"In Augustine of Hippo the theological conceptualization of prevenient grace found its primary interpreter. For this reason, any consideration of the beginning point of the development of prevenient grace has to consider Augustine. Therefore, in this section I pay attention to the contributions of Augustine to the doctrine of prevenient grace, especially in his anti-Pelagian writings."
Of course, "the beginning point of the development of prevenient grace" did not begin with Augustine (354-430) if it is taught in the bible, and I firmly believe it is, as did Augustine, and the previous chapters have been written to demonstrate that fact. In the first chapter of this series I cited from J.L. Packer who correctly stated that Augustine believed in prevenient grace but falsely stated that Augustine equated prevenient grace with regeneration rather than with pre-regeneration grace and acts of the Spirit preceding salvation. Augustine used the term "gratia praeveniens" to refer to what God does prior to regeneration to produce regeneration, to God's initiatory activity. He also, as I do, saw "common grace" as instances of prevenient grace.
In
"Prevenient Grace at Work in Augustine" (
here), Daniel Sheets wrote (emphasis mine):
"He (Augustine) shows that God was showing him grace, even when he had nothing to offer Him, nor recognized his own need for salvation. God’s grace was evident in the way God had brought Augustine into the world, and how He had provided Augustine with everything he needed as an infant. This idea of God reaching out and showing grace and love to Augustine before he himself reached out to embrace God is a part of the Via Salutis. It is something that may be referred to as prevenient grace, or grace that goes before. This grace is what began the Via Salutis in the life of Augustine."
By "Via Salutis" is meant "the way of salvation" or "life of salvation." Further, if what Sheets says of Augustine is correct, Augustine saw what we would call common grace as prevenient grace. Even Calvinists who shy away from acknowledging prevenient grace will acknowledge that God engineers, via his providence, events in the lives of the elect, prior to their being regenerated or born again, which are intended to pave the way for their salvation. Many Calvinists believe that when Jude says of the elect "preserved in Jesus Christ and called" (or "kept for Jesus Christ") that the preservation being put before calling denotes what God did in the lives of the elect to keep them from death or any other thing that would prevent their later being called. So John Gill wrote in his commentary on the text:
"...they are preserved by him, and that before they are called, as well as after; wherefore this character is put before that of being called, though the Syriac version puts that in the first place: there is a secret preservation of them in Christ before calling..."
This preservation of and providence over human life is a kind of prevenient grace.
Sheets wrote further:
"Augustine continues his confessions by speaking of his life after having grown up from being an infant. He describes his childhood and how he had gone to school and learned about many different things. His childhood is also an example God’s prevenient grace as a part of the Via Salutis. He says, “I disliked learning and hated to be forced to it. But I was forced to it, so that good was done to me though it was not my doing” (I, ll. 102-3). Augustine recalls that as a schoolboy, he did not like being forced to learn, and that he only wanted to learn certain things. God, however, acted in grace, and caused him to be taught things that would be beneficial for him later in life. One such task was learning to read in languages such as Greek and Latin. "
Again, many Calvinists espouse "common grace" but not "prevenient grace," as we have previously written about, but Augustine rightly saw common grace as instances of prevenient grace.
Sheets wrote further:
"Augustine shows how he had experienced a great longing for something as a child. He had longed for a love deeper than what he knew. He searched for it in the Aeneid and other great works of literature, but he did not find what he was looking for in them. He found love, but not the love that would make him truly satisfied; he only found love that left him feeling empty. In this way, Augustine shows once again the act of God’s prevenient grace to him taking place as a part of the Via Salutis. Augustine recognizes that God had been calling out to his own heart, showing him that he needed Him to fill it with His love, but Augustine did not fully understand and he tried to fill the place in himself that needed God’s love with other loves."
God's "calling out" to the heart of Augustine for years prior to his conversion were instances of prevenient grace.
Returning to what Hernandez wrote, we cite these words:
"For Augustine, the doctrine of prevenient grace plays an essential role in preserving what he regarded as a critical concept of Christianity: the idea of God’s initiative in the salvation of humanity. This doctrine arose in consideration of the role of human will in relation to God’s grace in the work of salvation before and within the Pelagian controversy. This connection makes it important to consider the teaching of Pelagius concerning freedom of will and grace before discussing Augustine’s conceptualization of the doctrine of prevenient grace." (pg. 93-94)
Calvinists often stress the truth that God must make the first move in the salvation of any sinner. Those Arminians who say to lost sinners "you take the first step and God will meet you half way" shift the initiation to the sinner and away from God. However, James did say to sinners - "draw near to God and he will draw near to you." (James 4: 8) However, James realized that God must work in the mind of sinners prior to their decision to draw near to God. But, it is not only Calvinists who stress the fact that God must take the initiative in bringing sinners to salvation, for many Arminians do the same, especially those who are known as "Classical Arminians."
Hernandez wrote further:
"Augustine exalts God’s grace throughout his writings. The first action of God toward sinful humanity occurs through prevenient grace. Prevenient grace, according to Augustine, could be properly summarized in two main points:
First, it is the anticipation of God’s actions to rescue people from eternal perdition. Before any human movement toward God, says Augustine, God moves toward humans. In this manner, Augustine assures us that grace precedes human freedom of will. Thus, salvation begins by God’s direct initiative.
He speaks of God who prepares the will, and perfects by his co-operation what He initiates by His operation. He works in us that we may have the will [prevenient grace], and in perfecting works with us when we have the will [subsequent grace]. He operates, therefore, without us, in order that we may will [prevenient grace]; but when we will, and so will that we may act, He co-operates with us.
Second, prevenient grace is a gracious gift of God. Augustine states that grace “is not rendered for any merits, but is given gratis, on account of which it is also called grace.” Because grace is given gratis preceding any meritorious human actions, prevenient grace is anti-merit. Humans in their sinfulness and corruption, massa damnata, do not deserve God’s grace and love (Romans 5:15), but solely condemnation and rejection. Consequently, grace could exclusively be granted by God’s free decision, love, and mercy." (pgs. 99-102)
Many Calvinists go to extremes when they insist that in being saved or born again the sinner is entirely passive and not in any sense active. In these two posts of mine titled
"Passive or Active" (
here,
here) I address this question. I show that there are aspects of salvation where sinners are passive, but I also showed that there are aspects of it where sinners are active. Many Calvinists who promote what is called
"monergism" deny that sinners are active in any way in their being saved. However, that idea is simply not biblical. As I have stated previously, the word
"receive," a word connected with being saved, is in the active voice, not in the passive voice. A person who receives Christ and life thereby does so actively and willingly. A person who
"comes" to Christ is active in that coming.
The Greek word lambanō is often translated as "receive," and is used when someone actively takes hold of something (like reaching out to take a gift). It contrasts with the Greek word dechomai, which implies a more passive reception.
In the first post in "Passive or Active" I cite from the Baptist theologian Dr. Alveh Hovey who said:
"The simple fact is, that man is both active and passive in regeneration. The first series of texts brings to view his activity; the second, his passivity. Man is active in thinking upon the truth, in exercising his sensibilities in relation to it, and in giving up his heart to God; he is passive in that he is acted upon by the truth, and also by the Holy Spirit. He both acts and is acted upon." (See "Examination of the Alleged Discrepancies of the Bible" By John W. Haley, Alvah Hovey - Here)
In that same post I wrote:
"And I said unto him, Sir, thou knowest. And he said to me, These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb." (Rev. 7: 14)
The Greek word for "washed" is in the active voice, according to Robertson. Thus, regeneration is not, in every respect, a passive or monergistic experience."
In the second post in the above chapters "Passive or Active" I also wrote:
Dr. B.H. Carroll, in a message titled "THE HUMAN SIDE OF REGENERATION" (1894) wrote:
"I never hesitate to declare my own convictions when I have any that are clear to my own mind and are regarded as worth the telling. Let me say then, here and now and emphatically, that I believe, without the shadow of a doubt, that God’s Spirit deals with man’s spirit directly, immediately--the impact of naked Spirit on spirit. And this not only as a preparation for conviction, repentance, and faith, but oftentimes after one becomes a child of God. But I do not call this influence regeneration."
What the Hyper Calvinists do, as a means of dealing with the problems involved in making salvation to be wholly a passive experience, is to divorce
"regeneration" from evangelical
"conversion," from faith and repentance, arguing that regeneration causes conversion, sinners being passive in the former but active in the latter. The older Calvinists, however, did not divorce regeneration from conversion, but saw them as being the same experience, and that being true saw salvation as having both passive and active aspects to it. Those later Calvinists began however to restrict the definition of
"regeneration" so as to exclude conversion, and would speak of
"regeneration strictly defined" versus
"regeneration broadly defined" (which included conversion). In my post titled
"PaedoBaptist Shedd on Regeneration & Means" I cited the following words from Shedd, taken from his work
"Various Uses of the Term Regeneration" (See here):
"The term regeneration has been used in a wide and in a restricted sense. It may signify the whole process of salvation, including the preparatory work of conviction and the concluding work of sanctification. Or it may denote only the imparting of spiritual life in the new birth, excluding the preparatory and concluding processes...The Lutheran doctrine, stated in the apology for the Augsburg Confession and in the Formula of Concord, employs regeneration in the wide meaning, but distinguishes carefully between justification and sanctification. In the Reformed church, the term regeneration was also employed in the wide signification. Like the Lutheran, while carefully distinguishing between justification and sanctification, the Reformed theologian brought under the term regeneration everything that pertains to the development as well as to the origination of the new spiritual life. Regeneration thus included not only the new birth, but all that issues from it. It comprised the converting acts of faith and repentance and also the whole struggle with indwelling sin in progressive sanctification."
"This wide use of the term passed into English theology. The divines of the seventeenth century very generally do not distinguish between regeneration and conversion, but employ the two as synonyms. Owen does this continually (On the Spirit 3.5), and Charnock likewise (Attributes, Practical Atheism)."
"Consequently, there arose gradually a stricter use of the term regeneration and its discrimination from conversion. Turretin (15.4.13) defines two kinds of conversion, as the term was employed in his day."
"We shall adopt this distinction between regeneration and conversion. Regeneration, accordingly, is an act; conversion is an activity or a process."
When these new Calvinists divorced conversion, which involves faith and repentance, from regeneration, it was in part due to their embracing an unbiblical proposition which said that "regeneration is unconditional," a leading tenet of the Hardshell Baptists, the most extreme Hyper Calvinists. They knew that evangelical conversion was not unconditional, so in order to uphold their new proposition they had to sever conversion from regeneration, or to say that "strictly defined regeneration" excluded conversion but "broadly defined regeneration" included conversion. In the bible, however, it is clear that regeneration begins in conversion.
Hernandez wrote further:
"On the other hand, mainly using the Scriptures, Augustine also pointed to the external nature of grace. Grace as an external influence resonates, convinces, and draws humans to God’s offer of salvation."
That summarizes my view as expressed in the previous chapter, and I am a Calvinist in the Augustinian tradition. Any Calvinist who believes that the preaching of the gospel is a means in regeneration or rebirth must believe in prevenient grace, for the gospel is the means of saving grace.
Hernandez wrote further:
"According to Augustine, external incentives on human perceptions will work by “evangelical exhortation” of the Church and “the commands of the law.” Then, the preaching of the Word and the Law rebukes humans of their frailties and advises them of their necessity of God’s grace. This is important because at this point Augustine concurs with Pelagius that the preaching of the Gospel and the commandment of the law have a role as external means of prevenient grace to make humans willing to believe. However, unlike Pelagius, Augustine strongly refuses to limit grace to these external aids. Grace is primordial to any human actions because God “in all things prevents [precedes] us with His mercy.” (pg. 103-04)
We have seen in previous chapters where many Calvinists agree in affirming that God uses the law to show men their guilt and thus be a means to lead them to Christ for justification. This was constantly preached by the Puritan Calvinists in their ideas about preparationism. They also saw the gospel, of course, as a means of grace and regeneration, and that being so, it is only a means for salvation for those who believe the gospel. We also saw how God uses the law, gospel, and providential events to humble sinners, to awaken them and get their attention, so as to lead them to Christ and salvation.
Hernandez wrote further about Augustine's view on prevenient grace:
"Prevenient grace results in a series of spiritual effects that lead humans to salvation. Prevenient grace liberates, empowers, and heals human freedom of will. Augustine assures that “by grace the healing of the soul from the disease of sin” and the “cure of the will” occurs, resulting in the establishment of the freedom of will. So, for Augustine, freedom of will is clearly not the result of nature, but the result of grace. Despite the corruption of the human will, prevenient grace gives humans a new supernatural predisposition that prompts the will before an individual ever wills. Then, grace frees, heals, and enables human free will, not only enlarging a person’s area of choice but by substituting the evil desires with a system of good choices."
I don't know whether it is true to say that Augustine believed that "prevenient grace liberates, empowers, and heals human freedom of will" prior to being regenerated. However, it is true that God works in the hearts of the elect, prior to salvation, "to will," as we have seen. The moment the will is changed is the moment the sinner is reborn.
Many Calvinists simply make untenable assumptions about the implications of the doctrine of human depravity that are not sound and this leads them to embrace other unbiblical ideas.
Hernandez wrote further:
"Another important spiritual effect of prevenient grace is faith. According to Augustine, prevenient grace moves human freedom of will toward faith. Because grace has already liberated free will, it is now able to exercise faith. Faith, like free will, for Augustine is therefore a gift of grace. God’s prevenient grace is the indispensable key that enables depraved persons to become spiritually alive again and believe in God. Augustine states that “by faith [comes] the acquisition of grace against sin, by grace the healing of the soul from the disease of sin, by the health of the soul freedom of will, by free will the love of righteousness.” Although faith is the source of grace and it is “in our own power,” Augustine scripturally clarifies that “there is no power but comes from God (Rom 13:1).” Then, everywhere in his writing, Augustine emphasizes that faith is rightly regarded as a gift of grace. Quoting two passages of Paul in 2 Timothy 4:7 and 1 Corinthians 7:25, Augustine concludes that “even faith itself cannot be had without God’s mercy, and that it is the gift of God.”
I would rather say, as previously stated, that though God operates on the will of sinners prior to their salvation, the will is not freed until it receives Christ. A sinner is not said to be free from bondage until he has been joined to Christ, until he has been enslaved by Christ. So wrote Paul:
"But God be thanked that though you were slaves of sin, yet you obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine to which you were delivered. And having been set free from sin, you became slaves of righteousness." (Rom. 6: 17-18 nkjv)
The sinner is a slave to sin, which includes his will being enslaved, until he obeys from the heart that form of doctrine to which he was delivered, at which point his will is no longer enslaved to sin but enslaved to Christ and his teaching.
Under "Prevenient Grace in the Theology of the Protestant Reformation" (pg. 131) Hernandez wrote:
"A consideration of the way in which an individual turns away from sin to grace and submission to God was a central focus of the Reformers. In this context, the role of human will and God’s sovereign grace increasingly become a point of contention. On this topic, Martin Luther and John Calvin shared similar views, namely that later developments came to a more rigid and limited understanding of the role of free will in the work of salvation. They emphasized God’s sovereign grace and human weakness to do something to receive salvation to the point that it appears that humanity is only a passive agent in the whole process of redemption.
It may "appear" that Calvinism with its view of human depravity leads to a sinner being entirely passive in being saved, but this is not so. I have read Luther's "Bondage of the Will" and find nothing to disagree with. As stated, the will is not liberated until it is "taken captive" by Christ at the time Christ chooses. So testified Paul in II Corinthians 10: 4-5, saying that the thoughts, which would include the will, are by the Lord, through his instruments, "brought into captivity to the obedience of Christ." It is said of Satan that he similarly "takes captive" sinners "to do his will," by his traps. Surely Christ is able to do the same, to liberate the will from Satan and sin and to bring it into conformity to his will. (II Tim. 2: 26)
Hernandez wrote:
"Calvin clearly affirmed the anticipation of grace to the human will in salvation. For him—and I would say for Arminius—it cannot be otherwise because the depravity of the will is so profound that it “cannot move and act except in the direction of evil.” It is this depraved will that is in need of conversion." (pg. 135)
God begins to operate on the will of lost sinners prior to his saving them, but the will is not freed from sin until Christ takes it captive.