Many Calvinists today, especially those who are Hyper Calvinists, or who lean much in that direction, have done much harm by their coming to redefine biblical "regeneration" in a narrow, highly restricted, or limited manner, so as to exclude evangelical conversion. This they do when they say that sinners are "regenerated or born again before faith," or before conversion. The older Calvinists, however, did not do this, but saw biblical regeneration or rebirth as including conversion. I have many posts on this point wherein I give witness to this by many scholars of historic Calvinism. Truly in this debate the devil is in the definition.
I take the view that initial salvation, whether it be called salvation, quickening, resurrecting, regenerating, renewing, re-creating, rebirth, washed, forgiven, justified, sanctified, converted, etc., is talking about what occurs when a person believes in Jesus Christ and accepts his teachings, and repents of his sins, which is what we generally call conversion. When the apostles wrote in their letters about the salvation of those believers to whom they addressed, they all refered to what took place when they were converted, when they believed and repented. They do not view regeneration as something that took place before believers were converted. All the references to initial salvation in the Bible describe it in terms of conversion. I challenge anyone to prove this is not so.
Some of my Calvinists brothers who believe in the "born again before faith" error say that regeneration is one side of the coin of salvation and conversion is the other side. But, this analogy totally divorces one from the other. Further, which side has justification? Forgiveness? Sanctification? Union with Christ? Etc.?
The idea that "regeneration" is defined in scripture as excluding conversion is totally unfounded. No one is regenerated till he has been converted, before he has believed and repented, before he has been united to Christ by receiving him, or by his entering into Christ and by Christ entering him. These things occur together. It would be ridiculous to say that my wife was joined to me in marriage before I was joined to her in that union. Yet, this is what those who teach that sinners are born again or regenerated before faith are forced to believe. They are also forced to deny that the Bible teaches that union with Christ is by faith.
My blogs are filled with scripture references that show that a sinner is united to Christ, or enters into Christ, when he receives Christ or believes in Christ. Marriage is one of the ways the Bible writers use to illustrate this union. Becoming members of Christ's body is also another way. Another way is by eating Christ's body and drinking his blood, for Christ is the living bread and whoever eats that bread by faith, by believing and mentally feasting upon him, becomes one with him. Water baptism is a picture of our entering into Christ (Rom. 6: 1-4) and the Lord's Supper (Communion) is a picture of Christ entering into those who believe in him. The "regenerated before faith" view must say that a person enters into Christ, and Christ enters into a person, before he partakes of Christ, before he is joined in marriage to Christ.
I have shown in many articles how it was a later invention among Calvinists with Hyper Calvinistic tendencies who narrowed the definition of regeneration so that it excluded evangelical faith and repentance (i.e. conversion). See for instance "Regeneration - Broad and Narrow?" (here). In another article in my series "The Hardshell Baptist Cult" titled "Chpt. 111 - Mediate or Immediate?" (here) I cited from Dr. Archibald Alexander, a Calvinist, who wrote:
"Evangelical repentance, conversion and regeneration, are substantially the same. They all signify a thorough change of views, affections, purposes and conduct; and this change is every where declared to be essential to salvation."
This is the historic or original view of the Reformers and Calvinists of the sixteenth century and is what is stated in their oldest confessions of faith. It was the view of John Calvin. In that chapter I gave many citations that the reader is encouraged to review. In it I made this comment about the first Calvinists of the Reformation:
"They all taught that scripture did not distinguish between regeneration and conversion."
I gave some examples from Calvinists who admit this fact. I cited from Abraham Kuyper (1837-1920) and his writing "The Work of the Holy Spirit," wherein he promoted the "regenerated before faith" error. In section XXIII of chapter four, on "Regeneration and Faith," Kuyper's views are stated. He wrote (emphasis mine):
"We answer: The Holy Spirit may perform this work in the sinner's heart before, during, or after the preaching of the Word. The inward call may be associated with the outward call, or it may follow it. But that which precedes the inward call, viz., the opening of the deaf ear, so that it may be heard, is not dependent upon the preaching of the Word; and therefore may precede the preaching."
"If I designate the whole conscious work of grace from conversion until death, "regeneration," without any regard to its mysterious background, then I may and must say with the Confession (article 24): "That this faith, being wrought in man by the hearing of the Word, and the operation of the Holy Spirit, doth regenerate him and make him a new man."
"Hence God's work of grace runs through these three successive stages:
1st. Regeneration in its first stage, when the Lord plants the new life in the dead heart.
2d. Regeneration in its second stage, when the new-born man comes to conversion.
3d. Regeneration in its third stage, when conversion merges into sanctification.
"Describing it still more closely, we say that in the first stage of regeneration, that of quickening, God works without means; in the second stage, that of conversion, He employs means, viz., the preaching of the Word; and in the third stage, that of sanctification, He uses means in addition to ourselves, whom He uses as means."
By "the confession" he means the Belgic Confession (1561). You can read Kuyper's work (here). The citations are from chapter twenty one titled "Regeneration the Work of God."
We see how accepting the proposition that "regeneration or rebirth precedes faith" leads to the denial that the word of God or preaching of the gospel is a means in regeneration. This is what Kuyper affirmed in the above citation and in taking that position he admits that it is not the traditional or Orthodox view of the Calvinist or Reformed faith and its confessions.
Abraham Booth (1734-1806), another leading Calvinist, wrote:
"Regeneration must precede faith. This, though assumed as a certain fact:, may be justly doubted: for the page of inspiration does not warrant our supposing, that any one is born of God, before he believes in Jesus Christ; or, that regeneration is effected by the Holy Spirit, without the word of grace." ("Glad Tidings to Perishing Sinners," page 122)
This is quite logical. If it is true that sinners are born again by the word of God (I Peter 1: 23, etc.), then obviously it can only be such by believing it, for it would be absurd to say that it regenerated a person who rejected it.
Dr. W.G.T. Shedd, a leading Calvinist with Hyper Calvinist leanings, agreed with Kuyper. Shedd in his Dogmatic Theology wrote (emphasis mine):
"The Holy Spirit employs means in conviction, in conversion, and in sanctification but not in regeneration. The appointed means of grace are the Word, the sacraments, and prayer. None of these means are used in the instant of regeneration, first because regeneration is instantaneous, and therefore there is not time to use them, secondly because regeneration is a direct operation of the Holy Spirit upon the human spirit." (Vol 2, page 506)
Since the view that affirms "regeneration before faith" leads to, or entails, a denial of the word of God as a means in regeneration, we can overthrow that view by showing that the scriptures teach that regeneration is effected by such means. These scriptures do teach means, as the older Calvinists taught:
"Since you have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit in sincere love of the brethren, love one another fervently with a pure heart, having been born again, not of corruptible seed but incorruptible, through the word of God which lives and abides forever...Now this is the word which by the gospel was preached unto you." (I Peter 1: 22-23, 25 nkjv)
"Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth, that we should be a kind of firstfruits of his creatures." (James 1: 18 kjv)
"For though you might have ten thousand instructors in Christ, yet you do not have many fathers; for in Christ Jesus I have begotten you through the gospel." (I Cor. 4: 15 nkjv)
In my article "PaedoBaptist Shedd on Regeneration & Means" (here) I cited from Shedd as follows.
In "Various Uses of the Term Regeneration" (See here) Shedd wrote (emphasis mine):
So, Shedd admits that it was not the original view of Calvin or the first Calvinists of the Reformation to deny means in regeneration nor to see regeneration as distinct from evangelical conversion.
Dr. Louis Berkhof (1873-1957), well known biblical scholar, of the Dutch Reformed faith, wrote the following (emphasis mine):
"The word 'regeneration' is not always used in the same sense. Our Confession uses it in a broad sense, as including even conversion. At present it has a more restricted meaning." ("Calling and Regeneration" - See here)
Why did the older Calvinists and their confessions say that regeneration includes conversion? Is it not because they saw that this was how the Bible defined or explained it?
He also wrote:
"Several seventeenth century authors fail to distinguish between regeneration and conversion, and use the two terms interchangeably, treating of what we now call regeneration under vocation or effectual calling. The Canons of Dort also use the two words synonymously, and the Belgic Confession seems to speak of regeneration in an even wider sense. This comprehensive use of the term "regeneration" often led to confusion and to the disregard of very necessary distinctions."
So, why did they not distinguish regeneration from conversion? Is it not because they saw, as I do, that in the scriptures regeneration was a sinner's evangelical conversion, the result of his faith? Did not Calvin say that sinners are born again by faith? Did he not say that regeneration was by faith? See these posts where I give citations from Calvin and others which show this to be true: (here, here, here).
Berkhof continued:
"For instance, while regeneration and conversion were identified, regeneration was yet declared to be monergistic, in spite of the fact that in conversion man certainly co-operates. The distinction between regeneration and justification had already become clearer, but it gradually became necessary and customary also to employ the term "regeneration" in a more restricted sense. Turretin defines two kinds of conversion: first, a "habitual" or passive conversion, the production of a disposition or habit of the soul, which, he remarks, might better be called "regeneration"; and, secondly, an "actual" or "active" conversion, in which this implanted habit or disposition becomes active in faith and repentance. In present day Reformed theology the word "regeneration" is generally used in a more restricted sense, as a designation of that divine act by which the sinner is endowed with new spiritual life, and by which the principle of that new life is first called into action. So conceived, it includes both the "begetting again" and the "new birth," in which the new life becomes manifest. In strict harmony, however, with the literal meaning of the word "regeneration" the term is sometimes employed in an even more limited sense, to denote simply the implanting of the new life in the soul, apart from the first manifestations of this life." (See THE USE OF THE TERM "REGENERATION" IN THEOLOGY - here)
"DEFINITION OF REGENERATION. From what was said in the preceding respecting the present use of the word "regeneration," it follows that regeneration may be defined in two ways. In the strictest sense of the word we may say: Regeneration is that act of God by which the principle of the new life is implanted in man, and the governing disposition of the soul is made holy. But in order to include the idea of the new birth as well as that of the "begetting again," it will be necessary to complement the definition with the following words. . ."and the first holy exercise of this new disposition is secured."
This view makes a distinction between being "regenerated" and being "born again." This is what many believe, affirming that spiritual birth is exactly like physical birth. Physical birth has three distinct stages. First there is implanting of the seed and its germination in the female womb (or egg), then there is a living human being and a period of time spent developing in the womb, and finally a deliverance from the womb or birth proper. The three stage model of birth, as in the Old Regular or Primitive Baptists of the 19th century, saw birth as a process that included (as it also does in natural birth) three stages. Under this view (also held in modern times by men such as A.W. Pink) the planting of the seed is regeneration, the time in the womb is the time spent under conviction of sin, and the time of delivery (emergence) from the womb is birth proper. I have written on this view in several articles. This post (here) is one example and where I give several citations from those who espoused it.
However, many of those Calvinists who believe that regeneration precedes faith will say that regeneration and rebirth are the same. So they will affirm that not only is regeneration before faith but rebirth of the Spirit is also before faith. This is what they argue from I John 5: 1, saying that the text says that people believe in Christ after having been born of God. Of course, that is not what the text is saying. See my posts on that text here and here.
Many of those Calvinists who affirm that regeneration or rebirth precedes faith and conversion will agree that this was a view that was developed by later Calvinists and will say that its restricted definition helped to make things clearer. But, that is a mistake. Rather, I firmly believe, it made things less clear and produced much confusion and was a departure not only from Calvin and the older Calvinists but was a departure from what the scriptures teach. It certainly led to a denial that the gospel and word of God was a means in effecting regeneration or rebirth. It also led to Hyper Calvinism and to the idea that the gospel is not to be addressed to the unregenerate and that offers of salvation are not to be given to all men in preaching. This is what the Hardshell Baptists teach. It also led them to say that heathen, pagans, and believers in many false gods, may nevertheless be regenerated and born of the Spirit!
In the Bible conversion and regeneration are the same experience. I would encourage the reader to view this blog (here) where I have most of my articles on the ordo salutis. I deal with all the arguments of those who argue for "regeneration before faith" and I give scriptural arguments against that view.
Another error that the regeneration before faith view led to was that they then taught that regeneration (which includes sanctification) logically precedes justification. But, this creates all kinds of difficulty, and is the view of the Catholics. I have written many posts on this difficulty also. The ordo salutis blog also has many articles dealing with this difficulty. See this post (here) as an example.


