Biblical Framework
Charles Clough
Lesson 142
We’re
going to hopefully finish this appendix, so we can move on to the next event in
Christ’s life and finish that this spring, that is the resurrection. We’ve gone through the birth, the life, and
we got into the death of Christ, and tonight we’re going to deal with some of
the issues that came out of that. Turn
to Appendix C. I want to take you
through the history of this. It’s not
easy material and there’s a lot of disagreement about this and there’s quite a
bit of debate in church history. But it
does involve significant items, significant points about church history that
explain things about various denominations etc. that you know today. I think as Christians we need to be aware of
what has gone on in the past. We’re not
the first generation of Christians ever to walk the planet; therefore we
probably aren’t the first ones to raise a lot of these questions.
Again
I introduce this by saying that church history is a study unto itself. It’s
another whole field by itself. But the
benefits of studying church history are that as the Holy Spirit has led the
Church from the day of Pentecost up to the present time, He has evidently
forced the Church to deal with one doctrine after another. It’s always been…, if you can think of the
picture of a flock of sheep, sheep don’t appreciate the shepherd until the
wolves bite their flanks. The Church
has apparently had the propensity, we all do, to learn things the hard
way. In the history of the Church
that’s the way it happened. I can’t
think of one doctrinal advance ever made in church history that was made
because people sought it. It was always
made because heretics came into the Church and nearly wrecked it, and then oh
gee, we’ve got to get this straight.
Then after that the doctrine settled out and got debated, and got based
Scripturally and then everybody moved on to the next crisis, forgot all about
everything and then a whole new set of heretics come in, tear the place up,
hmm, maybe we ought to do something about this. And that’s how the Church has grown; very unflattering for every
believer. But hey, that’s a corporate view
of us individually.
As
we go on through this particular debate I prefaced it last time by saying that
chronologically the problem of the atonement really came into
Protestantism. That’s because in
Catholicism you never really had a clarification of the potency of the cross as
a total salvation package. Even to this
day, in a Roman Catholic culture if you say that you are saved and you dare
claim that you know you’re saved, you’re going to get some pretty interesting
glances, because they do not believe, in actual practice, that it’s a question
you can know for sure. Assurance is not coupled with faith inside the Roman
culture. And it’s not to slight… I
mean, hey, I’m not Bob Jones, I could comment on that and will before the
evening is over because we will get into what fundamentalism is all about, a
very interesting debate about Bob Jones.
If you don’t know anything about Bob Jones family you’ll know that they
could care less what anybody thinks, they’re going to do their own thing
period. As one lady talked to me who
has a son down there in his Junior year, they were going to get rid of the
dating rule, they couldn’t interracially date, so Bob Jones thought because
everybody was making a fuss of it he’ll extend it five more years. So that’s how Bob Jones operates. In other words, they’re not people that are
intimidated.
We
go on in church history into the extent of the atonement and date wise here is
a timeline, and we come to the 1500’s with the Protestant Reformation, and this
was a major point. Now the average
Roman Catholic and average Protestant today doesn’t even know the Reformation
existed, but it was a very traumatic time in church history. A lot of things happened here. You had, within the Roman Catholic Church,
in its behalf, you had godly people, born again Christians, the problem was
that institutionally corruption had occurred so that things became so
manifestly corrupted that something had to be done about it. So not only was there just corruption but
you had breakthroughs, new truths or Biblical truths fell out of this
Protestant Reformation and one of them was justification by faith, that the
only way that man can be accepted with God to inherit the righteousness that
Jesus Christ generated is by faith and when that faith is exercised, that
righteousness is credited completely and fully to the person’s account; that’s
justification by faith.
Then
after that… after that because we’re
justified, now the motive from this point on…, here’s the point of
justification when somebody becomes a Christian, from that point on the motive
is one of thankful reflection upon what God has done for me. This results in a
certain kind of motive which is thankfulness; it also is grounded a tremendous
assurance. But that’s missing in the
Roman Catholicism of the Middle Ages because, first there wasn’t a motive…there
was thankfulness, I mean, Francis of Assisi was thankful, but not like
this. This is an order of magnitude
different. This is thankfulness for our
so great salvation, that I know. It’s
not thankful to God for a pretty sky and pretty creation, medieval Roman Catholicism
was thankful for that. But this was a
different degree, a different magnitude of thankfulness, and it became the
ground motive for the Christian life.
The Christian life wasn’t seeking to become acceptable with God at the
end, it wasn’t seeking to acquire a merit, it was seeking to express a thankful
walk because of what had happened in the past.
So
there were some fundamental changes that happened here, but because of this
emphasis on justification, it turned out that the cross became very much
central to the whole issue. Hence after
this there came to be tremendous emphasis on what did Christ do? And in the Appendix what I’m trying to do is
to show that life with Christology… remember when we dealt with the hypostatic
union, Jesus Christ is true humanity undiminished deity united in one person
without confusion forever, and we can say that nice and glibly but it took 450
years before we got there. Same thing
here, we say Christ died for us, and we say that glibly, but what we want to do
tonight is take you on the torturous pathway through all the argumentation that
went on about what did Jesus Christ do on the cross. Can you come to a known non-Christian and legitimately say Christ
died for you. Can you do that? A good segment of Protestantism to this day
does not believe that, that it is not right to say to a non-Christian that
Christ died for you; you have no right to say that because you’re not sure that
Christ did die for that person. This is
fundamental, this is what’s wrapped up in the extent of the atonement, as to
what extent does the atonement apply.
As
with all these great debates in church history you learn to come to
Scripture. The end product isn’t just
to learn church history. The end
product is to appreciate the depths of the Word of God and better minds than us
have knocked heads over this issue. We
can learn a lot by listening to their dialogue, because they have raised deep
questions, and when we capture the essence of these questions, we go back, we
open our Bibles and say yeah, I never thought of that question, let’s see what
the text says. That’s the proper
response to church history. From church
history we learn the questions that we use back in our Bible study. One of the questions concerns the area, on
pages 1-2, I’ve dealt with four areas of Bible doctrine that are involved with
this issue. They all came up together,
kind of. One was election,
justification, the nature of faith, and sanctification.
I
don’t want to mislead you; I’m not saying that the atonement issue was the sole
factor in all these. Other issues were
going on. It’s just that I’m using the
cross and the death of Christ as a foil to bring all this stuff in right
now. If you look under the doctrine of
election, and justification, faith and sanctification, just look at some of the
questions. What I’ve tried to do is
paraphrase the questions that believers were debating. Under the doctrine of election, if then God
intended, notice the verb, if you’re not afraid to mark up your notes, circle
the verb “intend” because it turned out in a lot of the discussions that we
really weren’t clear when we asked the question about what we meant by the
question. The question is: “If, then,
God intended to save all men by having His Son die for their sins, but in the
end all are not saved, what does this fact do to our view of His
sovereignty?” If God intended to save
all men and all men aren’t saved, doesn’t that imply that there’s a force other
than God, outside of God, that somehow is thwarting His sovereignty? That’s the issue raised in the Reformation,
the second and third generations.
Another
question, “Are His intentions,” if you don’t believe that, “in conflict with
His sovereign choice? And how can He
remain sovereign if men’s decisions to accept or reject the Cross in the end
control the extent of the atonement?”
Do you see what they’re getting at?
Who’s finally controlling this thing?
“If we say that He elected upon the basis of His foreknowledge of men’s
response to the Cross, isn’t this saying the same thing—that men initiate the
action and God ‘seconds’ it? Suppose we take the other approach and postulate
that the atonement is limited to only the elect. Then, the preaching of the Cross to those who reject, to the
non-elect, cannot be a valid ‘call.’ As
a strong Reformed theology professor acquaintance of mine once said,” this is
by a well-known exegete of the Scriptures, and here’s what he actually said,
I’ve got it in his notes, “‘if I knew who the non-elect were, I wouldn’t bother
to preach to them.’ Obviously, the extent of the atonement is closely linked to
the truths of election.”
Let’s
go to justification. These are
interesting questions that were raised.
“If justification is somehow based upon the atonement and it is not sufficient
to remove all my sin when I initially believe in Christ, isn’t the atonement in
some fashion limited in my life?” In
other words, if I have to confess my sins in order to be forgiven, isn’t that
an added action that happens; is that added action not included in the original
atonement? These are the questions that
were being raised. Here’s a good one:
“If we die physically after being justified, aren’t we still under the Edenic
death sentence for sin?” In other words, how does justification work when it
doesn’t remove the sentence of death on my body, an interesting question? These weren’t light-heartedly raised
questions. “If we all have to appear
before the judgment seat of Christ in the future, aren’t we still in some way
identified with sin? If the atonement
is thus limited in those who believe and apparently only partially effective,
how can we ever be sure we are wholly justified before God?” This is a whole segment of people that
raised this question.
Now
the doctrine of faith. “If the
atonement is limited and saving for the elect, what role does faith play in
appropriating salvation? Is it
necessary? Or, from our human
perspective how do we know that we are of the elect? If false faith of mere ‘professing’ Christians exists, how is
genuine faith to be distinguished from the false? If, to answer this question, I must ponder my faithfulness, then
what role does the cross play as an object of faith? On the other hand, if the atonement is unlimited but ineffective
without faith, then isn’t faith again the center of action rather than the
cross? In this case, doesn’t faith
somehow become a meritorious good work?” to be added to the cross, to make the
cross effective.
Finally
the doctrine of sanctification. “Are
post-salvation sins covered in the atonement, or is it limited in this
respect? If the benefits of the
atonement must be appropriated by faith, what happens when this faith fails? Do
these benefits fluctuate with the ups and downs in the Christian life? If, however, the atonement is not so
limited, why must we forgive in order to be forgiven, confess our sins, repent,
and be disciplined when we sin?”
All
these were issues that were raised, so you see, these guys… there’s a whole
slug of stuff here. Today, 300, 400,
500 years later, 450 years later we’ve answered some of these questions because
of more Bible study, and finally we see our way clear in some of these
things. But they didn’t, this was new
stuff here, they were coming out of all this. So that’s the background.
If
you turn to page 3 there’s some “Preliminary Considerations.” Bear with me tonight, this is tough material
and there’s some considerations that I want you to be aware of. Even if you don’t grab and follow all these,
just grab the idea that before you go into these discussions you’ve got to
think through the old question that we asked.
When you ask a question you are already taking a position. Most of the time you can’t avoid that, but
what you can avoid is being ignorant that you’re doing that. So when you think about these questions,
remember that the questions themselves contain baggage; just accept that,
that’s a fact of life and conversation.
So when questions arise, don’t answer them too fast; answer them
reflectively thinking about what does the question bring onto the table. In particular I want you to look at this, so
if you’ll just follow these three paragraphs.
This is actually a review of stuff we covered back when we dealt with
Gen. 1-3.
“With
a Satisfactory Atonement along side the obvious continuation of evil in
history, the Protestant mentality centered upon the plan behind the
atonement. A plan involves the choice
of the planner. In this case, God’s
sovereignty came to the fore.” What
they were trying to do, if you raised the question what is the plan of
salvation, if it’s not Rome with indulgences, and it’s not paying money to the
Pope, if it’s not going to Mother Church, if it’s not crucifying Christ anew in
the mass, if it’s not any of these things, then what is the plan of
salvation? When you start asking what
is the plan, you come to the Planner.
What was the Planner’s intention, what was on His mind? The Protestants began to think about what
did God have on His mind when He did all this, because if we could find out
what He had on His mind we could define [can’t understand word/s] trust in the
Lord, what did Jesus do on the cross, and all that. So it went back and focused on the Planner, which was great. In this case, the sovereignty of God came to
the fore. “How is this sovereign
attribute to be viewed? Do we think of
it abstractly, as a prime quality ‘cleansed’ from all historical connotation?”
In
other words, do we think of this cause, Aristotle was great on the many
different kinds of causes. So have this
big universal cause, and we’re asking is God’s sovereignty a big universal
cause. Did you hear what I just
said? I’ve already led you down a
trap. This is where Protestantism… Is
God’s sovereignty like that Aristotelian category of universal cause? Ooh, see what was happening? The guys had intellectual tools that they
inherited through scholasticism and Aristotle, Plato and Greek philosophy. They picked up these ideas and began to
manipulate Bible doctrine in the light of the tools that Aristotle and Aquinas
had given to the Church, Aristotle didn’t give to the Church, but Aquinas
brought in a lot of the tools and some of them were great tools. It’s just that they were unrefined and not
subject to Scripture.
Remember
the verse that we’ve looked at several times, Col. 2:8. Here’s an example of how serious that verse
is, because we’re going to go through some agonizing church history which I
believe could largely have been avoided if people had understood what Paul
wanted us to do in Col. 2:8, “See that no one takes you captive through
philosophy and empty deception, according to the tradition of men, according to
the elementary principles of the world, rather than according to Christ.” We said that the word translated “elementary
principles” is the Greek word stoicheia,
and stoicheia if you look it up in a
Greek dictionary and find out how it’s used, it is used by the Greek
philosophers to refer to earth, fire, water, air, all the basic
categories. See what stoicheia means—basic categories.
Paul
says when you start to go in and you have these basic categories and you begin
to frame Scripture in the light of those basic categories, you’ve got a
problem. Right now you’re taken captive
by the tradition of men, because our education is tradition. Very little of what we learn in school is
original thought. Think about it. When
you learned in biology, as an example, evolution, did you do the
experiments? Did you do Spilonzoni’s
[sp?] experiment with the maggots and the meat? Most of us didn’t, we just read about it. Did we ever dig fossils
and actually go out into a fossil field and find fossils when we were talking
about fossils in biology? Or did we
just read about it in a book and the teacher told us that? Tradition of men. It’s not the tradition that’s necessarily wrong, we have to learn
by tradition. Training is largely
tradition. That’s a method of teaching.
There’s nothing wrong with that, but Paul says when that’s your basic, when
that’s your starting point, you’ve got a problem.
He
says instead of that, in verse 8, “according to the elementary principles of
the world, rather than according to Christ,” and he takes this word, Christos, and he pits that against stoicheia. What do we know about Christos?
We know that He is God and man. We know
the hypostatic union. We know the
Creator/creature distinction. We know all these things, we know that God is
holy, He’s love, He’s immutable, He’s eternal, He’s omniscient, omnipresent, He
has all these attributes, the essence of God, the Creator/creature distinction,
the doctrine of the Trinity, the doctrine of man over against God and the
incarnation, all this is wrapped up in Christos. That’s where you start, Paul says. You don’t start with Aristotle, you don’t
start with fire and earth; you start with the fundamental categories that
Scripture gives you… that Scripture gives
you.
Going
back to page 3, “If we think of sovereignty as an abstract property or a
universal classification that belongs to both God and the creation, then we
haven’t broken with Aristotelian logic.”
All I’m saying is this, if you diagram what the philosophers try to do,
they try to come up to this point where they can classify everything, and included
underneath their categories is God, man, plus nature, etc. In other words, put God and man alongside of
each other in this classification system.
But the classification system is higher than them, it looks down and
says God is this way, man is this way, etc.
What you’ve done, this is nothing more than the Continuity of Being,
it’s all one level of existence, there’s no Creator/creature distinction, it’s
all erased. So “if we think of
sovereignty as an abstract property or a universal classification that belongs
to both God and the creation, then we haven’t broken with Aristotelian
logic. We are still enmeshed in the
pagan idea of the Continuity of Being wherein both God and man are on the same
level of existence. Immediately, we
find ourselves with an internal logical contradiction: two beings on the same level cannot have
total sovereignty.”
Hence,
the tension between God’s sovereignty and man’s sovereignty and man’s choice
and God’s choice, they become billiard balls banging against each other because
they’re in the same box down here, when the Bible says wait a minute, there’s
two boxes, there’s the Creator and the creature, they’re not the same. Man’s choice is an altogether different kind
of existence than God’s sovereignty.
They can’t come into collision because they’re structured not to. Man is but a finite replica of God, he has
this thing called choice or free will down here and God has sovereignty up
here, and choice is a finite analogue to God’s sovereignty. It’s an analogue; it’s not on the same
level. So it’s ridiculous to think they
can ever be in conflict once you seriously come to grips with Creator/creature
distinction. But that wasn’t done,
unfortunately. What had happened was
the scholastic categories took over, these were the intellectual tools that
these guys knew at the time, and they did their best utilizing those tools.
Now
if you’ll follow the debate. There’s an
interesting thing here about church history.
“In Luther and Calvin (1509-1564),” notice the date of Calvin, because
most of this is not on the Lutheran side of the Reformation, most of this
happened on the Calvinist side of the Reformation, “In Luther and Calvin,”
Calvin dating from “(1509-1564)” he died a young man. By the way, his life was amazing. Do you know how old he was when he wrote the Institutes of the
Christian Religion that was the textbook for Protestant theology for the last
500 years? Twenty-one. He didn’t go to American Public Schools. “… there is little or no evidence of the
limited atonement idea.” When you read
Calvin and Luther you don’t come across any idea of the atonement being
limited, even though Reform theologians keep talking to us about the limited
atonement. It’s not in Calvin and
Luther, they didn’t discuss that issue.
“Their
focus,” that is Luther’s focus and Calvin’s’ focus, “is upon Christ as the
believer’s savior and” underline this one, “source of assurance, viz.,
that Christ died for him,” that is for the believer. “Wrote Calvin:” follow this quote, this is a quote directly from
Calvin, at the end of the notes you’ll see the reference, “‘if we have been
chosen in Him, we shall not find assurance of our election in ourselves. . . ,”
let me read that sentence very slowly a second time, because subsequent
Reformed theologians don’t believe that and they rejected that. So let’s get it straight from what Calvin
originally taught, “‘if we have been chosen in Him, we shall not find assurance
of our election in ourselves. . . . Christ [Himself] is the mirror wherein we
must. . .contemplate our election’[1].”
In
other words, what Calvin was saying is how do I know I’m accepted with
God? Because I look at Jesus
Christ. It’s the same thing Luther
discovered, I’m looking at Christ, I’m not looking here, I’m not looking at all
my warts, I’m not looking at my personal sins, I’m not measuring how good I’m
rating, I’m not doing a fruit inspection of my life, I’m looking at Him. I’m acceptable before God because of
Him. Luther and Calvin looked up, not
in; two different prepositions. Up and
out rather than down and in, totally different ways. And the first guys out of the block in the Protestant Reformation
weren’t looking in, they were looking outwardly because they knew they were
sinners, they knew they never could have enough evidence in their heart to
convince them that they were saved, they all knew that Jesus Christ paid for
the sins and that therefore He was their Savior. And their assurance was that.
“Thus
each person at the point of saving faith knows without doubt that Christ died
for him or her.” That is fundamental, underline that, that’s fundamental! That’s what saving faith is according to the
first generation out. Faith, in other
words, to Calvin and to Luther, faith is assurance. You don’t seek to be assured that you really believed. You believed because you’re assured you’re
saved. What does Hebrews say? Faith is what? The evidence, the assurance
of things hoped for. That was the magic
power, and I want to emphasize that because that was what created a problem for
the Protestants. This is where the
Protestants drew like a lightning rod the attack of Rome. Rome came in on the Protestants and the new
small Protestant movement like crazy over this point. I’m going to show you how.
“The elect are those creatures who come to this faith in post-fall
history. However God in eternity past
viewed His plan, He viewed it as involving real history in which there was a
fall.”
“Following
Calvin a number of Reformers, such as Theodore Beza (1519-1605)” notice the
dates, very close to Calvin, “entertained an abstract approach to God’s
sovereignty,” here we go, now the heat’s off a little bit and these guys are
trying to systemize the Reformation, he “entertained an abstract approach to
God’s sovereignty that led to the limited atonement doctrine. Their reasoning was simple. God from all eternity had a plan expressed
in His ‘eternal decrees.’ Since only
the elect are saved, it must be that the atonement was designed only for them. In essence, their argument was a
straightforward reasoning from effect to cause. This approach, however, quickly affected faith and
assurance. If Christ died only for the
elect, then how can I know He died for me?
I can’t know that He died for me directly—that would require omniscience—so
my assurance must come from inspecting my ‘fruit’, the evidences of the Holy
Spirit’s work in my heart.”
“Luther
and Calvin had argued earlier that looking inwardly at my fallen nature only
leads to anxiety so that one must look outwardly
to the Cross of Christ instead! The
‘second generation’ Reformers coming after Luther and Calvin, because of their
system, had to look inwardly for
assurance. Thus the limited atonement
doctrine effectively divorced faith and assurance. In the days of Luther and Calvin, faith was assurance that Christ died for me; in the later days of the
Reformers assurance could only follow and reinforce faith—to show evidence of
election and the coverage of my sin by the atonement. Assurance thus became for them ‘faith in faith’ or persevering
faith evidenced by the fruit in one’s life.”
See
what happened here, there’s a shift here and it looks kind of vague and subtle,
but it has very powerful implications.
How many people have heard of the Puritans? Everybody’s heard of the Puritans. What is your image of the Puritans? Very sober, very legalistic, etc., some of that is a lot of
bologna, if we dared sing some of the hymns they sand in their wedding services
it’d be rated “R.” The Puritans, by the
way, were brilliant. They were
excellent soldiers.
In
fact there was one English non-Christian historian who said you know we can
laugh at the Puritans, the way they whine with their silly little music,
because they got rid of all the accompaniment, etc. a lot of it was a cappella, and he says we laugh at
their drawn faces, their seriousness, the way they dress, etc. etc. etc., but
he says you know what, if you ever meet a Puritan on the battlefield or in the
hall of debate you’d stop your laughing.
They were tough people, and the reason they are so maligned a lot of
times is because little people always have to chew down big people, just like
dogs, you know the yip yap dogs are always the little ones, the big dog doesn’t
have to yip yap, it’s always the little ones that yip yap. That’s the same problem in history, it’s
always some little yip yap college professor that barely got his PhD who is
knocking people like George Washington and other people, the great people of
history. It’s always the same way.
Now
in church history the problem the Puritans had, and they had some problems, was
they didn’t reproduce themselves very well.
By the second and third generation there was no evangelism, there was no
winning of the next generation to Christ.
There’s something wrong here.
The Puritans were fine in some areas but they had some failings. Why weren’t they able to reproduce their
society? Why, after one or two
generations, did it go boom, it disappeared.
What happened? There was
something defective. You go back and
you read Puritan authors. I don’t know
how many people have read Owens and some of the Puritan writers, you can find
books “that” thick written by those Puritans that talk about godliness and
whether I’m saved… whether I’m saved,
because they conducted an inspection campaign all their life to try to detect
the operation of saving faith in their heart.
It’s a morbid thing. In fact
there’s a term that scholars use for those books, it’s called conversion
morphology, it’s the form of conversion, the form that conversion takes, are
you really saved, am I really saved, well I’m not sure that I’m saved.
One
of the great economists of history pointed out that a fruitful result of the
unfruitful theology was the industrial revolution. You say what did the industrial revolution have to do with the
Puritans? The industrial revolution
couldn’t happen without capital money because the industrial revolution had to
invest in machines. Where do you
suppose the money came from that was saved, stored up, and invested to finance
the industrial revolution. [can’t understand
name] book on economics traces it back to a Puritan belief that a sign of your
election was that you would be economically blessed, and they worked hard, and
that work ethic that you heard about that was so fundamental in our country,
the work ethic actually in some cases can be shown to have grown out of this
Puritan morbid introspection that I’ve got to work hard to give God a chance to
show that I’m the elect by blessing me.
It was connected to this, there are lots of historical ramifications to
this, this is not some little theological point in a closet somewhere. This spilled out, it affected the economy of
Europe, it affected us as a country, etc.
But
one of the problems in Puritanism was the fact that here’s Mr. Christian, but
he’s not quite sure that he’s a Christian, because he’s heard all this story
about election and predestination and he’s not sure he’s part of the elect
because he says, and this was one of the problems that Calvin had. He said it’s possible for there to be
pretentious believers, i.e. believers who have a false faith, and the false
faith dissipates finally, and that proves the person never had the true faith
to start with. And the problem is that
if this person became a Christian at age 7, and he dies at 77, and he’s got 70
years of Christian life, how does he know whether he’s a saint or not until he
gets to his 77th year and drops dead believing. See what happens? If you don’t have assurance at the beginning you can’t have
assurance at any other point. There’s always the danger that you’re going to
fall away. So the problem of the
falling away, and it was built on an exegesis of the book of Hebrews, actually,
this problem of falling away began to act subtlety to separate faith and
assurance. And whatever this faith was,
un-assuring faith doesn’t sound right.
But that plagued the Puritans; that was their dilemma, they weren’t
really sure that they were of the elect unless it was so manifestly obvious of
the Holy Spirit’s works in their life.
So there began to be this emphasis of splitting away of faith and
salvation.
After
the limited atonement became dominant in Reform circles, because it is widely
considered by the first hundred years in Reform circles that Christ died only
for the elect, He didn’t die for the non-elect. If that’s so, now keep in mind what I warned you about, I’m
leading you down a path here, remember when someone asks you a question they
bring baggage to the table, so be cautious.
“Soon
after limited atonement had become dominant in Reformed circles, one of the
Reformers, Jacob Arminius (1559-1609), rejected limited atonement and taught:
‘that. . .Jesus Christ, the Savior of the world, died for all men and for every
man, so that he has obtained for them all, by his death on the cross, redemption
and the forgiveness of sin; yet that no one actually enjoys this forgiveness of
sins except the believer, according to the word of the gospel of John
iii.16: ‘God so loved the world. . .’ And in the First Epistle of John ii.2: ‘And
he is the propitiation for our sins; and not for our sins only, but also for
the sins of the whole world.’[2]” Remember I told you,
1
John 2:2 played a role, here it is, and I’m quoting right from the creed, this
was Arminius’s own position.
“The
unlimited atonement, according to Arminius, is for all men potentially, but not
actually. What makes it actually apply
to me is my act of faith. God chose the
elect, in this view, upon the basis of foreseen persevering faith” Let me read
that again, Arminius was a student of the Reformers, he was a solid Reformed
guy, he was in Holland. And what he
argued was that the cross of Christ applied for all. It’s like a big package, and you come up and you claim your piece
of it, by your faith. Oh, and by the
way, he added, you’ve got to keep believing it, because if you don’t keep
believing it, you lose it, and that’s where loss of salvation arose, the idea
that you could lose your salvation. That’s why we call that Arminianism as
distinguished from Calvinism because the package, your claim on this package
was contingent…contingent upon your
faith.
“Arminius
then added that one could lose this faith, in which case it would be shown that
he did not have true persevering faith and was not of the elect.” Do you notice something similar about
Arminius and Calvin, second generation reformers? What are they both saying?
That the Christian, a genuine Christian, can never fail, that every true
Christian will have persevering faith.
What do you do about Solomon?
What do you do about the people in Corinth? What do you do about the failures in the New Testament? What do you do with that passage in Peter
“denying the Lord that bought them?”
Oh-oh, now we’ve got a problem.
All this theological argument, just like it is today, the people that
get involved in these theological controversies spend so much time getting
involved in the theological controversy they never study the text. What does the text say, you-hoo, you know,
text, what does the text say? So
Arminius, to his credit, at least he smelled something wrong, because Arminius
did try to do some exegesis, and he did look at 1 John 2:2 and he says
something doesn’t fit here, no matter what you guys are doing you can’t make
the word “world” in 1 John 2:2 be just the world of the elect, that’s not how
John uses the word. So we’ve got a rat
in the house somewhere here.
So
Arminius, again using the tools available to him intellectually, bound up with
the idea of faith, etc. what he did is he opened the door to what church
theologians call the Pelagianism, which is the belief in the strong will of man
and that God cooperates so that the will of God and the will of man are kind of
the same thing, they’re on the same team… [blank spot]
“Arminius’
teachings were rejected because they seemed to depose” so there was a Calvinist
reaction to Arminius, and this thing ripped up Europe, people said oh, see how
the Christians fight, no peace in the church.
At least they were talking about something with five syllable words in
it. At least they were debating about
something worth debating, eternal salvation.
Today it’s just shallow and boring compared to this stuff. “Arminius’ teachings were rejected because
they seemed to depose God from His sovereignty and replace Him with man’s
choice. At the Synod of Dort (1619) it
was stated over against Arminius that,” what’s happening to the church
now? People are hardening their
positions, no third way now, everybody’s in one camp or the other, got to
harden up, throw rocks at each other, build thicker castle walls. So by 1619 Dort said this:
“‘It
was by the will of God that Christ by the blood of the cross. . .should
effectively redeem. . .all those, and those only, who were from eternity chosen
to salvation. . . ; that he should confer upon them faith,” which is another
thing that comes up now, faith becomes a gift possible only through God,
“…faith which, together with all other saving gifts of the Holy Spirit, he
purchased for them by his death.’” Look
at the logic in that sentence, it’s very carefully structured. These guys could
make our lawyers look sick. Look at the
grammar in that sentence and how carefully it’s stated. What do you notice it says? “That He should confer upon them faith,” and
then there’s a whole set of clauses that describe this faith thing, and it’s
called a saving gift of the Holy Spirit, which is fine, and what does it say
about those gifts? They were purchased
for them by Christ’s death. What is
purchased for them by Christ’s death?
Faith. Well then how can the non-elect
believe? If the non-elect never had
faith purchased for them, were they ever offered salvation? That’s the problem Arminius saw.
So
now you have these two camps in the Church.
Historically they come down today, although they’re blurred in most
churches today because nobody knows what their own church believes, let alone
what somebody else believes.
Arminianism and Calvinism come down in church history like this:
Calvinism dominates the Presbyterian circles; largely Presbyterian and Congregational
circles tend to historically inherit the Calvinist way of thinking. Of course liberalism has come in and wiped
out most of the theology so again I say this is history, this is the genealogy
but it doesn’t apply, you can walk into a Presbyterian [Church] and they
wouldn’t know what you’re talking about, even if you were talking about Calvin,
some of them. Things have deteriorated
in our time. But this is the lineage,
Presbyterianism and Congregationalism.
Arminianism came down through John Wesley into the Methodist Church, and
out of the Methodist Church at the turn of the century came the
Pentecostals. And out of this movement
came your Charismatics. This begins to
explain some of these divisions we see.
Completely
independent of this the Lutherans are sitting over here; they’ve had their own
relatively unscathed history from all this controversy. You have the Episcopalian Church that like
the Lutheran Church tried to preserve a lot of the rituals of the Catholic
Church, and the Lutherans and the Episcopalians had their own lineage. Except the Episcopalians, the King of
England decided he needed some theology teachers, so he sent down to Geneva and
he brought some Reform people into the Episcopalian Church. These are the ebbs and the flows.
As
I said, don’t go out and say that this is true today, because it isn’t
necessarily true today because nobody knows what they believe. They go to the church with the largest youth
group, the biggest basketball game or something. But originally you could see the lines of this theology, you
could go to these kinds of churches and if you listened carefully to the men in
those churches that do know their own denominational teachings, you will hear
Jacob Arminius, you will hear you’d better watch out Christian, you can lose
your salvation. You come over here and
you can here those second generation Reformers saying are you really of the
elect, are you really a believer, examine your heart, etc. etc. etc. So those are the two cultural streams that
have come down to us in our own time.
Page
5, that wasn’t the end of the controversy by any order. “All Calvinists were not happy with the Dort
statement against Arminianism. They
were troubled by the texts Arminius had used which did emphasize the atonement’s
application to all men (e.g., John 3:16; 4:42; Rom. 5:15-18; II Cor. 5:14-20; I
Tim. 2:4-6; II Pet. 2:1; 3:9; I John 2:2).
One of these people was Moise Amyraut (1596-1664) who taught theology at
Saumer, France. Although his teachings
were called heretical in Holland, they were accepted by Calvinists in
France. His position was this: ‘God wills all men to be saved, on condition
they believe—a condition in which they
could well fulfill in the abstract, but which, in fact, owing to inherited corruption,
they stubbornly reject, so that this universal will for salvation actually
saves no one.’”
Then
he goes on and develops it. This was
the source, by the way, of what we call Four-point Calvinism. Five-point Calvinism is TULIP, (T)otal depravity, (U)nconditional election, (L)imited atonement,
(I)rresistable grace, and (P)erseverence of faith. Now you can go and impress your Reformed friends, you can say I
know what TULIP means, it’s not grown in
the garden in the spring, it’s something else.
What Amyraut did is he questioned this (L), and hence there arose this
label that you sometimes hear people talk about, Five-point Calvinism and
Four-point Calvinism. That’s where it
started, right there.
“In
the centuries since the Reformation, Protestantism has been divided over this
issue. Until modern liberalism
destroyed orthodoxy in most denominations, Arminianism prevailed in Methodist
and Pentecostal circles while Calvinism in Presbyterian and Reformed
circles. Since present day ‘Bible fundamentalism’
is largely dispensational which originated in the Calvinist camp (broadly
speaking), it tends to follow a mild version of Calvinism,” and you can’t
predict what you run into, but generally speaking that’s what happens.
Now
the discussion; I’ve already given you, basically, much of the discussion. I attribute this to a failure of the
Reformation to really mine the depths of Scripture on this Creator/creature
distinction. We come on page 6 to a
very interesting quote. I said that the
result of all this was that the later Reformers consciously rebelled against
Calvin. Why did they do so?
“The
later Reformers” began “to alter Luther and Calvin’s teachings on faith. Catholicism counter-attacked the original
teaching of Luther and Calvin (that faith was
assurance)” how do you think the Catholics attacked? Think about this, it’s very easy to see. You are a Catholic
theologian and want to stop this Protestant movement. You want to nail it before it gets started. What can you do to appeal to the most godly
element in the church that these people are heretics? You can’t talk about the reforms, you don’t discuss that because
the godly people in the Church would agree with the Protestants, yeah, throw
the corrupt guys out, so that wasn’t the tactic. The tactic was to come around
and say you know, we really love the Lord, and this Protestant doctrine of
assurance of salvation, if you really believe that you’re saved, you can go out
and raise hell. It would lead to loose,
licentious living. That was the attack,
a brilliant stroke.
They
argued that assurance would lead to loose living. So now the Protestants, instead of thinking it through, going
back to the Scripture, now they’re reeling politically from this assault, and
they’re saying what are we going to do about this. So their answer was to say, you know, we got to build safeguards
to this justification doctrine, we’ve got to kind of cool things down here a
little bit. So watch what they did.
“Catholicism
counter-attacked the original teaching of Luther and Calvin (that faith was
assurance) as an incentive to loose living.
To defend Protestantism, the later Reformers began to argue that we
cannot be assured that we have believed unto salvation unless there are
evidences of the Holy Spirit’s work in our lives.” Nobody’s denying there are evidences of the saving faith in life,
but the argument was that you didn’t have assurance until you saw those
evidences; that’s the argument. “The
famous Civil War era” one of the great Reformed theologians in the south,
Andrew Jackson’s theological mentor was Robert Dabney who taught in Union
Seminary in Richmond, Virginia, a great southern gentleman, “Southern Reformed
theologian, Robert Dabney pointed out that later Reformers separated faith and
assurance.”
Here’s
Dabney’s own quote, he was in the Reformed tradition, and here’s what he says:
“[The first Reformers] defined saving faith as a belief that ‘Christ saved me,’ making the assurance of hope of its
necessary essence. Now, the later
Reformers, and those learned, holy and modest teachers of the Reformed
Churches. . .have subjected this view to searching examination, and rejected it
(as does the Westminster Assembly) on scriptural grounds.’ Christ, in this view, died only for the
elect, and neither you nor I can be sure we are of the elect company until we
can experientially prove out in our lives that we have ‘persevering faith’, i.e.,
faith that never fails until we die.”
Here
you have the guy admit it; there was a shift from Calvin and Luther to the next
generation. And the shift was caused as
a political/theological response to the forces of Rome that wanted to brand
Protestantism as a dangerous gospel that gave too much power, it gave too much
privilege to the individual person, and it could be misused. It reminds you of the gun control
lobby. Got to watch out, those guns all
by themselves go out and shoot people.
Same thing, don’t trust somebody with something, they might misuse
it. The totalitarians always think this
way; don’t ever empower anybody to do anything because you might lose control
of them if you do that, that’s dangerous stuff to do that. So people were held, just as they were held
by the indulgences in Rome, now they are held with a threat that if you have
failure in your Christian life you’re not a Christian. It was felt that this threatening atmosphere
was necessary to discipline the Church to live righteously.
The
Scriptures do threaten. The question
is, do the Scriptures threaten loss of salvation or do the Scriptures threaten
discipline upon God’s children, spanking of those in His family, not an
abolition of the family unit but a severe form of discipline. Every communion
service we read 1 Cor. 11 and I’ll bet there aren’t 3 people in 10 that listen
to 1 Cor. 11 when it’s read. What is
one of the things that’s threatened every time we take communion? We’re
threatened with physical death. What
are those threats for? To keep the
Church in line, but those threats don’t underline assurance of your saving
faith, they are appealing to it, because you are saved, because you are in
God’s family. Hebrews says that if you
don’t get chastised when you sin, you’re a bastard; you’re not even in the
family. So the appeal and the warning
passages of Scripture is precisely because we are in the family of God with a
holy Father, and He’s not going to let us get away with loose living, He’s
going to take His action. But the
action He takes isn’t saying ha-ha, I’m going to hold your salvation
hostage. That’s not the way it operates
in the New Testament.
So
here’s the problem, and the limited atonement fell in the middle of the whole
thing because does the atonement cover these things or doesn’t it? If I believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, what
happens? I am forgiven of all my sins,
past, present and future. If I’m not
forgiven of my sins for the future, then doesn’t that imply that I can lose my
salvation, I’ve got to be re-forgiven every time… it’s not that. Does it mean
that I can get away in my Father’s house with whatever I want to do? No it doesn’t, He’s got a big stick, He can
take care of things. So there are two
levels that we now see. We can say if
we were only there in the Reformation we would have straightened them all out,
of course. But we’re 300-400 years
later and we begin to see, oh yeah, there’s two parts to this thing, there’s
entering the kingdom at the point of regeneration and joining the family of God
and then there’s internal to that family a disciplinary procedure. Oh, now we can deal with the warning passages
of Scripture.
In
a nutshell we’ve gone through this argument. We haven’t got into some of the
things on pages 6 and 7, we’ve run out of time, next week we’ll clean that up
and move on to the resurrection and some of the passages.
----------------------------------
Don’t
be discouraged if parts of this are very challenging. It’s a classic example that you can literally believe two
sentences that on the surface look totally contradictory, but because you load
the words in one sentence with one set of meanings and load the words in the
other sentence with another set of meanings, you can literally believe the two
sides. In one sense the atonement is
limited because in eternity what happens?
People wind up in hell. But the
thing is that the people who wind up in hell wind up there now because of
another reason. Originally, if Christ
had not died, it would be I am in hell because I am part of the fallen human
race and I have sinned, it’s because of my sins. But on another level now, with Christ having died, I wound up in
hell unnecessarily because I didn’t have to be here, I had a (quote) “second
chance” if you can express it that way, because Christ died for me. He died to handle the holy righteous sentence
of God upon me. That could have been
avoided, and I’m here because I rejected it.
I basically thumbed my nose at God again, and turned away from the
pardon that He offered me. It was a
genuine pardon that was offered.
So
there’s some fundamental truths here and next week we’ll point out those same
four things that we did in the fourth chapter, because what we’re struggling
with here is we want to preserve the pieces of truth we know from Scripture,
even though we can’t formulate it in a nice coherent logical system. This is a classic instance where the
Scriptures defy you to create a 100% logical structure. It’s not that it’s contradictory, it’s that
you take the pieces…, imagine a jigsaw puzzle on your living room table, it’s
not the case that you’ve got all the pieces here and they don’t fit, it’s
rather the case that you don’t have all the pieces. So no matter how you do it, there will be pieces in that puzzle
that you really don’t know how they work, but they’re legitimate, they’re part
of the puzzle, it’s just that you don’t have enough of the pieces together to
see how it fits. That’s different from
saying this piece doesn’t belong to the puzzle and it’s logically
contradictory. That’s what I’m trying
to say.
But
isn’t that in the end what we’re confessing as creatures, that we’re not the
Creator, and that He is ultimately incomprehensible, and you can relax in that,
and you have to relax in that. The
dilemma always is we’re hurting, we have a trial, a crisis in our lives, we
always want to know, well now why did that happen, and we get the answer so
many times that Job got, you just look at Me. Well I know, God, you’re a great
God, but I would still like to know what you had in mind with that. And He says look at Me. But I know, I’m looking at You, but I still
want to know. Look at Me! And the answer keeps going back to that;
we’ve all had that experience. We never
get the answer, but yet our hearts finally find peace. How do our hearts find peace, finally? Because they come to a rest in the character
of our God, not all the details in His mind, because we don’t know all the
details in His mind, we just come to a rest and we know, I’m satisfied, I have
a deep enough confidence that God loves me, that He cares for me, and I just
have to trust that character quality in our God, that in this hurt, and all the
pain I’m facing, and all the trouble I have, that deep down underneath it’s
okay. That’s what we all wind up
with.
Theologically
that’s what we wind up with. Theology
isn’t any different from every day Christian life. It’s just that some theologians act like we act, and they want to
ram it and cram it and I want an answer and I want it now and I want it
published in 215 pages so I can get it copyrighted. It doesn’t work that way.
Well, I’m going to call a conference and we’re going to have 55
theologians here and we’re going to come out at the end of that meeting with a
mutually agreed upon creed. Well, you
can schedule it but God isn’t necessarily going to attend. That’s what’s happened down through
history. And I’m not… don’t get me
wrong, I am not slighting those
efforts to pull doctrine together and clarify issues. We need to do that, but there’s a limit to what we can clarify
and we have to know that too.
Tonight
was a classic case of a very, very difficult thing; there are some areas where
the atonement is limited, but even this you’ll see, hopefully when we talk
about Pentecost and the coming of the Holy Spirit to the Church and the
so-called exchanged life, that the cross doesn’t deal, is limited and doesn’t
really nullify the things we inherit from Adam. That’s why the Christian life
starts all over in Christ, because something new has started; we are a new
creature in Christ, so yeah, we die, we still bear the Edenic curse, they’re right,
the atonement hasn’t done away with the Edenic curse. What the atonement has done is provide a transfer mode, a
protocol of transfer so I can transfer out of Adam and into Christ. That’s what the atonement has accomplished,
but it has not… it has not done away with the Edenic curse; we all die. It substitutes something neat, the
resurrection of the saints in Christ Jesus, but it has not nullified it. So in that sense, yeah, the atonement is
limited.
And
ultimately isn’t the atonement limited to, in its saving eternal benefits to
just those who believe. We know that,
so in that sense yeah, it’s limited.
The problem is how you say it.
Remember when we were talking about impeccability, we had a discussion,
the question was brought out when we were talking about posse non peccari, peccari non posse, He is able not to sin and not
able to sin, you brought out a very good point when you said saying it that
way, not able to sin, sounds wrong, something to that effect, and you were
right, there’s a way of saying it and it’s hard to say what we’re trying to say
there, that it was impossible that Jesus Christ could sin, but you can say it
in such a way that it sounds like it was programmed in or you can say it in
such a way that it’s softer, it fits the Scripture. That’s the trouble we have…
[someone
says something about a father is able
to hurt that child but his love for that child prevents him from…] yeah, built
into the character of God and that’s what we find with the unlimited atonement,
limited atonement issue. The people who
are for unlimited atonement simply are reflecting the truth of 1 John 2:2, “He
is the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only but also for the sins
of the whole world.” It means that the atonement frees up a holy God could do
what He wants to in the way of pardoning to anybody, it frees Him. It’s like a judge who has the legal
authority to pardon, except in Christ’s case he died for us to get that power. He can apply the pardon pretty much how he
wants to if he has the authority. God
now has the authority to apply the pardon wherever and however He wishes,
compatible with His character of course.
But the cross gives Him that. So
in that sense that’s why the cross is for all men, it permits God to come to
all men that way, and it permits you, in your witnessing, to say after this
person understands something of the holiness of God and His responsibility to
a God who is holy, after he perceives
that, because if you do it too fast it just becomes a premature throwing your
pearls before swine. If, after the
person has some sense of responsibility and sin before God, then to say that a
full pardon is here for you, you can say that.
You can say that because Christ is the propitiation for that person as
well as for you, for me, for everybody else.
Where
Arminians went wrong and where that tradition got a little hung up on was they
recognized correctly the necessity of faith, and frankly in Reform circles
sometimes that isn’t made clear. The
Bible doesn’t say hope and be saved, it doesn’t say love and be saved, it
doesn’t say walk obediently and be saved, it says believe and be saved. There’s
something unique about believe and faith.
That segment of Christendom correctly saw that, but then they began to
define it and began to alter the whole doctrine of election so that God was
really electing after men responded. So
you put God like He’s seconding the motion, I raise my hand, I make the motion,
God seconds it. Wait a minute, no-no,
something’s wrong there. But that
something that’s wrong wouldn’t have happened if they had had a firm
Creator/creature distinction all along, because if you get that distinction in
mind, this creature down here every moment, everything that he does is
dependent on who? Who’s sustaining the creature? The Creator. So that dependency is never lost, and it
softens.
When
I start talking about free will, gosh, you say that in some Reform circles you
get crucified, and it’s too bad because it’s true, that has been illegitimately
used by pagan philosophers and they’re sensitive to that and they should
be. On the other hand there is that
thing we mean by human choice, but it’s creature choice, and it’s sustained,
even in the choosing it’s sustained by the Creator. The Creator never stops being the Creator and the Sustainer. So it’s helped me in working with this, I’ve
just noticed in my own life that the stronger I appreciate the Creator/
creature distinction the easier it is for me to come to these verses without
feeling like oh-oh, that guy conflicts with that guy. That’s just my
experience.
Question
asked: Clough replies: The question is when I said justification was new in the
Reformation what I really meant was it was clarified as it hadn’t been
clarified before because obviously no one could have believed all the way back
to Abraham and beyond if they weren’t justified by faith, because Paul tells us
that. So justification was operating
all that time period, it’s just that frankly it wasn’t appreciated. Just like the deity of Christ wasn’t
appreciated. You read some of the
church fathers in the first and second century, holy mackerel, they were having
a problem with who Jesus was, and yet you know that they were genuine born
again, you can sense that in their writings, they loved the Lord, they were
just kind of fumbling around trying to understand Him. That’s where we are,
we’re still fumbling around trying to understand Him, but it’s just that was a
step forward in clarifying a truth that was going on before.
Someone
says something about when you were talking Abraham and then you got into the
Reformation and you talked about what Luther and Calvin got in trouble for was
because … vs. the Catholic belief that it was a grace regeneration from within
and then righteousness … Are we using terms very loosely in Christian circles
when we talk about saving grace, saved by grace, is that incorrect phraseology
to say that we’re saved by grace?
Clough replies: Oh no, that’s fine. [same person says, so this faith
that we’re talking about here is what Luther was saying that faith …assurance,
but the regeneration is the salvation portion… Clough: Are you talking about
the sequence in which they happened?
[same person says I guess the sequence and the function]
Clough
says: Okay, there are different words and they have different emphases, but if
you ask me which comes first, the chicken or the egg, [can’t understand word/s]
debate about that one too, it happens in such a microsecond that it’s hard to
separate it, but the point I was making back in the Abraham issue was because I
wanted to clarify this righteousness issue, where’s this righteousness coming
from, and Rome, true to its position, insisted that the Protestants were wrong
in talking endlessly about this substitutionary death that generated this
righteousness that wasn’t ours. They
said how can you take a righteousness that you don’t possess, it’s Christ’s,
not yours, it’s Christ’s, not Charles’s, and this other righteousness, it’s not
yours, it’s not Charles’s, and yet you and Charles enjoy this righteousness,
it’s a foreign righteousness. So this
didn’t set with them and they wanted to say you come to God because of what
grace works in your heart, the righteous fruit that comes in; the righteous
fruit is clearly your righteous fruit, it’s clearly Charles’s righteous fruit,
in the sense well it’s not… they’re willing to grant that it’s Holy Spirit
motivated, they’re not saying it’s energy of the flesh, but they have to so
identify the righteousness as coming from
the individual, rather than being legally transferred from Christ. They saw that as a tremendous threat.
Why
I’m saying this over and over, that they feel threatened by that, because the
conclusion might be that you would say well, it’s not my righteousness, it’s
Christ’s so I can sit here and do what I want.
Why I’m saying this then and why I’m saying it tonight is because you’ll
see the same thing happening in our own evangelical circles right now. We deal in a godless generation, we have
flake-outs all over the church, and the diagnosis that’s being promulgated in
our own evangelical circles by certain teachers is that basically of Rome,
namely that if you witness to your neighbor and your neighbor trusts the Lord
and you’ve told your neighbor that Christ died for him, and he sits there and
he believes on your witness, that Christ died for him and he’s perfectly
justified, what control do you have on how he’s going to live? Can’t he take what you just told him and go
out and live any way he wants to. Well
there’s an answer to that. I don’t know
why the Protestant Reformers didn’t come up with this answer.
The
answer is, first of all, is there false faith?
We all agree, yes, there can be false faith, but what is the nature of
false faith? Isn’t it rather that they
never perceived what Christ did for them rightly and correctly anyway? In other words, they were never born again
in the first place. We agree to that, that’s a false faith, but it’s false not
because they didn’t try, it’s because they didn’t perceive. For example, let me give a case, I’ve met
people who had the most agonizing apparent conversion you can imagine, tears,
emotions, the whole nine-yards, vowed great things for God and three and a half
years later there’s not a sign of it in their life and poof, it’s a
disaster. Now can I be sure that they
never were born again? No, I can’t be,
I can’t be sure; I’m only an external observer. The Holy Spirit knows.
These kinds of things, but my point is if it turns out they never
believed, it was because at that point when we thought they believed, they
never really understood the gospel.
That’s the problem, it was a lack of a response in their heart to the
illuminating work of the Holy Spirit, in contrast to saying well, they really
understood the issue and it’s just that they didn’t dedicate their life to
Christ, they didn’t vow great things for Jesus, they didn’t come vowing that
they would do this and they would do that for the Lord. No, that’s not what He asked us to do, He
says Come, and drink of the waters freely.
So
there’s a subtlety at the point of witnessing, at the point of a person
trusting the Lord. It’s the
overwhelming truth dawning in our hearts and us trusting in the Lord at that
point. We come to Him with empty
hands. The God that called Adam and Eve
out of the bushes isn’t impressed… because we’re seeking you God, I mean, gee
we’ve looked all over the garden for You.
No you didn’t, you were hiding behind the bushes. Who are you trying to kid? The only reason you got saved is because I
called for you. See, it’s the power of
that initial transaction, and yes, once we trust the Lord at a point in time,
once the Holy Spirit illuminates our heart, can we turn away? We can try.
Can we do a pretty good job of it?
Didn’t the Corinthians? Didn’t
some of those people at the tail end of the gospels, So and So has denied the
faith and has given me a hard time and everybody’s abandoned me, you know all
the New Testament references. Yes, it
was all over the first century church.
Did Paul go up and say are you real believers? Or rather did he say I turn Such and Such over to Satan that he
may learn not to blaspheme? Wasn’t the
way the Apostles handled the problem?
Wasn’t that the threat that we read in the communion service in 1 Cor.
11. Yeah, the church had discipline,
but they never disciplined you out of your salvation. There’s the difference.
And
you can’t hold to Calvin’s original concept, which I think is the Scriptures,
that when I believe that is assurance that Christ has died for me. Why else would you believe? If you perceive that God is holy and
righteous, why are you going to keep looking at Him unless you’re assured
you’re going to be forgiven? Doesn’t
the light blind you? Isn’t the light so
terrible, so hot, so intense that it would turn us from Him if we didn’t know
that He is shining in our life through the cross of Christ to bless us.
Question
asked, something about negative one zero and positive one where forgiveness got
you to zero…: Clough replies: Imputed righteousness got you to plus one.
[blank
spot] … but in the scheme of the stories his life is an illustration of
something. David’s life is an
illustration, they played different places on the team, they may be on the same
team but they’re playing a theological drama here, God plays with their lives
and illustrates through them. Saul
certainly was an example of the conditional kingship spawned by men, the Spirit
left him and people used that to say ooh, you can lose your salvation and all
the rest of it. But keep in mind when
it says in the Old Testament the Spirit comes upon a person that often does not
refer to a spiritual thing like in the New Testament. It often refers to what we would say… here’s an example, when the
tabernacle was made in Exodus it says the spirit came upon the carpenters and
they got carpenter skills. Huh? You know, this strikes us as funny because
we’re so used to reading the New Testament, the Holy Spirit comes and we think
of Christ’s life, the ethical and moral dimension, but when the Spirit came
upon men in the Old Testament He often had a very non-spiritual physical,
social thing.
For
example, Samson is out of it, and the Spirit of God comes upon him and what
does he do? It gives him the ability to
kill people. Now I don’t know whether
he’s in fellowship or out of fellowship when it happened, but it sure
worked. I mean, he pulled the whole
temple of Dagon down, wiped out a whole bunch of people. So the Spirit of God coming upon Samson, the
Spirit of God coming on Saul, he prophesied… I have often taken Saul as a
believer, but when you read the Old Testament story I’m not looking at that
issue when I’m looking at Saul. That’s
how I resolve it. These guys may very
well have been believers, but they’re used, their life stories are used as
illustrations of different things.
Question
asked: Clough replies: That’s a good
point, God, if He’s going to do something He’ll find another way to do it, and
in His mind there are thousands of ways that fit His promises. An example of that in the New Testament,
here’s a strange one, in the New Testament Jesus comes up with a very
mysterious thing. He says if you had
received John the Baptist, he would have been Elijah. Try that one on for size.
What does He mean by that, because if the people had accepted the
message of John the Baptist as a nation, the millennial kingdom would have
happened and the prophesy of Elijah coming before the millennial kingdom would
have had to have happened. So now you’ve got John the Baptist being Elijah all
of a sudden, or the spirit of Elijah.
So
you get into these “what ifs.” Jesus
says later, when He’s going to die on the cross and His disciples are worried
about Him, and He says I could ask My Father and there’d be 10,000 angels here
right now, legions of angels. Now what
if He had? If the angels had come and
defended Jesus then He wouldn’t have died on the cross and if He didn’t die on
the cross we wouldn’t have our salvation.
This is what happens when you get into the realm of history and that’s
why the only way to do it is go back and say well, what did God promise? And we have to trust Him with how He’s going
to fulfill a promise, because He has a million ways of doing it.
You’re
right. If He had not gone up on the
roof then somehow or other there would be one of his children who would still
go on to be king.
That’s
it, see you next week.