Tuesday 31 March 2015

8 REASONS WE NEED THE PURITANS

By Jeff Robinson

1. Because they were mature in ways we are not.

J. I. Packer hits the mark:
  • Maturity is a compound of wisdom, goodwill, resilience, and creativity. The Puritans exemplified maturity; we don’t. We are spiritual dwarfs. A much-travelled leader, a native American (be it said), has declared that he finds North American Protestantism, man-centered, manipulative, success-oriented, self-indulgent and sentimental, as it blatantly is, to be 3,000 miles wide and half and inch deep. The Puritans, by contrast, as a body were giants. They were great souls serving a great God.
Would anyone deny the truthfulness of his assessment in much of modern evangelicalism today?

2. Because they understood the deep sinfulness of the human heart.

John Owen (1616-1683) called the human heart a hornet’s nest of evil. He wrote The Mortification of Sin, the most famous treatment of sin among the Puritans. Because they understood the depravity of the human heart, the Puritans realized that only a unilateral work of sovereign grace can rescue fallen man. Thus, their keen understanding of the deadness of the human heart led them to plant their feet firmly upon a theology of grace as the sole catalyst that will draw dead hearts out of the grave.

3. Because they knew their best life was later.

The Puritans suffered long, but they suffered well. Death was a constant companion for the Puritans of the 17th and 18th centuries. In England, they faced deadly persecution at the hands of the Church of England, the church they sought to purify. In the New World, they faced an especially harsh physical climate. Packer writes:
  • Ease and luxury, such as our affluence brings us today, do not make for maturity; hardship and struggle, however, do, and the Puritans’ battles against the spiritual and climatic wilderness in which God set them produced a virility of character, undaunted and unsinkable, rising above discouragement and fears, for which the true precedents and models are men like Moses, and Nehemiah, and Peter after Pentecost, and the apostle Paul.
4. Because they viewed the family as a little church.

Puritan fathers were deeply committed to catechizing their children and serving as shepherds in their homes. One of the great needs of our day is for God to raise up an army of lion-hearted and lamb-like husbands/fathers who will love their families by teaching them the Word of God, by modeling biblical headship and churchmanship. I have written more extensively on the Puritans and family discipleship here.

5. Because they saw all of life as being lived coram deo—before the face of God.

For the Puritans in both old England and new, there was no sacred/secular divide. If they worked as blacksmiths, the calling was to blacksmith to the glory of God. If they farmed, they sowed and reaped in dependence upon God. The Puritans knew vividly that God is omnipresent, that there is not one square inch in all creation where he is not present or where he is not interested in radiating forth his glory. Hard work was for the Puritans a central part of Christian living, and what we call the Protestant work ethic is a gift passed down from them.

6. Because they were highly decorated soldiers on the spiritual battlefield.

They viewed spiritual conflict as central to the Christian’s calling. As Packer memorably puts it, “They never expected to advance a step without some sort of opposition.” This is evident in John Bunyan’s classic allegory Pilgrim’s Progress, where every step along the path to the Celestial City contends with fighting without, fears within. John Geree (1601-1649) wrote in The Character of an Old English Puritane or Nonconformist: “His whole life he accounted a warfare, wherein Christ was his captain, his arms were prayers and tears. The Cross was his Banner and his [motto] was: he who suffers conquers.” William Gurnall (1617-1679) penned The Christian in Complete Armor, which endures as one of the most compelling books on spiritual warfare. 

7. Because they were skilled physicians of souls.

Long before Jay Adams and David Powlison pioneered the movement, the Puritans excelled in biblical counseling. They saw God’s Word as sufficient for the Christian’s every need, including counsel. Tim Keller writes,
  • Clearly, the Puritans rested their counseling approach on Scripture. In many ways the Puritans are an excellent laboratory for studying biblical counseling, because they are not influenced by any secular models of psychology. Many of those today claiming to be strictly biblical in their counseling approach still evidence the heavy influence of Maslow or Rogers or Skinner or Ellis. But the Puritans had the field of “the cure of souls” virtually to themselves; they had no secular competition in the area of counseling. Thus we need to consider very seriously their counseling models.
8. Because they understood contentment in Christ as the key to genuine happiness.

Christ was enough for them. He had to be; with no modern medicine and at times precious little food available, life expectancy was around 30, particularly in the American colonies. If a family had four children, on average two would die in child birth. Roughly half of the mothers died during child birth. There was no aspirin, no penicillin, no surgery. Economic hardship was the norm. Yet the Puritans wrote often of contentment. Among the best works ever written on this topic were The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment by Jeremiah Burroughs and The Art of Divine Contentment by Thomas Watson. They lived with eternity stamped on their eyeballs.

Tuesday 17 March 2015

A Letter from George Whitefield to the Rev. Mr. John Wesley IN ANSWER TO MR. WESLEY’S SERMON ENTITLED “FREE GRACE”

“But when Peter had come to Antioch, I withstood him to his face, because he was to be blamed” (Gal. 2:11).

Modernized and annotated by William H. Gross www.onthewing.org Mar 2015.

PREFACE

I am very well aware what different effects publishing this letter against the dear Mr. Wesley’s Sermon [1] will produce. Many of my friends who are strenuous advocates for universal redemption will immediately be offended. Many who are zealous on the other side will be much rejoiced. Those who are lukewarm on both sides, and are carried away with carnal reasoning, will wish this matter had never been brought under debate.

The reasons I have given at the beginning of the letter, I think are sufficient to satisfy all of my conduct in this. I desire therefore that those who hold election would not triumph, or make a party on one hand (for I detest any such thing) — and that those who are prejudiced against that doctrine not be too concerned or offended on the other.

Known to God are all his ways from the beginning of the world. The great day will reveal why the Lord permits dear Mr. Wesley and me to be of a different way of thinking. At present, I will make no inquiry into that matter, beyond the account which he has given of it himself in the following letter, which I lately received from his own dear hands:

London, August 9, 1740

My dear Brother,

I thank you for yours, May the 24th. The case is quite plain. There are bigots both for predestination and against it. God is sending a message to those on either side. But neither will receive it unless it is from one who is of their own opinion. Therefore, for a time you are allowed to be of one opinion, and I of another. But when his time is come, God will do what man cannot, namely, make us both of one mind. Then persecution will flame out, and it will be seen whether we count our lives dear to ourselves, so that we may finish our course with joy.

I am, my dearest brother,
Ever yours,
J. WESLEY

Thus my honoured friend, I heartily pray to God to hasten the time, for his being clearly enlightened into all the doctrines of divine revelation, that we may thus be closely united in principle and judgment, as well as heart and affection. And then if the Lord should call us to it, I do not care if I go with him to prison, or to death. For like Paul and Silas, I hope we shall sing praises to God, and count it our highest honour to suffer for Christ’s sake, and to lay down our lives for the brethren.

WHITEFIELD’S LETTER TO WESLEY

Bethesda in Georgia, Dec. 24, 1740

Reverend and very dear Brother,

God only knows what unspeakable sorrow of heart I have felt on your account since I left England last. Whether it is my infirmity or not, I frankly confess, that Jonah could not go with more reluctance against Nineveh, than I now take pen in hand to write against you. If nature was to speak, I would rather die than do it; and yet if I am faithful to God, and to my own and others’ souls, I must not stand neutral any longer. I am very apprehensive that our common adversaries will rejoice to see us differing among ourselves. But what can I say? The children of God are in danger of falling into error. No, indeed numbers have been misled, whom God has been pleased to work upon by my ministry; and a greater number are still calling aloud upon me to also show my opinion. I must then show that I know no man after the flesh, and that I have no partiality, (Jas 2.9) any further than is consistent with my duty to my Lord and Master, Jesus Christ.

This letter, no doubt, will lose me many friends: and for this cause perhaps God has laid this difficult task upon me — even to see whether I am willing to forsake all for him, or not. From such considerations as these, I think it my duty to bear a humble testimony, and to earnestly plead for the truths which I am convinced are clearly revealed in the Word of God. In the defence of it, I must use great plainness of speech, and treat my dearest friends on earth with the greatest simplicity, faithfulness, and freedom, leaving the consequences of all to God.

For some time before, and especially since my last departure from England, both in public and private, by preaching and printing, you have been propagating the doctrine of universal redemption. And when I remember how Paul reproved Peter for his dissimulation, I fear I have been sinfully silent too long. O then do not be angry with me, dear and honoured Sir, if I now deliver my soul by telling you that I think you greatly err in this.

It is not my design to enter into a long debate on God’s decrees. I refer you to Dr. Edwards’ work, Veritas Redux, [2] which, I think is unanswerable — except in a certain point, concerning a middle sort between elect and reprobate, [3] which in effect he afterwards condemns.

I will only make a few remarks upon your sermon, entitled Free Grace. And before I enter upon the discourse itself, let me take note briefly of what in your Preface you say is an indispensable obligation to make it public to all the world. I must admit that I always thought you were quite mistaken on that point.

The case (you know) stands thus: When you were at Bristol, I think you received a letter from a private hand, charging you with not preaching the gospel, because you did not preach election. On this you drew a lot: [4] the answer was “preach and print.” I have often questioned, as I do now, whether in doing so, you did not tempt the Lord. A due exercise of religious prudence, without drawing a lot, would have directed you in that matter. Besides, I never heard that you enquired of God whether or not election was a gospel doctrine.

But, I fear, taking it for granted that it was not, you only enquired whether you should be silent, or preach and print against it.

However this may be, the lot came out to “preach and print”; accordingly you preached and printed against election. At my desire, you suppressed publishing the sermon while I was in England; but you soon sent it into the world after my departure. O that you had kept it in! However, if that sermon was printed in answer to a lot, I am apt to think that one reason why God would so allow you to be deceived, was that hereby a special obligation might be laid upon me to faithfully declare the Scripture doctrine of election; and that thus the Lord might give me a fresh opportunity to see what was in my heart, and whether I would be true to his cause or not; as you could only grant that he did once before, by giving you another such lot at Deal. [5]

The morning I sailed from Deal for Gibraltar, [6] you arrived from Georgia. Instead of giving me an opportunity to converse with you, even though the ship was not far off shore, you drew a lot, and immediately set off to London. You left a letter behind with words to this effect: “When I saw that God, by the wind which was carrying you out, brought me in, I asked the counsel of God. His answer you have enclosed.” This was a piece of paper in which were written these words, “Let him return to London.”

When I received this, I was somewhat surprised. Here was a good man telling me he had cast a lot, and that God would have me return to London. On the other hand, I knew my call was to Georgia, and that I had taken leave of London, and could not justly go from the soldiers who were committed to my charge. I took myself to prayer with a friend. That passage in 1Kings 13 was powerfully impressed upon my soul, where we are told that the Prophet was slain by a lion when he was tempted to go back (contrary to God’s express order) upon another Prophet’s telling him that God would have him do so. I wrote you word that I could not return to London. We sailed immediately.

Some months after, I received a letter from you at Georgia, in which you wrote to this effect: “Though God never before gave me a wrong lot, yet perhaps he allowed me to have such a lot at that time, to test what was in your heart.” I would never have published this private transaction to the world if the glory of God did not call me to it. It is plain you had a wrong lot given to you here, and justly so, because you tempted God in drawing one. And thus I believe it is in the present case. And if so, do not let the children of God, who are your intimate friends and mine, and also advocates for universal redemption, think that this doctrine is true — just because you preached it in compliance with a lot given from God.

This, I think, may serve as an answer to that part of the Preface to your printed sermon, in which you say, “Nothing but the strongest conviction, not only that what is advanced here is the truth as it is in Jesus, but also that I am indispensably obliged to declare this truth to all the world.” That you believe what you have written to be truth, and that you honestly aim at God’s glory in writing, I do not doubt in the least. But then, honoured Sir, I can only think you have been greatly mistaken in imagining that your tempting God, by casting a lot in the way you did, could lay you under an indispensable obligation to any action, much less to publish your sermon against the doctrine of predestination to life.

I must next observe, that as you have been unhappy in printing at all upon such an imaginary warrant, so you have been as unhappy in the choice of your text. Honoured Sir, how could it enter into your heart to choose a text to disprove the doctrine of election out of Romans 8, where this doctrine is so plainly asserted? Once I spoke with a Quaker on this subject, and he had no other way of evading the force of the Apostle’s assertion than by saying, “I believe Paul was in the wrong.” And another friend recently (who was once highly prejudiced against election), ingenuously confessed that he too used to think St. Paul himself was mistaken, or that he was not accurately translated.

Indeed, honoured Sir, it is plain beyond all contradiction that St. Paul, through the whole of Romans 8, is speaking of the privileges of those alone who are really in Christ. And let any unprejudiced person read what goes before and what follows your text, and he must confess the word “all” only signifies those that are in Christ. And the latter part of the text plainly proves what I find that dear Mr. Wesley will by no means grant. I mean the final perseverance of the children of God: “He that did not spare his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, [i.e., all the Saints] how shall he not with him also freely give us all things?” (Rom. 8:32) — give us grace, in particular, to enable us to persevere, and everything else necessary to carry us home to our Father’s heavenly kingdom.

If anyone had a mind to prove the doctrine of election, as well as final perseverance, he could hardly wish for a text more fit for his purpose than that which you have chosen to disprove it! One who did not know you, would suspect that you were aware of this; for after the first paragraph, I scarcely know whether you have mentioned the text so much as once throughout your whole sermon.

But your discourse, in my opinion, is as little to the purpose as your text; and instead of turning me, it only more and more confirms me in the belief of the doctrine of God’s eternal election.

I will not mention how illogically you have proceeded. If you had written clearly, you would first, honoured Sir, have proved your proposition: “God’s grace is free to all.” And then by way of inference, you would have argued against what you call the horrible decree. But you knew (because Arminianism, as of late, has so abounded among us) that people were generally prejudiced against the doctrine of reprobation; and therefore you thought that if you kept up their dislike of that, you could overthrow the doctrine of election entirely. For without a doubt, the doctrine of election and reprobation must stand or fall together.

But passing by this — and also your equivocal definition of the word grace, and your false definition of the word free — and so that I may be as brief as possible, I frankly acknowledge that I believe the Doctrine of Reprobation in this view:
  • That God intends to give saving grace through Jesus Christ only to a certain number; and that the rest of mankind, after the fall of Adam, being justly left by God to continue in sin, will at last suffer that eternal death which is its proper wages.
This is the established doctrine of Scripture, and it is acknowledged as such in the 17th article of the Church of England, as Bishop Burnet himself confesses. Yet dear Mr. Wesley absolutely denies it.

But the most important objections you have urged against this doctrine, as reasons why you reject it — being seriously considered, and faithfully tried by the Word of God — will appear to have no force at all. Let the matter be humbly and calmly reviewed, as to the following points:

First, you say that if this is so (i.e., if there is an election) then all preaching is in vain: it is needless for those who are elected, for whether with preaching or without, they will be infallibly saved. Therefore the end of preaching, to save souls, is void with regard to them. And it is useless for those who are not elected for they cannot possibly be saved. Whether with preaching or without, they will infallibly be damned. The end of preaching is therefore likewise void with regard to them. So that in either case, our preaching is in vain, and your hearing is also in vain. Page 10, paragraph 9.

O dear Sir, what kind of reasoning — or rather sophistry —this is! Has not God, who has appointed salvation for a certain number, also appointed the preaching of the Word as a means to bring them to it? Does anyone hold election in any other sense? And if so, how is preaching needless for those who are elected, when the gospel is designated by God himself to be the power of God unto their eternal salvation? (Rom 1.16) And since we do not know who are elect and who are reprobate, we are to preach promiscuously to all. For the Word may be useful, even to the non-elect, in restraining them from much wickedness and sin. However, it is enough to excite us to the utmost diligence in preaching and hearing, when we consider that by these means, some — even as many as the Lord has ordained to eternal life — shall certainly be quickened and enabled to believe. And whoever attends to this, especially with reverence and care, who can tell whether he may not be found among that happy number?

Second, you say that the doctrine of election and reprobation tends to directly destroy holiness, which is the end of all the ordinances of God. “For” (says the dear mistaken Mr. Wesley) “it wholly takes away those first motives to follow after it, so frequently proposed in Scripture: the hope of future reward and fear of punishment, the hope of heaven and fear of hell,” etc.

I thought that one who carries perfection to such an exalted pitch as dear Mr. Wesley does, would know that a true lover of the Lord Jesus Christ would strive to be holy for the sake of being holy, and work for Christ out of love and gratitude, without any regard for the rewards of heaven or fear of hell. You remember, dear Sir, what Scougal [7] says, “Love’s a more powerful motive that moves them.”

But passing by this, and granting that rewards and punishments (as they certainly are) may be motives from which a Christian may be honestly stirred up to act for God, how does the doctrine of election destroy these motives? Do the elect not know that the more good works they do, the greater their reward will be? And is that not encouragement enough to set them upon, and cause them to persevere in, working for Jesus Christ?

And how does the doctrine of election destroy holiness? Who ever preached any other election than what the Apostle preached when he said, “Chosen... through sanctification of the Spirit?” (2Thes. 2:13). Indeed, is holiness not made a mark of our election by all who preach it? And how then can the doctrine of election destroy holiness?

The instance which you bring to illustrate your assertion, indeed, dear Sir, is quite impertinent. For you say, “If a sick man knows that he must unavoidably die or unavoidably recover, though he knows not which, it is not reasonable to take any medicine at all.”  Dear Sir, what absurd reasoning is here? Were you ever sick in your life? If so, did not the bare probability or possibility of your recovering, even though you knew it was unalterably fixed that you must live or die, encourage you to take medicine? For how did you know that that very medicine might not be the means God intended to recover you by?

This is just as it is with the Doctrine of Election. I know that it is unalterably fixed (one may say) that I must be damned or saved; but since I do not know which for certain, why should I not strive, even though at present I am in a state of nature, since I do not know if this striving may not be the means God has intended to bless me, in order to bring me into a state of grace?

Dear Sir, consider these things. Make an impartial application, and then judge what little reason you had to conclude the 10th paragraph, page 12, with these words: “Thus this doctrine directly tends to shut the very gate of holiness in general, to hinder unholy men from ever approaching it, or striving to enter it.”

“Just as directly,” you say, “this doctrine tends to destroy several particular branches of holiness, such as meekness, love,” etc.  I shall say little, dear Sir, in answer to this paragraph. Dear Mr. Wesley perhaps has been disputing with some warm narrow-spirited men who held election, and then he infers that their warmth and narrowness of spirit was owing to their principles? But does not dear Mr. Wesley know many dear children of God, who are predestinarians, and yet are meek, lowly, merciful, courteous, tender-hearted, kind, of a catholic spirit, and hope to see the most vile and profligate of men converted? And why? Because they know God saved themselves by an act of his electing love, and they do not know whether he may not have elected those who now seem to be the most abandoned.

But, dear Sir, we must not judge the truth of principles in general, nor this of election in particular, entirely from the practice of some who profess to hold them. If so, I am sure much might be said against your own. For I appeal to your own heart, whether or not you have felt in yourself, or observed in others, a narrow-spiritedness, and some disunion of soul respecting those that hold universal redemption. If so, then according to your own rule, universal redemption is wrong, because it destroys several branches of holiness, such as meekness, love, etc. But not to insist upon this, I beg that you would observe that your inference is entirely set aside by the force of the Apostle’s argument, and the language which he expressly uses in Colossians 3:12-13: “Put on therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, tender mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, longsuffering; forbearing one another, and forgiving one another, if any man has a quarrel against anyone: even as Christ forgave you, so also do.”

Here we see that the Apostle exhorts them to put on tender mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, long-suffering, etc., upon this consideration: namely, because they were elect of God. And all who have experientially felt this doctrine in their hearts, feel that these graces are the genuine effects of their being elected of God.

But perhaps dear Mr. Wesley may be mistaken in this point, and calls it “passion” which is only zeal for God’s truths. You know, dear Sir, the Apostle exhorts us to “contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to the saints” (Jude 3). Therefore you must not condemn all that appear zealous for the doctrine of election as narrow-spirited, or persecutors, just because they think it is their duty to oppose you. I am sure that I love you in the tenderness of Jesus Christ, and think I could lay down my life for your sake; yet, dear Sir, I cannot help strenuously opposing your errors on this important subject, because I think you warmly, though not designedly, oppose the truth, as it is in Jesus. May the Lord remove the scales of prejudice from the eyes of your mind and give you a zeal according to true Christian knowledge!

Third, says your sermon, “This doctrine tends to destroy the comforts of religion, the happiness of Christianity, etc.”

But how does Mr. Wesley know this, who never believed election? I believe those who have experienced it will agree with our 17th article, that
  • "the godly consideration of predestination, and election in Christ, is full of sweet, pleasant, unspeakable comfort to godly persons, and those who feel in themselves the working of the Spirit of Christ, mortifying the works of the flesh, and their earthly members, and drawing their minds to high and heavenly things, because it greatly establishes and confirms their faith of eternal salvation, to be enjoyed through Christ, and because it fervently kindles their love towards God,” etc..
This plainly shows that our godly reformers did not think election destroyed holiness or the comforts of religion. As for my own part, this doctrine is my daily support. I would utterly sink under a dread of my impending trials, if I were not firmly persuaded that God has chosen me in Christ from before the foundation of the world, and that now being effectually called, he will allow no one to pluck me out of his almighty hand. (Joh 10.28)

You proceed thus: “This is evident as to all those who believe themselves to be reprobate, or only suspect or fear it; all the great and precious promises are lost to them; they afford them no ray of comfort.”

In answer to this, let me observe that none living, especially none who are desirous of salvation, can know that they are not of the number of God’s elect. None but the unconverted can have any just reason so much as to fear it. And would you, dear Mr. Wesley, give comfort, or dare you apply the precious promises of the gospel, being children’s bread, (Mar 7.27) to men in a natural state, while they continue as such? God forbid! What if the doctrine of election and reprobation does put some to doubting? So does regeneration. But is this doubting not a good means to put them to searching and striving? And is that striving not a good means to make their calling and election sure? (2Pet 1.10)

This is one reason among many others why I admire the doctrine of election, and why I am convinced that it should have a place in gospel ministrations, and should be insisted on with faithfulness and care. It has a natural tendency to rouse the soul out of its carnal security. And therefore many carnal men cry out against it. Whereas universal redemption, sadly, is a notion adapted to keep the soul in its lethargic, sleepy condition; and therefore so many natural men admire and applaud it.

Your 13th, 14th and 15th paragraphs come next to be considered.  “The witness of the Spirit,” you say, “experience shows to be greatly obstructed by this doctrine.”

But, dear Sir, whose experience? Not your own; for in your journal, from your embarking for Georgia to your return to London, you seem to acknowledge that you do not have it, and therefore you are no competent judge in this matter. You must mean then the experience of others. For you say in the same paragraph, “Even in those who have tasted of that good gift, who yet have soon lost it again,” (I suppose you mean lost the sense of it again) “and fallen back into doubts and fears and darkness, even horrible darkness that might be felt,” etc. Now, as to the darkness of desertion, was this not the case of Jesus Christ himself, after he had received an unmeasurable unction of the Holy Ghost? Was his soul not exceedingly sorrowful, even unto death, in the garden? (Mat 26.38) And was he not surrounded with a horrible darkness, even a darkness that might be felt, when on the cross he cried out, “My God! My God! Why have you forsaken me?” (Mat 27.46)

And is it not evident from Scripture that all his followers are liable to the same thing? For, the Apostle says, “He was tempted in all things, as we are” (Heb 4:15) so that he himself might be able to succour those who are tempted (Heb. 2:18). And is not their liableness to it consistent with that conformity to him in suffering, which his members are to bear (Phil. 3:10)? Why then should persons falling into darkness, after they have received the witness of the Spirit, be any argument against the doctrine of election?

“Yet,” you say, “many, very many of those that do not hold it, in all parts of the earth, have enjoyed the uninterrupted witness of the Spirit, the continual light of God’s countenance, from the moment in which they first believed, for many months or years, to this very day.” But how does dear Mr. Wesley know this? Has he consulted the experience of many, very many, in all parts of the earth? Or if he could be sure of what he has advanced without sufficient grounds, would it follow that their being kept in this light is owing to their not believing the doctrine of election? No, this doctrine, according to the sentiments of our church, “greatly confirms and establishes a true Christian’s faith of eternal salvation through Christ,” and is an anchor of hope, both sure and steadfast, when he walks in darkness and sees no light; as certainly he may, even after he has received the witness of the Spirit, whatever you or others may unadvisedly assert to the contrary.

Then, to have respect toward God’s everlasting covenant, and to throw himself upon the free distinguishing love of that God who does not change, will make him lift up the hands that hang down, and strengthen the feeble knees. (Heb 12.12)

But without the belief of the doctrine of election, and the immutability of the free love of God, I cannot see how it is possible that anyone should have a comfortable assurance of eternal salvation. What could it signify to a man whose conscience is thoroughly awakened, and who is warned in good earnest to seek deliverance from the wrath to come, even though he should be assured that all his past sins are forgiven, and that he is now a child of God — if notwithstanding this, he may afterward become a child of the devil, and be thrown into hell at last? Could such an assurance yield any solid, lasting comfort to a person convinced of the corruption and treachery of his own heart, and of the malice, subtlety, and power of Satan? No! That which alone deserves the name of a full assurance of faith, is such an assurance that it emboldens the believer, under the sense of his interest in distinguishing love, to challenge all his adversaries, whether men or devils, with regard to all their future as well as present attempts to destroy — saying with the Apostle,
  • Who will lay any thing to the charge of God’s elect? It is God that justifies. Who is he that condemns? It is Christ that died, yes rather, who has risen again, who is even at the right hand of God, who also makes intercession for us. Who will separate us from the love of Christ? Will tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? As it is written, For your sake we are killed all day long; we are accounted as sheep for the slaughter. No, indeed, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us. For I am persuaded that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, will be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord (Rom. 8:33-39).
This, dear Sir, is the triumphant language of every soul that has attained a full assurance of faith. And this assurance can only arise from a belief of God’s electing, everlasting love. That many have an assurance they are in Christ today, but take no thought for, or are not assured that, they will be in him tomorrow — no, to all eternity — is their imperfection and unhappiness rather than their privilege. I pray to God to bring all such persons to a sense of his eternal love, so that they may no longer build upon their own faithfulness, but upon the unchangeableness of that God whose gifts and callings are without repentance. For those whom God has once justified, he will also glorify. (Rom 8.30)

I observed before, dear Sir, that it is not always a safe rule to judge the truth of principles from people’s practice. And therefore, supposing that all who hold universal redemption in your way of explaining it, after they received faith and enjoyed the continual uninterrupted sight of God’s countenance — it does not follow from this, that this is a fruit of their principle. For that, I am sure, has a natural tendency to keep the soul in darkness forever; because the creature is thereby taught that his being kept in a state of salvation, is owing to his own free will. And what a sandy foundation that is for a poor creature to build his hopes of perseverance upon! Every relapse into sin, every surprise by temptation, must throw him “into doubts and fears, into horrible darkness, even darkness that may be felt.”

Hence it is, that the letters which have been sent to me lately by those who hold universal redemption, are dead and lifeless, dry and inconsistent, in comparison to those I receive from persons on the contrary side. Those who settle in the universal scheme, even though they might begin in the Spirit (whatever they may say to the contrary), are ending in the flesh, and building up a righteousness that is founded on their own free will: while the others triumph in hope of the glory of God, and build upon God’s never-failing promise and unchangeable love, even when his sensible presence is withdrawn from them.

But I would not judge the truth of election by the experience of any particular persons: if I did (O bear with me in this foolish boasting) (2Cor 11.16) I think I myself might glory in election. For these five or six years I have received the witness of God’s Spirit; since then — blessed be God — I have not doubted a quarter of an hour of having a saving interest in Jesus Christ: but with grief and humble shame, I acknowledge that I have fallen into sin often since then. Though I do not — dare not — allow any one transgression, (Rom 7.19) yet up to now I have not been (nor do I expect that while I am in this present world I ever shall be) able to live one day perfectly free from all defects and sin. And since the Scriptures declare that there is not a just man on earth (no, not among those of the highest attainments in grace) who does good and does not sin (Eccl. 7:20), we are sure that this will be the case of all the children of God.

The universal experience and acknowledgement of this among the godly in every age, is abundantly sufficient to confute the error of those who hold in an absolute sense, that after a man is born again he cannot commit sin. Especially since the Holy Spirit condemns the persons who say they have no sin as deceiving themselves, as being destitute of the truth, and as making God a liar (1Joh. 1:8, 10). I have also been in heaviness through manifold temptations, and I expect to be often so before I die. Thus were the Apostles and primitive Christians themselves; thus was Luther, that man of God who, as far as I can find, did not (peremptorily, at least) hold to election; and the great John Arndt [8] was in the utmost perplexity, but a quarter of an hour before he died — and yet he was no predestinarian.

And if I must speak freely, I believe your fighting so strenuously against the doctrine of election, and pleading so vehemently for a sinless perfection, are among the reasons or culpable causes why you are kept out of the liberties of the gospel; and from that full assurance of faith which those enjoy who have experientially tasted, and daily feed upon God’s electing, everlasting love.

But perhaps you may say that Luther and Arndt were no Christians, or at least they were very weak ones. I know you think little of Abraham, though he was eminently called the friend of God: and, I believe, also of David, the man after God’s own heart. No wonder, therefore, that in a letter you sent me not long ago, you would tell me that no Baptist or Presbyterian writer whom you have read knew anything of the liberties of Christ. What? Neither Bunyan, Henry, Flavel, Halyburton, nor any of the New England and Scots divines? See, dear Sir, what narrow-spiritedness and lack of charity arise from your principles; so then, do not cry out against election any more on account of its being “destructive of meekness and love.”

Fourth, I will now proceed to another topic. Says the dear Mr. Wesley, “How uncomfortable a thought this is, that thousands and millions of men, without any preceding offence or fault of theirs, were unchangeably doomed to everlasting burnings?”

But who ever asserted, that thousands and millions of men, without any preceding offence or fault of theirs, were unchangeably doomed to everlasting burnings? Do those who believe God’s dooming men to everlasting burnings, not also believe that God looked at them as men fallen in Adam? And that the decree which ordained the punishment, first regarded the crime by which it was deserved? How then are they doomed without any preceding fault? Surely Mr. Wesley will admit God’s justice in imputing Adam’s sin to his posterity. And also, after Adam fell, and his posterity fell in him, God might justly have passed them all by, without sending his own Son to be a saviour for anyone. Unless you heartily agree to both these points, you do not believe original sin correctly. If you do admit them, then you must acknowledge the doctrine of election and reprobation are highly just and reasonable. For if God might justly impute Adam’s sin to all, and afterwards have passed by all, then he might justly pass by some. On the right hand or on the left, you are reduced to an inextricable dilemma. And if you would be consistent, you must either give up the doctrine of the imputation of Adam’s sin, or else receive the amiable doctrine of election with a holy and righteous reprobation as its consequent. For whether you can believe it or not, the Word of God abides faithful: “The elect have obtained it, and the rest were blinded” (Rom. 11:7).

I will pass over your 17th paragraph, page 16. What was said on the 9th and 10th paragraphs, with a little alteration, will answer it. I will only say that it is the doctrine of election that most presses me to abound in good works. [9] I am willing to suffer all things for the elect’s sake. This makes me preach with comfort, because I know salvation does not depend on man’s free will, but the Lord makes us willing in the day of his power, and he can make use of me to bring some of his elect home, when and where he pleases.

But, Fifth, you say, “This doctrine has a direct manifest tendency to overthrow the whole Christian revelation. For,” you say, “supposing there is an eternal, unchangeable decree, one part of mankind must be saved, as though the Christian revelation were not in existence.”

But, dear Sir, how does that follow? It is only by the Christian revelation that we are acquainted with God’s design of saving his church by the death of his Son. Indeed, it is settled in the everlasting covenant that this salvation shall be applied to the elect through the knowledge and faith of him. As the prophet says in Isaiah 53:11, “By his knowledge my righteous servant shall justify many.” How then has the doctrine of election a direct tendency to overthrow the whole Christian revelation? Who ever thought that God’s declaration to Noah, that seed-time and harvest should never cease, could afford an argument for the neglect of plowing or sowing? Or that the unchangeable purpose of God — that the harvest should not fail — rendered the heat of the sun, or the influence of the heavenly bodies, unnecessary to produce it? Neither does God’s absolute purpose of saving his chosen preclude the necessity of the gospel revelation, or the use of any of the means through which he has determined the decree shall take effect. Nor will the right understanding, or the reverent belief of God’s decree, ever allow or suffer a Christian in any case to separate the means from the end, or the end from the means.

And since we are taught by the revelation itself that this was intended and given by God as a means of bringing home his elect, we therefore receive it with joy, prize it highly, use it in faith, and endeavour to spread it through all the world, in the full assurance that wherever God sends it, sooner or later it will be savingly useful to all the elect within its call.

How then, in holding this doctrine, do we join with modern unbelievers in making the Christian revelation unnecessary? No, dear Sir, you are mistaken. Infidels of all kinds are on your side of the question. Deists, Arians, and Socinians arraign God’s sovereignty and stand up for universal redemption. I pray to God that dear Mr. Wesley’s sermon, as it has grieved the hearts of many of God’s children, may not also strengthen the hands of many of his most avowed enemies!
(1 Eph 2:10) For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them. (2Pet 1:10) Therefore, brethren, be even more diligent to make your call and election sure, for if you do these things you will never stumble;

Here I could almost lie down and weep. “Do not tell it in Gath; do not publish it in the streets of Askelon; lest the daughters of the Philistines rejoice, lest the daughters of the uncircumcised triumph” (2 Sam. 1:20). [10]

Further, you say, “This doctrine makes revelation contradict itself.” For instance, you say,
  • “The assertors of this doctrine interpret that text of Scripture, ‘Jacob I have loved, but Esau I have hated,’ as implying that God, in a literal sense, hated Esau and all the reprobates from eternity!”
Yet, when considered as fallen in Adam, were they not objects of his hatred? And might not God, of his own good pleasure, love or show mercy to Jacob and the elect — and yet at the same time, do the reprobate no wrong? But you say, “God is love.” And can God not be love, unless he shows the same mercy to all?

Again, says dear Mr. Wesley,
  • “They infer from that text, ‘I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy,’ that God is merciful only to some men, viz., the elect; and that he has mercy for those only — flat contrary to which is the whole tenor of the Scripture, as is this express declaration in particular, ‘The Lord is loving to every man, and his mercy is over all his works.’”
And so it is, but not his saving mercy. God is loving to every man: he sends his rain upon the evil and upon the good. (Mat 5.45) But you say, “God is no respecter of persons” (Acts 10:34). No! For every one, whether Jew or Gentile, that believes on Jesus, and works righteousness, is accepted by him. “But he that does not believe shall be damned” (Mk. 16:16). For God is no respecter of persons on account of any outward condition or circumstance in life whatsoever; nor does the doctrine of election in the least suppose him to be so. But as the sovereign Lord of all, who is debtor to none, he has a right to do what he will with his own; and to dispense his favours to what objects he sees fit, merely at his pleasure. And his supreme right in this is clearly and strongly asserted in those passages of Scripture where he says, “Moses, I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion” (Rom. 9:15, Exod. 33:19).

Further, from the text, “the children not yet being born, nor having done any good or evil, that the purpose of God according to election might stand, not of works, but of him that calls; it was said to her [Rebekah], The elder shall serve the younger” (Rom. 9:11-12) — you represent us as inferring that our predestination to life in no way depends on the foreknowledge of God.

But who infers this, dear Sir? For if foreknowledge signifies approval, as it does in several parts of Scripture, then we confess predestination and election do depend on God’s foreknowledge. But if by God’s foreknowledge you mean God’s fore-seeing some good works done by his creatures, as the foundation or reason for choosing and therefore electing them, then we say, in this sense, predestination does not in any way depend on God’s foreknowledge.

But I referred you, at the beginning of this letter, to Dr. Edwards’s Veritas Redux, which I recommended to you also in a recent letter, with Elisha Coles on God’s Sovereignty. Be pleased to read these, and also the excellent sermons of Mr. Cooper of Boston in New England (which I also sent you), and I do not doubt that you will see all your objections answered. Though I would observe, that after all our reading on both sides of the question, we will never in this life be able to search out God’s decrees to perfection. No, we must humbly adore what we cannot comprehend, and with the great Apostle, at the end of our enquiries, we must cry out, “O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out! For who has known the mind of the Lord? Or who has been his counsellor?” (Rom. 11:33-34) — or say with our Lord, when he was admiring God’s sovereignty, “Even so, Father: for so it seemed good in your sight” (Matt. 11:26).

However, it may not be amiss to take notice that if those texts, “The Lord is . . . not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance” (2 Pet. 3:9) and “I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked; but that the wicked turn from his way and live” (Ezek. 33:11) — and others like these — are taken in their strictest sense, then no one will be damned. [11]

But here’s the distinction. God takes no pleasure in the death of sinners, so as to delight simply in their death; rather, he delights to magnify his justice by inflicting the punishment which their iniquities have deserved. A righteous judge who takes no pleasure in condemning a criminal, may yet justly command him to be executed so that law and justice may be satisfied, even though it is in his power to procure him a reprieve.

I would hint further, that you unjustly charge the doctrine of reprobation with blasphemy; yet it is the doctrine of universal redemption, as you set it forth, that is really the highest reproach on the dignity of the Son of God, and the merit of his blood. Consider whether it is not blasphemy rather to say, as you do, “Christ not only died for those who are saved, but also for those who perish.”

The text you have misapplied, to gloss over this, is explained by Ridgely, Edwards, and Henry; and I purposely omit answering your texts myself so that you may be brought to read such treatises which, under God, would show you your error. You cannot make good the assertion that Christ died for those who perish without holding that all the damned souls would hereafter be brought out of hell (as Peter Bohler, one of the Moravian brethren, in order to prove universal redemption, frankly confessed in recent a letter). I cannot think Mr. Wesley is thus minded. And yet unless this can be proved, universal redemption taken in a literal sense, falls entirely to the ground. For how can all be universally redeemed, if all are not finally saved?

Dear Sir, for Jesus Christ’s sake, consider how you dishonour God by denying election. You plainly make salvation depend not on God’s free grace, but on man’s free-will. And if that is so, then it is more than probable that Jesus Christ would not have had the satisfaction of seeing the fruit of his death in the eternal salvation of one soul. [12] Our preaching would then be vain, and all the invitations for people to believe in him would also be in vain.

But, blessed be God, our Lord knew for whom he died. There was an eternal compact between the Father and the Son. A certain number was then given him as the purchase and reward for his obedience and death. He prayed for these, and not for the world (Joh. 17:9). For these elect ones, and these only, he is now interceding, and with their salvation he will be fully satisfied.

I purposely omit making any further particular remarks on the several last pages of your sermon. Indeed if your name, dear Sir, had not been prefixed to the sermon, I could not have been so uncharitable as to think you were the author of such sophistry. You beg the question, in saying that God has declared (notwithstanding that you admit, I suppose, some will be damned) that he will save all — i.e., every individual person. You take it for granted (for you have no solid proof) that God is unjust if he passes by any; and then you decry the “horrible decree”: and yet, as I hinted before, in holding to the doctrine of original sin, you profess to believe that he might justly have passed by all.

Dear, dear Sir, O do not be offended! For Christ’s sake, do not be rash! Give yourself to reading. Study the covenant of grace. Down with your carnal reasoning. Be a little child. And then, if the doctrine of universal redemption is not true, instead of pawning your salvation (as you have in a recent hymn book), and instead of talking of sinless perfection (as you have done in the preface to that hymn book), and instead of making man’s salvation depend on his own free will, as you have in this sermon — you will compose a hymn in praise of sovereign distinguishing love. You will caution believers against striving to work perfection out of their own hearts; and print another sermon the reverse of this, entitled “Free Grace Indeed.” Free, not because it is free to all; but free, because God may withhold or give it to whom and when he pleases.

Till you do this, I must doubt whether you know yourself. In the meanwhile, I cannot help but blame you for censuring the clergy of our church for not keeping to their articles, [13] when you yourself, by your principles, positively deny the 9th, 10th and 17th articles.

Dear Sir, these things should not be so. God knows my heart, as I told you before; so I declare again, nothing but a single regard for the honour of Christ has forced this letter from me. I love and honour you for his sake; and when I come to judgment, I will thank you before men and angels for what you have, under God, done for my soul.

There, I am persuaded, I shall see dear Mr. Wesley convinced of election and everlasting love. And it often fills me with pleasure to think how I shall behold you casting your crown down at the feet of the Lamb and, as it were, filled with a holy blushing for opposing the divine sovereignty in the manner you have done.

But I hope the Lord will show you this before you go from here. O how I long for that day! If the Lord should be pleased to make use of this letter for that purpose, it would abundantly rejoice the heart of, dear and honoured Sir,

Yours affectionate, though unworthy brother and servant in Christ,

GEORGE WHITEFIELD.

Notes
  1. Wesley’s Sermon has been included at the close of this letter.
  2. This refers to a work by Dr. John Edwards of Cambridge, not Jonathan Edwards, the famous American pastor-theologian.
  3. Reprobate: those abandoned to eternal damnation (Jer 6.30), as opposed to being elected to salvation (2Tim 2.10).
  4. Or “flipped a coin.”
  5. Deal is a town in Kent, England which lies on the English Channel, eight miles north-east of Dover.
  6. 2 February 1738
  7. Henry Scougal (1650–1678) – Scottish theologian, minister, and professor at King’s College, Univ. of Aberdeen.
  8. Johann Arndt (1555–1621) German Lutheran theologian and pietist.
  9. Eph 2:10 For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them. 2Pet 1:10 Therefore, brethren, be even more diligent to make your call and election sure, for if you do these things you will never stumble.
  10. Whitefield is citing Wesley in that same 18th paragraph, saying that it is his lament, not Wesley’s.
  11. That is, hell would be empty.
  12. Contra, Isa 53:10 When You make His soul an offering for sin, He shall see His seed.
  13. The Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion (Anglican Church). The 9th is Original Sin; 10th Free Will; 17th Predestination and Election.

FREE GRACE
By John Wesley

Sermon 128
(text modernized from the 1739 edition)
Source: https://archive.org/stream/freegracesermonp00wesl#page/n1/mode/2up

TO THE READER

Nothing but the strongest conviction — not only that what is here advanced is “the truth as it is in Jesus,” but also that I am indispensably obliged to declare this truth to all the world — could have induced me to openly oppose the sentiments of those whom I esteem for their work’s sake: At whose feet may I be found in the day of the Lord Jesus!

Should any believe that it is his duty to reply to this, I have only one request to make, Let whatever you do, be done in charity, in love, and in the spirit of meekness. Let your very disputing show that you have put on, as the elect of God, tender mercies, gentleness, longsuffering; “that even according to this time it may be said, ‘See how these Christians love one another!’
  • “He that did not spare his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all things?” – Romans, 8:32
1. How freely God loves the world! While we were yet sinners, “Christ died for the ungodly.” [1] While we were “dead in our sin,” (Eph 2.5) God “did not spare his own Son, but delivered him up for us all.” And how freely with him he “gives us all things!” Truly, FREE GRACE is all in all!

2. The grace or love of God, from which our salvation comes, is FREE IN ALL, and FREE FOR ALL.

3. FIRST. It is free in all to whom it is given. It does not depend on any power or merit in man; no, not in any degree, either in whole or in part. It does not in any way depend either on the good works or righteousness of the receiver: not on anything he has done, or anything he is. It does not depend on his endeavours. It does not depend on his good tempers, or good desires, or good purposes and intentions — for all these flow from the free grace of God. They are the streams only, not the fountain. They are the fruits of free grace, and not the root. They are not the cause, but the effects of it. Whatever good is in man, or is done by man, God is the author and doer of it. Thus his grace is free in all; that is, it in no way depends on any power or merit in man, but on God alone, who freely gave us his own Son, and “with him freely gives us all things.”

4. But it is free for ALL, as well as IN ALL. To this some have answered,
  • “No: It is free only for those whom God has ordained to life; and they are but a little flock. The greater part of mankind, God has ordained to death; and it is not free for them. God hates them; and therefore before they were born, he decreed they would die eternally. And this he absolutely decreed; because it was his good pleasure to do so; it was his sovereign will. Accordingly, they are born for this: to be destroyed body and soul in hell. And they grow up under the irrevocable curse of God, without any possibility of redemption. For what grace God gives, he gives only for this: to increase, not to prevent, their damnation.”
This is that decree of predestination. But I think I hear someone say,
  • “This is not the predestination which I hold. I hold only the Election of Grace. What I believe is not more than this: that God, before the foundation of the world, elected a certain number of men to be justified, sanctified, and glorified. (Rom 8.30) Now, all these will be saved, and none else. For the rest of mankind God leaves to themselves. So they follow the imaginations of their own hearts, which are only evil continually, (Gen 6.5) and waxing worse and worse, they are at length justly punished with everlasting destruction.”
5. Is this all the predestination which you hold? Consider: perhaps this is not all. Do you not believe that God ordained them to this very thing? If so, you believe the whole Decree; you hold predestination in the full sense which has been described above. But it may be, you think you do not. Do you not then believe that God hardens the hearts of those who perish: Do you not believe that he (literally) hardened Pharaoh’s heart; and that for this end he raised him up (or created him)? Why, this amounts to just the same thing. If you believe Pharaoh, or any one man on earth, was created for this end — to be damned — then you hold all that has been said of predestination. And there is no need for you to add that God seconds his Decree, which is supposedly unchangeable and irresistible, by hardening the hearts of those vessels of wrath whom that Decree had beforehand fitted for destruction.

6. Well, it may be that you do not believe even this. You do not hold any decree of reprobation. You do not think that God decrees any man to be damned, nor hardens and irresistibly fits him for damnation. You only say,
  • “God eternally decreed that all being dead in sin, he would say to some of the dry bones, Live, and to others he would not. That consequently, these should be made alive, and those should abide in death. These should glorify God by their salvation, and those by their destruction.”
7. Is this not what you mean by the Election of Grace? If it is, I would ask one or two questions. Are any who are not thus elected, saved? Or were any, from the foundation of the world? Is it possible for any man to be saved unless he is thus elected? If you say, “No,” you are but where you were. You have not gotten one hair’s breadth further. You still believe that in consequence of an unchangeable, irresistible decree of God, the greater part of mankind abides in death, without any possibility of redemption — inasmuch as none can save them but God, and he will not save them. You believe he has absolutely decreed not to save them. And what is this if not decreeing to damn them? It is, in effect, neither more nor less; it comes to the same thing. For if you are dead, and altogether unable to make yourself alive, then if God has absolutely decreed, he will make only others alive, and not you, he has absolutely decreed your everlasting death; you are absolutely consigned to damnation. So then, though you use softer words than some, you mean the self-same thing. And God’s decree concerning the election of grace, according to your own account of it, amounts to neither more nor less than what others call “God’s decree of reprobation.”

8. Call it therefore by whatever name you please, whether election, preterition, predestination, or reprobation, it comes in the end to the same thing. The sense of all is plainly this: “by virtue of an eternal, unchangeable, irresistible decree of God, one part of mankind is infallibly saved, and the rest infallibly damned: it being impossible that any of the former should be damned, or that any of the latter should be saved.”

9. But if this is so, then all preaching is in vain. It is needless for those who are elected: whether with preaching or without, they will infallibly be saved. Therefore the end of preaching — to save souls — is void with regard to them. And it is useless for those who are not elected, for they cannot possibly be saved: whether with preaching or without, they will infallibly be damned. The end of preaching is therefore void with regard to them likewise; so that in either case, our preaching is in vain, and your hearing is also in vain.

10. This then is a plain proof that the doctrine of predestination is not a doctrine of God, because it makes void the ordinance of God; and God is not divided against himself.

A SECOND proof is that it directly tends to destroy that holiness which is the end of all the ordinances of God. I do not say that none who hold to it are holy (for God is of tender mercy to those who are unavoidably entangled in errors of any kind). But the doctrine itself — that every man is either elected or not elected from eternity, and that the one must inevitably be saved, and the other inevitably damned — has a manifest tendency to destroy holiness in general. For it wholly takes away those first motives to follow after it, so frequently proposed in Scripture: the hope of future reward and fear of punishment, the hope of heaven and fear of hell. That these shall go away into everlasting punishment, and those into life eternal, is not a motive for someone to struggle for life, who believes his lot is cast already. It is not reasonable for him to do so if he thinks he is unalterably adjudged either to life or death. You will say, “But he does not know whether it is life or death.” What then? This does not help the matter; for if a sick man knows that he must unavoidably die, or unavoidably recover, even though he knows not which, it is unreasonable for him to take any medicine at all. He might justly say (and so I have heard some speak, both in bodily sickness and in spiritual),  “If I am ordained to life, I shall live; if to death, I shall die. So I need not trouble myself about it.” Thus this doctrine directly tends to shut the very gate of holiness in general, to hinder unholy men from ever approaching it, or striving to enter through it.

11. Just as directly, this doctrine tends to destroy several particular branches of holiness. Such are meekness and love: love, I mean, of our enemies, of those who are evil and unthankful. I am not saying that none who hold it have meekness and love (for as is the power of God, so is his mercy); but that it naturally tends to inspire or increase a sharpness or eagerness of temper, which is quite contrary to the meekness of Christ, as then it especially appears when they are opposed on this point. And it as naturally inspires contempt or coldness towards those whom we suppose are outcast from God. But you say, “O, I assume no particular man is a reprobate.” You mean you would not if you could help it. You can’t help sometimes applying your general doctrine to particular persons. The enemy of souls will apply it for you. You know how often he has done so: “But you rejected the thought with abhorrence.”

True; as soon as you could. But how did it sour and sharpen your spirit in the mean time? You well know, it was not the spirit of love which you then felt towards that poor sinner, whom you supposed or suspected (whether you would or not) to have been hated by God from eternity.

12. THIRDLY. This doctrine tends to destroy the comfort of religion, the happiness of Christianity. This is evident with regard to all those who believe themselves to be reprobated, or who only suspect or fear it. All the great and precious promises are lost to them; they afford them no ray of comfort: For they are not the elect of God; therefore they have neither lot nor portion in them. This is an effectual bar to their finding any comfort or happiness even in that religion whose ways are designed to be “ways of pleasantness, and all her paths peace.” (Pro 3.17)

13. And as for you who believe yourselves to be the elect of God, what is your happiness? I hope not a notion, a speculative belief, or a bare opinion of any kind; but a feeling possession of God in your heart, wrought in you by the Holy Ghost; or the witness of God’s Spirit with your spirit that you are a child of God. (Rom 8.16) This, otherwise termed
  • “the full assurance of faith,” is the true ground of a Christian’s happiness. And it does indeed imply a full assurance that all your past sins are forgiven, and that you are now a child of God. But it does not necessarily imply a full assurance of our future perseverance. I do not say this is never joined to it, but that it is not necessarily implied in it; for many have the one who do not have the other.
14. Now, experience shows that this witness of the Spirit is greatly obstructed by this doctrine; and not only in those who, believing themselves reprobated by this belief, thrust it far from them, but even in those who have tasted of that good gift, (Heb 6.4) who yet have soon lost it again, and fallen back into doubts, and fears, and darkness, even horrible darkness that might be felt! And I appeal to any of you who hold this doctrine, to say between God and your own hearts, whether you do not often have a return of doubts and fears concerning your election or perseverance? If you ask, “Who has not?” I answer, Very few of those who hold this doctrine; but many, very many of those who do not hold it, in all parts of the earth; many of those who know and feel they are in Christ today, and take no thought for the morrow; who abide in him by Faith from hour to hour, or rather from moment to moment. Many of these have enjoyed the uninterrupted Witness of the Spirit, the continual Light of his Countenance from the moment in which they first believed, for many months or years, to this very day.

15. That assurance of faith which these people enjoy, excludes all doubt and fear. It excludes all kinds of doubt and fear concerning their future perseverance; though it is not properly (as was said before) an assurance of what is future, but only of what now is. And this does not need for its support, a speculative belief that whoever is once ordained to life must live; for it is wrought from hour to hour by the mighty power of God, “by the Holy Ghost which is given to them.” (Rom 5.5) And therefore that doctrine is not of God, because it tends to obstruct, if not destroy, this great work of the Holy Ghost from which flows the chief comfort of religion, the happiness of Christianity.

16. Again, how uncomfortable a thought is this: that thousands and millions of men, without any preceding offense or fault of theirs, were unchangeably doomed to everlasting burnings? How peculiarly uncomfortable it must be to those who have put on Christ! To those who, being filled with a heart of mercy, tenderness, and compassion, could even “wish themselves accursed for their brethren’s sake!” (Rom 9.3)

17. FOURTHLY. This uncomfortable doctrine directly tends to destroy our zeal for good works. And this it does First, as it naturally tends (according to what was observed before) to destroy our love for the greater part of mankind, namely, the evil and unthankful. For whatever lessens our love, must so far lessen our desire to do them good. This it does, Secondly, as it cuts off one of the strongest motives to all acts of bodily mercy, such as feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, and the like, viz., the hope of saving their souls from death. For what does it avail to relieve the temporal wants of those who are just dropping into eternal fire? “Well; only run and snatch them as brands out of the fire.” (Zec 3.2) No, indeed this you assume is impossible. They were appointed to it, you say, from eternity, before they had done either good or evil. You believe it is the will of God that they should die. And “who has resisted his will?” (Rom 9.19) But you say you do not know whether these are elected or not. What then? If you know they are one or the other, that they are either elected or not elected, all your labour is void and in vain. In either case, your advice, reproof, or exhortation is as needless and useless as our preaching. It is needless for those who are elected; for they will infallibly be saved without it. It is useless for those who are not elected; for with or without it they will infallibly be damned; therefore you cannot consistently with your principles take any pains about their salvation. Consequently, those principles directly tend to destroy your zeal for good works — for all good works, but particularly for the greatest of all, the saving of souls from death.

18. But, FIFTHLY, this doctrine not only tends to destroy Christian holiness, happiness, and good works, but it also has also a direct and manifest tendency to overthrow the whole Christian Revelation. The point which the wisest of the modern unbelievers most industriously labour to prove, is that the Christian Revelation is not necessary. They well know that if they could once show this, the conclusion would be too plain to be denied: “If it is not necessary, it is not true.” Now, this fundamental point you give up. For supposing there is an eternal, unchangeable decree, one part of mankind must be saved, as though the Christian Revelation were not in existence; and the other part of mankind must be damned, notwithstanding that Revelation. And what would an infidel desire more? You allow him all he asks. In making the gospel thus unnecessary to all sorts of men, you give up the whole Christian cause. “O do not tell it in Gath! Do not publish it in the streets of Ashkelon! Lest the daughters of the uncircumcised rejoice; lest the sons of unbelief triumph!” (2Sam 1.2)

19. [SIXTHLY.] And as this doctrine manifestly and directly tends to overthrow the whole Christian Revelation, so it does the same thing, by plain consequence, in making that Revelation contradict itself. For it is grounded on such an interpretation of some texts (whether more or fewer, it does not matter) that it flatly contradicts all the other texts, and indeed the whole scope and tenor of Scripture. For instance: The assertors of this doctrine interpret that text of Scripture, “Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated,” as implying that God in a literal sense hated Esau and all the reprobated, from eternity. Now what can possibly be a more flat contradiction than this, not only to the whole scope and tenor of Scripture, but also to all those particular texts which expressly declare, “God is love”? (1Joh 4.8) Again, they infer from that text, “I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy,” (Romans 9:15) that God is love only to some men, viz., the elect, and that he has mercy for those only; flat contrary to which is the whole tenor of Scripture, as is this express declaration in particular, “The Lord is loving to every man; and his mercy is over all his works.” (Psalm 145:9) Again, they infer from that and similar texts, “It is not of him that wills, nor of him that runs, but of God that shows mercy,” (Rom 9.16) that he shows mercy only to those to whom he had respect from all eternity. No indeed, but who replies against God now? You now contradict the whole oracles of God, which declare throughout, “God is no respecter of persons,”(Acts 10:34). “There is no respect of persons with him,” (Rom. 2:11). Again, from that text, “The children not yet being born, nor having done any good or evil, that the purpose of God according to election might stand, not of works, but of him that calls; it was said to her (to Rebecca), ‘The elder shall serve the younger,’” (Rom 9.11-12) you infer that our being predestined or elect, in no way depends on the foreknowledge of God. Flat contrary to this are all the scriptures; and these in particular: “Elect according to the foreknowledge of God,” (1Peter 1:2); “Whom he foreknew, he also predestined,” (Rom. 8:29).

20. And “the same Lord over all is rich in mercy to all that call upon him,” (Rom. 10:12). But you say, “No; he is such only to those for whom Christ died. And those are not all, but only a few whom God has chosen out of the world; for he did not die for all, but only for those who were ‘chosen in him before the foundation of the world,’” (Eph. 1:4). Also flat contrary to your interpretation of these scriptures, is the whole tenor of the New Testament; as are these texts in particular: “Do not destroy him with your meat, for whom Christ died,” (Rom. 14:15) — a clear proof that Christ died not only for those who are saved, but also for those who perish. He is “the Saviour of the world,” (John 4:42); He is “the Lamb of God that takes away the sins of the world,” (John 1:29); “He is the propitiation, not for our sins only, but also for the sins of the whole world,” (1John 2:2); “He, (the living God) is the Saviour of all men,” (1Tim. 4:10); “He gave himself a ransom for all,” (1Tim. 2:6); “He tasted death for all men” (Heb. 2:9).

21. If you ask, “Why then are not all men saved?” the whole law and the testimony answer, First, Not because of any decree of God; not because it is his pleasure that they should die; for, “As I live, says the Lord God, I take no pleasure in the death of anyone that dies,” (Ezek. 18:32). Whatever is the cause of their perishing, it cannot be his will if the oracles of God are true; for they declare, “He is not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance,” (2Pet. 3:9); “He wills that all men should be saved.” (1Tim 2.4)

And Secondly, they declare the reason why all men are not saved: namely, that they will not be saved. So our Lord says expressly, “You will not come to me that you may have life,” (John 5:40). “The power of the Lord is present to heal them,” (Luk 5.17) but they will not be healed. “They rejected the counsel,” the merciful counsel, “of God against themselves,” (Luk 7.30) as did their stiff-necked forefathers. And therefore they are without excuse, because God would save them, but they will not be saved. This is the condemnation: “How often would I have gathered you together, and you would not,” (Matt. 23):

22. Thus this doctrine manifestly tends to overthrow the whole Christian Revelation, by making it contradict itself; by giving such an interpretation of some texts, that it flatly contradicts all the other texts, and indeed the whole scope and tenor of Scripture; this is an abundant proof that it is not of God.

But neither is this all: For, SEVENTHLY, it is a doctrine full of blasphemy; such blasphemy that I should dread to mention it, except that the honour of our gracious God, and the cause of his truth, will not allow me to be silent. In the cause of God then, and from a sincere concern for the glory of his great name, I will mention a few of the horrible blasphemies contained in this horrible doctrine. But first, I must warn every one of you who hears it (for you will answer it at the great day), not to charge me (as some have done) with blaspheming, just because I mention the blasphemy of others. And the more you are grieved by those who thus blaspheme, see that you confirm your love towards them the more, and that your heart’s desire, and continual prayer to God is, “Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.” (Luk 23.34)

23. This premised, let it be observed, that this doctrine represents our blessed Lord, “Jesus Christ the Righteous,” (1Joh 2.1) “the only begotten Son of the Father, full of grace and truth,” (Joh 1.14) as an hypocrite, a deceiver of the people, a man void of common sincerity. For it cannot be denied that he speaks everywhere as if he was willing that all men should be saved. Therefore, to say that he was not willing that all men should be saved, is to represent him as a mere hypocrite and dissembler.

It can’t be denied that the gracious words which came out of his mouth are full of invitations to all sinners. To say then, that he did not intend to save all sinners, is to represent him as a gross deceiver of the people. You cannot deny that he says, “Come to me all you who are weary and heavy-laden.” (Mat 11.28) If then you say he calls those who cannot come; those whom he knows to be unable to come; those whom he can make able to come, but will not; then how is it possible to describe greater insincerity? You represent him as mocking his helpless creatures by offering what he never intends to give. You describe him as saying one thing, and meaning another; as pretending the love which he did not have. Him, in “whose mouth there was no deceit,” (1Pet 2.22) you would make full of deceit, void of common sincerity. Then especially, when drawing near the city, He wept over it and said (Mat. 23.37), “O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you kill the prophets, and stone those who are sent to you; how often I would have gathered your children together, and you would not;” (καὶ οὐκ ἠθελήσατε — kai ouk ethelesate). Now if you say, they would, but he would not, you represent him (who could hear this?) as weeping crocodile’s tears; weeping over the prey which he himself had doomed to destruction.

24. This is such blasphemy that one would think it might make the ears of a Christian tingle. But there is yet more to follow; for just as it dishonours the Son, so this doctrine dishonours the Father. [2] It destroys all his attributes at once. It overturns his justice, mercy, and truth. Yes, it represents the most holy God as worse than the devil, as more false, more cruel, and more unjust. More false; because the devil, liar as he is, has never said, “He wills all men to be saved.” More unjust; because the devil cannot, even if he would, be guilty of such injustice as you ascribe to God, when you say that God condemned millions of souls to the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels, for continuing in sin which they cannot avoid, for lack of that grace which he will not give them. And more cruel; because that unhappy spirit “seeks rest and finds none;” (Mat 12.43) so that his own restless misery is a kind of temptation to him to tempt others. But God rests in his high and holy place; so that to suppose him — of his own mere motion, of his pure will and pleasure, happy as he is — to doom his creatures to endless misery, whether they will it or not, is to impute such cruelty to him that we cannot impute even to the great enemy of God and man. It is to represent the most high God (he that has ears to hear, let him hear!) as more cruel, false, and unjust than the devil.

25. This is the blasphemy clearly contained in the horrible decree of predestination. And here I fix my foot. On this I join issue with every assertor of it. You represent God as worse than the devil; more false, more cruel, more unjust. But you say you will prove it by scripture. Hold! What will you prove by Scripture? That God is worse than the devil? It cannot be. Whatever that Scripture proves, it can never prove this. Whatever its true meaning is, this cannot be its true meaning. Do you ask, “What is its true meaning then?” If I say, “I do not know,” you have gained nothing; for there are many scriptures, the true sense of which neither you nor I shall know till death is swallowed up in victory. But this I know, it would be better to say it had no sense at all, than to say it had such a sense as this. It cannot mean, whatever it means besides, that the God of truth is a liar. Let it mean what it will, it cannot mean that the Judge of all the world is unjust. No scripture can mean that God is not love, or that his mercy is not over all his works. That is, whatever it proves besides, no scripture can prove predestination.

26. This is the blasphemy for which (however I love the persons who assert it) I abhor the doctrine of predestination. It is a doctrine upon the supposition of which — if one could possibly suppose it for a moment (call it election, reprobation, or whatever you please, for it all comes to the same thing) — one might say to our adversary the devil,
  • “You fool, why do you roar about any longer? Your lying in wait for souls is as needless and useless as our preaching. Do you not hear that God has taken your work out of your hands; and that he does it much more effectually? You, with all your principalities and powers, can only so assault that we may resist you; but He can irresistibly destroy both body and soul in hell! (Mat 10.28) You can only entice; but his unchangeable decree — to leave thousands of souls in death — compels them to continue in sin till they drop into everlasting burnings. You tempt; but He forces us to be damned, for we cannot resist his will. (Rom 9.19) You fool, why do you go about any longer, seeking whom you may devour? (1Pet 5.8) Do you not hear that God is the devouring lion, the destroyer of souls, the murderer of men? Moloch only caused children to pass though the fire: and that fire was soon quenched — or the corruptible body being consumed, its torment was at an end. But God, you are told, by his eternal decree — fixed before they had done good or evil — causes not only children of a span long, but their parents also, to pass through the fire of hell, the ‘fire which shall never be quenched’; (Mar 9.43) and the body which is cast into it, now being incorruptible and immortal, will be ever consuming and never consumed, but ‘the smoke of their torment,’ because it is God’s good pleasure, ‘ascends up for ever and ever.’” (Rev 14.11)
27. O how the enemy of God and man would rejoice to hear that these things were so! How he would cry aloud and not be sparing! How he would lift up his voice and say,
  • “To your tents, O Israel! Flee from the face of this God, or you shall utterly perish. But to where will you flee? Into heaven? He is there. Down to hell? He is there also. You cannot flee from an omnipresent, almighty Tyrant. And whether you flee or stay, I call heaven his throne, and earth his footstool, to witness against you: you shall perish; you shall die eternally. Sing, O hell, and rejoice, you that are under the earth! For God, even the mighty God, has spoken, and devoted to death thousands of souls, from the rising of the sun to its going down. Here, O death, is your sting! They shall not, cannot escape; for the mouth of the Lord has spoken it. Here, O grave, is your victory! Nations yet unborn, before they have ever done good or evil, are doomed never to see the light of life; but you shall gnaw upon them forever and ever! Let all those morning stars sing together who fell with Lucifer, son of the morning. Let all the sons of hell shout for joy! For the decree is past, and who shall disannul it?” (Isa 14.27)
28. Yes, the decree is past; and so it was before the foundation of the world. But what decree? It is even this: “I will set before the sons of men ‘life and death, blessing and cursing.’ And the soul that chooses life shall live, just as the soul that chooses death shall die.” (Deu 30.19) This decree by which those “whom God foreknew, he predestined,” was indeed from everlasting. This decree — by which all who allow Christ to make them alive, are “elect according to the foreknowledge of God” (1Pet 4.2) — now stands fast, even as the moon, and as the faithful witness in heaven. (Psa 89.37) And when heaven and earth pass away, this shall not pass away; (Mat 24.35) for it is as unchangeable and eternal as is the being of God who gave it. This decree yields the strongest encouragement to abound in all good works and in all holiness; and it is a well-spring of joy, of happiness also, to our great and endless comfort. This is worthy of God; it is in every way consistent with all the perfections of his nature. It gives us the noblest view of his justice, mercy, and truth. To this agrees the whole scope of the Christian Revelation, as well as all its parts.

To this Moses and all the Prophets bear witness, and our blessed Lord and all his Apostles. Thus Moses prophesied in the name of his Lord: “I call heaven and earth to record against you this day, that I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing; therefore choose life, that you and your seed may live.” (Deu 30.19) Thus prophesied Ezekiel (to cite one Prophet for all), “The soul that sins shall die: The son shall not bear (eternally) the iniquity of the father. The righteousness of the righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked shall be upon him,” (Eze. 18:20). Thus said our blessed Lord: “If any man thirsts, let him come to me and drink,” (John 7:37). Thus said his great Apostle St. Paul, “God commands all men everywhere to repent,” (Acts 17:30) — “all men everywhere”; every man in every place, without any exception either of place or person. Thus said St. James, “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all men liberally, and does not upbraid, and it shall be given to him,” (James 1:5). Thus said St. Peter, “The Lord is not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance” (2Pet. 3:9). And thus said St. John, “If any man sins, we have an Advocate with the Father; and he is the propitiation for our sins; and not for ours only, but for the sins of the whole world,” (1Joh 2:1, 2).

29. O hear this, you who forget God! You cannot charge your death upon him. “‘Have I any pleasure at all that the wicked should die?’ asks the Lord God,” (Ezek. 18:23ff.). “Repent, and turn from all your transgressions, so that iniquity will not be your ruin. Cast away from you all your transgressions by which you have transgressed — for why will you die, O house of Israel? For I have no pleasure in the death of anyone who dies, says the Lord God. Therefore turn, and live.” (Eze 18.32) “As I live, says the Lord God, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked. — Turn, turn from your evil ways; for why will you die, O house of Israel?” (Ezek. 33:11)

Notes
  1. Rom 5:6,8.
  2. The original printing had an obvious typographical error in it saying, “just as it honours the son, so doth this doctrine honour the Father.” That would be inconsistent with “It destroys all his attributes at once.” Perhaps the typesetter was a Calvinist...

Walid Shoebat - Mark of the Beast


Tuesday 10 March 2015

THE BONDAGE OF THE WILL

by Martin Luther (1483-1546)

Contents

Argument 1: The universal guilt of mankind proves “free will” to be false.

Argument 2: The universal rule of sin proves “free will” to be false.

Argument 3: “Free will” is not able to gain acceptance with God through keeping the Moral and Ceremonial  Law.

Argument 4: The Law is designed to lead men to Christ by giving a knowledge of sin.

Argument 5: The doctrine of salvation by faith in Christ proves “free will” to be false.

Argument 6: There is no place for any idea of merit or reward.

Argument 7: “Free will” has no value because works have nothing to do with a man’s righteousness before God.

Argument 8: A whole fistful of arguments.

Argument 9: Paul is absolutely clear in refuting “free will”.

Argument 10: The state of man without the Spirit shows “free will” can do nothing spiritual.

Argument 11: Those who come to know Christ did not previously think about Him or prepare themselves for Him.

Argument 12: Salvation for a sinful world is by the grace of Christ through faith alone.

Argument 13: The case of Nicodemus in John 3 opposes “free will”.

Argument 14: “Free will” is useless: salvation is by Christ alone.

Argument 15: Man is unable to believe the Gospel, so all his efforts cannot save him.

Argument 16: Universal unbelief proves “free will” to be false.

Argument 17: The power of the “flesh” in true believers disproves “free will”.

Argument 18: Knowing that salvation does not depend on “free will” can be very comforting.

Argument 19: God’s honour cannot be tarnished.

This material first appeared as Section VII in The Bondage of the Will. This text is excerpted from chapter one of Born Slaves, an abridged version in modern English of Martin Luther’s The Bondage of the Will (first published in 1525).

“What the Scriptures Teach”

THE Scriptures are like several armies opposed to the idea that man has a “free will” to choose and receive  salvation. But it will be enough for me to bring two generals into the fight—Paul and John, with a few of their forces.

Argument 1: The universal guilt of mankind proves “free will” to be false.
  • For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith: as it is written, The just shall live by faith. For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who hold the truth in unrighteousness; Because that which may be known of God is manifest in them; for God hath shewed it unto them. (Rom 1:17-19)
In Romans 1:18, Paul teaches that all men without exception deserve to be punished by God: “The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who hold the truth in unrighteousness.” If all men have “free will” and yet all without exception are under God’s wrath, then it follows that “free will” leads them in only one direction—“ungodliness and unrighteousness” (i.e., wickedness). So where is the power of “free will” helping them to do good? If “free will” exists, it does not seem to be able to help men to salvation because it still leaves them under the wrath of God.

But some people accuse me of not following Paul closely enough. They claim that Paul’s words “against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who hold the truth in unrighteousness” do not mean that everyone without exception is guilty in God’s sight. They argue that the text leaves it possible that some people do not “hold the truth in unrighteousness,” i.e., to suppress the truth by their wickedness. But Paul is using a Hebrew form of words which leaves no doubt that he means the wickedness of all men.

Furthermore, notice what Paul wrote just before it. In verse 16, Paul declares the Gospel to be “the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth.” This must mean that apart from the power of God in the Gospel, no one has strength on his own to turn to God. Paul goes on to say that this applies both to the Jews and to the Greeks. The Jews knew the laws of God in minute detail, but this did not save them from God’s wrath. The Greeks enjoyed wonderful cultural benefits, but these brought them no nearer to God. There were Jews and Greeks who tried hard to make themselves right with God. But in spite of all their advantages and their “free will,” they failed completely. Paul does not hesitate to condemn them all.

Then notice that in verse 17, Paul says that “the righteousness of God” is revealed. So God shows His righteousness to men. But God is not foolish. If men did not need God’s help, He would not waste His time giving it to them. Every time people are converted, it is because God has come to them and overcome their ignorance by showing the Gospel to them. Without this, they could never save themselves. No one in all human history has thought out by himself the fact of God’s wrath as it is taught in Scripture. No one ever dreamed of getting peace with God through the life and work of a unique Saviour, the God-man, Jesus Christ. In fact, the Jews rejected Christ in spite of all the teaching of their prophets. It seems that the very goodness that some Jews and Gentiles reached stopped them from seeking God in His way—because they were determined to do things in their own way. So, the more “free will” tries, the worse things become!

There is not a third group of people somewhere in between believers and unbelievers: a group capable of saving themselves. Jews and Gentiles make up the whole of mankind, and they are all under God’s wrath. None has the ability to turn to God. He must show Himself to them first. If it were possible by “free will” to discover the truth, surely one Jew somewhere would have done so! The very highest reasoning of the Gentiles and the very strongest efforts of the best of the Jews did not bring them anywhere near to faith in Christ (Rom 1:21; 2:23, 28-29). They were condemned sinners along with all the rest. If all men have a “free will” and all men are guilty and condemned, then this supposed “free will” is powerless to bring them to faith in Christ. So, their will is not free after all.

Argument 2: The universal rule of sin proves “free will” to be false.
  • What then? are we better than they? No, in no wise: for we have before proved both Jews and Gentiles, that they are all under sin; As it is written, There is none righteous, no, not one: There is none that understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God. They are all gone out of the way, they are together become unprofitable; there is none that doeth good, no, not one. Their throat is an open sepulchre; with their tongues they have used deceit; the poison of asps is under their lips: Whose mouth is full of cursing and bitterness: Their feet are swift to shed blood: Destruction and misery are in their ways: And the way of peace have they not known: There is no fear of God before their eyes. Now we know that what things soever the law saith, it saith to them who are under the law: that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God. Therefore by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight: for by the law is the knowledge of sin. But now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested, being witnessed by the law and the prophets; Even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe: for there is no difference: For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus: Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God. (Rom 3:9-25)
We must let Paul explain his own teaching. In Romans 3:9, he says, “What then? are we [Jews] better than they [Gentiles]? No, in no wise: for we have before proved both Jews and Gentiles, that they are all under sin.” Not only are all men without exception declared to be guilty in God’s sight, they are slaves to the sin that makes them guilty. This includes the Jews, who thought they were not slaves of sin because they had the Law of God. Since neither Jews nor Gentiles have been able to rid themselves of this slavery, there is obviously no power in man to help him to do good.

This universal slavery to sin includes those who appear to be the best and most upright. No matter how much goodness men may naturally achieve, this is not the same thing as the knowledge of God. The most excellent thing about men is their reason and their will, but it has to be acknowledged that this noblest part is corrupt. Paul says in Romans 3:10-12, “As it is written, There is none righteous, no, not one: There is none that understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God. They are all gone out of the way, they are together become unprofitable; there is none that doeth good, no, not one.” The meaning of these words is perfectly clear. It is in the reason and the will that God is known. But no one by nature knows God. We must conclude therefore that man’s will is corrupt and man is totally unable by himself to know God or to please Him.

Perhaps some brave individual will say that we are able to do more than we actually perform. But we are concerned here with what we are able to do, not with what we may or may not actually do. The Scriptures quoted by Paul in Romans 3:10-12 will not allow us to make such a distinction. God condemns both the sinful inability of men as well as their corrupt acts. If men were able in the slightest degree to try to move in God’s direction, there would be no need for God to save them. He would allow them to save themselves. But no man is able even to attempt it!

In Romans 3:19, Paul declares that every mouth is to be shut tight because no one may argue against God’s judgment of them; for there is nothing in anyone that God can praise—not even a will that is free to turn to Him. If someone says, “I do have a little ability of my own to turn to God,” that must mean he thinks there is something in him that God must praise and not condemn. His mouth is not shut! But this contradicts Scripture.

God has said that all mouths are shut. It is not just certain groups of people who are guilty before God. It is not just the Pharisees among the Jews who are condemned. If this were so, then the remaining Jews would have had some power of their own to keep the Law and avoid being guilty. But even the best of men are condemned for their ungodliness. They are spiritually dead in the same way as those who do not try to keep God’s Law at all. All men are ungodly and guilty, deserving to be punished by God. These things are so clear that no one can whisper a word against them!

Argument 3: “Free will” is not able to gain acceptance with God through keeping the Moral and Ceremonial Law.

Paul says in Romans 3:20, “by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight,” i.e., no one will be declared righteous in God’s sight by observing the Law. I argue that when he says this, he means the Moral Law (the Ten Commandments) as well as the Ceremonial Law. An idea has spread abroad that Paul means only the Ceremonial Law—the ritual of animal sacrifices and temple worship. It is extraordinary that men have called Jerome, [1] who invented this idea, a saint! I would call him something else! Jerome said that the death of Christ ended any possibility of being justified (declared righteous) by keeping the Ceremonial Law. But he left entirely open the possibility of being justified by keeping the Moral Law in our own strength, without God’s help.

My answer is that if Paul only meant the Ceremonial Law, his argument is meaningless. Paul is contending that all men are unrighteous and in need of God’s special grace—the love, wisdom, and power of God by which He saves us. The result of Jerome’s idea would be that God’s grace is needed to save us from Ceremonial Law but not from the Moral Law. But we cannot keep the Moral Law, apart from grace! You can scare people into keeping ceremonies, but no human power can force them to keep the Moral Law. Paul is arguing that we cannot be justified in God’s sight by trying to keep the Moral Law, or the Ceremonial Law. Eating, drinking, and such things in themselves neither justify nor condemn us.

I will go further and state that Paul means the whole law, and not any particular part of it, is still binding on men. If the Law was no longer binding on men because Christ died, all that Paul needed to do was to say so and nothing more. In Galatians 3:10, Paul wrote, “For as many as are of the works of the law are under the curse: for it is written, Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the law to do them.” In this text, Paul claims support from Moses that the Law is binding on all men, and that failure to obey the Law puts all men under God’s curse.

Neither men who try to keep the Law, nor those who do not try to keep it, are justified before God, for they are all spiritually dead. Paul’s teaching is that there are two classes of people in the world—those who are spiritual and those who are not (see Romans 3:21 and 28). This is in harmony with the teaching of Jesus Christ in John 3:6: “That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.” To people who do not have the Holy Spirit, the Law is useless. No matter how much they try to keep the Law, they will not be justified except by spiritual faith.

Finally, then, if there is such a thing as “free will,” it must be the noblest thing in a man, for without the Holy Spirit “free will” helps a man to keep the whole Law! But Paul says that those who are “of the works of the law” are not justified. This means that this “free will” at its best is unable to make men right with God. In fact, in Romans 3:20 Paul says that the Law is necessary to show us what sin is: “By the law is the knowledge of sin,” i.e., we become conscious of sin. Those who are “of the works of the law” cannot recognize what sin really is. The Law was not given to show men what they can do, but to correct their ideas of what right and wrong are in God’s sight. “Free will” is blind, for it needs to be taught by the Law. It is also powerless, for it fails to justify anyone in God’s sight.

Argument 4: The Law is designed to lead men to Christ by giving a knowledge of sin.

The argument in favour of “free will” is that the Law would not have been given if we were not able to obey it. Erasmus! [2] You repeatedly say, “If we can do nothing, what is the purpose of all the laws, precepts, threats, and promises?” The answer is that the Law was not given to show us what we can do. It was not even given to help us do what is right. Paul says in Romans 3:20, “by the law is the knowledge of sin.” The Law’s purpose is to show what sin is and what it leads to—death, hell, and the wrath of God. The Law can only point these things out. It cannot free us from them. Deliverance comes only through Jesus Christ, revealed to us in the Gospel! Neither reason nor “free will” can lead men to Christ, for reason and “free will” themselves need the light of the Law to show them their own sickness.

Paul asks this question in Galatians 3:19, “What then was the purpose of the law?” But Paul’s answer to his own question is the opposite of yours and Jerome’s. You say that the Law was given to prove the existence of “free will.” Jerome says that it was to restrain sin. But Paul does not say either of those things. His whole argument is that men need special grace to fight the evil that the Law exposes. There is no cure until the disease is diagnosed. The Law is necessary to make men see their dangerous condition, so they will long for the remedy that is found only in Christ! So Paul’s words in Romans 3:20 may seem to be very simple, but they have enough power to make “free will” utterly and completely non-existent. Paul says in Romans 7:7, “I had not known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not covet.” This means that “free will” does not even know what sin is! How then can “free will” ever know what is right? And if it does not know what is right, how can it strive to do what is right?

Argument 5: The doctrine of salvation by faith in Christ proves “free will” to be false.

In Romans 3:21-25, Paul confidently proclaims, “But now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested, being witnessed by the law and the prophets; Even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe: for there is no difference: For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus: Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood.”

These words are thunderbolts against “free will.” Paul distinguishes the righteousness that God gives from a righteousness that comes from keeping the Law. “Free will” could only possibly flourish if man could be saved by keeping the Law. But Paul clearly demonstrates that we are saved without relying in any way on the works of the Law. No matter how much we might imagine a supposed “free will” would be able to do good works or make us good citizens, Paul would still say that the righteousness that God gives is a different thing altogether. It is impossible for “free will” to survive the assault of verses like these.

These verses also fire another thunderbolt against “free will.” In them, Paul draws a line between believers and unbelievers (Rom 3:22). Nobody can deny that the supposed power of “free will” is quite different from faith in Jesus Christ. But without faith in Christ, Paul says nothing can be acceptable to God. And if a thing is not acceptable to God, it is sin. It cannot be neutral. Therefore, “free will,” if it exists, is sin because it is opposed to faith, and it gives no glory to God.

Romans 3:23 is another thunderbolt: “For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God!” Paul does not say, “All have sinned, except those who do good works by their own free will.” There are no exceptions. If it were possible to make ourselves acceptable to God by “free will,” then Paul is a liar—he ought to have allowed for exceptions. But he states clearly that because of sin, no one can truly glorify and please God. Anyone who does please God must know that God is pleased with him or her. But our experience teaches us that nothing in us pleases God. Ask those who argue for “free will” to say whether there is something in them that pleases God. They must admit that there is not. And Paul clearly says there is not.

Even those who believe in “free will” must agree with me that they cannot glorify God in their own strength. Even with their “free will,” they doubt whether they please God. So, I prove, on the testimony of their own conscience, that “free will” does not please God. Even with all its powers and efforts, “free will” is guilty of the sin of unbelief. So we see that the doctrine of salvation by faith is quite contrary to any idea of “free will.”

Argument 6: There is no place for any idea of merit or reward.

Those who teach “free will” say that if there is no “free will,” then there is no place for merit or reward.

What will the supporters of “free will” say about the word freely in Romans 3:24? Paul says that believers are “justified freely by his grace.” What do they make of “by his grace”? If salvation is free and given by grace, it cannot be earned or deserved. Yet Erasmus argues that a man must be able to do something to earn his salvation or he would not deserve to be saved. He thinks that the reason why God justifies one person and not another is because one used his “free will” and tried to be righteous, and the other did not. This makes God a respecter of persons—and the Bible says He is not (Acts 10:34). Erasmus and some other persons like him say that men can do only a very little with their own “free will” to get salvation. They say that “free will” only has a little merit—it does not deserve very much. But they still think that “free will” makes it possible for people to try to find God. And they still think that if people do not try to find God, it is their own fault if they do not receive His grace.

So whether this “free will” has great merit or little, the result is the same: the grace of God is earned by it. But Paul denies all merit when he says we are “freely” justified. Those who say that “free will” has only little merit are just as bad as those who say it has great merit. Both teach that “free will” has enough merit to secure the favour of God. So they are really no different from one another.

Actually, these supporters of “free will” have given us a perfect example of “jumping out of the frying pan into the fire.” By talking about “free will” only having little merit, they make their position worse, not better. At least those who talk about great merit (they are called “Pelagians” [3]) put a high price on God’s grace because great merit is needed to earn salvation. But Erasmus makes grace cheap. It can be obtained by a feeble effort. But Paul reduces both ideas to pulp by this one word “freely” in Romans 3:24.

Later, in Romans 11:6, he states that our acceptance with God is only by grace: “And if by grace, then is it no more of works…if it be of works, then is it no more grace.” Paul’s teaching is quite plain. There is no such thing as human merit in God’s sight, whether the merit is great or small. No one deserves to be saved. No one can work to be saved. Paul excludes all supposed works of “free will” and establishes grace alone. We cannot give ourselves even one tiny bit of credit for our salvation. It is entirely because of God’s grace.

Argument 7: “Free will” has no value because works have nothing to do with a man’s righteousness before God.
  • For if Abraham were justified by works, he hath whereof to glory; but not before God. For what saith the scripture? Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness. Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt. But to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness. (Rom 4:2-5)
Now I will follow through with Paul’s arguments in Romans 4:2-3: “For if Abraham were justified by works, he hath whereof to glory; but not before God. For what saith the scripture? Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness.” Paul does not deny that Abraham was a righteous man. The whole point is that this righteousness did not earn him salvation. No one disagrees that evil works are not acceptable to God. That is obvious. The argument is that not even good works make us acceptable to God. They merit His wrath, not His favor. In Romans 4:4-5, Paul sets “a man who works” over against “a man who does not work.” Righteousness, which is acceptance with God, is not accounted to “him who works,” but to “him who does not work” and—instead—trusts in God. There is no halfway position!

Argument 8: A whole fistful of arguments.

I must mention in passing some more arguments against “free will.” I will only refer to them briefly, but each of them by itself could completely destroy the idea of “free will.”

For example, the source of the grace by which we are saved is God’s eternal purpose (Rom 8:28ff.). This must rule out the suggestion that God is gracious to us because of something we may do.

Another argument is based on the fact that God promised salvation by grace (to Abraham) before He gave the Law. Paul argues that if we are now saved by keeping the Law by “free will,” then this would mean the promise of salvation by grace is cancelled (Rom 4:13-15; Gal 3:15-21). Faith, also, would have no value.

Paul also tells us that the Law can only expose sin; it cannot remove it (Gal 3:21ff.; Rom 3:20). Because “free will” can only operate on the basis of keeping the Law, there can be no righteousness acceptable to God achieved by it.

Lastly, we are all under God’s condemnation because of Adam’s sinful disobedience (Rom 5:12; 1Co 15:22). We all come under this condemnation at our birth, including those who have “free will”—if any such people exist! How then can “free will” help us—except to sin and earn condemnation?

I could have left out these arguments and simply given a running commentary on Paul’s writings. But I wanted to show just how stupid my opponents are, who fail to see such simple things plainly. I leave them to think over these arguments for themselves.

Argument 9: Paul is absolutely clear in refuting “free will.”

Paul’s arguments are so clear, it is amazing that anyone could misunderstand him. He says, “They are all gone out of the way, they are together become unprofitable; there is none that doeth good, no, not one” (Rom 3:12). I am amazed that some people say, “Some are not gone out of the way, are not unrighteous, are not evil, are not sinners; there is something in man that strives after good”! And Paul does not make these statements in a few isolated passages. He makes them sometimes positively and sometimes negatively, by plain statements and by contrasts. The plain meaning of his words, the whole context and the entire scope of his argument, unite in this—that apart from faith in Christ there is nothing but sin and condemnation. My opponents are defeated even if they will not surrender! But that is not in my power to bring about; I must leave that to the work of the Holy Spirit.

Argument 10: The state of man without the Spirit shows that “free will” can do nothing spiritual.
  • For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh; but they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit. For to be carnally minded is death; but to be spiritually minded is life and peace. Because the carnal mind is enmity against God: for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be. So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God. But ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his. (Rom 8:5-9) 
In Romans 8:5, Paul divides mankind into two—those of the “flesh” (or the sinful nature), and those of the “Spirit” (see John 3:6). This can only mean that those who do not have the Spirit are in the flesh and still have a sinful nature. Paul says that “if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ he does not belong to Christ” (Rom 8:9). This obviously means that those without the Spirit belong to Satan. “Free will” has not been much good to them! Paul says that those controlled by their sinful nature “cannot please God” (Rom 8:8). He says that “the carnal mind is enmity against God: for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be” (Rom 8:7). It is impossible for such people to make any effort of their own to please God.

A man called Origen [4] suggested that each man has a “soul” that has the ability to turn to the “flesh” or to the “Spirit.” This is just his imagination. He dreamt it! He has no Biblical proof for it at all. In fact, there is no middle position. Everything without the Spirit is flesh; and the best activities of the flesh are hostile to God. This is the same as the teaching of Christ in Matthew 7:18—that an evil tree cannot produce good fruit. It is also in harmony with the twin statements of Paul: “The just [righteous] shall live by faith” (Rom 1:17) and “whatsoever is not of faith is sin” (Rom 14:23). Those who are without faith are not justified, and those who are not justified are sinners in whom any supposed “free will” can only produce evil. So “free will” is nothing but a slave of sin, death, and Satan. Such “freedom” is no freedom at all.

Argument 11: Those who come to know Christ did not previously think about Him, seek Him, or prepare themselves for Him.

In Romans 10:20, Paul quotes Isaiah 65:1: “I am sought of them that asked not for me; I am found of them that sought me not: I said, Behold me, behold me, unto a nation that was not called by my name.” Paul knew from his own experience that he did not seek God’s grace, but received it in spite of his furious rage against it. Paul says in Romans 9:30-31 that the Jews who made great efforts to keep the Law were not saved by those efforts, but Gentiles who are totally ungodly received God’s mercy. This clearly shows that all the efforts of a man’s “free will” are useless to save him. The Jews’ zeal got them nowhere, while ungodly Gentiles received salvation! Grace is freely given to the undeserving and unworthy, and is not gained by any of the efforts that even the best and most upright of men try to make.

Argument 12: Salvation for a sinful world is by the grace of Christ through faith alone.
  • He was in the world, and the world was made by him, and the world knew him not. He came unto his own, and his own received him not. But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name: Which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God. And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth. John bare witness of him, and cried, saying, This was he of whom I spake, He that cometh after me is preferred before me: for he was before me. And of his fullness have all we received, and grace for grace. (Joh 1:10-16)
Let us now turn to John who also writes eloquently against “free will.” In John 1:5 he says, “And the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not,” and in John 1:10-11, “He was in the world, and the world was made by him, and the world knew him not. He came unto his own, and his own received him not.” By “world,” John means the entire human race. Since “free will” would be a most excellent thing in man, it must be included in whatever John says about the “world.” Therefore, according to these two texts, “free will” does not know the light of truth and it hates Christ and his people. Many other passages, such as John 7:7; 8:23; 14:7; 15:19; 1 John 2:16; 5:19, proclaim that the “world” (and that especially includes “free will”) is under Satan’s command.

The “world” includes all that is not separated to God by the Spirit. Now, if there had been anybody in the world who had by “free will” known the truth and by “free will” did not hate Christ, John would have altered what he wrote. But he did not do so. It is clear, therefore, that “free will” is as guilty as the “world.” In John 1:12-13, John goes on, “But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name: Which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.” “Not of blood” means it is useless to rely on your place of birth, or on your family. “Nor of the will of the flesh” means it is foolish to rely on the “works of the law.” “Nor of the will of man” means that no effort by man can begin to make him acceptable to God.

If “free will” is useful at all, John ought not to reject “the will of the flesh,” or else he’s in danger of Isaiah 5:20: “Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil.” There can be no doubt that natural birth is of no use to gain salvation because in Romans 9:8, Paul writes, “They which are the children of the flesh, these are not the children of God: but the children of the promise.”

Then John also says in John 1:16, “And of his fullness have all we received, and grace for grace,” i.e., one blessing after another. So we receive spiritual blessings only through the grace of another and not by our own efforts. Two opposite things cannot both be true—that grace is so cheap, anyone anywhere can earn it; and at the same time, grace is so dear that we can only receive it through the merit of one man, Jesus Christ.

I wish my opponents would realize that when they argue for “free will,” they are denying Christ. If we can obtain grace by “free will,” we do not need Christ. And if we have Christ, we do not need “free will.” Supporters of “free will” prove their denial of Christ by their action because some of them even resort to the intercession of Mary and the “saints,” and fail to rely on Christ as the only mediator between man and God. They all abandon Christ in His work as Mediator and the kindest Savior—and regard the merits of Christ as of less value than their own efforts.

Argument 13: The case of Nicodemus in John 3 opposes “free will.”
  • Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews: the same came to Jesus by night, and said unto him, Rabbi, we know that thou art a teacher come from God: for no man can do these miracles that thou doest, except God be with him. Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God. Nicodemus saith unto him, How can a man be born when he is old? can he enter the second time into his mother’s womb, and be born? Jesus answered, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit. Marvel not that I said unto thee, Ye must be born again. The wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit. Nicodemus answered and said unto him, How can these things be? (Joh 3:1-9)
Look at Nicodemus’ virtues in John 3:1-2. He confesses Christ to be true and to have come from God. He refers to Christ’s miracles. He seeks out Christ to hear more from Him. Now, when he hears of the new birth (3:3-8), does he admit that this is what he had sought in the past? No! He is startled and confused,  and he turns away from it at first as an impossibility (3:9). Even the greatest philosophers have to admit that they do not know about Christ, much less can they seek those things that belong to salvation, before Christ came. When they admit that, they are admitting that their “free will” is ignorant and powerless! Surely, those who teach “free will” are crazy, but they will not keep quiet and give glory to God.

Argument 14: “Free will” is useless because salvation is by Christ alone.

It is clear from John 14:6, where Christ is said to be “the way, the truth and the life,” that salvation is to be found only in Jesus Christ. That being so, everything out of Christ can only be dark, false, and dead. What need would there be for Christ to come if men naturally understood the way to God, knew God’s truth, and shared God’s life?

Our opponents say that bad men have “free will,” even though they abuse it. If this is so, then there is something good in the worst of men. And if that is so, then God is unjust to condemn them. But John says that those who do not believe in Jesus Christ are condemned already (Joh 3:18). But if men possess this good thing called “free will,” then John ought to have said that they are condemned only because of their bad part, not because of this good part in them. Scripture says, “He that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him” (Joh 3:36). This must mean the whole of a man. If this were not so, then there would be a part in a man preventing him from being condemned—he could go on sinning without any fears, secure in the knowledge that he cannot be condemned.

Again, we read in John 3:27 that “a man can receive nothing, except it be given him from heaven.” This refers especially to a man’s ability to do God’s will. Only what comes from above can help a man to do God’s will. But “free will” does not come from above, which means that “free will” is useless.

In John 3:31, John says, “He that is of the earth is earthly, and speaketh of the earth: he that cometh from heaven is above all.” Now, “free will” certainly has no heavenly origin. It is of the earth, and there is no other possibility. This can only mean, therefore, that “free will” has nothing to do with heavenly things. It can only be concerned with earthly things. Christ says in John 8:23, “You are from beneath; I am from above: ye are of this world; I am not of this world.” If this statement only meant that their bodies were of the world, the statement would not be necessary; for they knew that already. Christ means that they were totally lacking in any spiritual power, and that this power could only come from God.

Argument 15: Man is unable to believe the Gospel, so all his efforts cannot save him.
  • No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him: and I will raise him up at the last day. It is written in the prophets, And they shall be all taught of God. Every man therefore that hath heard, and hath learned of the Father, cometh unto me. (Joh 6:44-45)
In John 6:44, Christ says, “No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him.” This leaves absolutely no room for “free will.” The Lord goes on to explain the Father’s drawing, “Every man therefore that hath heard, and hath learned of the Father, cometh unto me” (verse 45). Man’s will, left to itself, is powerless to do anything about coming to Christ for salvation. Even the very word of the Gospel is heard in vain, unless the Father Himself speaks to the heart and draws us to Christ. Erasmus wants to play down the plain meaning of this text by likening men to sheep who respond to the shepherd when he holds out a branch to them. He argues that there is something in men that responds to the Gospel. But this will not do because even if God shows the gift of His own Son to ungodly men, they do not respond unless He works within them. Indeed, without the Father’s inward working, men are more likely to persecute His Son rather than follow Him. But, when the Father shows how wonderful His Son is to those to whom He has given understanding, then they are drawn to Him. Such people are already “sheep,” and they know the Shepherd’s voice!

Argument 16: Universal unbelief proves “free will” to be false.
  • And when he is come, he will reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment: Of sin, because they believe not on me. (Joh 16:8-9)
In John 16:8, Jesus says that the Holy Spirit will “reprove the world of sin,” i.e., He will convict the world of guilt in regard to sin. In verse 9, He explains that the sin is “they believe not on me.” Now this sin of unbelief is not in the skin or in the hair, but in the mind and the will. All men without exception are as ignorant of the fact of their guilty unbelief as they are ignorant of Christ Himself. The guilt of unbelief has to be revealed to them by the Holy Spirit. So all that is in man, including “free will,” stands condemned by God and can only add to the guilt of which he is ignorant until God shows it to him. The whole of Scripture proclaims Christ as the only way of salvation. Anyone who is outside Christ is under the power of Satan, sin, death, and the wrath of God. Christ alone can rescue men from the kingdom of Satan. We are not delivered by any power within us, but only by the grace of God!

Argument 17: The power of the “flesh” in true believers disproves “free will.”

For some reason, Erasmus, you ignore my arguments from Romans 7 and Galatians 5. These two chapters show us that even in true Christian believers, the power of the “flesh” is such that they cannot do what they know they should do and want to do. Human nature is so bad, even in people who have the Spirit of God in them, that not only do they fail to do what is right, but they even fight against it. What possibility can there be then that there is a power to do good in those who are not born again? As Paul says in Romans 8:7, “The carnal mind is enmity against [5] God.” I would like to meet the man who can puncture that argument!

Argument 18: Knowing that salvation does not depend on “free will” can be very comforting.

I confess that I would not want “free will” even if it were given to me! If my salvation were left to me, I would be no match for all the dangers, difficulties, and devils that I have to fight. But even if there were no enemies to fight, I could never be certain of success. I would never be sure I had pleased God or whether there was something more I needed to do. I can prove this from my own painful experience over many years. [6]

But, my salvation is in God’s hands and not my own. He will be faithful to His promise to save me, not on the basis of what I do but according to His great mercy. God does not lie; He will not let my enemy the devil snatch me out of His hands. By “free will,” not one person can be saved. But by free grace, many will be saved. Not only so, but I am glad to know that as a Christian, I please God—not because of what I do but because of His grace. If I work too little or too badly, He graciously pardons me and makes me better. This is the glory of all Christians.

Argument 19: God’s honour cannot be tarnished.

You may be worried that it is hard to defend the honour of God in all this. “After all,” you might say, “He condemns those who cannot help being sinful, and who are forced to stay that way because God does not choose to save them.” As Paul says, we “were by nature the children of wrath, even as others” (Eph 2:3). But you must look at it another way. God should be reverenced and respected as one Who is merciful to all He justifies and saves, although they are completely unworthy. We know God is divine. He is also wise and just. His justice is not the same as human justice. It is beyond our human understanding to grasp fully, as Paul exclaims  in Romans 11:33, “O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!” If we agree that God’s nature, strength, wisdom, and knowledge are far above ours, we should also believe that His justice is greater and better than ours. He has promised us that when He reveals His glory to us, we will see clearly what we should believe now: that He is just, always was, and always will be (1Co 13:12).

Here is another example. If you use human reason to consider the way God rules the affairs of the world, you are forced to say either that there is no God or that God is unjust. The wicked prosper and the good suffer (see Job 12:6; Psalm 73:12)—and that appears to be unjust. So, many men deny the existence of God and say that everything happens by chance.

The answer to this problem is that there is life after this life, and all that is not punished and repaid here will be punished and repaid there. This life is nothing more than a preparation for, or rather, a beginning of the life that is to come. This problem has been debated in every age but is never solved, except by believing the Gospel as found in the Bible. Three lights shine on the problem: the light of nature, the light of grace, and the light of glory. By the light of nature, God seems to be unjust, for the good suffer and the wicked prosper. The light of grace helps us further, but it does not explain how God can condemn someone who, by his own strength, can do nothing but sin and be guilty. Only the light of glory will explain this, on that coming Day when God will reveal Himself as a God who is entirely just, although His judgment is beyond the understanding of  human beings. [7] A godly man believes that God foreknows and foreordains all things, and that nothing happens except by His will. No man, or angel, or any other creature, therefore, has a “free will.” Satan is the prince of this world and holds all men in bondage unless they are released by the power of the Holy Spirit.

Notes
  1. Jerome (ca. A.D. 347-420) – distinguished translator, exegete, and theologian of the early church; translated the Latin translation of Scripture known as the Vulgate.
  2. Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam (1466?-1536) – Dutch Renaissance humanist and Roman Catholic theologian, recognized as the “Prince of the Humanists,” a leading biblical scholar, and a powerful advocate of church reform. Believing that all education must have the goal of training readers to understand Scripture, he prepared his own edition of the New Testament, published in 1516. Containing a Greek NT, a Latin translation, and annotations, this translation challenged Rome’s understanding of the Word and Rome’s doctrine. Some said in his day, “Erasmus laid the egg that Luther hatched” because his call for reform and his New Testament helped lay the foundation of the Reformation. Taking Rome’s side and holding firmly to the doctrine of free will, he wrote On the Freedom of the Will against Luther, who replied with On the Bondage of the Will. Erasmus’s later attempts to navigate the “middle road” between Rome and the Reformers disappointed and even angered many Protestants as well as conservative Catholics.
  3. Pelagians – a sect in the 4th and 5th centuries that followed the teachings of the heretic Pelagius (c. 354-c. 420), a British monk who argued that people could reform themselves by free will and that they can take the first steps toward salvation without the assistance of God’s grace. His views were condemned as heresy by the Council of Ephesus (431).
  4. Origen (c.185-c.254) – Greek philosopher, theologian, and Biblical scholar in Alexandria, Egypt; his views were later condemned as unorthodox.
  5. enmity against – hostile to; the state of being an enemy.
  6. Luther’s own conversion followed years of self-effort, fears, and confusion. See the tract Luther’s Conversion by Horatius Bonar (1808-1889).
  7. See the booklet Divine Sovereignty and Human Responsibility by J. I. Packer for further explanation;