapter 5.
Chapters 6-8
Some of Pauls adversaries apparently argued that if his doctrine of salvation
by grace were true, then it follows that we should continue to sin so God can
show us more grace. Similarly, some argued that if we are not under law (as
a means of earning our salvation), then we have no motivation not to sin.
Paul annuls these objections by revealing that those who have truly received
Gods grace, that is, true believers, have become obedient from their hearts
(see 6:17) and have been united with Christ in His death and resurrection (see
6:2-7). They have thus died to sin, are freed from it, and it no longer has
dominion over them (see 6:2, 7, 14). Believers are released from the Laws
condemnation by Christs death (see 7:1-6). Now we serve in newness
of the Spirit and not in oldness of the letter (7:6).
This naturally leads Paul in the second half of chapter 7 to discuss the plight
of the Jew who desires to keep the Law but who is still bound by sin (see 7:14-25).
A wretched man (7:24) is he indeed, and one with whom every Jew
who was genuinely attempting to keep the Law could identify. The only one who
can set him free from his bondage is Jesus (see 7:24-25).
In chapter 8 Paul continues this theme, highlighting the great advantage gained
by those who have been regenerated and are now in the Spirit, no
longer in the flesh (8:9). Such people have an obligation to follow
the indwelling Spirit, and they are Gods own children and heirs (see 8:12-17).
They should patiently wait, even if suffering for their faith, for the time
when Gods plan of salvation will be completely fulfilled, when all of
the physical creation, including their own bodies, will be transformed for Gods
glory (see 8:18-25).
Paul then declares,
And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who
love God, to those who are called according to His purpose. For whom He foreknew,
He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son, that He might
be the first-born among many brethren; and whom He predestined, these He also
called; and whom He called, these He also justified; and whom He justified,
these He also glorified (8:28-30).
This passage Piper highlights later in his chapter on unconditional election
(see pp. 21-22), saying that it is perhaps the most important text of
all in relation to the teaching of unconditional election (p. 21, prgh.
3). He then attempts to show that what this scripture plainly states, it doesnt
actually mean, because it clearly contradicts Calvinistic theology.
Anyone who reads this passage without a Calvinistic bias would conclude that
God causes all things to work together for good for those who love Him, that
is, the believers. This is demonstrated by the fact that those whom God foreknows
will love Him, He predestines to become conformed to the image of Jesus, He
calls them through the gospel, He justifies them, and He ultimately glorifies
them.
Piper attempts to prove that when Paul used the word foreknew in
regard to the believers, the actual meaning of the word foreknew
in this context is foreordained. The flaw in his logic that he uses
to prove his point is so glaring it is almost embarrassing to expose it. But
expose it I must.
Piper ignores the fact that Paul is writing from the beginning of verses 28
and 29 exclusively about people who are saved. Paul defines them as those
who love God, those who are called according to His purpose
and those whom God foreknew. Paul is clearly not writing about all
people, but only those who are Christians.
Piper points out that Paul says in verse 30 that those whom God calls He justifies.
Piper then says that this calling which Paul mentions is not the general call
of repentance given to all people because Paul says it always results
in justification. Since not everyone who hears the general call ends up justified,
this call of which Paul speaks here must be, according to Piper, the Calvinistic call of irresistible grace, the call that is given only to those
unconditionally elected for salvation. Piper ignores the fact that Gods
general call of salvation always results in the justification of those whom
God foreknew would believe, which are, of course, the only people about whom
Paul was writing.
Based on his conclusion that Paul was writing about people who are called by
Gods irresistible grace, Piper then goes back to the beginning of verse
29 and redefines what Paul must have meant when he spoke of those whom God foreknew.
Since Paul was obviously writing about only those who are unconditionally
elected and irresistibly drawn, when he used the word foreknew in
verse 29, it must be equivalent to the word foreordained! What logic!
What nonsense!
Again, the truth of the matter is that the general call of the gospel always
does result in the justification of those whom God foreknew would believe, which
are the only ones Paul was speaking of in this passage from the beginning. It
is just that simple. Thus Pipers Calvinistic argument collapses.
Moreover, foreknowledge and foreordination are not the same things. I might
foreknow that is it going to rain, but that doesnt prove that I foreordained
that it would rain. God foreknows who will be saved because He foreknows who
will believe. How full is the Bible of events that God foreknew and foretold
by prophecy but did not foreordain! How can foreknowledge be said to be equivalent
to foreordination?
Note also that Paul says nothing in the above passage about God predestining
anyone to salvation, but only to Him predestining certain people to be conformed
to Christs image whom He foreknew. In that sense, God predestines Christians.
Foreknowing believers, He predestines them to become like Christ.
Incidentally, God calls people through the gospel, not by irresistible grace
(although He does draw them by a grace that is resistible). Paul told the Thessalonican
believers, He called you through our gospel, that you may
gain the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ (2 Thes. 2:14, emphasis added).
When Paul preached the gospel in Thessalonica, did he only preach to people
who were pre-selected to be saved? No, many who heard the gospel in Thessalonica
rejected it (see Acts 17:1-12). Everyone in Thessalonica was called by
God through the gospel. So when Paul wrote that the Thessalonians were called
through [his] gospel, he certainly didnt think that all the Thessalonians
who were called were automatically justified.
Interestingly, one sentence before Paul wrote that God called the Thessalonians
through the gospel, he wrote, God has chosen you from the beginning
for salvation through sanctification by the Spirit and faith in the
truth (2 Thes. 2:13, emphasis added). Paul could say that God had
chosen the Thessalonians to whom he was writing because God has chosen from
the beginning to save all who would have faith in the truth under
the drawing of Gods Spirit. Indeed, as Jesus said, Many are called,
but few are chosen (Matt. 22:14). All those who believe are among Gods
chosen.
Chapter 9
Paul begins this chapter by expressing his sincere love for his fellow Jews,
even though most of them have rejected his gospel (see 9:1-3). Shortly thereafter,
he declares that to the Jews belongs the adoption as sons
(9:4, emphasis added). This statement clearly contradicts the Calvinistic doctrine
of unconditional election. If Paul believed that God had selected only certain
Jews for salvation, he would have never made such a statement. Clearly, he believed
that adoption into Gods family was something that belonged to every Jew,
but each individual Jew must believe in Jesus if he is to enjoy the adoption
that belongs to him.
If he does not enjoy his rightful adoption, it is not Gods fault. Paul
declares this fact just one verse later, stating, But it is not as though
the word of God has failed (9:6). Gods word never fails. Pauls
Jewish opponents apparently argued that if his gospel were true, then Gods
word had failed, because by Pauls criteria, most of the Jews had failed
to obtain the salvation God had promised to them.
Paul knows Gods word well enough, however, to know that God did not promise
salvation to every physical descendant of Israel or to every Jew who attempts
to keep the Law, but only to those who believe. Moreover, Paul knows Gods
word well enough to know that God had even foretold through the Prophets that
very few Jews would believe the gospel, while many Gentiles would embrace it.
And this is what the 9th chapter of Romans is all about.
Directly after Paul declares that Gods word has not failed, he states,
For they are not all Israel who are descended from Israel (9:6).
Paul can only mean that just because one is a physical descendant of Israel
doesnt mean that he is a true Israelite. No Jew should rely upon
his physical lineage to guarantee his salvation, any more than he should rely
upon his physical circumcision, as Paul had earlier warned (see 2:25-29).
Paul continues by expanding on this idea:
Neither are they all children because they are Abrahams descendants, but:
through Isaac your descendants will be named. That is [here is Pauls
explanation of what he just said], it is not the children of the flesh who
are children of God, but the children of the promise are regarded as descendants.
For this is a word of promise: At this time I will come, and Sarah shall
have a son(9:7-9, emphasis added).
Again, the primary point is that physical lineage does not guarantee
blessing from God, as proven by the case of Ishmael. Ishmael was a physical
descendant of Abraham who did not receive the blessing given to Isaac.
Paul draws a further parallel with this example to his contemporary Jewish readers.
They may either be like Isaac or Ishmael in this respect: Believing Jews are
like Issac, children of the promise, who receive the blessing by
faith. Unbelieving Jews are like Ishmael, children of the flesh, who are only physical descendants.
Obviously, like all comparisons, this one is imperfect, and there are many dissimilarities
that could be mentioned between Isaac and believers and Ishmael and unbelievers.
Paul only draws out one similarity. His point is that God has chosen to bless
only those who have faith in His promise. No Jew should rely on his physical
lineage to obtain Gods blessing. And God certainly has the right to determine
whom He accepts and whom He rejects. Paul continues:
And not only this, but there was Rebekah also, when she had conceived twins
by one man, our father Isaac; for though the twins were not yet born, and had
not done anything good or bad, in order that Gods purpose according to
His choice might stand, not because of works, but because of Him who calls,
it was said to her, The older will serve the younger. Just as it
is written, Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated (Rom. 9:10-13).
This is one of the passages Piper points out, and he claims that Paul is teaching
that believers are unconditionally elected before birth just as Jacob was unconditionally
elected before his birth. Piper unfortunately neglects the context that we have
just considered.
Once more, Paul is proving that ones lineage does not guarantee blessing
from God. He highlights another one of Gods previous choices, when God
made a choice in regard to Jacob over Esau. Esau was a physical descendant of
Isaac who did not receive the blessing given to Jacob.
And once again, Paul draws an additional parallel with this example to his contemporary
readers: Gods choosing of Jacob was definitely not based on his works. That is obvious to anyone who reads Jacobs life story. He was a sinful,
selfish deceiver, and God knew what he would be like before he was born. Yet
God chose him just as He has chosen to bless sinful Gentiles who believe. How
could Jewish readers legitimately object to Pauls doctrine that God had
chosen to bless sinful Gentiles when their forefather, Israel, was no different
than any sinful Gentile?
Paul is in no way trying to convince his readers that the reason some are saved
and some are unsaved is because God has pre-selected only some to salvation,
as in the cases of Isaac and Jacob! Neither Jacob nor Isaac were pre-selected
to be saved, and there is no scriptural proof that either Ishmael or Esau died
unsaved. Ishmael and Esau were simply not chosen to be in the messianic lineage.
Paul is illustrating that God has the sovereign right to make His choices, regardless
of what any man thinks, and that neither physical lineage nor doing some good
works guarantees His blessing.
Incidentally, when God told Rebekah why her twins were struggling in her womb,
God said to her, Two nations are in your womb; and two peoples
shall be separated from your body; and one people shall be stronger than
the other; and the older shall serve the younger (Gen. 25:23, emphasis
added). This was a foretelling of what would happen to the posterity of her
sons, not the sons themselves, and we know, of course, that what God said did
not come to pass in her sons, but in their posterity. Likewise, when God said
through His prophet Malachi, Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated, He
was speaking not of the individuals Jacob and Esau, but of their posterity,
as Malachi 1:2-5 reveals. In Pauls analogy, Jacob corresponded to those
whom God had chosen before time to lovebelievers. Esau corresponded to
those God had chosen before time to hateunbelievers.
Again, like all comparisons, this one is imperfect. We must be cautious that
we dont try to read more into than Paul intended, and the context helps
us to do that. Pauls example of Jacob or Esau cannot be rightfully interpreted
that God chose Jacob for salvation and Esau for damnation or that God has done
anything similar with any individual before or after them. Otherwise, we take
Pauls words out of their context and make him contradict himself in his
very next sentence, which says, What shall we say then? There is no injustice
with God, is there? May it never be! (9:14).
Paul is masterfully exposing the fallacy of the Jews argument. They said
it was unjust for God to show saving mercy to the Gentiles that He withheld
from His own people. Paul has just proved otherwise from their own history.
If they say Pauls message makes God unjust, then they must also admit
that God was unjust in regard to His choices of Isaac and Jacob over Ishmael
and Esau. Pauls opponents are cornered. Checkmate!
An unjust God is an impossibility in Pauls mind, and so it should be in
everyones mind. If God did choose Jacob for salvation and Esau for damnation
before they were born, then God is very unjust! Who can, however, accuse
God of injustice just because He chose Jacob rather than Esau to be in the messianic
lineage? God has such a right. And who can accuse Him of injustice if He chooses
to show grace to sinners who become humble believers and chooses to withhold
His grace from proud sinners who attempt to earn their salvation? There is no
injustice in that. But there is indeed injustice in God if He unconditionally
elects some to salvation and some to damnation.
Paul continues:
For He says to Moses, I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will
have compassion on whom I have compassion. So then it does not depend
on the man who wills or the man who runs, but on God who has mercy. For the
Scripture says to Pharaoh, For this very purpose I raised you up, to demonstrate
My power in you, and that My name might be proclaimed throughout the whole earth. So then He has mercy on whom He desires, and He hardens whom He desires (9:15-18).
To Paul, salvation is not a matter of to whom God shows justice. Rather, it
is a matter of to whom God shows mercy. If every person received Gods
due justice, every person would be condemned, because all have sinned, a point
Paul had made earlier in this letter. So the only question is, To whom, if
anyone, is God showing mercy in salvation? His answer, of course, is that
God shows mercy in saving anyone who believes, by which He does not compromise
His fairness to all.. He will have mercy on whom He will have mercy, and no
one has any right to find fault with Him for showing mercy to whom He chooses.
To find fault with God for showing mercy to believing Gentiles is to judge God
and exalt ones self.
Just as God has the right to show mercy to whomever He desires, He also has
the right to harden whomever He desires. No one can rightfully find fault for
Him hardening anyone He desires. Thankfully, because God is righteous, He hardens
only those who have repeatedly rejected His mercy. Paul points specifically
to Pharaoh, whom God showed incredible mercy over a period of time (and nobody
can argue against this). On at least three occasions, Scripture says that Pharaoh
hardened his heart, and thus God decided to show him no further mercy, and Scripture
begins to say that God hardened Pharaohs heart (see Ex. 7:13, 22: 8:15,
19, 32; 9:7, 12, 34-35; 10:1, 20, 27; 11:10; 14:8). Who can find fault with
God for that?
Likewise, God had shown incredible mercy to the Jews, as Paul would soon
say in 10:21, quoting Isaiah 65:1: All the day long I have stretched out
My hands to a disobedient and obstinate people. Certainly God had the
right to harden them now just as He did Pharaoh of old. Paul will soon show
that the Prophets predicted the Jews rejection of Christ and Gods
hardening of them because of it (see 9:27-29; 33; 10:19-21; 11:7-10).
Calvinists misuse Pauls words in this passage (and Piper is no exception),
saying that God has compassion on some and hardens others for no other reason
than His good pleasure. That makes God unjust, the very thing Paul was arguing
against, and contradicts his summarizing statement to this entire section
of scripture: For God has shut up all in disobedience that He might
show mercy to all (11:32). God will indeed have mercy on whom He
will have mercy, and, because He is perfectly just, He extends His saving mercy
to all, Jews and Gentiles. (Clearly, Paul is writing in this passage about Gods saving mercy, and not about His supposed common mercy.)
Anticipating the consequent objection to what he has just said, Paul writes, You will say to me then, Why does He still find fault? For who resists
His will? On the contrary, who are you, O man, who answers back to God? (Rom 9:19).
If God actually hardens rebels, then why does He still find fault with them?
is the question posed. The answer is that God righteously hardens rebels.
He hardens them as a means of judgment upon them. Paul, however doesnt
mention this at this point, but sharply rebukes anyone who would dare find fault
with God for hardening anyone. We are not the judge of God; He is our judge.
Anyone who has been hardened by God cannot rightly point a finger of accusation
against Him. God has the right to do whatever He desires with us, and thank
God that He has shown us all incredible mercy in order that we might repent
and be saved.
Paul continues defending Gods right to do what He pleases with what is
His:
The thing molded will not say to the molder, Why did you make me like
this, will it? Or does not the potter have a right over the clay, to make
from the same lump one vessel for honorable use, and another for common use?
What if God, although willing to demonstrate His wrath and to make His power
known, endured with much patience vessels of wrath prepared for destruction?
And He did so in order that He might make known the riches of His glory upon
vessels of mercy, which He prepared beforehand for glory, even us, whom He also
called, not from among Jews only, but also from among Gentiles (9:19-24,
emphasis added).
I italicized the last part of 9:24 just to remind us that Paul is still writing
about the Jewish controversy about the justice of God in saving believing Gentiles
while rejecting unbelieving Jews.
Paul is not, and cannot, be attempting to persuade his readers that God pre-selects
some to be vessels of wrath and others to be vessels of mercy,
as that would contradict everything He has said about Gods justice. Rather,
Paul is emphasizing that God has been extremely patient with those who were
vessels of wrath prepared for destruction (9:22). These vessels
were not prepared sovereignly by God, but simply prepared,
or ready for destruction because of their own sinfulness. Paul is
not saying that only a certain percentage of people are vessels of wrath. All people are such vessels prior to their repentance and regeneration,
as Paul has made abundantly clear in earlier chapters of Romans.
Paul explains that the reason God was so patient with vessels that were so worthy
of His judgment was so He might make known the riches of His glory upon
vessels of mercy, which He prepared beforehand for glory [beforehand
because He foreknew who would believe; see 8:29], even us, whom He also called,
not from among Jews only, but also from among Gentiles (9:23). Clearly,
in opposition to what some Jews wanted to believe, Paul believed that the vessels
of mercy include Gentiles whom God has called through the gospel. That
is still the primary point of this chapter. To buttress his point, Paul offers
proof that God foretold through His prophets that God would save Gentiles but
that there would only be a remnant of Jews who would be saved:
As He says also in Hosea, I will call those who were not My people [Gentiles],
My people, And her who was not beloved, beloved.
And it shall be that in the place where it was said to them, you are not
My people, There they shall be called sons of the living God. And
Isaiah cries out concerning Israel, Though the number of the sons of Israel
be as the sand of the sea, it is the remnant that will be saved; for the Lord
will execute His word upon the earth, thoroughly and quickly. And just
as Isaiah foretold, Except the Lord of Sabaoth had left to us a posterity,
We would have become as Sodom, and would have resembled Gomorrah (9:25-29).
Finally, we arrive at Pauls summary of this entire 9th chapter. Here it
becomes even more clear that Paul has all along been refuting the Jewish objection
to his doctrine that God was accepting believing Gentiles and rejecting unbelieving
Jews:
What shall we say then? That Gentiles, who did not pursue righteousness, attained
righteousness, even the righteousness which is by faith; but Israel, pursuing
a law of righteousness, did not arrive at that law. Why? Because they did not
pursue it by faith, but as though it were by works. They stumbled over the stumbling
stone, just as it is written, Behold, I lay in Zion a stone of stumbling
and a rock of offense, and he who believes in Him will not be disappointed. (9:30-33).
Pauls point is so obvious that one wonders how any Calvinist can miss
it. Many Gentiles attained righteousness while many Jews did not, because they
did not pursue it by faith as did the Gentiles. And God had foretold this would
happen through Isaiah, saying that the Messiah would be a stumbling stone to
some, but anyone who would believe in Him would not be disappointed.
Isaiah foretold of a salvation that would be available to anyone by faith.
Chapters 10 and 11
Paul devotes two more chapters to the Jewish/Gentile issue, both of which stand
in contradiction to Calvinistic doctrine. He begins chapter 10 by stating that
his prayer to God is for the salvation of his fellow Jews (see 10:1). Had Paul
been a Calvinist, he would never have prayed such a prayer, knowing that the
salvation or damnation of every person was already determined before the foundation
of the world. Thus, there is no reason to pray for anyones salvation.
Any Calvinist who prays for the salvation of other people is inconsistent with
his own theology. Even if he prays, Lord, whenever it pleases You, bestow
Your irresistible grace upon those whom You have predestined to be saved, his prayer accomplishes nothing. God will do what he has requested regardless
of his request.
In 10:4, Paul again affirms the universal opportunity of salvation: For
Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes (emphasis added). He then pulls out an arsenal of scriptures to seal his case.
In so doing, he repeatedly declares that salvation is available to all in 10:11-13,
quoting the prophets Isaiah and Joel:
For the Scripture says, Whoever believes in Him will not be disappointed. For there is no distinction between Jew and Greek; for the same Lord is Lord
of all, abounding in riches for all who call upon Him; for Whoever will call upon the name of the Lord will be saved (emphasis added).
The very word whoever which Paul uses twice in this passage contradicts
Calvinistic theology, because it implies that individuals can make a choice.
To Calvinists, totally depraved people cant choose to repent or believe,
and only those who are unconditionally elected, irresistibly drawn and
sovereignly regenerated will ever do so. Thus, the concept implied by the word whoever does not exist in the Calvinist system.
Paul again puts the blame on the Jews themselves for not being saved, quoting
from the most well-known messianic chapter in the Old Testament, Isaiah 53: Lord, who has believed our report? (Is. 53:1, emphasis added).
Had they believed the report of the Messiah in Isaiahs 53rd chapter, any
of them could have been saved.
Paul then quotes Deuteronomy 32:21, where God said that He would make His people
jealous and angry by a nation without understanding (10:19). Paul
reveals a few verses later that he was following Gods example in this
(see 11:11), attempting to move to jealousy some of his fellow-countrymen
and save some of them (11:14). Paul believed that it was possible for
him (and God) to do something that would motivate fellow Jews to believe and
be saved. Calvinisms doctrines of total depravity, irresistible grace
and unconditional election all melt in the light of such truth.
Paul again quotes Isaiah to prove that God planned to save Gentiles (see 10:20)
and had extended His merciful hand to His own disobedient and obstinate
people (10:21). Once more the implication is that God wanted Jews to be
saved, but they would not repent.
Lest anyone think Paul thought that God had completely rejected the Jews, Paul
begins the 11th chapter by refuting that idea, first pointing to himself as
proof that God had not rejected the descendants of Israel. Then he cites an
Old Testament example of an ancient Israelite who thought he might be the only
true follower of Jehovah remaining on the earth:
God has not rejected His people whom He foreknew. Or do you not know what the
Scripture says in the passage about Elijah, how he pleads with God against Israel? Lord, they have killed Thy prophets, they have torn down Thine altars,
and I alone am left, and they are seeking my life. But what is the divine
response to him? I have kept for Myself seven thousand men who have not
bowed the knee to Baal (11:2-4).
Notice that God said He had kept seven thousand men for Himself, but they were
men who had made the decision not to bow their knee to Baal. God made a decision
based upon their decision, not the other way around. Just like Elijah, who by
his own free will had decided to serve God and not Baal, so there were seven
thousand others like him.
Paul then makes an application of this story to his contemporary situation: In the same way then, there has also come to be at the present time a
remnant according to Gods gracious choice (11:5). That is, just
as in Elijahs day, God had graciously chosen to keep for Himself a remnant
of Jews. They consist of those who believe. Paul immediately emphasizes this
condition of acceptance with God in his very next sentence: But if it
is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of works, otherwise grace is no longer
grace (11:6). Those who attempt to earn salvation by their works are excluded
from being among Gods chosen group. He has determined to show grace to
those who believe.
Paul continues:
What then? That which Israel is seeking for, it has not obtained, but those
who were chosen obtained it, and the rest were hardened; just as it is written, God gave them a spirit of stupor, eyes to see not and ears to hear not,
down to this very day. And David says, Let their table become a
snare and a trap, and a stumbling block and a retribution to them. Let their
eyes be darkened to see not, and bend their backs forever (11:7-10).
The majority of Israelites had not obtained the salvation they were seeking,
with the exception of those who were chosen. Ripped from its context
and interpreted with a Calvinistic bias, one could use this scripture as a proof-text
for unconditional election. But when we read it within its context without a
Calvinistic bias, we easily see that Paul is writing about a conditional
election. That is, God has chosen to save those who believe. They are His true
chosen people.
Incidentally, note that Paul clearly stated that the Jews had been seeking salvation,
but had not obtained it, because, as we know, they had been seeking it by works.
This, of course, contradicts Calvinisms doctrine of total depravity. The
unsaved Jews of whom Paul wrote were not so totally depraved that they couldnt
attempt to obey God and seek salvation.
Paul writes that those who are not among Gods chosen, that is, those who
do not believe, God has hardened. This subject of Gods righteous hardening
of rebels has already surfaced in 1:21-32 and 9:15-18. But has God hardened
Christ-rejecting Jews to the point that it is now impossible for them to repent
and believe? No, indeed, as Paul makes ever so clear in the very next paragraph:
I say then, they did not stumble so as to fall, did they? May it never be! But
by their transgression salvation has come to the Gentiles, to make them jealous.
Now if their transgression be riches for the world and their failure be riches
for the Gentiles, how much more will their fulfillment be! But I am speaking
to you who are Gentiles. Inasmuch then as I am an apostle of Gentiles, I magnify
my ministry, if somehow I might move to jealousy my fellow countrymen and save
some of them. For if their rejection be the reconciliation of the world, what
will their acceptance be but life from the dead? (11:11-15).
So far from stating that God has completely rejected the Jews, Paul declares
that by saving Gentiles, God is attempting to move Jews to jealousy that they
might be motivated to receive His free salvation. Again, this stands in direct
contradiction to Calvinistic theology. If some Jews were predestined to be saved
and others to be damned, God would have no reason to try to make Jews jealous
by showing grace to Gentiles in hopes that Jews would be saved.
Paul also declares that, if the Jewish rejection of Christ has resulted in spiritual
riches for the Gentiles, what might happen when the Jews ultimately receive
Christ, as the Scripture has foretold they will? Their future acceptance of
Him will be life from the dead (11:15), probably a reference to
the future resurrection and the beginning of Christs millennial reign
on Earth. Paul develops this theme a little later in this chapter:
For I do not want you, brethren, to be uninformed of this mystery, lest you
be wise in your own estimation, that a partial hardening has happened to Israel
until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in; and thus all Israel will be
saved; just as it is written, The Deliverer will come from Zion, He will
remove ungodliness from Jacob. And this is My covenant with them, when I take
away their sins. From the standpoint of the gospel they are enemies for
your sake, but from the standpoint of Gods choice they are beloved for
the sake of the fathers; for the gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable
(11:25-29).
By these words, Paul completes his refutation of the Jewish objection that Gods
word had failed if his gospel were true (see 9:6). Paul believed that Gods
promise of salvation to the Jews would ultimately be fulfilled when the
fullness of the Gentiles [had] come in (11:25), when the Jews would finally,
in mass, believe in Jesus. For now, however, Paul said that a partial
hardening had happened to Israel. This was not because God arbitrarily
decided to harden certain Israelites simply because of His good pleasure, but
because He had righteously hardened those who refused to believe in His Messiah.
Again, He had not hardened them to the point of making it impossible for them
to believe, because He was at the same time attempting to attract them to believe
by making them jealous of the Gentiles who believed. If God had determined to
harden certain Jews because they were not predestined to be saved, why would
He attempt to motivate them to believe by making them jealous of Gentiles?
Moreover, why would God attempt to make anyone believe (in this case,
by trying to make Jews jealous of Gentiles)? If people are only saved when Gods
bestows a grace that is irresistible upon those pre-ordained to be saved, then
God would make no such attempts that leave room for possible failure
and that are inconsistent with His sole means of saving people. Making certain
people jealous in order to motivate them to believe in Jesus is contradictory
to the Calvinistic ideas of total depravity, irresistible grace and unconditional
election.
Further contradiction against Calvinistic doctrine is found in chapter 11. Drawing
an analogy of a tree and its branches with Gods family tree of salvation,
Paul writes,
But if some of the [Jewish] branches were broken off, and you, being a wild
olive [a Gentile], were grafted in among them and became partaker with them
of the rich root of the olive tree, do not be arrogant toward the branches;
but if you are arrogant, remember that it is not you who supports the root,
but the root supports you. You will say then, Branches were broken off
so that I might be grafted in. Quite right, they were broken off for their
unbelief, but you stand by your faith. Do not be conceited, but fear; for if
God did not spare the natural branches, neither will He spare you. Behold then
the kindness and severity of God; to those who fell, severity, but to you, Gods
kindness, if you continue in His kindness; otherwise you also will be cut off. And they also, if they do not continue in their unbelief, will be grafted
in; for God is able to graft them in again. For if you were cut off from
what is by nature a wild olive tree, and were grafted contrary to nature into
a cultivated olive tree, how much more shall these who are the natural branches
be grafted into their own olive tree? (11:17-24, emphasis added).
Again we see that Paul
believed that God would graft individual Jews into the salvation tree if
they would believe. It was up to them, not God. Had Paul been a Calvinist,
he could not have written what we did. He could only have said, God will
graft them in again if God wills for them to be grafted in and gives them the
gift of faith.
Note also that Paul warned that genuinely saved Gentiles could forfeit their
salvation if they stopped believing. Naturally, such a thing wouldnt be
possible if unconditional election were true. If God unconditionally elected
a person to be saved, then once Gods irresistible grace had been bestowed
upon that person, he would be permanently saved with no chance of forfeiting
his salvation. One who is grafted in cannot be cut off
in the Calvinistic system, yet Paul believed one grafted in could
be cut off. Furthermore, according to Calvinism, one who was grafted
in and then cut off could never have been grafted in in the first place. Paul believed otherwise.
In conclusion, if Paul was affirming the Calvinistic doctrine of Unconditional
Election in Romans 9, then he was a complete idiot, because he contradicted
his own doctrine repeatedly throughout the book of Romans, and we should thus
toss his writings out with the rubbish.
Ephesians 1:3-6
The only other scripture that Piper uses to defend the idea of unconditional
election is Ephesians 1:3-6, a passage that, like many others, refers to believers
as being chosen before the foundation of the world. Calvinists often use such
verses to prove their theory of unconditional election, but they fail to notice
that Paul never says anything about Gods choice being unconditional.
And they ignore the multitude of scriptures that unequivocally say that Gods
choice of people is conditional.
For example, Paul later writes in Ephesians that by grace you have
been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of
God; not as a result of works (Eph. 2:8-9, emphasis added). The salvation
that God has so graciously offered to us is conditioned upon our faith, and
not our works. What could be more obvious? In order to be chosen by God and
saved, we must have faith. Because God foreknows what every person will do,
He knows who will have faith and who will not. So those who have faith are chosen
before the foundation of the world.
Thus we see how unscriptural the idea of an unconditional election is. Any person
who takes the whole of Scripture into consideration will not conclude that God
pre-selects some individuals for salvation and others for damnation. Only those
who ignore the majority of what Scripture teaches and focus on certain out-of-context
Calvinistic proof texts could arrive at such a conclusion.
David has written another article on unconditional election, entitled, "Oh, the Luck that Saves Us?" and you can read it here.
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