Monday, October 31, 2022

Perfect


“That you may be perfect and complete, lacking nothing”
(James 1: 4)

Last night I woke at 4 A.M. and my thoughts were upon Christian perfection, chiefly in two things, in love and holiness and want to share my thoughts.

Perfected In Love

"But whoever keeps His word, truly the love of God is perfected in him. By this we know that we are in Him." (I John 2: 5)

"No one has seen God at any time. If we love one another, God abides in us, and His love has been perfected in us." (I John 4: 12)

"There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves torment. But he who fears has not been made perfect in love." (I John 4: 18)

In these verses the words "perfected" or "made perfect" are from the Greek word "teleioō," a verb meaning "to make perfect, complete to carry through completely, to accomplish, finish, bring to an end to complete (perfect)," or to "add what is yet wanting in order to render a thing full to be found perfect to bring to the end (goal)" and "proposed to accomplish bring to a close or fulfilment by event of the prophecies of the scriptures." (Strong) Both the verb and the noun are the basis for English words like "telescope," "telephone," etc. 

So, what does it mean to have love perfected? Who has such love among the saints? From the words of the apostle John we know that a person who has a spiritual divine love that is perfect is one who 1) is keeping God's word, and 2) is loving God's people (and not merely in word but in action), and 3) is free from tormenting and slavish fear. 

A perfect love is not a childish immature affection, but a mature love that has no mixture of fear. Why would we fear those we love and know that they love us? If we fear God's wrath, we manifest that our love to him is not perfected, not full and complete. So, we should ever be seeking to love God and Christ more and more. So believers ever sing "I want to love him more." Further, there is always danger that our love for the Lord may grow cold. (See Matt. 24: 12) There is the danger that we may leave our "first love." (Rev. 2: 4) So, let us ever be examining ourselves in regard to this thing. Let us be always asking ourselves "how dwells the love of God in me?" So the apostle in this epistle asked this very question:

“But whoso hath this world's good, and sees his brother have need, and shuts up his bowels of compassion from him, how dwells the love of God in him?” (I John 3: 17)

I like to think of mature love as what some call "companionate love," the love that one has with a marital companion after years of living together and experiencing life's joys and sorrows as one. I loved my wife when we first married thirty seven years ago, but my love for her today is more mature, more firm, more a privilege than a mere duty. So we are told by the apostle Paul "by love serve one another." (Gal. 5: 13) Perfect love is a love that is complete and cannot increase any more, for it has reached its fullness. 

The divine love is fully and well described by the apostle Paul in these words:

"Love suffers long and is kind; love does not envy; love does not parade itself, is not puffed up; does not behave rudely, does not seek its own, is not provoked, thinks no evil; does not rejoice in iniquity, but rejoices in the truth; bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never fails." (I Cor. 13: 4-8a)

Love has been completed and perfected when it fully obeys the word and law of the Lord, when it no longer is envious, condescending, egotistical, narcissistic, hedonistic, selfish, or sinful. It is perfect when it is as kind and longsuffering as God himself, when it rejoices only in truth and righteousness, and when it never fails or decreases. This being so, love is never fully perfected in this life, but is the goal to which we are striving, and the end to which we have been predestined as believers in Christ. 

In closing my thoughts on love being perfected, I want to include some other scripture that additionally shows how love comes in degrees and how it is demonstrated in service and obedience. 

As John said, the one who is keeping God's word is the one who has love perfected. To the degree we are disobeying the word of God, we are showing that our love for God is still lacking, is not perfect. Jesus also taught this when he said -

If you love Me, keep My commandments...He who has My commandments and keeps them, it is he who loves Me. And he who loves Me will be loved by My Father, and I will love him and manifest Myself to him.” (John 14: 15, 21)

To show that some love more than others, read the story about the time when Christ was in the home of Simon the Pharisee in Luke chapter seven. 

“And Jesus answered and said to him, “Simon, I have something to say to you.” So he said, “Teacher, say it.” “There was a certain creditor who had two debtors. One owed five hundred denarii, and the other fifty. “And when they had nothing with which to repay, he freely forgave them both. Tell Me, therefore, which of them will love him more?” Simon answered and said, “I suppose the one whom he forgave more.” And He said to him, “You have rightly judged.”Therefore I say to you, her sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she loved much. But to whom little is forgiven, the same loves little.” (Luke 7: 40-43, 47)

This shows that love may be little or strong in us. When love is perfected, it is superlative, has reached its greatest degree.

Perfecting Holiness

"Therefore, having these promises, beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God." (II Cor. 7: 1)

The Greek word for "perfecting" is "epiteleō" which again has telos as the base word with the prefix "epi." It means "to bring to an end, accomplish, perfect, execute, complete." 

So, how do we perfect holiness, that is, how do we complete our sanctification? From the text itself we see how it involves first of all a being cleansed from "all moral and spiritual filthiness of both flesh and spirit." When we will have had all sin and propensity to sin removed from our very being we will then be perfected in holiness. Until then we are to be striving towards perfect holiness. 

Holiness involves being separate from what is sinful and unclean. It means to be set apart from other things so as to be special, peculiar or unique. This is what it means for God himself to be holy. Said the apostle Paul: 

"For God did not call us to uncleanness, but in holiness." (I Thess. 4: 7)

It is our vocation, our calling, our duty, to be striving towards greater holiness of character and life. Just as we are daily cleaning ourselves (taking baths or showers, washing our hands, etc.) so too we should be daily washing away our moral filth in pursuit of holiness. Cleansing is regularly available to us through the word of God (Psalm 119:9; Eph. 5: 26; etc.) and through the application of the blood of Christ via confession of sin (I John 1: 7-9).  Further, becoming more holy involves becoming more godly, more righteous in our character and conduct. Wrote Paul:

"...slaves of righteousness for holiness...now having been set free from sin, and having become slaves of God, you have your fruit to holiness, and the end, everlasting life." (Rom. 6: 19, 22)

To the degree we are living righteously and are free from sin and disobedience we are holy. In this life we never reach sinless perfection. That will not become a fact of our existence till we leave this world and enter the next. It will be our confirmed state throughout eternity. Hallelujah! 

In the following text we see how being perfected in both love and holiness are joined together. Wrote Paul:

"And may the Lord make you increase and abound in love to one another and to all, just as we do to you, so that He may establish your hearts blameless in holiness before our God and Father at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with all His saints." (I Thess. 3: 12-13)

The words state several of the points I have been making in this homily. Notice also how the level or degree of holiness is connected with the degree of being blameless. Notice also how perfect holiness is looked to as a future reality and connected with the second coming of Christ and the time of the believer's glorification.

Perfecting = Accomplishing

"Whom resist stedfast in the faith, knowing that the same afflictions are accomplished in your brethren that are in the world." (I Peter 5: 9)

In this verse the word "accomplished" is the same Greek word as in our text where the English word "perfecting" is used. It denotes a finished product or workmanship, a completed work. For the present life of a believer, he is a work in progress. God is accomplishing his work by making the believer more obedient and more like Christ. Often the afflictions that believers experience are meant to purify them, and to improve them. So Paul says "no one should be shaken by these afflictions; for you yourselves know that we are appointed to this." (I Thess. 3: 3) Why appointed? Is it not part of our training, a means to perfect us in holiness? The apostle Peter wrote in support of this thesis:

"But may the God of all grace, who called us to His eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after you have suffered a while, perfect, establish, strengthen, and settle you." (I Peter 5: 10)

One day all believers will be perfect, fully established in righteousness, and fully strengthened and settled, but while we live this life we are being worked upon by God our Potter. 

The Process of Being Made Perfect

“I in them, and You in Me; that they may be made perfect (teleioō) in one, and that the world may know that You have sent Me, and have loved them as You have loved Me." (John 17: 23)

This was the prayer of our Lord for us as believers. He prayed that we be made perfect, that God finish his work in us, in we who are "his workmanship." (Eph. 2: 10) This leads us to say as did Isaiah - "For You have also done all our works in us." (Isa. 26: 12) The same thing is said by Paul in Hebrews.

"Now may the God of peace who brought up our Lord Jesus from the dead, that great Shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant, make you complete (perfect kjv) in every good work to do His will, working in you what is well pleasing in His sight, through Jesus Christ, to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen." (Heb. 13: 20-21)

He also said to the Philippian believers: 

"...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." (Phil. 1: 6)

God is accomplishing his purpose to make us like Christ and that work is progressive and will be finished at the return of Christ.

Another verse that shows that growth in love and holiness is progressive and continuous is this:

"And He Himself gave some to be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, and some pastors and teachers, for the equipping (perfecting KJV) of the saints for the work of ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ, till we all come to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to a perfect man, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ; that we should no longer be children, tossed to and fro and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the trickery of men, in the cunning craftiness of deceitful plotting, but, speaking the truth in love, may grow up in all things into Him who is the head—Christ—" (Eph. 4: 11-15)

Again "perfect" is from the Greek word teleios but is used as an adjective to describe the chosen people of God. While we are growing and maturing we are still advancing towards perfection. Again, Paul wrote:

"Not as though I had already attained, either were already perfect: but I follow after, if that I may apprehend that for which also I am apprehended of Christ Jesus." (Phil. 3: 12)

For Paul, perfection was the goal, the end product. In this advancement towards perfection, Christ as a man is our example. Of him it is written:

"...though He was a Son, yet He learned obedience by the things which He suffered. And having been perfected, He became the author of eternal salvation to all who obey Him..." (Heb. 5: 8-9) 

Saturday, October 29, 2022

Presumptive Regeneration & Seed Faith


Abraham Kuyper
(1837 - 1920)

Abraham Kuyper is one who promoted the PedoBaptist idea that infants may be presumed to be regenerated and it is an idea that, sadly, infected those who call themselves "Primitive" or "Old School" Baptists with few exceptions. When I was a young PB elder and pastor I was taught that many of God's elect were regenerated in infancy and is the reason why many of them speak of having always loved God. This idea of Kuyper is called "Presumptive Regeneration," concerning which Travis Fentiman (here) says the following, citing Curt Daniel (emphasis mine):

"Regarding presuming the regeneracy of Covenant-children, Abraham Kuyper (1837-1920), a great popularizer of presumptive regeneration, “taught that God can and often does regenerate his elect as infants” and that “covenant parents are to presume that their covenant children are regenerate until they give prolonged and conscious evidence in their mature years that they are unregenerate.” (Curt Daniel, The History and Theology of Calvinism (Dallas: Scholarly Reprints, 1993, p. 131)"

Concerning the views of Kuyper regarding regeneration and its similarity to the views of most PBs of the twentieth century and today see my postings in Chapters 111-113 of that series titled - "Mediate or Immediate?" (See here, herehere) In those chapters I give the views of Kuyper and offer critical analysis of them.

Now let me cite from "Regeneration" by Abraham Kuyper (see here) as it relates to this idea of presumptive regeneration of infants. Kuyper wrote (all emphasis mine):

"Before we examine the work of the Holy Spirit in this important matter, we must first define the use of words. The word "regeneration" is used in a limited sense, and in a more extended sense.

It is used in the limited sense when it denotes exclusively God's act of quickening, which is the first divine act whereby God translates us from death into life, from the kingdom of darkness into the kingdom of His dear Son. In this sense regeneration is the starting-point. God comes to one born in iniquity and dead in trespasses and sins, and plants the principle of a new spiritual life in his soul. Hence he is born again.

But this is not the interpretation of the Confession of Faith, for article 24 reads: "We believe that this true faith, being wrought in man by the hearing of the Word of God and the operation of the Holy Ghost, doth regenerate and make him a new man, causing him to live a new life, and freeing him from the bondage of sin." Here the word "regeneration," used in its wider sense, denotes the entire change by grace effected in our persons, ending in our dying to sin in death and our being born for heaven. While formerly this was the usual sense of the word, we are accustomed now to the limited sense, which we therefore adopt in this discussion.

Respecting the difference between the two--formerly the work of grace was generally represented as the soul consciously observed it; while now the work itself is described apart from the consciousness."

Kuyper states what has been stated by others about how the use of the word "regeneration" has changed since the days of Calvin and the Reformation. At first the Calvinists defined regeneration broadly as including conversion (faith and repentance). 

Bob Ross, citing Berkhof, wrote:

"Berkhof taught that "new life is often implanted in the hearts of children long before they are able to hear the call of the gospel," and that they may receive the "seed of regeneration long before they come to years of discretion," and therefore this rules out the Holy Spirit's use of the Gospel as a means (pages 471, 472)." (See here)

Bob Ross also writes in further detail to show that the first Calvinists and Reformers, and the first Confessions of faith, spoke only of regeneration broadly defined and I cite from him extensively in this blog posting (here). Kuyper is simply agreeing that the first Calvinists spoke only of regeneration that included evangelical conversion, this being the only kind the bible spoke about. For instance, here is some of what is posted in that entry:

W. G. T. Shedd, Dogmatic Theology, Volume 2, pages 492-494, attributes the distinction between "regeneration" and "conversion" to Turretin, and Shedd adopted this approach. He says:

"The divines of the seventeenth century [Puritans] very generally do not distinguish between regeneration and conversion, but employ the two as synonyms. Owen does this continually: On the Spirit, III. v. And Charnocke likewise: Attributes, Practical Atheism. The Westminster [Confession] does not use the term regeneration. In stead of it, it employs the term vocation, or effectual calling. This comprises the entire work of the Holy Spirit in the application of redemption. . . ." Shedd then alleges: "But this wide use of the term regeneration led to confusion of ideas and views. As there are two distinct words in the language, regeneration and conversion, there are also two distinct notions denoted by them. Consequently, there arose gradually a stricter use of the term regeneration, and its discrimination from conversion. Turrettin (XV. iv. 13) defines two kinds of conversion, as the term was employed in his day. . . . After thus defining, Turrettin remarks that the first kind of conversion is better denominated 'regeneration,' because it has reference to the new birth by which man is renewed in the image of his Maker; and the second kind of conversion is better denominated 'conversion,' because it includes the operation and agency of man himself. . . ."

Then Shedd says: "We shall adopt this distinction [by Turretin] between regeneration and conversion. . . . Regeneration is a cause; conversion is an effect."

J. I. Packer also contends that the theory arose in "later Reformed theology:" Packer says:

"Many seventeenth century Reformed theologians equated regeneration with effectual calling and conversion with regeneration . . . LATER REFORMED THEOLOGY has defined regeneration more narrowly, as the implanting of the 'seed' from which faith and repentance spring (I John 3:9) in the course of effectual calling."

Louis Berkhof:

Berkhof likewise acknowledged that the theory had post-Creedal development:

"It is true that some Reformed authors have occasionally used the term 'regeneration' as including even sanctification, but that was in the days when the ORDO SALUTIS was not as fully developed as it is today" (Systematic Theology, page 468).

So, the question is whether Kuyper and others who restricted the original meaning were rightly fine tuning the teaching of scripture or obscuring it?

That infants who die in infancy are regenerated at some point before they enter heaven I do not question, yet the scriptures do not address this in any detail. But, that is not the question in the present discussion. The question is whether many adults who have been converted to Christ were previously regenerated when they were infants, which if true, might lend support to the idea that regeneration is distinct from conversion, and may exist apart from evangelical knowledge, faith, and repentance. 

Kuyper continued:

"But this subjective representation, more or less incomplete, can not satisfy us now. It was to be expected that the supporters of "free will" would abuse it, by inferring that the origin and first activities of the work of salvation spring from man himself. A sinner, hearing the Word, is deeply impressed; persuaded by its threats and promises, he repents, arises, and accepts the Savior. Hence there is nothing more than a mere moral persuasion, obscuring the glorious origin of the new life. To resist this repulsive deforming of the truth, Maccovius, already in the days of the Synod of Dort, abandoned this more or less critical method to make regeneration the starting-point. He followed this order: "Knowledge of sin, redemption in Christ, regeneration, and only then faith." And this was consistent with the development of the Reformed doctrine. For as soon as the subjective method was abandoned, it became necessary in answer to the question, "What has God wrought in the soul?" to return to the first implanting of life. And then it became evident that God did not begin by leading the sinner to repentance, for repentance must be preceded by conviction of sin; nor by bringing him under the hearing of the word, for this requires an opened ear. Hence the first conscious and comparatively cooperative act of man is always preceded by the original act of God, planting in him the first principle of a new life, under which act man is wholly passive and unconscious."

Again, Kuyper admits that the old original Calvinist and Reformed view that saw regeneration and conversion as the same thing was unacceptable to him and later Calvinists and so they spoke of two kinds of regeneration, one which excluded conversion, and one which included it. We have shown where men like Gill and Charles Hodge admit that the bible defines it in terms of conversion, or broadly.

Kuyper continued:

"This led to the distinction of the first and second grace. The former denoted God's work in the sinner, creating a new life without his knowledge; while the latter denoted the work wrought in regenerate man with his full knowledge and consent.

The first grace was naturally called regeneration. And yet there was no perfect unanimity in this respect. Some Scottish theologians put it in this way: "God began the work of grace with the implanting of the faith-faculty (fides potentialis), followed by the new grace of the faith-exercise (fides actualis), and of the faith power (fides habitualis). Yet it is only an apparent difference. Whether I call the first activity of grace, the implanting of the "faith-faculty," or the "new principle of life," in both instances it means that the work of grace does not begin with faith or with repentance or contrition, but that these are preceded by God's act of giving power to the powerless, hearing to the deaf, and life to the dead."

So, not only did later Calvinists redefine regeneration but they also began to redefine "faith." The Hardshells did the same thing. They too began to speak of "seed faith," a faith that did not believe anything, or know anything, a faith that was non cognitive, a faith that was "dormant" in the regenerated infant, imbecile, or heathen idolater. They also, like Hardshell apologist Zack Guess, defined faith as "the ability to believe." Of course, the bible knows nothing of these altered definitions. (See our posting on this here) Also, the bible does not define regeneration or initial salvation as occurring when God first begins to work on the heart of a sinner for it speaks of prevenient grace or preparatory work towards regeneration. We have several postings where we show that the first Calvinists saw conviction of sin as a preparation towards regeneration and not an effect of it (as the Hardshells believe). We have also shown how the bible and Calvinists such as Jonathan Edwards and Archibald Alexander said that regeneration cannot be defined alone by what causes it but also by what is effected by it. (See our postings here and here) In those postings here is what Edwards and Alexander said:

Jonathan Edwards wrote and I commented as follows:

"If we compare one Scripture with another, it will be sufficiently manifest, that by regeneration, or being begotten, or born again, the same change in the state of the mind is signified with that which the Scripture speaks of as effected in true repentance and conversion. I put repentance and conversion together, because the Scripture puts them together, Acts iii. 19, and because they plainh signify much the same thing."

"This inward change, called regeneration and circumcision of the heart, which is wrought in repentance and conversion, is the same with that spiritual resurrection so often spoken of, and represented as a dying unto sin, and living, unto righteousness."  (THE WORKS of PRESIDENT EDWARDS," pg. 213, Chapter II)

Edwards defines "regeneration" by the effect, by the actual "change" of heart.  Again, it is just pure nonsense to say that a man is changed (act of God, or cause alone) before he is actually changed.  But, that is the foolish consequence of defining regeneration by cause alone.

Alexander wrote:

"Curious inquiries respecting the way in which the word is instrumental in the production of this change are not for edification. Sometimes regeneration is considered distinctly from the acts and exercises of the mind which proceed from it, but in the Holy Scriptures the cause and effect are included; and we shall therefore treat the subject in this practical and popular form. The instrumentality of the word can never derogate from the efficient agency of the Spirit in this work. The Spirit operates by and through the word. The word derives all its power and penetrating energy from the Spirit. Without the omnipotence of God the word would be as inefficient as clay and spittle, to restore sight to the blind."

Alexander pinpoints the error of those Hyper Calvinists who restrict the definition of regeneration to include only the "cause."  He correctly states that the scriptures include what is effected in the definition.  A man cannot then be said to have been "regenerated" who lacked the "effects," or constituent elements of regeneration.  In other words, a man cannot be said to have been "saved" who lacks the "things which accompany salvation."  Thus, to say a man is regenerated before he believes and repents is to define regeneration strictly by the cause to the exclusion of the effect.

Kuyper continued:

"For a correct idea of the entire work of grace in its different phases let us notice the following successive stages or milestones: 
 
1. The implanting of the new life principle, commonly called regeneration in the limited sense, or the implanting of the faith-faculty. This divine act is wrought in man at different ages; when, no one can tell. We know from the instance of John the Baptist that it can be wrought even in the mother's womb. And the salvation of deceased infants constrains us, with Voetius and all profound theologians, to believe that this original act may occur very early in life
 
This view is very close to that view of the first Hardshells that saw the new birth as much like physical birth, where there are three stages, first the implanting of the seed, then the time of formation in the womb, then the time of emergence or delivery from the womb. But, the bible knows nothing of such a thing and such a view creates lots of theological problems.

And, as far as John the Baptist is concerned, even if we allow that his being filled with the Holy Spirit in the womb was his regeneration, it was not divorced from cognitive faith and knowledge. His regeneration was not unconnected from conversion. His faith was not dormant but active in "leaping for joy." Further, his experience ought to be viewed as the exception and not the rule. 

Kuyper continued:

2. The keeping of the implanted principle of life, while the sinner still continues in sin, so far as his consciousness is concerned. Persons who received the life-principle early in life are no more dead, but live. Dying before actual conversion, they are not lost, but saved. In early life they often manifest holy inclinations; sometimes truly marvelous. However, they have no conscious faith, nor knowledge of the treasure possessed. The new life is present, but dormant; kept not by the recipient, but by the Giver--like seed-grain in the ground in winter; like the spark glowing under the ashes, but not kindling the wood; like a subterranean stream coming at last to the surface. 
 
Before their conversion they are not lost? That is hyper Hyper Calvinism, or neo Hardshellism. However, the bible says that all unconverted people are lost. Again, the Hardshell notion of dormant "seed faith" is a pedobaptist idea stemming from their view about "covenant children." 

Kuyper continued:

3. The call by the Word and the Spirit, internal and external. Even this is a divine act, commonly performed through the service of the Church. It addresses itself not to the deaf but to the hearing, not to the dead but to the living, altho still slumbering. It proceeds from the Word and the Spirit, because not only the faith-faculty, but faith itself--i.e., the power and exercise of the faculty--are gifts of grace. The faith-faculty can not exercise faith of itself. It avails us no more than the faculty of breathing when air and the power to breathe are withheld. Hence the preaching of the Word and the inward working of the Holy Spirit are divine, correspondent operations. Under the preaching of the Word the Spirit energizes the faith-faculty, and thus the call becomes effectual, for the sleeper arises
 
Again, this is Hardshellism in a nutshell. The gospel does not address itself to the spiritually dead? The bible does not teach such a thing. Jesus himself addressed his gospel message to people who he identified as spiritually dead. 

Kuyper continued:

4. This call of God produces conviction of sin and justification, two acts of the same exercise of faith. In this, God's work may be represented again either subjectively or objectively. Subjectively, it seems to the saint that conviction of sin and heart-brokenness came first, and that then he obtained the sense of being justified by faith. Objectively, this is not so. The realization of his lost condition was already a bold act of faith. And by every subsequent act of faith he becomes more deeply convinced of his misery and receives more abundantly from the fulness which is in Christ, his Surety. Concerning the question, whether conviction of sin must not precede faith, there need be no difference. Both representations amount to the same thing. When a man can say for the first time in his life "I believe," he is at the same moment completely lost and completely saved, being justified in his Lord. 
 
No, conviction of sin is not an evidence of regeneration or salvation! (See my posting here, which posting gives links to several other postings on this question). In those postings I cite from Hardshell founding father Wilson Thompson who did not believe conviction of sin by itself was evidence of regeneration. Notice these words from him and others:

Elder Wilson Thompson wrote:

"We shall now proceed to show what men may experience and not be under the work of the spirit of grace. He may feel all that weight of guilt which the law of God charges upon him; and yet not be a subject of the spirits operation, for the law is the ministration of condemnation and death."

Stephen Charnock wrote:

"The soul must be beaten down by conviction before it be raised up by regeneration..."

John Owen (1616-1683) addresses the subject in the third volume of his Works in a section entitled, "Works of the Holy Spirit Preparatory Unto Regeneration." Owen writes:

"Ordinarily there are certain previous and preparatory works, or workings in and upon the souls of men, that are antecedent and dispositive unto it [i.e. regeneration]. But yet regeneration doth not consist in them, nor can it be educed out of them."

Wrote Thomas Boston  (emphasis mine): (here)

"A person may have sharp soul-exercises and pangs, and yet die in the birth. Many "have been in pain," that have but, "as it were, brought forth wind." There may be sore pangs of conscience, which turn to nothing at last. Pharaoh and Simon Magus had such convictions, as made them to desire the prayers of others for them. Judas repented: and, under terrors of conscience, gave back his ill-gotten pieces of silver. All is not gold that glitters. Trees may blossom fairly in the spring, on which no fruit is to be found in the harvest: and some have sharp soul-exercises, which are nothing but foretastes of hell."

Again, this is the teaching of Scripture and of the old Baptists and Calvinists. Boston also wrote:

"Some have sharp convictions for a while: but these go off, and they become as careless about their salvation, and as profane as ever, and usually worse than ever; "their last state is worse than their first," Matt. 12:45. They get awakening grace—but not converting grace; and that goes off by degrees, as the light of the declining day, until it issues in midnight darkness."

He also wrote:

"There may be a wonderful moving of the affections in souls that are not at all touched with regenerating graceWhen there is no grace, there may, notwithstanding, be a flood of tears, as in Esau, who "found no place of repentance, though he sought it carefully with tears," Heb. 12:17. There may be great flashes of joy; as in the hearers of the word, represented in the parable of the stony ground, who "with joy receive it," Matt. 13:20. There may be also great desires after good things, and great delight in them too; as in those hypocrites described in Isa. 58:2, "Yet they seek me daily, and delight to know my ways – they take delight in approaching to God."

I have also pointed out how the affirmation that those under conviction of sin (and not yet converted) are nevertheless regenerate makes the Spirit of God a liar (See herehere). 

Kuyper continued:

5. This exercise of faith results in conversion; at this stage in the way of grace the child of God becomes clearly conscious of the implanted life. When a man says and feels "I believe," and does not recall it, but God confirms it, faith is at once followed by conversion. The implanting of the new life precedes the first act of faith, but conversion follows it.

Again this is Hyper Calvinism, or Hardshellism. The idea that men may be regenerated without being converted is foreign to the scriptures. There is no such thing as a regenerated unbeliever.

Kuyper continued:

"Conversion does not become a fact so long as the sinner only sees his lost condition, but when he acts upon this principle; for then the old man begins to die and the new man begins to rise, and these are the two parts of all real conversion. In principle man is converted but once, viz., the moment of yielding himself to Immanuel. After that he converts himself daily, i.e., as often as he discovers conflict between his will and that of the Holy Spirit. And even this is not man's work, but the work of God in him. "Turn Thou me, O Lord, and I shall be turned." There is this difference, however, that in regeneration and faith's first exercise he was passive, while in conversion grace enabled him to be active. One is converted and one converts himself; the one is incomplete without the other." 
 
So, according to Kuyper's paradigm, a soul who is convicted of his lost condition is regenerated (and not really lost) but is not converted. So, it is evident that the separating of conversion from regeneration logically led to its being separated chronologically. Yea, it even led to the heresy that unconverted heathen who worship false gods are saved and regenerated. 

Kuyper continued:

6. Hence conversion merges itself in sanctification. This is also a divine act, and not human; not a growing toward Christ, but an absorbing of His life through the roots of faith. In children of twelve or thirteen deceased soon after conversion, sanctification does not appear. Yet they partake of it just as much as adults. Sanctification has a twofold meaning: first, sanctification which as Christ's finished work is given and imputed to all the elect; and second, sanctification which from Christ is gradually wrought in the converted and manifested according to times and circumstances. These are not two sanctifications, but one; just as we speak sometimes of the rain that accumulates in the clouds above and then comes down in drops on the thirsty fields below. 
 
There is no such thing as a person who is regenerated and converted and who has not been sanctified. Yes, sanctification is progressive, but it is begun in conversion, when he becomes a saint, when he is "sanctified by faith" in Christ Jesus. (Acts 26: 18; Etc.)

Kuyper continued:

7. Sanctification is finished and closed in the complete redemption at the time of death. In the severing of body and soul divine grace completes the dying to sin. Hence in death a work of grace is performed which imparts to the work of regeneration its fullest unfolding. If until then, considering ourselves out of Christ, we are still lost in ourselves and lying in the midst of death, the article of death ends all this. Then faith is turned into sight, sin's excitement is disarmed, and we are forever beyond its reach. 

If one is completely sanctified at death, why can we not say the same of those who die in infancy? I.e., that they were regenerated, converted, and sanctified in death? They certainly do not go to heaven as infants or idiots, right? Don't they transition to adulthood immediately and miraculously?

Kuyper continued:

"The work of grace must begin with quickening the dead. Once implanted, the still slumbering life must be awakened by the call. Thus awakened, man finds himself in a new life, i.e., he knows himself justified. Being justified, he lets the new life result in conversion. Conversion flows into sanctification. Sanctification receives its keystone through the severing of sin in death. And in the last day, glorification completes the work of divine grace in our entire person."

Why must the work of grace begin with quickening? Kuyper has already spoken of preparatory work that God does before he quickens. What about the quickening of the dry dead bones in Ezekiel? Was there not much movement and coming together of bones and sinew, etc, before coming to life? The idea that infants have spiritual life but it is "slumbering" or "dormant" is ridiculous. Again, however, this is the language of hardshellism. In their minds many of the elect are regenerated in infancy and such is not known until that life is awakened by preaching. Thus, in their minds, many Muslims, Hindoos, and other idolaters fit this description. They would say that this was the case with the Athenian idolaters of Acts 17, affirming that many of them were regenerated (though believers in false gods) and not converted, and that the preaching of Paul "brought to light" those who were previously alive by regeneration. Such nonsense!

Kuyper continued:

"From the preceding it is evident that preparatory grace is different in different persons; and that distinction must be made between the many regenerated in the first days of life, and the few born again at a more advanced age."

Again, he speaks of "preparatory grace" but in essence he does not believe in it (since he has said that regeneration is the first thing). Further, though there is indeed a difference in the amount of grace at work in the elect before their salvation as opposed to the non elect, still common or prevenient grace was operative in both. Notice also how Kuyper believes that many of the elect are born again in infancy and that only a minority of them are regenerated as adults. This is what many Hardshells also believe. 

Kuyper continued:

"Of course, we refer only to the elect. In the non-elect saving grace does not operate; hence preparatory grace is altogether out of the question. The former are born, with few exceptions, in the Church. They do not enter the covenant of grace later on in life, but they belong to it from the first moment of their existence. They spring from the seed of the Church, and in turn contain in themselves the seed of the future Church. And for this reason, the first germ of the new life is imparted to the seed of the Church (which is, alas! always mixed with much chaff) oftenest either before or soon after birth."

Again, all this is an invention and not what is affirmed in scripture. It is also the belief of the Hardshells. It shows again that their doctrine came not only from the Two Seeders but also from the pedobaptists. We showed how Spilsbury debated pedobaptist Bakewell on this very point back in the 17th century. (See my posting on this debate here)

Kuyper continued:

"The Reformed Church was so firmly settled in this doctrine that she dared establish it as the prevailing rule, believing that the seed of the Church (not the chaff of course} received the germ of life even before Baptism; wherefore it is actually sanctified in Christ already; and receives in Baptism the seal not upon something that is yet to come, but upon that which is already present. Hence the liturgical question to the parents: "Do you acknowledge that, altho your children are conceived and born in sin, and therefore are subject to condemnation itself, yet that they are sanctified in Christ, and therefore as members of His Church ought to be baptized?"

Here he speaks of infants who are sanctified when they are regenerated and yet earlier he spoke of young people being converted but dying before being sanctified. That is a contradiction. 

This is not Baptist doctrine, nor is it Bible doctrine. All this is the result of divorcing conversion from regeneration, a thing the scriptures do not do.

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Another Delivered From Hardshellism


"Rather, we have renounced secret and shameful ways; 
we do not use deception, nor do we distort the word of God. 
On the contrary, by setting forth the truth plainly 
we commend ourselves to everyone’s conscience in the sight of God."
(II Cor. 4: 2)

The following testimonial has been sent to me by a sister with whom I have been trying to help in her departure from the cult of Hardshellism. I have spoken to her for hours on the telephone and have sent text messages and e-mails back and forth with her. We are hoping she and her husband find another sovereign grace Baptist church soon. Brother Mann and I have made some suggestions to her along that line. Keep her and her family in your prayers. She has "renounced" the heresies of the Hardshells and for this we rejoice and are glad.
 
She wishes to remain anonymous for now until she has been formally dismissed from the Hardshell cult. Here is the posting she sent to me for publication.

Here is my story: 
 
A few years ago I began attending a primitive Baptist church and became a member shortly thereafter. I have loved the Lord for as long as I can remember. I was baptized at 12 years of age in the church that I attended as a child; however, I was told by the Pastor that I must be re-baptized in order to be accepted as a member of the primitive Baptist Church. In a culture that is so radically progressive and modern, I longed for an old-fashioned simple church where I could feel like I could go back to a time in America where God, church and family were supreme. The church had so many things I liked….the people were warm and friendly, old hymns were sung in a style that stirred my inward zeal for God’s grace and mercy, church discipline was actually practiced, the KJV of the Bible was endorsed, there was fellowship that was so deep, and there was a historical element that appealed to me. All of those things are good things, and I still want to be in a local church like that, BUT not at the expense of doctrine. But at the time, I idolized those things above the Word of God, and so, I agreed to be rebaptized. 

Over the course of the next several months, when I would hear things in conversations or in the pulpit that did not match up with the Word of God, to my shame, I suppressed it. I noticed that I began to actually grow cold in my spiritual walk. Sin seemed a little less serious, I no longer had compassion for the lost, I was no longer zealous for good works, and I became a lazy Christian. But then, after a while, I no longer could ignore the blatant contradictions I was hearing from the pulpit, and it began to provoke me to study. The two major problems I was seeing was the denial of the necessity of an individual’s faith for eternal salvation and the watering down of Jesus’s warnings about sin and eternal hell. “Conditional Time Salvation” was a convenient way to minimize Jesus’s stern warnings and soften the blow of His hard sayings. No wonder my conscience toward sin was becoming dull. No wonder I lost motivation to share the gospel with others. After studying the Bible, I had to make a decision. Was I going to listen to my Shepherd and hear His voice, or not? I could no longer dismiss the extreme errors being taught and decided to leave, not knowing where I would go.

I would encourage anyone out there who is thinking about leaving the PB church because of doctrinal issues to seek Truth above all else. Yes, you will have to humble yourself and admit you were wrong and you may have to leave family and friends. But it is worth it. The Lord is our portion and He rewards those who diligently seek Him and gives grace to the humble. I had to repent of many things: the fear of man, idolizing historical documents, idolizing “endless genealogies”, twisting scripture, apathy toward the lost, minimizing the power of the everlasting Gospel, cheapening grace, and teaching damnable heresy to others.

After all this happened, I began to wonder why I had to go through all of this. I believe that it was a fiery trial. I believe the Lord was testing my faith and now, I am closer to the Lord than ever before. And I also believe it was to humble me.

I do not blame anyone but myself. There is no excuse whatsoever for what I did. When we get away from the Holy Word of God or start twisting scripture, we WILL BE DECEIVED. Stay in the Word and do not compromise with ANYONE no matter who it is. I don’t care if it’s Spurgeon or Gill or Pink. If there is a major doctrinal teaching out there that is not taught in Holy Scripture, stand firm in the Truth.

There are great promises given to those who ask, seek and knock. There are great rewards for those who forsake all to follow Jesus. Do not be discouraged, do not fear. He will provide, and He will lead you where to go.

I pray regularly for all those out there who are seeking Truth that they will find it.

I also had to repent of pride. I was more proud to be an "Old Baptist" than to be content with being just a disciple of Jesus. Primitive Baptist became my identity instead of just simply a member of Christ.

We hope she will feel free to write more in the future as she and her husband have much to relate to us as respects their journey from heresy to truth.

Monday, October 24, 2022

Elder William Conrad


 Elder William Conrad

1797-1882

Pastor of the Old Baptist Chruch of Christ at Williamstown 54 Yrs. Of Rays Fork 40 Yrs. Of Forklick 30 Yrs and of Twin Creek 29 Yrs. In 1972-1975 I visited Rays Fork church a few times. It was then pastored by Elder Rice Bolender, a dear friend and father in the ministry and who was in my first PB ordination in Ohio. For bio and obituary info see (here). He is also mentioned in "Biographical History of Primitive or Old School Baptist Ministers." (See page 71 here) That record says:

"...for about half a century was a faithful laborer in the Master's vineyard. Elder Conrad wrote a history of his life and travels, together with a concise history of the following Old School Baptist Churches: Williamstown and Forklick, Grant County, Raysfork, Scott County; And Twin Creek, Harrison County, Kentucky. This book contains 422 pages and was published in 1876." 

For previous entries on Conrad and his beliefs see (herehere). In them I wrote:

Elder William Conrad was a leader among Kentucky Baptists for most of the 19th century and was an associate of Wilson Thompson and Ambrose Dudley, and many other notables. He was one of the "Old School Baptists" and yet, like many of them, believed that conversion was the same as being "born again," and was accomplished through the means of the gospel. He held the same view as Elders Beebe and Trott. They held that regeneration was not the same as being begotten, believing that regeneration was the giving of life, but that conversion was the birth of that life. He believed that all the elect would be both regenerated and born again by the gospel. Notice these words by Elder Conrad:

"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." (Chapter 25)

Notice how Conrad says that being "born" of God "does not give us life," for he believed that "regeneration" is what gave life. But, he believed that no one could be eternally saved who was not "born again" by the gospel.

Conrad says this about his long ministry:

"And lastly, that I am now among the oldest in profession that claims to be an Old School Baptist in our part of Kentucky...And, as above, having lived near fifty-five years an unworthy member among them, that these, these considerations connected with my own personal knowledge, while thus to mingle and commingle among the people with whom we have been so long identified." (ibid)

Elder Conrad was also a fellow minister with Elders E. H. Burnam and W. T. Pence, two elders who led the "means" side in the division over means in the 1880s.

Wrote Conrad:

"...thus far this year nearly a like supply, for Elder E. H. Burman, from Columbia, Mo., was with us the first Saturday and Sunday in this month of July, 1875, and Elder Phillip McInturff, from Pennsylvania, last fall, etc." (ibid)

One writer says this about Elder Conrad:

"...in the 1840’s, the Means Baptists, led by Elder William Conrad of Dry Ridge (Williamstown) further purged it of duty faith believers."

Thus, we may put Elder Conrad as one who believed in gospel means in the new birth. He was also one who opposed T.P. Dudley (son of Ambrose) for his Two Seed views. His view about regeneration and new birth was the predominant view of the first generation of PB ministers. 

Thursday, October 20, 2022

A Favorite Verse




The following verse, from "A Song of Ascents. Of Solomon," is one of my favorite verses in the bible. I have quoted it in speaking to myself many times in my life. 

"Unless the Lord builds the house, They labor in vain who build it; Unless the Lord guards the city, The watchman stays awake in vain." (Psalm 127: 1)

The verse tells us something about success, about accomplishment, about victory. It is similar to the verse at the head that says "victory (or safety in kjv) is of the Lord." 

God's blessing is essential to any enterprise. Without him we can do nothing. In fact, all that is built is God's building, even though we do the building. I have built houses and other buildings and I was heard to say "I built that," but really, it was God who built it through me. 

I also know what it means to "labor in vain," to build when the Lord was not blessing the building, or not the one doing the building. 

We can substitute many other words for those given in the text (build, guard, stays awake), so as to say

-  except the Lord does the preaching the preacher preaches in vain
-  except the Lord does the teaching or writing the teacher writes in vain
-  except the Lord keep you safe your safety precautions are in vain

God's blessings upon our labors and endeavors are essential for real and lasting success. All the labors and endeavors of unblessed men and women are in vain. 

Elder (Dr.) J.B. Stephens

 

5 Feb 1836 - 7 Aug 1919 (aged 83)

The above picture was again taken from find a grave (See here). As before stated, Elder Stephens lived in Nashville, Tennessee and was an associate of elders and fellow physicians John M. Watson and R.W. Fain. He is mentioned in "Biographical History of Primitive or Old School Baptist Ministers" and was pastor of South College Street Church in Nashville for forty three years (see page 254 here). The write up says: 

"Elder Stephens is an able advocate of the doctrine of God our Saviour as maintained by the Primitive or Old School Baptists. For nearly half a century he has preached Jesus the way, the truth, and the life; nor has he seen any reason to adulterate the doctrine of grace or to change the order of God's house...And though Elder Stephens has passed his threescore and ten, yet he is still active and faithful to his charge; and his church, is perhaps, the only one among our people in the United States that has services every Sunday at 11 o'clock and at night."

I find it amazing that this write up did not include the fact that he edited, along with Elder (Dr.) R.W. Fain and Elder B.E. Mullins, the paper known as "The Baptist Watchman." After the death of Elder Fain he was the leading editor of that paper. He also had a brother who was an elder, J.K. Stephens. 

One of the things that call for special investigation is the charge that was made by Elder Lemuel Potter (one of the people in the late 19th century who pushed the PBs away from their original position to an anti means view) that Elder John Clark, editor of "Zion's Advocate" and Hardshell founding father did not believe in means. In his debate with fellow PB elder J.T. Pence over the means question, Potter had this to say about Elder Clark and Elder Stephens.

"He (Pence) undertook to show that Elder Clark was agreed with him on the subject of means. In this he gloriously failed, for I showed him from Zion's Advocate, that on the occasion of Elder Booten's ordination, Elder Clark was the moderator of the Presbytery, and that Elder Booten was interrogated on this very point, as to whether he believed in the Spirit's work in the regeneration of sinners, without, and independent of, all means and instrumentalities whatever. A correspondence between Elder J. B. Stephens, of Nashville, Tenn., and Elder Clark, concerning this matter, which was published in Zion's Advocate, shows that Elder Clark emphatically denied the use of any means or agencies outside of the divine Spirit in the regeneration of sinners. I am not prepared to give the date of the Advocate in which this correspondence occurred. In reply to my idea that the gospel was the power of God to the saved, Elder Pence rather made light, saying: "The power of God unto salvation to the man already saved?" (As cited previously by me here and here)

I then made these comments upon the above citation:

It was convenient of Potter not to give the citation from Elder Clark. In this blog I have cited statements from Elder Clark which showed clearly that he believed that sinners were born again by the preaching of the gospel. Now, it very well could be that Elder Clark agreed with Beebe, Osbourne, Trott, and others, that regeneration was distinct from the birth, and allowed no means in the former but did allowed them in the latter. In this case, Clark must be read carefully to see if he is talking about means in regeneration or in birth.

When I spent a day at Duke University reading through what volumes of "Zion's Advocate" they had, I never found a record of the debate between Elder Clark and Elder Stephens. From the above words of Elder Potter in his debate with Elder Pence we are told by Potter that Elder Clark took the no means view in that discussion with elder Stephens which makes Potter to affirm two things: 1) Elder Clark denied means and 2) Elder Stephens affirmed means.

For citations from Clark and Zion's Advocate supporting means see these postings (herehereherehere)

So, by Potter's own admission, Stephens believed in means and was the editor of the Baptist Watchman, a weekly publication in the years after the civil war until about 1880. Further, Stephens was an associate of both Elder Watson and Elder Fain, both of who believed in means. In reading through the Baptist Watchman I noticed that Elder Potter would sometimes write to the paper and never said a word against the means view espoused by its editors. So, why did Elder Potter in his debate with Elder Throgmorton deny that Watson taught means? 

Elder Potter, as I have shown in numerous postings, told lies about Watson, Clark, Gill, etc. See my postings in the series Potter-Throgmorton Debate Review and other postings. (Use the search engine for those postings). But, Potter is not alone in giving false information and telling lies, as I have shown how several other of their ministers have published falsehoods about their history.

If more volumes of Zion's Advocate become available for me to read, perhaps I will find the debate between Clark and Stephens that Potter refers to. However, I doubt that it is as Potter said. If it was such an important piece of information, surely Potter would have been able to tell us exactly when in Zion's Advocate it was printed. The truth of the matter is, both Clark and Stephens held to the original position that God regenerated his people through the preaching of the gospel.

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

The Church's Desolation

I used to sing and meditate upon this old hymn many years ago. Considering the state of most professing churches today, I find it appropriate to sing this song of lamentation. "Ichabod" means "the glory is departed." Of many churches the Lord may well say, as he did to the church at Sardis, "that thou hast a name that thou livest, and art dead." (Rev. 3: 1) Ichabod is written over so many churches today and though they profess to be spiritually alive, they are really dead.

Song - The Church's Desolation

Well may Thy servants mourn, my God,
The Church’s desolation;
The state of Zion calls aloud
For grief and lamentation.
Once she was all alive to Thee
And thousands were converted,
But now a sad reverse we see,
Her glory is departed.

And has religion left the Church
Without a trace behind her?
Where shall I go, where shall I search,
That I once more may find her?
Adieu, ye proud, ye light and gay,
I’ll seek the brokenhearted,
Who weep when they of Zion say,
Her glory is departed.

Some few, like good Elijah stand,
While thousands have revolted,
In earnest for the heav’nly land
They never yet have halted.
With such religion doth remain,
For they are not perverted;
Oh may they all through men regain

The glory that’s departed.

You can listen to it sung (hereherehere)

Some don't sing all the verses and all are sung sacred harp.

Monday, October 17, 2022

The Coming Storm


"Upon the wicked he shall rain snares, fire and brimstone, and an horrible tempest
this shall be the portion of their cup." 
(Psalm 11: 6)


"Behold, a whirlwind of the Lord has gone forth in fury— A violent whirlwind! It will fall violently on the head of the wicked. The anger of the Lord will not turn back Until He has executed and performed the thoughts of His heart. In the latter days you will understand it perfectly." (Jer. 23: 19-20)

Friends, there is a "perfect storm" of divine judgment that is coming soon as prophesied to occur in conjunction with the coming day of the Lord, or day of judgment, of which the Apocalypse well describes in addition to the above verses. Further, the signs of this storm being imminent are evident. Just as we may forecast a storm by seeing its signs, so we may see the storm of coming judgment by looking at the signs of the times. Notice these words from the gospel of Matthew:

"Then the Pharisees and Sadducees came, and testing Him asked that He would show them a sign from heaven. He answered and said to them, “When it is evening you say, ‘It will be fair weather, for the sky is red’; and in the morning, ‘It will be foul weather today, for the sky is red and threatening.’ Hypocrites! You know how to discern the face of the sky, but you cannot discern the signs of the times." (Matt. 16: 1-3)

Already the dark clouds are evident in our world that portends the coming storm that the above verses testify to. So, how can we escape or find safety in that coming storm? Where can we find shelter? 

1 He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty. 2 I will say of the LORD, He is my refuge and my fortress: my God; in him will I trust . 3 Surely he shall deliver thee from the snare of the fowler, and from the noisome pestilence. 4 He shall cover thee with his feathers, and under his wings shalt thou trust : his truth shall be thy shield and buckler. 5 Thou shalt not be afraid for the terror by night; nor for the arrow that flieth by day; 6 Nor for the pestilence that walketh in darkness; nor for the destruction that wasteth at noonday. 7 A thousand shall fall at thy side, and ten thousand at thy right hand; but it shall not come nigh thee. 8 Only with thine eyes shalt thou behold and see the reward of the wicked. 9 Because thou hast made the LORD, which is my refuge, even the most High, thy habitation; 10 There shall no evil befall thee, neither shall any plague come nigh thy dwelling. (Psalm 91: 1-10)

Yes, a storm of divine judgment is coming. Recall the words of that famous Christian song "Hiding From The Storm Outside" (as sung by Doyle Lawson and his group here). We are living in the days of Elijah.

Once Elijah being tempted by Jehovah’s foes
Fled for refuge to the mountains when a storm arose
There he found a safe pavilion where he could reside
I am hiding (like Elijah) from the storm outside.

Chorus
I am hiding like Elijah in the rifted stone.
And sometimes I feel just like him that I can’t go on.
Then a voice from Heaven whispers in the rock abide.
I am hiding (like Elijah) from the storm outside.

When the clouds of sorrow gather like raging storm
And the way is dark before me, I shall fear no harm
I am trusting in my Savior what so ere betide
I am hiding (like Elijah) from the storm outside

Repeat Chorus

There are many other Christians in this world today
I can feel the spirit moving when I hear them pray
And it gives me consolation when my soul is tried
I am hiding like Elijah from the storm outside.

Repeat Chorus

I am hiding (like Elijah) from the storm outside.

Friend, the only place to hide is in the Lord. He is the rock of ages, the shelter for you from the coming storm.