Tuesday, February 25, 2020

John Calvin On Union By Faith

My dear friend Bob L. Ross, and his associate "Charles," wrote the following against those who claim that John Calvin taught the "born again before faith" error. (here)

John Calvin vs. "Born Again Before Faith"
The doctrine that an unbeliever is born again before placing saving faith in Jesus Christ is a heresy held by almost all of today’s Reformed Calvinists. As Bob Ross has decisively proven, this heresy is not taught in any of the historic Baptist confessions. It is likewise not found in the Baptist Faith and Message, the confession of the Southern Baptist Convention. In fact, the BF&M teaches exactly the opposite of "born again before faith."

"Born again before faith" theology is not only rejected by Southern Baptists, it was rejected by John Calvin himself! In the book Theology of the Reformers (Broadman, 1988), Dr. Timothy George, the five-point Calvinist dean of the Beeson School of Divinity, says that John Calvin taught that faith precedes regeneration, which is exactly what the BF&M teaches and what Southern Baptists believe.

"This being placed into Christ (insitio in Christo) occurs in regeneration which, Calvin was careful to point out, follows from faith as the result: Since faith receives Christ, it leads us to the possession of all His benefits. Repentance too, which is part of regeneration, is the consequence of faith." (225-226)
Again, Calvin is clear that faith unites to Christ and all the aspects of salvation follow that union.

Brother Ross also wrote:

"In his comment on 1 Corinthians 13:13, Calvin says, "In fine, it is by faith that we are born again, that we become the sons of God -- that we obtain eternal life, and that Christ dwells in us."" (here)

Now, let us no more hear of Calvin teaching that one is born again before and without faith. It is only the later Hyper leaning Calvinists who teach this heresy.

Furthermore, as I have shown, the first Hardshells, like Elder John Clark, editor of Zion's Advocate, also plainly said that we "are children of God by faith." 

John Bunyan On Union With Christ & Faith

John Bunyan wrote:

"For faith hath joined Christ and the soul together, and being so joined, the soul is one spirit with him: not essentially; but in agreement, and oneness of design. Besides, when Christ is truly received and embraced to the justifying of the sinner, in that man’s heart he dwells by his word and Spirit, through the same faith also. Now Christ, by his Spirit and Word, must needs season the soul he thus dwells in. So then the soul being seasoned, it seasoneth the body; and body and soul, season the life and conversation.

For the true beholding of Jesus to justification and life, changes from glory to glory. Nor can that man that hath so believed, as that by his faith he hath received and embraced Christ for life before God, be destitute of good works. For, as I said, the Word and Spirit come also by this faith, and dwell in the heart and conscience." (Saving Faith - here)

If "faith" is that which "hath joined Christ and the soul," and if all the blessings of salvation follow union with Christ, then ergo, all follows faith. In fact, this latter proposition is implied in the words of Paul who said "whatsoever is not of faith is sin." (Rom. 14:23) This implies that "all is of faith."

In other article Bunyan wrote:

"Third. To be saved is to be brought to, and helped to lay hold on, Jesus Christ by faith.

2. As they must be brought to, so they must be helped to lay hold on Christ by faith; for as coming to Christ, so faith, is not in our own power; therefore we are said to be raised up with him "through the faith of the operation of God." And again, we are said to believe, "according to the working of his mighty power, which he wrought in Christ, when he raised him from the dead" (Col 2:12; Eph 1:19,20). Now we are said to be saved by faith, because by faith we lay hold of, venture upon, and put on Jesus Christ for life. For life, I say, because God having made him the Saviour, hath given him life to communicate to sinners, and the life that he communicates to them is the merit of his flesh and blood, which whoso eateth and drinketh by faith, hath eternal life, because that flesh and blood hath merit in it sufficient to obtain the favour of God.

"Saved by faith." For although salvation beginneth in God's purpose, and comes to us through Christ's righteousness, yet is not faith exempted from having a hand in saving of us. Not that it meriteth aught, but is given by God to those which he saveth, that thereby they may embrace and put on that Christ by whose righteousness they must be saved. Wherefore this faith is that which here distinguisheth them that shall be saved from them that shall be damned. Hence it is said, "He that believeth not, shall be damned"; and hence again it is that the believers are called "the children, the heirs, and the blessed with faithful Abraham;" that the promise by faith in Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe (Gal 3:6-9,26; Rom 4:13,14).

Fourth. To be saved is to be preserved in the faith to the end. "He that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved" (Matt 24:13). Not that perseverance is an accident in Christianity, or a thing performed by human industry; they that are saved "are kept by the power of God, through faith unto salvation" (1 Peter 1:3-6).

But perseverance is absolutely necessary to the complete saving of the soul, because he that falleth short of the state that they that are saved are possessed of, as saved, cannot arrive to that saved state. He that goeth to sea with a purpose to arrive at Spain, cannot arrive there if he be drowned by the way; wherefore perseverance is absolutely necessary to the saving of the soul, and therefore it is included in the complete saving of us—"Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting salvation: ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world without end" (Isa 45:17). Perseverance is here made absolutely necessary to the complete saving of the soul."

Where there is no faith and trust in Christ Jesus as Lord and Savior there is no salvation. Oh how happy I am to be a believer! So thankful that the Holy Spirit convinced me of this great truth as a young man! Like the apostle Paul I can say "I know in whom I have believed and am persuaded..."

Bunyan continued:

"The Holy Spirit coming into us, and dwelling in us, worketh out many salvations for us now, and each of them in order also to our being saved for ever."

Our Hardshell brothers should pay close attention to these words of Bunyan since he references "many salvations." But, unlike our Hardshell brothers, he sees these several deliverances as "in order also to our being saved for ever."

Bunyan continued:

"4. This is he that worketh faith in our hearts, without which neither the grace of the Father nor the grace of the Son can save us, "For he that believeth not, shall be damned" (Mark 16:16; Rom 15:13)."

This was not only the view of the Baptists of the 17th and 18th centuries, but was the view of the first Hardshells.

Bunyan continued:

"1. The things that immediately concern our justification and salvation, they are offered, yea, given to us freely, and we are commanded to receive them by faith."

If this is true, then faith precedes all, because faith is what unites the soul to Christ.

Bunyan continued:

"God is the first that seeketh peace; and, as I said, in a way of entreaty he bids his ministers pray you in Christ's stead; "as though God did beseech you by us, we pray you, in Christ's stead, be ye reconciled to God." O sinner, wilt thou not open? Behold, God the Father and his Son Jesus Christ stand both at the door of thy heart, beseeching there for favour from thee, that thou wilt be reconciled to them, with promise, if thou wilt comply, to forgive thee all thy sins. O grace! O amazing grace! To see a prince entreat a beggar to receive an alms would be a strange sight; to see a king entreat the traitor to accept of mercy would be a stranger sight than that; but to see God entreat a sinner, to hear Christ say, "I stand at the door and knock," with a heart full and a heaven full of grace to bestow upon him that opens, this is such a sight as dazzles the eyes of angels. What sayest thou now, sinner?"

This is the way God has ordained that we address lost sinners. Our Hardshell brothers who think it a sin to do this are greatly deluded. The fact that they do not preach this way is the leading reason why so few are converted in their assemblies.

Bunyan continued:

"Second. If God now comes up closer to them, and begins to fasten conviction upon the conscience, though such conviction be the first step to faith and repentance, yea, and to life eternal, yet what shifts will they have to forget them, and wear them off! Yea, although they now begin to see that they must either turn or burn, [13] yet oftentimes even then they will study to wave a present conversion: they object, they are too young to turn yet; seven years hence time enough, when they are old, or come upon a sick-bed. O what an enemy is man to his own salvation! I am persuaded that God hath visited some of you often with his Word, even twice and thrice, and you have thrown water as fast as he hath by the Word cast fire upon your conscience." (Saved By Grace OR A Discourse of the Grace of God Showing - here)

Hardshells today claim that to preach "turn or burn" is a gross heresy! How unlike Bunyan and their Baptist forefathers! He also shows that conviction of sin is not an evidence of salvation, like our Hardshell brothers teach, but is only a "first step" to it.

Monday, February 24, 2020

John Owen On Union's Priority

In "John Owen on Union with Christ and Justification" (here) we have these good comments about Owen's view on the ordo salutis (emphasis mine):

"This essay proves that Owen embraces both union with Christ but at the same time gives priority to the doctrine of justification over sanctification, that is, that he holds to an ordo salutis."

"Owen gives priority in this sense: a person can say that they are sanctified because they are justified, but a person cannot say that they are justified because they are sanctified. In other words, Owen maintains the classic hallmark of Reformed theology: justification and sanctification are distinct but inseparable benefits of union with Christ, but a person's sanctification (the fruit of which is good works) is not in any way mixed or confused with their justification. Justification logically comes before sanctification because good works are the fruits and evidences of justification, not its antecedent cause. Moreover, justification is a complete act whereas sanctification is an inaugurated but nevertheless incomplete process."

Owen did "discuss the relationship between union with Christ, justification, and sanctification," affirming that -

"A person does not lay hold of Christ's accomplished work until they are united with him and share in the communion of his benefits through the work of the Spirit."

In discussing Owen's view regarding "Union with Christ and the Ordo Salutis" the writer says:

"Grasping Owen's doctrine of the pactum is cardinal in understanding how he prioritizes the forensic element in redemption. But we must first understand what Owen believes about union with Christ before we can proceed. Owen, like most Reformed theologians, holds to the doctrine of union with Christ. Owen believes that all of the benefits of redemption flow from the believer's union with Christ. Union with Christ, writes Owen, “is the cause of all other graces that we are made partakers of; they are all communicated to us by virtue of our union with Christ. Hence is our adoption, our justification, our sanctification, our fruitfulness, our perseverance, our resurrection, our glory.” Union with Christ, therefore, is the all-encompassing doctrinal rubric that embraces all of the elements of redemption."

"Owen sees no problem with affirming both union with Christ and articulating an ordo salutis. Owen explains that Paul never speaks about the necessity of sanctification, regeneration, or renovation by the work of the Spirit antecedently to the believer's justification."

"Owen carefully safeguards the doctrine of justification because Paul states that God justifies the ungodly (Rom 4:5), which means that the believer's justification has to be antecedent to his sanctification."

"To be sure, Owen does not confuse justification (the forensic) with sanctification (the transformative), but rather states that a person must be in union with Christ to partake of the forensic benefit of imputation. Owen clearly states this point: “Our actual interest in the satisfaction of Christ depends on our actual insertion into his mystical body by faith, according to the appointment of God.” Elsewhere, Owen bluntly asserts, “The foundation of the imputation asserted is union.”"

In another article, "Union with Christ: The Westminster Confession," by Stephen Unthank (here) we have these comments:

"For English Reformed Orthodoxy, the doctrine of a believer’s union with Christ was paramount. John Owen, enunciating the centrality of a believer’s union, exclaimed that our union with Christ is the “principle and measure of all spiritual enjoyments and expectations.”[1] Likewise Thomas Goodwin expressed a similar conviction that “being in Christ, and united to him, is the fundamental constitution of a Christian.”[2] It is a bit surprising then when one looks at the Westminster Confession of Faith, that high-water mark of Puritan theological codification, where we find no chapter expressly dedicated to the doctrine of union with Christ. But this in no way means the doctrine is not there. No, it runs like a silver thread throughout the document underlying much of the theology laid out in its pages."

"Perhaps the clearest place to see the doctrine is in the Shorter Catechism question 30, which asks “How doth the Spirit apply to us the redemption purchased by Christ?” The answer: “The Spirit applieth to us the redemption purchased by Christ, by working faith in us, and thereby uniting us to Christ in our effectual calling.” The language used here harkens back to Calvin’s famous passage on union with Christ in his Institutes where he asks the same question. “How do we receive those benefits which the Father bestowed on his only-begotten Son?” Calvin answers by saying we must first “understand that as long as Christ remains outside of us, and we are separated from him, all that he has suffered and done for the salvation of the human race remains useless and of no value to us.”"

Again, these are my sentiments and they express the true Calvinist faith on the ordo salutis. Union with Christ by faith is the foundation for the obtaining of all the blessings of redemption, including regeneration. What think ye?

Sunday, February 23, 2020

On The Priority Of Union With Christ

There is much debate between Arminians and Calvinists over the arrangement of the "ordo salutis" and I have chimed in on this debate many times over the years. The debate focuses on whether faith precedes the new birth or follows it. Let me say here at the outset that I get very agitated when men on both sides say - "Calvinists believe that regeneration precedes faith." Many times I have had to say to both Arminians and Calvinists that such is not true. That some Calvinists or "Reformed" theologians put regeneration before faith is not doubted. But to put all Calvinists into that category is a gross falsehood. In my writings I have cited many Calvinists, such as Calvin and Booth, who did not aver that regeneration precedes faith. I am Calvinist but I do not put regeneration or the new birth before faith and conversion.

Let me also say that the older Calvinist writers did not make conversion something different from regeneration, seeing rather that evangelical conversion is regeneration. A man was not viewed as regenerate or born again before be believed in Christ.

In all the writings of those on this issue, over the past several hundred years, I have noticed a gross inconsistency by those who affirm that regeneration precedes faith. How so? Because even those who espouse such will often affirm that 1) union with Christ is the first requirement, preceding all other graces and aspects of salvation, and that 2) "vital union" is "by faith." Now, if these two propositions are true (and they are), then regeneration, rebirth, justification, forgiveness, sanctification, etc., must all follow this union; And, faith must be before these things, for it is what unites the soul to Christ. Therefore, union with Christ by faith must precede regeneration, justification, etc. Don't you see?

So, with that in mind, we cannot but hold to this order:

1. Faith
2. Union with Christ
3. Justification
4. Regeneration
5. Sanctification

Now let me cite from some Calvinists on the priority of union with Christ by faith.

The following citations can be found (here) and all emphasis is mine:

On this subject Dr. John Gill wrote:

"In a word, union to Christ is the first thing, the first blessing of grace flowing from love and effected by it; hence, [it] is the application of all others. “Of Him are ye in Christ Jesus”—first loved and united to Christ—and then it follows, “who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption” (1Co 1:30). So Dr. Goodwin observes that “union with Christ is the first fundamental thing of justification and sanctification and all. Christ first takes us, and then sends His Spirit; He apprehends us first; it is not my being regenerate that puts me into a right of all these privileges; but it is Christ takes me, and then gives me His Spirit, faith, holiness.”"

In "FAITH UNITES US TO CHRIST," William Cunningham (1805-1861) wrote:

"LET us now…shortly consider the effect of faith as uniting us to Christ, and thus saving the soul. There is a great deal spoken of in Scripture on the subject of faith—of its great importance and of its indispensable necessity to salvation. We read, “He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned” (Mar 16:16). It is faith that makes a man a Christian, that produces all those things that accompany salvation, that salvation which is the turning point of a man’s existence, that salvation which delivers him from the authority of the devil and translates him into the kingdom of God’s dear Son.

Faith occupies this important place in our salvation because it unites us to Christ. We are expressly told this by the Apostle in Ephesians 3:17, where it is written, “That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith.” This union of believers to Christ, effected by faith, is indeed frequently spoken of in the New Testament. The nature of it is set before us by every mode of expression and description fitted to convey the strongest impression of its closeness and its importance.

Now when a man believes in Christ, he is, according to God’s appointment, united to Him. There is a union formed between them. God regards him as if he were Christ and treats him as if he had suffered the punishment for his sins that Christ endured in his room—as if he had in his own person performed that full and perfect obedience to the Divine Law that our Savior's conduct exhibited. It is this imputation of Christ’s sufferings and of His righteousness, or, as it is often called, His active and passive obedience—it is this communion of suffering and of merit in which the union of believers with Christ mainly consists. This union and communion with Him is the foundation of their salvation in all its parts and in all its aspects. When they believe Him, God regards them as one with Him—as if they had offered what He has suffered, as if they had done what He has done, as if they had paid the penalty for their sins and had gained a title to His favor.

Viewing them thus as united to Christ—as one with Him—God bestows upon them the blessings that Christ purchased for all who should believe on His name. They obtain through faith the forgiveness of their sins, acceptance with God as righteous persons, the renovation and sanctification of their natures, and, finally, an inheritance among them that are sanctified. Christ is the great Head of influence: all spiritual blessings are the fruits of His purchase. It is only by abiding in Him that we are enabled to bring forth fruits unto eternal life; as it is written, “I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit” (Joh 15:5).

You see now the great importance of faith in the salvation of sinners. It is the instrument by means of which we receive everything necessary to our peace. None can be saved without it, and everyone who has it will assuredly be saved. It is connected in the statements of God’s Word with almost every blessing that is mentioned as important and valuable, as the origin from which they are all derived, the instrument by which they are all received. It is the Holy Spirit that forms the union between Christ and believers, and faith wrought in their hearts by His almighty power is the tie that connects them together and forms the bond of union.

While salvation is thus through faith, it is, at the same time, “by grace” (Eph 2:5, 8). It is to be traced wholly to God’s free and unmerited favor. There is nothing whatever in faith as a grace or virtue, as an act of ours, to merit anything at God’s hands [or] to deserve anything for us…Faith, viewed as a work or act of ours, could not itself procure for us the pardon of sin any more than repentance, if that too were in our power. Far less—[even if] we could believe by our own strength—could it ever merit for us any reward at God’s hands.

It is not indeed, then, as a work or a grace that faith saves: it is merely the instrument of uniting us to Christ. His work is the sole ground of our salvation and of all that is connected with it. We owe it all to Him. He purchased it for us by His own sufferings and obedience, and He bestows it upon us by His Spirit. Therefore, we must beware, friends, of giving to our own faith, in the work of salvation, the place that belongs only to Christ. When salvation is ascribed to faith, this is so far from attaching merit to faith that it is just expressly renouncing it. We are saved indeed by faith, but it is faith in Christ Jesus. Our faith is that which carries us out of ourselves to Christ, transferring our whole dependence, as it were, from our own doing to what He has done and suffered for us. And it is a constant act of trust, a confidence in Him for everything pertaining to another world. It bears at all times upon it a declaration of our utter inability to do anything for ourselves. Hence, not only is salvation by faith quite consistent with being by grace, but further, as the Apostle tells us, it is of faith that it might be by grace. Not only are they consistent with each other, but the one affords the most striking illustration of the other. Nothing could have more fully established or more clearly illustrated the free grace of the Gospel than making our salvation depend upon faith; for faith, besides being originally God’s gift, is a constant appeal to His agency: it is both in form and in substance a casting [of] ourselves entirely and unreservedly upon His mercy through Christ and resting upon Him alone. We believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and are saved."

These are my sentiments exactly.

In "JUSTIFIED IN CHRIST" Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758) said:

"This relation or union to Christ, whereby Christians are said to be in Christ (whatever it be) is the ground of their right to His benefits. This needs no proof: the reason of the thing, at first blush, demonstrates it. It is exceeding evident also by Scripture: “He that hath the Son hath life; and he that hath not the Son of God hath not life” (1Jo 5:12). “But of him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us…righteousness” (1Co 1:30). First, we must be in Him, and then He will be made righteousness or justification to us. “He hath made us accepted in the beloved” (Eph 1:6). Our being in Him is the ground of our being accepted. So it is in those unions to which the Holy Ghost has thought fit to compare this. The union of the members of the body with the head is the ground of their partaking of the life of the head. It is the union of the branches to the stock that is the ground of their partaking of the sap and life of the stock. It is the relation of the wife to the husband that is the ground of her joint interest in his estate.

As there is nobody [who will not agree] that there is a peculiar relation between Christ and His true disciples by which they are in some sense in Scripture said to be one, so I suppose there is nobody [who will not agree] that there may be something that the true Christian does on his part, whereby he is active in coming into this relation or union…Now faith I suppose to be this act.

I do not now pretend to define justifying faith or to determine precisely how much is contained in it. [I will] only determine thus much concerning it: [justifying faith] is that by which the soul, which before was separate and alienated from Christ, unites itself to Him. [The soul] ceases to be any longer in that state of alienation and comes into that forementioned union or relation to Him. Or, to use the Scripture phrase, it is that by which the soul comes to Christ and receives Him. This is evident by the Scriptures using these very expressions to signify faith.

God does not give union with or an interest in the Savior to those that believe as a reward for faith, but only because faith is the soul’s active uniting with Christ. [Faith] is itself the very act of unition on their part. God sees it fit that in order to a union being established between two intelligent active beings or persons, so that they should be looked upon as one, there should be the mutual act of both that each should receive [the] other as actively joining themselves one to another. God, in requiring this in order to a union with Christ as one of His people, treats men as reasonable creatures, capable of act and choice.

It is [in this way] that faith justifies or gives an interest in Christ’s satisfaction and merits and a right to the benefits procured thereby, that is, as it thus makes Christ and the believer one in the acceptance of the Supreme Judge. It is by faith that we have a title to eternal life because it is by faith that we have the Son of God by whom life is. The Apostle John in these words, “He that hath the Son, hath life,” (1Jo 5:12) seems evidently to have respect to those words of Christ of which he gives an account in his Gospel: “He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him” (Joh 3:36). And where the Scripture speaks of faith as the soul’s receiving or coming to Christ, it speaks of this receiving, coming to, or joining with Christ as the ground of an interest in His benefits. To as many as received Him, “to them gave he power” to become the sons of God. Ye will not come unto me “that ye might have life.”

Can I get an amen?

Saturday, February 22, 2020

More On Conviction Of Sin

In a writing titled "JONATHAN EDWARDS ON CONVICTION OF SIN" by John Schuit, M.A. (here) I took these good notes (emphasis mine).

"In Scotland the Erskine brothers were typical. Ebenezer (1680-1754) maintained in a sermon entitled God's Regard to Worthless Man that the "hammer of the law must be applied, in order to break the rocky heart in pieces; the fallow ground must be plowed up, to prepare it for the reception of the incorruptible seed of gospel truth." The obstinacy of the will must be "bended by the almighty power of God, and he persuaded and enabled to embrace Christ and salvation through him, as he is freely offered in the gospel." (pg. 5)

"In Edwards' view however more is needed than conviction of sin. Indeed, one might sink into despair unless conviction issues into the peace of believing. In a sermon in which he distinguishes between convictions that result in saving faith and convictions which are experienced by the very devils he says that a sense of sin "is no certain sign that persons have true faith..." even though it is a necessary element of Christian experience." (pg. 15)

"For the Christian humble acknowledgment of one's own evil inclinations in the daily walk of life was for Edwards one of the fruits of grace."

"To Edwards, the grace of evangelical humility, so greatly to be sought after by the Christian, was reinforced by the blessing of an ongoing sense of sin." (pg. 17)

"In his description of the 1734-35 revival Edwards reports a three-stage conversion process. Sinners were awakened to their guilt; secondly, they surrendered to sovereign grace, and then they emerged into the light and freedom of the knowledge of Christ."

Conviction of sin is no evidence of the new birth, but is what generally precedes it.

Thursday, February 20, 2020

Potter-Throgmorton Debate Review II

Again, in Dr. Throgmorton's first negative speech, he said:

"Many Hardshells hold that it is the dust man, the man formed of clay, that is the subject of the new birth; and, hence, that the wicked have no immortal souls. Many dispute this, and hold to the orthodox view; but they do not make it a bar to denominational fellowship."

In this statement Throgmorton is affirming that as late as 1887 that the Hardshells still had many in their sect that held to "Two Seedism" ideas. He also affirms that the Hardshells still as yet did not make such Two Seed doctrines a "bar to fellowship." His point is to show the utter inconsistency of the Hardshells not fellowshipping Missionary Baptists, for supporting missionaries and preachers, and for teaching children in Sunday Schools, etc. They can fellowship the awful doctrines of the Two Seeders but not the efforts of Mission Baptists to spread the gospel and knowledge of God!

Throgmorton continued:

"There are many among them who hold that God's children are as eternal as himself; and that the devil is self-existent, and his children as old as himself; that not a single one of Satan's children was represented in Adam when he fell, but were added afterward; that two men may be the children of the same parents and yet one be a child of the devil from eternity and the other be a child of God from eternity. Others do not believe these things. Neither view, however, seems to be a bar to denominational fellowship."

As I have shown in other postings, even Elder Sylvester Hassell acknowledged the presence of Two Seed doctrines among the Hardshells late into the 19th century. See "Hassell On PB Two Seed Ancestry" (here) and "Rebuke the ultraist" (here) and "The Ultraist Response?" (here).

Throgmorton continued:

"Hardshells have many among them who deny the resurrection of the body. These are “two-seeders." Others hold to the orthodox view. Neither view, however, is a bar to denominational fellowship.

I have made all these preliminary statements because I think they may help us to a better understanding of the question; and because they show, as I think, the utter inconsistency of our Hardshell brethren in taking the position they do relative to fellowshipping missions, Sunday-schools, etc."

Yes, the "utter inconsistency of our Hardshell brethren"! They declare against those Baptists who work to teach the gospel to every creature but fellowship all kinds of heretical doctrines.

Throgmorton continued:

"I hold that the Missionary Baptists, as I have described them, are the Primitive Baptists, and that the Hardshells are not. In support of my position I shall argue, first, from Scripture; secondly, from history."

In every debate on who is the real "primitive" Baptist the Hardshells lose.

Throgmorton continued:

"First, then, the New Testament Baptists — the original Baptists, held that the Gospel should be preached to every creature, and that all men should be exhorted to repentance and that repentance and faith are duties as well as graces, and that the reading, and especially the preaching, of the Word of God is a means for the conviction and conversion of sinners."

This is a fact that cannot be denied. This was also the leading view of the first Hardshells.

Throgmorton continued:

"This is a matter so plain as to be settled in a very few words. The commission, as given by Mark, was: "Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature." — Mr 16:15. Nobody but the most obdurate hyper-Calvinist would contend in the face of this for a moment. It is too plain to need argument. The commission by Matthew also sustains the same idea: "Go, ye, therefore, and teach all nations." —Mt 28:19."

That is what the Hardshells are, "obdurate hyper-Calvinist." They "resist the truth,"

Throgmorton continued:

"Then as to the duty of all men to repent: How did the first Baptist preach when he went out? He said, "Repent ye." — Mt 3:2 and he was talking to the impenitent. How did the Lord Jesus preach when he began his mission? He said, "Repent ye and believe the Gospel."— Mr 1:15. And he said this to impenitent unbelievers. When He commissioned the twelve and sent them forth, their burden was the same message, “they went out and preached that men should repent." The New Testament preachers did not spend their time arguing with men as to what men could do, or what they could not do. They urged men to immediate repentance, and taught them that without it they must perish, and so applicable is this teaching to the vilest of the vile that we find Peter exhorting a man who had neither part nor lot in the matter of salvation, but who was "in the gall of bitterness and in the bond of iniquity," both to repent and pray. I allude to Simon the Sorcerer. The apostle spoke to him in this manner: "Repent, therefore, of this thy wickedness and pray God, if perhaps the thought of thine heart may be forgiven thee." —Ac 8:22. Surely if Simon was commanded to repent, every sinner ought to be so commanded. And, indeed, this is God's will. Paul so announced when he made his great speech at Athens, standing up in the midst of Mars Hill. Said he, “God now commandeth all men everywhere to repent." —Ac 17:30. Such was unquestionably the manner of preaching among the ancient Baptists of New Testament times. Who of the two denominations in this debate are Primitive on this point? Not the Hardshells, surely. We all know this who have heard much of their preaching and who have seen or learned much of their work. It is very uncommon to hear one of their preachers exhort the ungodly to repentance, and when one does it, he most generally makes an apology for it for fear somebody may think he is an Arminian. But I will give the testimony of one of their own writers concerning them." 

What Hardshell wants to come forward and disprove these things?

Throgmorton continued, citing the words of Elder John M. Watson, Hardshell founding father, and author of "The Old Baptist Test":

"Speaking of his examination into their practices he says:—

"I was much surprised as well as mortified that they evinced so little concern about the unbrought” other sheep which the Savior said he must bring. They lay great stress on these words of the Savior, but do not regard other things which he connected with the bringing them in as they ought to do. I heard but few prayers for the sending forth of laborers into his field; nor did I see much concern in any way about them." —Dr. Watson in Old Baptist Test, p. 181.

Dr. Watson was mortified that his brethren were so far from the old Primitive Baptists on this important question. But I want to quote further from him. Speaking of deviations among the Hardshell ministry, he says: —

“But the worst deviation of all is, that of our not exhorting both saint and sinner as enjoined in the word of God. A Gospel without exhortations may not be another Gospel, but it is not a full one. * * * Paul employed 'much exhortation;' we only a little. * * * Who among us ever repeat the words, Repent ye — believe on the Lord Jesus Christ,' without mixing up the strong doctrine of repentance and faith with the exhortation? If the text be used at all, we employ them only in a doctrinal and not in an exhortatory way. * * * The very exhortations, admonitions, warnings and threatenings of the Bible itself, when repeated from our pulpits, are regarded by some ultraists as Arminianism. At least it would be very difficult for any one to preach them in their scriptural fullness without incurring the charge or reproach of Arminianism. * * * Some do not object if the believers only be exhorted, but contend it is wrong to exhort the impenitent sinner to repent, or the unbelievers to believe! etc. * * * This violation of our commission has engendered a spirit of coldness and indifference about those yet unbrought; by some they are not cared for, prayed for, nor preached unto."— Watson's Old Baptist Test, pp. 516- 521."

In this blog, and in the Hardshell and Gadfly blogs, I have cited much from Watson's work to show how today's "primitive" Baptists have departed from the faith.

Throgmorton continued:

"The Hardshells are not primitive as to the great commission. Listen to Dr. Watson a little further: —

"The Lord has ordained this way;" — that is, this way of preaching the Gospel; — “our violation of it in the nineteenth century will not cause it to fail; others will do the work; it needs must be done; and this may be the cause why so few are coming into our churches! We have violated our commission. ‘Let us search and try our ways, and turn again to the Lord.' — Ibid., p. 520.

This is Dr. Watson talking of his own people. The Hardshells have violated the great commission! They do not preach a whole Gospel! Dr. Watson says so. Somebody else, however, is doing the work, he says. Hence, as to this point, Hardshells are not primitive. They are in disorder and rebellion, according to the testimony of one of their best and most learned men. Who is it that is primitive as to this matter? Evidently so far as Baptists are concerned, it is the Missionary Baptists. Our people exhort all men to repentance and preach the Gospel, as far as may be, to all, without apology, or fear of either Arminian or Calvinistic critics, and we are doing what we can, or at least we are doing something, to send the Gospel to “the regions beyond," that men there “may hear the Word of the Gospel and believe." Dr. Watson says the fact that the Hardshells have violated the commission “may be the cause why so few are coming into their churches!" The fact that we are striving to obey the commission may be the reason why so many are coming into our churches! There were won­derful in gatherings in New Testament times. Missionary Baptists have wonderful in gatherings now. We baptized last year in the United States a far greater number of persons than there are in the whole Hardshell denomination. Missionary Baptists are primitive as to their preaching under the great commission and as to their in gatherings. Hardshell Baptists are not.

This is a powerful rebuttal of Dr. Throgmorton! It leaves the Hardshells speechless and dumbfounded, and truly puts them on the spot.

Throgmorton continued:

"I said that repentance and faith are duties. Jesus said, when He came into Galilee preaching the Gospel, after John was put in prison, "Repent ye, and believe the Gospel." Mr 1:14-15. All men are commanded to repent. It is a duty. Paul and Silas said to the Philippian jailor, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved." Ac 16:31. Therefore believing is a duty. In Ro 10:17, we read, “So then Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the Word God." The Word then, is a means to the exercise of this duty."

All we can say to this is "amen"!

Throgmorton continued:

"In order to clear my way, I want to state certain points as to church co-operation about which both Missionaries and Hardshells are agreed. They both agree that a number of churches may unite together, by means of messengers appointed, and form what is called an association; and that this association may frame and adopt rules of order for its government; that it may elect officers, appoint committees, publish minutes, etc. It is agreed that such a body has no authority over the churches whatever, except in so far as it may prescribe its own terms of membership. Its province, so far as the churches are concerned, is purely advisory. It may advise the churches to pursue any course which in its judgment may seem wise. Hardshells are as much agreed among themselves that it is right to have such organizations as we are ourselves. Yet if I should ask for the word, "association," Brother Potter could not show it in all the New Testament as applied to such a body. If I should ask him for the chapter which tells of the permanent organization of such a body, with its moderator and clerk, its rules of order, its committees, its fund for minutes, he could not refer me to it. And every argument he could make for an association would be good for a convention, board, society, or committee. And he cannot be consistent and make arguments against conventions, societies and boards, which have equal force against associations. He must show that these mission bodies assume authority over the churches which associations do not, or he must show that in some other respect they do things which are unscriptural and which are not done by Hardshell associations."

Here Dr. Throgmorton showed again the "utter inconsistency" of the Hardshell apology for their anti stance against means to promote the spread of the gospel. If the Hardshells took their own line of argumentation consistently, then they would condemn their own associations, as well as other similar things that are not specifically mentioned in scripture.

Throgmorton continued:

"Now, let us define a little: A Missionary association is an association which appoints missionaries, and which undertakes not only to raise a fund for printing minutes, but also to pay the missionaries. This sets forth all the essential differences, as I understand, between a Hardshell Association and a Missionary Association considered in themselves.

Will my opponent say it is wrong for an association to appoint a man who has been ordained by church authority, to go out and preach, say for one year, here and there? Surely not. No more than it will be wrong for the Bethel Association of Illinois to appoint Brother Potter, when he visits it this fall, to preach at such a place on Friday night, at such a place on Saturday night, and at the Grove on Sunday." 

In response to this argument, Hardshells should simply say "point taken." Such reasoning overthrows the utter inconsistency and hypocrisy of their apologetics.

Throgmorton continued:

"The wrong then is not in appointing a preacher. Of course he may accept the appointment or not. Is there anything wrong then in asking the churches and individual brethren to make up a fund to support the preacher? If so, I ask on what grounds can associations ask the churches to contribute to a fund for printing minutes? There is no direct Scripture for the latter. We do it on general princi­ples. The same general principles would warrant the contribution of a fund for the support of the ministers. But for that we have express Scripture!"

The idea that nothing is to be done but what is specifically commanded is hereby refuted by Throgmorton. The bible's general principles may be used in justification of methods to teach the nations.

Throgmorton continued:

"Several years ago a number of Hardshell brethren came together, or at least consulted. They agreed they wanted a religious paper published, whose object should be to forward the interests of their people. The result was an organization, the raising of a fund, the appointment of a board of managers, etc. Soon editors were obtained, and the paper known as the Baptist Watchman, was published from Nashville, Tennessee. In the Baptist Watchman of October, 3rd, 1874, was the following notice: —

"CALL MEETING OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE BAPTIST WATCHMAN.

"At the request of two members of said Board of Directors I hereby call a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Baptist Watchman, to meet on Saturday before the third Sunday in November, at 3 o'clock p. m., at the Primitive Baptist Church in Nashville. C. W. Nance, President."

The Baptist Watchman was edited by Elder J. Bunyan Stephens and Elder R.W. Fain. I have this periodical on a USB file from SBHL. Both Stephens and Bunyan believed in gospel means. Further, even Potter wrote sometimes to this periodical and never attacked their view on means.

I also pointed out in my series on Hardshells and their anti seminary and anti education methods how the Hardshells now form their corporations for printing hymn books, Hardshell literature, etc. Yet, by the reasoning they give against seminaries and Sunday Schools, they condemn these things. "Consistency thou art a jewel."

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

On Loudermilk's Heresies Again

More than once I have had to call attention to the grave Hardshell errors, as put forth by Elder Ronnie Loudermilk, on the evidences of regeneration. Just put "Loudermilk" in the search engine for this blog and you will see those calls. Recently Loudermilk wrote the following:

"If you, dear reader, feel to be a sinner in the sight of God; if you feel guilty about your wrong doings; this is evidence that are a born again child of grace." ("Why Do I Feel Guilty For Sin?" - here)

According to Loudermilk, anyone who feels guilt and remorse for sins committed is a born again child of God! Does that not lead him into Universalism? Does it not make men like Judas a "regenerated" child of God? Listen to the record of scripture on Judas:

"Then Judas, which had betrayed him, when he saw that he was condemned, repented himself, and brought again the thirty pieces of silver to the chief priests and elders. Saying, I have sinned in that I have betrayed the innocent blood." (Matt. 27:3-4a)

On this verse Dr. Gill wrote (emphasis mine):

"repented himself: not for the sin, as committed against God and Christ; but as it brought a load of present guilt and horror upon his mind, and exposed him to everlasting punishment: it was not such a repentance by which he became wiser and better; but an excruciating, tormenting pain in his mind, by which he became worse; therefore a different word is here used than what commonly is for true repentance: it was not a godly sorrow for sin, or a sorrow for sin, as committed against God, which works repentance to salvation not to be repented of; but a worldly sorrow, which issues in death, as it did in him. It did not spring from the love of God, as evangelical repentance does, nor proceed in the fear of God, and his goodness; but was no other than a foretaste of that worm that dieth not, and of that fire which cannot be quenched: it was destitute of faith in Christ; he never did believe in him as the rest of the disciples did; see ( John 6:64 John 6:70 John 6:71 ), and that mourning which does not arise from looking to Jesus, or is not attended with faith in him, is never genuine. Judas's repentance was without hope of forgiveness, and was nothing else but horror and black despair, like that of Cain's, like the trembling of devils, and the anguish of damned souls."

The teaching of Loudermilk and his Hardshell brothers makes Judas into a born again child of God. It would also make Esau into a child of God. Who can believe such heresy?

Monday, February 17, 2020

Bear Creek Two Seedism

In the Bear Creek PB Association articles of faith, we have these words:

Art. 2. We believe in the man Jesus being the first of all God's creation and the pattern of all God's perfection in nature, providence, grace and glory, and in relative union with the divine word, and thus united with the whole Trinity.  (see here)

If you ask the members of the Bear Creek churches what this article is saying, in regard to Jesus being the "first of all God's creation," they will likely not be able to tell you what it is.

But, I know what it reveals. It reveals that the Bear Creek Association, in its formative years (1832 onward) was infected with what Elder G.M. Thompson called "Arian Two Seedism." He wrote an entire book on this issue called "The Measuring Rod" (here). In it he shows that such a statement is what the Two Seeders believed. I have written some on this in the past. See the posting "Bear Creek Association & Two Seedism" (here) and "Elder Preslar on Two Seedism" (here).

What this article is saying is that the "man" Jesus was created in eternity past (as the "Son of God") and that at this time the elect were created in Jesus. Thus, both the human Jesus and the elect were created before the foundation of the world.

The Arianism is seen in affirming that Jesus is the first thing God created. The Two Seedism affirms that the elect were created when Jesus was created.

Sunday, February 16, 2020

Can God Subdue The Will?

"Who shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body, according to the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himself." (Phil. 3:21 kjv)

One of the reasons why I believe in effectual calling, and that God can and does save all he is pleased to save, rejecting Pelagian and Arminian ideas about "free will," is because of such verses as the above.

Although I have not read any commentator who straightway affirms what I am about to affirm on the verse, nevertheless the affirmation, or argument, would not be rejected by those who believe in sovereign grace.

Let me begin by asking some questions:

1) Does the will of the depraved sinner need to be "subdued" in the work of salvation?

2) If yes, then, according to the above general statement of Paul, God is able to subdue the will.

3) If God subdues the will, and without fail, then how does that fact bear on the debate on how God works on the will in salvation?

Many say that the Calvinistic belief in "effectual calling," or "irresistible grace," leads to the idea that God "forces" or "coerces" sinners against their wills in saving them. But, seeing that such words have a bad connotation to them, can we substitute the word "subdued," or other synonyms such as conquer, subject, make to obey, etc.? After all, do we not read that "thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power"? (Psa. 110: 3)

If God is able to subdue "all things," would this not include the sinful carnal will?

The Arminian likes to talk about how God only "woos" the will, and deny that he "forces" the will. But, in reply, who can deny that the wooing of omnipotence is always conquering, always successful? Does he lack the wisdom or power to woo the will, to "win the heart" of the object of his deepest affections?

"The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it?" (Jer. 17: 9) But, who knows it better than God? Does God not know the stubbornness of the depraved will? Must his work not cross the line of "interfering with the will of man"? If God "forces" the will, has he sinned against himself, his own nature? What Arminian wants to tell us just where that line is drawn? Where wooing turns into coercion? Where does the putting forth of divine force (power) in the conquering of the will go across the line?

All agree that God puts forth power in changing a man's heart and will, but the Arminian wants to prescribe limits for how much force God may righteously apply. If he applies too much power in the changing of a sinner's heart and will, then, according to such thinking, he is guilty of violating a man's free will. So, in order for that not to happen, God must restrain his power in such a work to mere wooing and not go across that line. If he does cross that line, many will say that "God forces salvation on people," a thing thought to be unworthy of God.

"The king's heart is in the hand of the LORD, as the rivers of water: he turneth it whithersoever he will." (Prov. 21:1)

When I came to Christ, it was the result of God working in me "to will." (Phil. 2:12) He "made" me willing. Yet, at the time, I felt to be under no "coercion." I came most willingly. But, who am I to thank for my going from being "unwilling" to being "willing"? God, or myself?

What think ye?

Friday, February 14, 2020

Potter-Throgmorton Debate Review

With this posting I will begin to review some things said by Elder Lemuel Potter and W.P. Throgmorton in their debate in 1887. But, before I do this, let me preface with some introductory comments.

First, I read this debate when I was a young Hardshell preacher.

Second, after I had been delivered from the Hardshell cult, I began to want to read this debate again, this time without the cult blinders. However, I did not have that debate in my library. Father had it and I more than once asked him to let me borrow it. But, he would not. Why? He did not want me to use it to write against the Hardshells.

Third, when father passed away about four years ago, my sister was in charge of getting rid of father's many books. I asked her to let me have that debate. She also refused. All of his books (except the ones she and my nephew kept) were donated to the Southern Baptist library in Louisville, Ky.

The reader can judge for himself what this reveals about the cult.

Now, let me begin my review by examining some things said by Dr. Throgmorton in his first negative speech.

Throgmorton said (all emphasis mine):

"A few more words about Hardshell peculiarities as to this matter of fellowship:—

Hardshells have persons about them who hold that God uses means and instrumentalities in the conversion of the ungodly. More generally they hold that he uses nothing of the kind, but that he brings men to Christ independently of all means. But they do not make either of these positions, it seems, a bar to fellowship."

Historians of the "Primitive," "Old School," or old "Regular" Baptists will see much to take note of in these words from Dr. Throgmorton. The following are important points to note:

1) Elder Throgmorton was well versed in the history of this sect, having many of them in his part of southern Illinois. What he says therefore is of great significance.

2) Elder Potter was a champion of the faction that held to a no means view of salvation.

3) Elder Potter, in his writings, denied that there were believers in means among the sect, either at the time of the debate with Throgmorton, or in the previous years from 1832 until 1887. This was a flat out lie or deception on the part of Potter, and all kinds of evidence there is to prove it. Some of that evidence was presented by Throgmorton in the debate. I have posted lots of evidence in this blog that also shows how Potter was denying what he knew was the truth.

4) The date of the debate was 1887, a time when the sect was splitting over the issue of means (which took place during the latter quarter of the 19th century).

5) In the statement of Throgmorton, he states that in 1887 that there were in the sect two sides on the question of means.

6) He states that the anti means side, at that time, was the "general" or majority view.

7) He states that there was no formal division as yet on this issue, and that both sides fellowshipped each other.

In my research I have found that the means view was the predominant view from 1832 and up to the Civil War.

I have also found, in that time period, that many held to a view that says that "regeneration" and "rebirth" were not the same thing, the former being done apart from means, while the latter was associated with evangelical faith and repentance, or conversion, and that this was accomplished by means of the gospel.

I have found that both Wilson Thompson and Gilbert Beebe, in the 1840s, strongly advocated the no means view of "regeneration," though they did not deny that the regenerated sinner still needed to be born again by faith.

Elder William Beebe (son of Gilbert) edited the "Southern Baptist Messenger" from Georgia, and in the 1850s had writers who wrote to the paper and advocated for the anti means view.

In the 1850s there were some who wrote to "Zion's Advocate" (edited by Elder John Clark, a believer in means) who denied means. These were rebuffed, however, by Clark.

In the 1850s Elder Watson was completing his book, "The Old Baptist Test," and he affirmed means as being the view of the Old Baptists but noted that some (a minority) were beginning to assert the no means view, and that gospel faith and conversion were not necessary for final salvation.

In about 1867, Elder J. M. Thompson, debated Lawson (Campbellite) and denied that God used means in "regeneration."

It was not until Potter and his debate with Throgmorton, however, that we find that the distinction between regeneration and rebirth was no longer the predominant view, and that the anti means side began to affirm that one could be a heathen in faith and still saved.

The division over means, called the "Burnam Pence" controversy, was the catalyst for the sect becoming totally anti means, making gospel conversion unnecessary for rebirth, and affirming that many who were heathen in faith were nevertheless regenerated and born again. Those who held to means became a minority, many of the means faction going to the Missionaries or other Baptist groups.

In the next posting we will continue to review this debate.

(Note: I still plan to finish writings in my other series, as time allows. Such as on "Baptist Ordination Practices," "Redemption," etc. Pray for us. We have had health issues of late and have been busy with home improvement projects. Only God knows how long I have left in which to finish these writings)

Saturday, February 8, 2020

Elder J. H. Purifoy On Being Born Again

In a previous citation regarding Purifoy's original view espousing gospel means, we cited these words regarding Purifoy and his views on the new birth:

Dr. Purifoy published in Zion’s Advocate in 1879 and here are his exact words taken from it. I can produce the original. Here are his exact words:

“I firmly believe that it is the duty of every gospel minister to preach repentance and remission of sins, in the name of Jesus, to all the unregenerate with whom he comes in contact in his pulpit ministrations. As he does this in the name of Jesus, realizing the utter inability of the sinner to repent until the grace of repentance is given him from on high, he has an assurance from the scriptures, that God’s word will not return unto Him void, but will accomplish that whereunto he sends it, and prosper in the thing he pleases. Thus the gospel ministry is instrumental in God’s hands, through Jesus, in raising dead sinners to newness of life---spiritual life---just as the apostles were instruments in His hands in casting out devils, healing the sick, and raising the dead.” 
(See here)

There are some other articles that I have posted on Purifoy and you can find them in the search engine for this blog by typing in "Purifoy."

In another writing, a couple years after the above writing (1879), we have these words from Purifoy in "The Gospel Messenger" (emphasis mine):

"When we have fully realized our sinfulness, felt that we are forever cut off from the presence of God, then joy springs up in our soul, and we are made to praise our Maker. Whence comes this joy? It comes from a knowledge of Jesus; and when we know him in a spiritual sense, we know that he died for sinners, and we have faith in the power of God to believe that his death will be effectual in the salvation of those for whom he died. To some this evidence comes with great assurance and power,— to others it comes so gently that they can't tell when or how they came to trust in him. But how came we in possession of this knowledge of Jesus? It came by birth. The individual is born of the Spirit; hence he has a knowledge of spiritual things. "For ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear; but ye have received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father." — Rom. 8; 15. Again, "We have not received the spirit which is of the world, but the spirit which is of God ; that we might know the things that are freely given to us of God." — 1 Cor. 2; 12. Jesus is revealed to us as our Saviour. He is made unto us "wisdom, righteousness, sanctification and redemption." — 1 Cor. 1; 30. No matter how bright a view of Jesus others have had — they have learned no more than you. They have realized that salvation is of the Lord, and not of man — which you have also learned. They have been enabled to come to Jesus — which no man can do except the Father draw him (John 6; 44) — this you, also, have been enabled to do."  (1882 - page 149) (here)

Notice that Purifoy affirms that in the new birth a person comes to know, love, and believe in Jesus.

Purifoy continued:

"This is the only plan on which God ever has, or ever will save any sinner. He calls them to a knowledge of their justly condemned and needy condition, and makes them feel that their righteousness is as filthy rags. They know they need a Saviour, but he must be manifested and revealed to them before they can claim a personal interest in him.

Again, the expression "born of water" signifies a begetting, or a work that necessarily precedes the work of the Spirit. This is not the case in baptism. Nothing is born before it is begotten, or has a previous existence. Baptism puts nothing in existence. The washing of the sinner in the blood of Jesus, so to speak, is that which necessarily precedes the work of the Spirit in the new birth. The atonement and resurrection of Christ bring the heirs of salvation, before they are experimentally and actually born of the Spirit, into that state or condition in the mind, and purpose, and love of God that may, in a figurative sense, be compared to a begetting, as declared by the apostle Peter (1 Pet. 1; 3, 4, 5.) The word "born" comes or is translated from the Greek word gennao, and means to beget. By the blood of Christ, therefore, we are begotten from a state of death and sin into a state of life: but the sinner is not experimentally aware of this till he is quickened by the Spirit and born of the Spirit, — in which work of the Spirit he is made to realize the eternal life state into which he was brought by the death and resurrection of Christ, and especially by the blood of Christ." (Snow Hill, Ala., Feb. 22, 1882)

Notice how Purifoy here makes a distinction between the "begetting" (regeneration) and the birth. He also takes the view that the soul is not "quickened" until it is born again. Some Hardshells who took this three stage model of the new birth put the quickening at the time of the begetting, while others like Purifoy put the quickening later, at the time of the birth, or the time of gospel conversion.

Friday, February 7, 2020

Another Cayce False Proposition

Wrote Elder C.H. Cayce:

"Our escaping eternal condemnation does not, in any sense, depend upon what we do or fail to do. This depends altogether upon the mercy and grace of God, and what Christ has done for us." (Editorial Writings, 1908 - see here)

Questions:

1. Is "coming" to Christ something the sinner does? Yes. Thus, by Cayce's man made proposition, coming to Christ is not necessary for being saved.

2. Is "believing" and "repenting" something the sinner does? Yes. But, Cayce's proposition makes faith and repentance unnecessary for being saved.

Of course, we could add to this list. But, this is sufficient.

During Cayce's day the Hardshells came up with these unscriptural propositions and then made the bible to square with them.

Another one of Cayce's invented propositions was this:

"He does not tell us to do what He has promised to do for us, and He does not promise to do for us what He commands us to do." 

See this posting where we wrote against this - Cayce's Theological Blunder.

Demons Today

Where are the demons today? Are they only a phenomenon of ancient times? Have all the demons been cast out of our world?

Recognizing the presence of demonic spirits would be easy if each demonized person had symptoms that were as dramatic as those we saw in movies like The Exorcist, where the demon possessed spewed out vomit, and the head spins, and the body levitates, and where there is a sudden drop in room temperature, and where there is a total distortion of physical appearance, and a guttural voice, and where there are objects flying about the room. Nor do we need to go to the place where the criminally insane are confined.

In ancient societies, like Greece, demons were not viewed as necessarily bad. In fact, Socrates claimed to have his demon. Today, to get possessed of a spirit is called "channeling."

Wrote one writer (here):

"The practice of channeling — a person's body being taken over by a spirit for the purpose of communication — has been around for millennia. There are countless stories of shamen, witch doctors, prophets and others who claim to hear voices or receive some supernatural knowledge from the spirit world. Channelers, also sometimes known as psychic mediums, often use what are called "spirit guides," friendly spirits who give them knowledge and help them on their spiritual journeys.

According to Sanaya Roman and Duane Packer, authors of "Opening to Channel: How to Connect With Your Guide," "channeling is a powerful means of spiritual unfoldment and conscious transformation. As you channel you build a bridge to the higher realms — a loving, caring, purposeful collective higher consciousness that has been called God, the All-that-Is, or the Universal Mind...Channeling involves consciously shifting your mind and mental space in order to achieve an expanded state of consciousness.

To achieve this expanded state of consciousness, channelers usually meditate, trying to break free of worldly influences and tune in to a higher consciousness. They may imagine themselves seeking out specific spirits of the dead, or they may be contacted, apparently unbidden, by some unknown force that wishes to communicate."

J. Z. Knight is one who years ago (and even now) professed to "channel" an ancient spirit named "Ramtha."

If you want to find demons, look to those with wealth and power, those in "high places." Look for them in politics, in Hollywood's actors, in religious cults, and such like. In religions like Hinduism and Voodism, demons are worshiped and many are possessed by them. The many "gods" and "goddesses" in Hinduism are nothing but demons. (See I Cor. 10:20)

To my thinking, demons have with subtilty adapted  themselves to our times. They know how to keep themselves hidden. Some even possess animals, though they prefer human bodies to possess.

The only sure protection against demon possession is to be possessed of God's Spirit.

Extremes In Worship

I am glad that many of our Hardshell brothers are doing more "expository" preaching, or at least making the attempt. This is the kind of preaching you will find in many Baptist churches, especially in the "Reformed" Baptist churches. This is good, but to limit worship to this kind of preaching is going to an extreme in my opinion.

I have already written several times on this topic, and have criticized the total abandonment of topical or textual preaching.

One of the other things that strictly lecture type of preaching is often guilty of, is that it does not lift the spirits, as does the former type, and leaves many church services simply dry and emotionless. There are extremes on either side on this issue. Church services can become too emotional, but they can become stoical also.

For my own part I love to go to church where one has both good teaching and also much exhortation and witnessing. I want to hear the saints shout amen and hallelujah, seeing them raising their hands, and just plain getting happy.

Some churches offer opportunity for any brother to give testimony at the end of services. This is good and my personal experience has been to be greatly uplifted by the personal testimonies and exhortation from the lay people.

I have often said that in regard to how to rejoice and be glad in church service that I am more "Bapticostal." Thankfully many country Baptist churches have not become stoic in their worship and are not afraid to praise!

Many times while I was with the Hardshells they had services where sisters shouted and people were expressing their joy in bursts of enthusiasm.

I simply want to praise God when I go to church as well as learn something.

Wednesday, February 5, 2020

Is the Hardshell Apologetic Against the Necessity of Faith Evolving?

During the years I was among the Primitive Baptists the default explanation for those passages which marry faith in Christ with eternal life was that seed faith was under consideration.  In other words, all the biblical passages (and there are many) where faith is set forth as a necessity or condition in order to have eternal life were not asserting that a cognitive trust in the Lord produced by gospel revelation was essential to being saved, as the average Bible reader would conclude.  Rather, the passages had in mind a faith below the level of consciousness; in a “seed” form so to speak. 

I’m convinced this idea was invented from recognizing that the scriptures so obviously set forth faith in Christ as a condition, but it could not be tolerated that faith cometh by hearing (Rom. 10:17).  The proponents of anti-means were left with figuring out how to get faith to the elect, but bypass the gospel as the vehicle.

This novelty, though an error, met the demands of their soteriological grid.  It was an anti-means interpretation first and foremost (which was the ultimate goal) which gave an answer to all the faith texts in the Bible. And much to the satisfaction of those who wished to pine for the salvation of the heathen, it allowed room for many of the unevangelized to yet make it to heaven, as it could be said of the elect among them that were in fact “believers” in some sense.  Outwardly and cognitively, they were unbelievers having not been exposed to the gospel.  Yet below their consciousness lied a seed faith imparted in the new birth, of which they were not aware. And this constituted them “believers.  And so the anti-gospel, anti-means mind had an answer for the claim of mainstream Christianity that men must hear the gospel in order to receive faith and be thus saved. God gives faith directly to the elect in the new birth, but it’s a different “kind” of faith than that imparted by the gospel, which they may or may not receive at some point in the future.

I believe that my friend and colleague Brother Garrett will agree with me that seed faith was the default PB apologetic against the necessity of gospel faith for the bulk of the 20th century.

However, in the last few years that I was with the Hardshells I began to notice an increasing number begin to set forth the idea that the faith Christ had in God was what was under consideration in the faith texts of the scriptures. This often left me puzzled as I had always held to seed faith as the default explanation.  Who was right?

Not long ago I followed a conversation on Facebook between several Primitive Baptists in which the faith of Ephesians 2:8 was being debated.  It was extremely sad to read the various opinions which were set forth.  Some claimed that this great regeneration passage was not talking about eternal salvation at all!  Rather, it too was a reference to a time salvation, a novelty I never heard any Hardshell set forth in the 10 years I was with them!  Why, this is one of the most treasured verses among Christians, and one of the most treasured among the Primitive Baptists, for it trumpets forth the wonderful declaration that salvation is of the Lord and by His grace!  Why, this was the very first passage I learned and rejoiced in when I came to understand the doctrines of grace.  And I can’t even begin to recall how many Sundays I heard this passage quoted from the pulpits!

Things are getting pretty sad if one of the most classic “salvation by grace” passages in the Hardshell arsenal is itself being turned into a proof text for time salvation!

But others were atleast claiming that eternal salvation was under consideration, only that we are saved through Christ’s faith.  I was not surprised by this fanciful interpretation. What I was shocked to see was that not one stood up in defense of Ephesians 2:8 as referencing eternal salvation with the “traditional” PB response to the faith under consideration.  And by traditional, I mean the one used for the past 100 years. Certainly not before that.  I was utterly amazed that not one stood up in defense of the salvation here as eternal, only with the caveat that we are saved by grace thru seed faith!  It was what I did for 10 years, and what I always heard every other elder always propose! If it were not for the fact that it would have been about ten against one, I would have entered the discussion and stated the obvious: 

“Guys, you’ve had a rebuttal to the necessity of faith argument for about 100 years.  Two kinds of faith, remember?  To go along with the two kinds of salvation, two kinds of having peace with God, two kinds of knowing God, two kinds of following Christ, two kinds of being delivered from darkness, two kinds of having your eyes opened, etc. that your paradigm demands.  Do you no longer believe in that?  Is there no kind of faith at all imparted to the elect in regeneration?  Conscious or subconscious?"

Is the Hardshell doctrine continuing to evolve?  Is seed faith no longer the default answer as to what kind of faith is essential to being saved?

Tuesday, February 4, 2020

"Redeeming The Time"

“See then that ye walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, redeeming the time, because the days are evil.” (Eph. 5:15–16 kjv)

“Walk in wisdom toward them that are without, redeeming the time.” (Colossians 4:5)

Time is a gift from God, and none of us know how much of it we are allotted. We all have a scarcity of time. We should therefore "make the most of the time" we have, and be wise enough to know what it means to "make the most of time."

Living in worldly and carnal pleasures, in sin, is not making the most of one's time! Living the kind of life that the Creator has prescribed is the only way to make the best use of our time.

We should ever be aware that our days are few and that we may not have another day. Rather than waste our days on frivolous pursuits, the word of God instructs us to be diligent about doing good (Titus 3:8). The way we "spend our time" defines and reveals who we are, our priorities, our values.

A fool makes unwise choices with his time. We need to live in such a way that we get the most for our time. We are to live as if every minute counts. We can always make more money, but we cannot make more time.

Time Lost vs. Time Redeemed

We all, to one degree or another, have wasted time. We have "lost" time and ought to be interested in redeeming it, or buying it back. In other words, to use a common saying, we need to "make up for lost time." We all have lost time when it comes to pleasing God and doing those things that he has ordained. In some respects, we cannot make up for those lost days. Yet, in other respects we can "buy back" those lost days.

I think of how we often "lose time" in fulfilling our plans for the day or week. When a traveler gets behind schedule, he will speed up his walk, or his automobile, in order to "make up for lost time." Many Christians, especially when they are first saved, look upon their former years as "lost time" when it comes to their relationship with God. They often work hard in attempts to make up for all that lost time in sin.

We are in a race as Christians. (See I Cor. 9: 24-27; Gal. 5:7; Heb. 12:1) One thing that slows us down (losing time) are running with weights, with those "besetting sins." To run faster, and to gain time, we should get rid of the burdens and the wrong activities.

Sinners, and even many professing Christians, are "killing time," wasting time, but we should be rather redeeming it. People in Hell at this moment are suffering the bitter anguish of wasted time. Instead of men "killing time," time is killing men. Instead of killing time, redeem it. Instead of counting the days, make your days count.

Men don't generally procrastinate when it comes to doing those things that please the flesh, or "living in pleasure," but they most certainly procrastinate in the things of God.

Don’t put off until tomorrow what should be done today, because procrastination is the thief of time. In other words "make time!" And, "get around to it." Retrieve the misspent past by the right improvement of the present.

Time A Commodity 

“Time is money.” That is true, yet time is more valuable than money. You can get more money, but you cannot get more time. Time is a strange commodity; we can't save it, retrieve it, relive it, stretch it, borrow it, loan it, stop it nor store it, but can only use it or lose it.

Not only do we "kill time," but we work hard to "save time." We both rob time and get robbed of time. Though we hear people say that they "have all the time in the world" to get right with God, or to do good, they really do not. We should learn therefore to invest time and not just to spend it. Good stewards of our time as well as our money and exertions is what God calls us to be. Stop saying, “If I had time.” You do have time. Take advantage of every opportunity.

Yesterday is but a cancelled check. Tomorrow is a promissory note. Today is all of the cash that you have. Spend it wisely.

Stewards Of Time

In the day of judgment all will have to "give account" of how they spent their time.

With all our modern conveniences and technological advances we should have more leisure time than any period in history, but the opposite is really the case. Men simply choose to spend their leisure time in unholy pursuits rather than to do as the song exhorts, i.e., "take time to be holy."

"For all the Athenians and strangers which were there spent their time in nothing else, but either to tell, or to hear some new thing." (Acts 17: 21)

The words "spent their time" is from the singular Greek word εὐκαιρέω (eukairéō) and means, according to Strong, "to have good time, i.e. opportunity or leisure:—have leisure (convenient time), spend time." They spent their time in getting the latest news, the gossip, and in activities that please the flesh, rather than in truly seeking God.

"Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not bread? and your labour for that which satisfieth not? hearken diligently unto me, and eat ye that which is good, and let your soul delight itself in fatness." (Isa. 55:2 KJV)

For the word "money" in the above text insert the word "time." How many spend their time in things which do not really satisfy and make spiritually healthy?

If you knew you were going to die soon, how would you spend your time?

Concluding Thoughts

carpe diem - seize the day

"...no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of God. For the time past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we walked in lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revellings, banquetings, and abominable idolatries..." (I Peter 4:2-3)

If one has been saved, there should be a drastic change in how he spends his time. How are you spending your time?

One Word Prayers

In the following one word prayers, which I often communicate to the Lord, the words "Lord" and "me" are implied in the one word prayers. So, the sentence is "Lord ______ me."

1. Help
2. Save
3. Sanctify
4. Renew (or change)
5. Forgive
6. Mercy
7. Humble
6. Instruct
7. Keep
8. Uphold
9. Draw
10. Comfort
11. Heal
12. Hear
13. Favor
14. Bless
15. Control
16. Correct
17. Lead
18. Give
19. Lift (or raise)
20. Know (or search)
21. Defend (or protect)
22. Prosper
23. Strengthen (or enable)
24. Convert
25. Redeem
26. Cleanse
27. Free (or liberate)
28. Transform (or conform)
29. Seal
30. Content
31. Quiet (or still)
32. Make (or create)
33. Feed
34. Sustain
35. Clothe
36. Quicken
37. Rework
38. Acquit (or justify)
39. Advocate (or plead)
40. Intercede
41. Send
42. Illumine (or enlighten)
43. Give (or increase)
44. Answer
45. Use
46. Enter
47. Satisfy
48. Quench
49. Equip
50. Alert
51. Warn
52. Perfect
53. Plant (or not uproot)
54. Move (or translate)
55. Reconcile
56. Convict
57. Persuade
58. Grace
59. Fix (or repair)
60. Restore
61. Turn (or return)
62. Sweeten
63. Accept (or receive)
64. Unite (or reunite)

Now, there are no doubt many other words that could be added to this list.

Prayers do not have to be long as sermons to be heard. Thank God!

Bunyan On Wanting Salvation


1628-1688

Hardshell Baptists say - "the man who wants salvation already HAS it." I dealt with this in a short posting (see Was Balaam Saved?), disproving it. Now let me cite from Bunyan on this point.

Bunyan wrote (emphasis mine):

"...there is not only in carnal men a will to be vile, but there is in them a will to be saved also, a will to go to heaven also: But this it will not do, it will not privilege a man in the things of the kingdom of God; natural desires after the things of another world, they are not an argument to prove a man shall go to heaven whenever he dies; I am not a free-willer, I do abhor it, yet there is not the wickedst man, but he desires some time or other to be saved; he will read some time or other, or it may be pray; but this will not do, It is not in him that wills nor in him that runs, but in God that shews mercy; there is willing and running, and yet to no purpose, Rom. 9. 16." (Justification - here)

Thus, the Hardshell idea that the want for salvation is proof of actual salvation, leads to Universalism.

Sunday, February 2, 2020

Bunyan on Col. 2:13

The following is a reprint from The Baptist Gadfly for Dec. 11, 2008 - See here.

If I understand Bunyan correctly, he taught that faith was the means of becoming united to Christ. Then, being united to Christ, one is then justified and forgiven. Then, based upon this union and justification, the grace of regeneration and salvation are conferred.

Bunyan wrote:

"We received, by our thus being counted in him, that benefit which did precede his rising from the dead; and what was that but the forgiveness of sins? For this stands clear to reason, that if Christ had our sins charged upon him at his death, he then must be discharged of them in order to his resurrection. Now, though it is not proper to say they were forgiven to him, because they were purged from him by merit, yet they may be said to be forgiven us, because we receive this benefit by grace."

"And this, I say, was done precedent to his resurrection from the dead: "He hath quickened us together with him, having forgiven us all trespasses." He could not be "quickened" till we were "discharged"; because it was not for himself, but for us, that he died. Hence we are said to be at that time, as to our own personal estate, dead in our sins, even when we are "quickened together with him," Col. 2:13.

Therefore both the "quickening" and "forgiveness" too, so far as we are in this text concerned, is to him, as we are considered in him or to him, with respect to us.

Having forgiven you all trespasses. For necessity so required; because else how was it possible that the pains of death should be loosed in order to his rising, so long as one sin stood still charged to him, as that for the commission of which God had not received a plenary satisfaction? As therefore we suffered, died, and rose again by him; so, in order to his so rising, he, as presenting of us in his person and suffering, received for us remission of all our trespasses. A full discharge therefore was, in and by Christ, received of God of all our sins before he arose from the dead; as his resurrection truly declared; for "he was delivered for our offences,and was raised again for our justification," Rom. 4:25."

"Wherefore, hence it is that in time they partake of quickening grace from this their head, to the making of them also live by faith, in order to their living hereafter with him in glory; for if Christ lives, they cannot die that were sharers with him in his resurrection."

"This general offer of righteousness, of the righteousness of God, declares that it is in vain for men to think to be set just and righteous before God by any other means."

"There is here also insinuated, that for him that thinks himself the worst, God has prepared a righteousness, and therefore would not have him despair of life that sees himself far from righteousness. From all these scriptures, therefore, it is manifestthat "men must be justified from the curse of the law in the sight of God while sinners in themselves."

"Sixthly , "Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest," Matt. 11:28.

Here we have a labouring people, a people labouring for life; but by all their labour, you see, they cannot ease themselves; their burden still remains upon them; they yet are heavy laden. The load here is, doubtless guilt of sin, such as David had when he said by reason thereof "he was not able to look up"; Psal. 38:3...wherefore "men must be justified from the curse in the sight of God while sinners in themselves."


"Sanctification (including regeneration - SG), then, is consequential, justification goes before the Holy Ghost by this scripture setteth forth to the life, free grace to the sons of men while they themselves are sinners. I say, while they are unwashed, unswaddled, unsalted, but bloody sinners; for by these words, "not washed, not salted, not swaddled," he setteth forth their unsanctified state; yea, they were not only unsanctified, but also cast out, without pity, to the loathing of their persons; yea, "no eye pitied them,to do any of these things for them"; no eye but his whose glorious grace isunsearchable; no eye but his who could look and love; all others looked and loathed; but blessed be God that hath passed by us in that day that we wallowed in our own blood; and blessed be God for the skirt of his glorious righteousness wherewith hecovered us when we lay before him naked in blood. It was when we were in our blood that he loved us; when we were in our blood he said, Live. Therefore, "men are justified from the curse in the sight of God while sinners in themselves."

"Thus Christ saveth from present condemnation those that be still in their sin and blood."

"But is he now quit? No; he standeth yet in filthy garments; neither can he, by aught that is in him, or done by him, clear himself from him. How then? Why, the Lord clothes him with change of raiment: the iniquities were his own, the raiment was the Lord's."

"When he saw Jesus, the devil in him, as being lord and governor there, cried out against the Lord Jesus. In all this what qualification shews itself as precedent to justification? None but such as devils work, or as rank Bedlams have." (he clearly could not put regeneration before justification - SG)

"I come now to the second use, Have faith in Christ. But what are we to understand by faith?

Answer: Faith importeth as much as to say, receive, embrace, accept of, or trust in, the benefit offered. All which are, by holy men of God, words used on purpose to shew that the mercy of God, the forgiveness of sins, and eternal life, are not to be had by doing or by the law; but by receiving, embracing, accepting, or trusting to the mercy of God through Christ "We believe that through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved, even as they," John 1:12; 2 Cor. 4:1; 11:4;Col. 2:6; Heb. 11:13; 1 Tim. 1:15; Ephes. 1:12, 13; Acts 15:11. Thus you see what the gospel is, and what faith doth do in the salvation of the soul."

It seems clear to me, from the above citations, that Bunyan put faith before justification (union with Christ) and regeneration after justification.

Bunyan said:

"Now faith is the eye of the godly man..."

If Bunyan were a Hyper Calvinist, and believed that regeneration preceded faith, then he would not speak of faith being the eye. The Hyperist says that God must give one a spiritual "eye" before he can have faith. But, such an idea makes the eye something other than faith itself.

(Justification By An Imputed RIGHTEOUSNESS OR No Way to Heaven but by JESUS CHRIST)

See here