"The preparations of the heart in man,
and the answer of the
tongue, is from the Lord"
Proverbs 16:1
Elder C.H. Cayce in an editorial titled "The New Birth" in the September 19, 1911 issue of "The Primitive Baptist" wrote:
"The very fact that a child cries is unmistakable proof that a living child
has been born. So when one begins to mourn on account of sin and to cry unto the
Lord, begging for mercy, it is positive proof that he has been born of God. Then one
may ask, “Why does he mourn if he has been born of God?'' We answer, Because
he does not know he has been born of God. When the fact is made known to him
that Jesus is his Saviour and that he has been born of God, then he rejoices. The
fact is one thing, and the knowledge of the fact is another thing."
This is the Hardshell or Hyper Calvinistic view on the question of whether conviction of sin and guilt is a precursor to or an after effect of "regeneration" or new birth. I wonder what Cayce would say about the remorse of Esau and Judas. Of Esau we read:
"14 Pursue peace with all people, and holiness, without which no one will see the Lord: 15 looking carefully lest anyone fall short of the grace of God; lest any root of bitterness springing up cause trouble, and by this many become defiled; 16 lest there be any fornicator or profane person like Esau, who for one morsel of food sold his birthright. 17 For you know that afterward, when he wanted to inherit the blessing, he was rejected, for he found no place for repentance, though he sought it diligently with tears." (Heb. 12: 14-17 nkjv)
Were Esau's tears evidence of regeneration? Hardshell Hyper Calvinists would have to say yes. About Judas we read:
"Then Judas, His betrayer, seeing that He had been condemned, was remorseful and brought back the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and elders, saying, “I have sinned by betraying innocent blood.” And they said, “What is that to us? You see to it!” Then he threw down the pieces of silver in the temple and departed, and went and hanged himself." (Matt. 27: 3-5 nkjv)
Was the remorse of Judas an evidence of regeneration? It was good that he realized his sin, but what he did as a result sealed his doom. Why did he not simply go to Jesus and ask for forgiveness? Killing himself was not the right choice. His sorrow for sin did not lead to salvation.
Balaam said "let me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like his" (Numb. 23: 10) and yet he was never saved. Of Balaam Owen said:
"Men question what will become of them in the close; they fluctuate about what will be their latter end. Did not Balaam do so when he cried, “Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my latter end be like his”? That wretched man was tossed up and down between hopes and fears. This is common to the vilest person in the world. It is but the shaking of their security, if they be alone." (From his sermon "the strength of faith"; See here)
Many of our Hardshell brethren will say that Balaam was a saved man because he expressed a desire to be saved. In this post (here) I cited a Hardshell Baptist on this very point and gave a short rebuttal to it. In that post I wrote:
Elder Moore, a Hardshell Baptist, in delineating what "Primitive Baptists" believe, responded to questions. (see here)
8. Do you not then teach that some might want salvation but could not have it because they are not one of the elect?
Answer: No, the man who wants salvation already HAS it.
I have cited others who have said the same thing in my book on "The Hardshell Baptist Cult." Such a proposition makes men like Baalim a child of God, even though the Scriptures clearly affirm that he is one of them who will "perish." (Jude 11)
Looks like Balaam wanted to be saved, and by the logic of the Hardshells, this was enough to prove that Balaam was a born again child of God! Who can believe it?
8. Do you not then teach that some might want salvation but could not have it because they are not one of the elect?
Answer: No, the man who wants salvation already HAS it.
I have cited others who have said the same thing in my book on "The Hardshell Baptist Cult." Such a proposition makes men like Baalim a child of God, even though the Scriptures clearly affirm that he is one of them who will "perish." (Jude 11)
Looks like Balaam wanted to be saved, and by the logic of the Hardshells, this was enough to prove that Balaam was a born again child of God! Who can believe it?
In "Conviction of Sin Before Conversion" by John Owen in "Several Practical Cases of Conscience Resolved" (Available here), Discourse One, page four, wrote:
"QUESTION. To what extent should I be convicted of my sin and guilt before I may turn to Jesus Christ to find salvation?"
For, seeing conviction is so indispensably necessary, some may say, "It hath not been thus and thus with me,—according as hath been declared." Therefore,I would only show what I judge to be so necessary, as that without it a soul cannot be supposed sincerely to have closed with Christ. And we having all made our profession of choosing and closing with Christ, as I would be loath to say any thing that might discourage any, lest they should have failed in the very necessary work of conviction; so I would not betray the truth of God, nor the souls of any."
Of what Owen meant by conviction of sin, and of "closing with Christ" we have already spoken in the previous chapters. Notice that Owen, though a Calvinist, believes that closing with Christ, involves choosing Christ, and that this choice is essential for being initially regenerated or born of God. He also again says that the "work of conviction" is "very necessary" in leading a person to repentance.
Owen wrote further:
"Therefore, I shall place it upon this: What Jesus Christ doth indispensably call men unto, in order to believing in him, that is indispensably required of them. And this I shall manifest out of two or three places of Scripture:—Mark 2:17, "I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance." Now, this calling them unto repentance, is a calling them unto it by the faith which is in him...What is the conclusion? "Lost sinners," saith Christ, "this is that I require of you." So that this is what I assert to be indispensably necessary,—namely, that they are so far convinced that they are sinners as to state and course, that they are not righteous in themselves, and can have no righteousness in themselves. I say, therefore, when a person is not really convinced that he is not righteous, he is not under the call of Jesus Christ; and if he doth believe this, he is under a sovereign dispensation, and let not such despond."
On this point we have already taken notice of in the preceding chapter. A person must first see himself as lost and guilty before he will ever seek or find salvation through Christ.
In DISCOURSE #6 "On the Work of the Spirit after Justification," Elder Wilson Thompson (1788-1866), leader of the newly formed "Primitive" or "Old School" Baptist denomination wrote the following in his 1821 book "Simple Truth." I wrote about this in this post (here).
"This change wrought by the spirit, is called regeneration because it is begetting them unto a divine nature. The first work of the spirit on the heart is regeneration, or the implanting of that incorruptible seed with cleaves to holiness, and so it is sometimes called quickened, because this is a living seed, that causes the motions of life to appear, and this is always followed by the new birth which is effected when the soul is enabled to view Christ by faith, and lay hold of the comfort contained in the gospel, and so they are said to be born again, not of corruptible seed, but of an incorruptible seed, by the word of God."
Notice that Thompson does not equate "regeneration" with "the new birth." He believes that one must be regenerated first before he can later be born of the Spirit. This was a common view among the Hardshells of the 19th century. In this paradigm "conviction of sin and guilt" followed regeneration but preceded the birth. In this paradigm "regeneration" becomes "prevenient grace." Unlike the view of Owens and the Puritans, which viewed conviction of sin as a step towards regeneration or rebirth, Hardshells and the Hyper Calvinists saw conviction as an effect of regeneration. It may be that it was rejection of prevenient grace that led many Hyper Calvinists to say that conviction of sin and guilt was an effect of regeneration and that regeneration precedes faith and evangelical conversion and that the gospel or word of God is no means in effecting regeneration. Here are some more citations from "Primitive Baptists" of the 19th century that show that this paradigm was their common belief.
Elder William Conrad of Kentucky (1797-1882), an associate of Thompson, wrote:
"There is also a begetting and being born, but our being born does not give us life; we are born because we have life; but there is a begetting, and previous to this begetting there is no vital or actual existence; but there is eternal decreed, purposed or treasured in Christ before it is given, and in due time we are said to receive it according to the election of grace; and therefore we are said to be the Temple of God, which is holy, which temple ye are." (Life and Travels of Elder William Conrad; chapter 25 and cited by me in this posting here)
Elder J. R. Respass (1831-1895) wrote:
"When a man is born again, he, the man, becomes a new creature...but as woman in pangs of travail is delivered by birth, so he is delivered by faith, and rejoices in the truth." (Elder J. R. Respass in The Gospel Messenger, 1883, pg. 57)
Elder Gilbert Beebe (1880-1881) wrote:
"When a sinner is thus quickened, the incorruptible seed, by the word of God, which liveth and abideth forever, is implanted in his heart, and the evidence of this implantation is first given by a sense of the purity and holiness of God, and the spirituality of his law, contrasted with a sense of guilt, pollution and just condemnation of the person to whom this communication is made, and consequently a struggle for deliverance. The ear is now opened to hear the thunders of Sinai, and the eye is made to see the justice of God as a sin avenger; a brokenness of heart that he or she, as the case may be, has been all their lifetime in open rebellion against so holy, just and righteous a God, who has followed them with his mercies all their days. A sense of his goodness leads them to repentance, contrition and humble acknowledgment of their guilt. Now the quickened and awakened sinner becomes burdened with the load of depravity...Now all this conviction, contrition, lamentation and distress, is the legitimate consequence resulting from life implanted, and indicates to all who know experimentally the way of life, that the poor sin-burdened soul is drawing near to the time of his birth, or deliverance. He who has thus arrested him, and brought him to a sense of his lost and helpless estate, will perform the work in his own time, but the burdened soul must wait until "God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, shines in [not into] his heart, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ." -2 Cor. iv. 6. Or, as Paul relates his own experience, "When it pleased God, who separated me from my mother's womb, and called me by his grace, to reveal his Son in me." - Gal. i. 15. Then by the revelation of Christ in us the hope of glory, the way of salvation through him is brought to view, the burden of guilt is removed, the blood of Christ is applied, the demands of the law are canceled, the curse is removed, the prison doors are opened, the captive is delivered, the love of God is shed abroad in the heart, old things are passed away; behold all things have become new; a new song is put in his mouth, even praise unto God, the gospel pours its joyful sound into his quickened ears, his goings are established and he is a new creature..."
("REGENERATION AND THE NEW BIRTH" - Middletown, N. Y., September 1, 1857 - Editorials of Gilbert Bebee Vol. 4; for more such citations see my post here)
Elder Samuel Trott (1783-1866), an associate of Beebe, also wrote:
"Thus in the new birth there is a striking correspondence to the natural birth; to each there is a seed implanted, and then a quickening by which life is manifested. And when the natural child is brought to the birth, the sorrows of the woman in travail, the fetus being broke loose from that by which alone it had been hitherto nourished, strongly represents the agonies and the killing by the law belonging to the second birth." ("THE NEW BIRTH" From "SIGNS of the TIMES" - Vol.21 - 1853 - Writings of Elder Samuel Trott, pages 404 - 409)
Abraham Kuyper (1837-1920) wrote:
"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.
What Arminians and many Calvinists, such as I am, saw as instances of prevenient grace, or preparatory steps towards being saved, Hardshells and some Hyper Calvinists saw as salvation. In their system there are no graces that precede salvation. This is what led many of them to see the experience of being "awakened" as regeneration.
Interesting, however, is the fact that other theologians who would not be characterized as Hyper Calvinists also believed in a similar paradigm, which paradigm was also the result of making spiritual birth to be in every way like physical birth, which has three stages to it, first the conception in the womb, then a time of development in the womb, and then a time of birth proper, when the living fetus is delivered from the womb. Alexander Campbell and some of his followers had a modified view of this paradigm. He believed that a sinner was regenerated when he believed and repented but was not born until the believer was baptized in water. A.W. Pink, a leading Calvinist of the 20th century also held to the Hardshell paradigm. In this post (here) I cited from his work titled "Quickening Is the Initial Operation of the Spirit," wherein Pink wrote:
"In earlier years we did not ourselves perceive the distinction which is pointed by John 6:63 and 1 Peter 1:23: the former referring unto the initial act of the Spirit in "quickening" the spiritually-dead soul, the latter having in view the consequent "birth" of the same. While it is freely allowed that the origin of the "new creature" is shrouded in impenetrable mystery, yet of this we may be certain, that life precedes birth. There is a strict analogy between the natural birth and the spiritual: necessarily so, for God is the Author of them both, and He ordained that the former should adumbrate the latter. Birth is neither the cause nor the beginning of life itself: rather is it the manifestation of a life already existent: there had been a Divine "quickening" before the child could issue from the womb. In like manner, the Holy Spirit "quickens" the soul, or imparts spiritual life to it, before its possessor is "brought forth" (as James 1:18 is rightly rendered in the R.V.) and "born again" by the Word of God (1 Pet. 1:23)."
In that same post I also cited from several other Calvinists, such as Hardshell Jimmy Barber, W.E. Best, Bryan Schwertly, and John Hendryx of the web site monergism.com. I cited these words of Hendryx:
"I. Regeneration is described as a spiritual new birth.
1. This is affirmed in the following New Testament passages: John 1:12-13; 3:3-8; I Corinthians 4:15; Philemon 10; James 1:18; I Peter 1:3,23; I John 2:29; 3:9; 4:7; 5:1,4,18.
2. The embryonic stage of regeneration is what is called "quickening", and it is the work of the Holy Spirit alone.
3. The final stage of regeneration is delivery or birth, and it is the work of the Holy Spirit in dependence upon the Word as a means. Consequently, the spiritual knowledge conferred by illumination is the spiritual content or revelation (holy Scripture)." ("Biblical Regeneration and Affectional Theology," see here)
1. This is affirmed in the following New Testament passages: John 1:12-13; 3:3-8; I Corinthians 4:15; Philemon 10; James 1:18; I Peter 1:3,23; I John 2:29; 3:9; 4:7; 5:1,4,18.
2. The embryonic stage of regeneration is what is called "quickening", and it is the work of the Holy Spirit alone.
3. The final stage of regeneration is delivery or birth, and it is the work of the Holy Spirit in dependence upon the Word as a means. Consequently, the spiritual knowledge conferred by illumination is the spiritual content or revelation (holy Scripture)." ("Biblical Regeneration and Affectional Theology," see here)
In Owen's work "Discourse of the Efficient of Regeneration" (Available here) he wrote:
"These preparations are many times without perfection. The pangs of conviction resolve sometimes into a return to the old vomit, and make no progress in a state of life and grace. The apostle's rule will hold true in the whole compass of the work, Rom. vi. 11, 'If it be of works, then it is no more grace.' So much as is ascribed to any work or preparation by the creature, so much is taken from the glory of grace, and would make God not the author, but assistant, and that too by obligation, not by grace."
By "these preparations" he means those workings of the word and Spirit of God upon the hearts and minds of lost sinners prior to their being raised out of spiritual death. He also says that many sinners experience conviction of sin and guilt but who do not avail themselves of the salvation which is in Christ Jesus. I contend that being convicted of sin is not only a necessary precondition, except in cases of small children, for being regenerated but that it also is an example of both common and prevenient grace. Owen also makes a distinction between any preparatory works of the creature made apart from the work of the Spirit and grace of God and those preparations which are the result of the Spirit and grace of God. So Owen wrote further: "From this it follows, that man does not prepare himself by any act of his will, without the grace of God."
Owen mentions the "pangs of conviction." The people I cited previously who believed that regeneration preceded the new birth would see these "pangs" as denoting the "travail" a quickened, awakened, or regenerated sinner experiences while in the womb of darkness and guilt and before he is delivered from those travails in the birth.
Owens wrote further:
"Thirdly, What preparation had any of those we read of in Scripture from themselves? What disposition had Paul, when he was struck down with a heart fuller of actual enmity than he had at his birth? Did the apostles expect any call from their nets, or set themselves in a readiness before they heard that call? A voice from Christ was attended with a divine touch or power upon their hearts; both the preparation and the motion itself took birth together. And what preparations are there in Scripture, but are attributed unto God? If a conviction be thorough and full, and consequently a preparation, it must refer to that Spirit which our Saviour asserts to be the principal cause of it, John xvi. 8, 9, 'When he is come,' that is, the Comforter, 'he will reprove the world of sin.' It is laid wholly upon this, as the end of the almighty Spirit's coming, whereby it is not likely men would be convinced without him. Is there any desire or prayer for it? Even this, if true, is from the Holy Ghost; 'no man can call Christ Lord, but by the Holy Ghost,' 1 Cor. xii. 3. Did any of those our Saviour cured of bodily infirmities, prepare themselves for that cure? Neither can any man prepare himself for his spiritual cure...If one man of the same nature with another be endued with rich morals, it is from the common grace of God exciting natural light, and the common notions of fit and just; as the reason one vine of the same kind brings forth more generous fruit than another, is from the stronger influence of the sun. All nature assents to this truth, that nothing does prepare itself for a change."
It is true, as Owen says, that sometimes a conviction of sin, or an awakening, instantly brings forth a birth of the Spirit, as in the case of the apostle Paul. But many times there is much time between the preparatory steps and the birth. Further, as he has stated, people may be convicted and thus prepared but who are never saved. It seems also that Owen makes a distinction between the conviction that sinners experience, for he says "if a conviction be thorough and full" it is then definitely a work of the Spirit and will surely bring a sinner to the birth.
Many Calvinists, especially those who say that a sinner must be born again or regenerated before he can be converted by faith and repentance, in arguing against any type of prevenient grace, will say that if God convicts a sinner of sin and does not bring about his regeneration, that such a scenario would violate what Paul affirmed when he wrote:
"I thank my God upon every remembrance of you, always in every prayer of mine making request for you all with joy, for your fellowship in the gospel from the first day until now, being confident of this very thing, that He who has begun a good work in you will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ; just as it is right for me to think this of you all, because I have you in my heart, inasmuch as both in my chains and in the defense and confirmation of the gospel, you all are partakers with me of grace." (Phil. 1: 3-7 nkjv)
If God initiates the "good work" in conviction of sin, or in some other preparatory work in a sinner's heart and mind, then it can never be the case that such a convicted sinner would fail to be regenerated or finally saved, according to the words of the apostle. If God began the good work of convicting of sin in some and yet it did not end in salvation, it is argued by Hyper Calvinists that what Paul said is wrong. To which I reply first by saying that the "good work" Paul refers to is the conversion of the believers at Philippi. However, there are some, such as Kenneth Wuest, well known Greek exegetist, who say that the good work Paul has in mind is the financial support the Philippians gave to Paul and the first missionaries. In his commentary on the above passage he wrote:
"Paul had come to a
settled persuasion concerning the fact that the God who had begun in the Philippians the good work of giving to missions, would bring it to a successful conclusion right up to the day of Christ Jesus."
We may also say that where there has been what Owen called a "thorough and full" conviction, a good work in the hearts of those chosen to salvation, he will indeed complete what he designs to accomplish by that conviction; And, as Owen taught, even in those cases where some have been convicted and yet never saved God still completes his design therein.
Consider also the fact that a person must hear the gospel first before he can believe in Christ (Rom. 10), and if hearing the gospel is a gracious gift or good thing, then we see where there is prevenient grace at work prior to salvation by his bringing the sinner into contact with the gospel and word of God. However, Hyper Calvinists will sometimes go so far as to assert that one must be regenerated before he can savingly hear the gospel. Oftentimes he does not see that hearing the gospel is in itself a gracious thing, even if one does not believe it.
Wrote Owen:
"If the preparations were from the will of man, man would begin the noblest work that ever was wrought, and God would be made no more than an attendant upon the creature's motion; whereas the very beginning in the will, as well as the perfection, is ascribed to God: Philip. ii. 13, 'God works in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure.' God's good pleasure is the original cause of this work upon the will, not the will's good pleasure. The work then depending on God's good pleasure, excludes any dependency on the will of man; it is therefore called a creation, to show God's independence upon anything as to this work."
God works in the heart of the elect to will or to choose to be saved before he is actually saved or regenerated. The work of making willing does not always occur in an instant either. God may work long on a hard heart before he softens it and makes it receptive to him and his word. So Owen agrees when he writes further:
"If we seek, we shall find; if we ask, we shall receive, but who first touches the heart to seek or to ask? If we cannot think a good thought of ourselves, how can we think so good a thought as a desire of regeneration? To say, then, we can desire the new creation of ourselves, without some kind of grace, is to assert another doctrine than what the apostle Paul asserted to those already regenerate. The first will, which is the necessary spring of all actions, is wrought by God, Philip. ii. 13."

