Saturday, October 28, 2023
Is Your Theological House In Order?
Friday, October 27, 2023
Union With Christ By Faith (ii)
Thursday, October 26, 2023
Union With Christ By Faith
"The majority of printed systems of doctrine, however, contain no chapter or section on Union with Christ, and the majority of Christians much more frequently think of Christ as a Savior outside of them, than as a Savior who dwells within."
That is so true with regard to many theologians. It was not true with Calvin himself, however, as we will show (as I have before). In most lists of theologians, especially of those who are Hyper Calvinistic in their beliefs or inclinations, on the order of things in the ordo salutis, you won't even see "union with Christ" as one in the list. Yet, it ought to have the preeminence. Both representative union and vital union precede every aspect of experimental salvation. So I have "faith, vital union with Christ, justification, regeneration, sanctification, glorification."
Here is what Strong gives us on the subject:
Wednesday, October 25, 2023
Against The Majority Interpretation
Tuesday, October 24, 2023
Regeneration - Devil in the Definition
Hyper Calvinists who say "regeneration precedes faith" oftentimes, in explaining that proposition, will equate it with an act of God that produces faith and repentance, or evangelical conversion. What others call a pre-regeneration act of God, or "prevenient" grace and action, Hypers call "regeneration." This is their error. They have defined "regeneration" as
1) the first act that God does to bring about regeneration, by the cause alone, and
2) excluding any acts done by the one regenerated (or the effects)
By this definition, there are no preliminary acts of God prior to regeneration. However, it is an extreme view. Many of those who so define it believe that there are things that God providentially does in the life of a sinner prior to and for the purpose of his regeneration. Some also allow for some kind of "prevenient grace" (grace that precedes) and "common grace" operating upon the sinner prior to his regeneration. I wrote about this in this posting (here) and I cite from it.
Another error of those who separate regeneration from conversion, faith, and repentance, is to define "regeneration" simply as respects the "cause," whereas biblical "regeneration" includes both causes and effects, and primarily focuses upon the effect. On this point the great head of Princeton Seminary, Archibald Alexander, wrote:
"Evangelical repentance, conversion and regeneration, are substantially the same. They all signify a thorough change of views, affections, purposes and conduct; and this change is every where declared to be essential to salvation."This is in keeping with the view of Edwards.
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.
Alexander also wrote:
"Ezekiel was commanded to prophesy over the dry bones in the valley of vision. Thus ministers are now sent to call upon those who are dead in trespasses and sins, to awake and arise from the dead, but none will obey their voice, unless a divine power accompanies their words...That the word of God is indeed the instrument or means of producing this change is evident from many plain testimonies of Scripture..." See Here
Those Hyper Calvinists who limit their definition of the word "regeneration" to the cause of the change, to the exclusion of the effect, or actual change, greatly err. Alexander is correct to affirm that scripture defines the experience of regeneration in such a way as to include the effect, or to what is actually effected by the cause of regeneration.
The bible no where defines regeneration as excluding evangelical conversion (repentance and faith) but rather sees conversion as the first instance of regeneration, or regeneration begun, as the birth of the Spirit.
We have a blog filled with citations from Calvinists of the past who said, for instance, that the bible does not restrict the definition of regeneration as do the Hypers so as to exclude faith and repentance. I challenge the Hypers to show us the texts where it is clear that regeneration (or its equivalent terms) is shown to be some kind of giving of ability prior to possessing faith and repentance, that is, apart from conversion. I predict that every text brought forward to try to show that regeneration does not include conversion will be shown by the context to speak of conversion.
New life does not begin until Christ, who is "the Life," is received by faith.
The authors of the 1689 London Baptist Confession of Faith say that it is an error to believe that sinners must have ability to believe before they believe. They agreed with John Owen (as previously cited by me here) who wrote:
First, The work of conversion itself, and in especial the act of believing, or faith itself, is expressly said to be of God, to be wrought in us by him, to be given unto us from him. The Scripture says not that God gives us ability or power to believe only,—namely, such a power as we may make use of if we will, or do otherwise; but faith, repentance, and conversion themselves are said to be the work and effect of God. Indeed, there is nothing mentioned in the Scriptures concerning the communicating of power, remote or next unto the mind of man, to enable him to believe antecedently unto actual believing. A “remote power,” if it may be so called, in the capacities of the faculties of the soul, the reason of the mind, and liberty of the will, we have given an account concerning; but for that which some call a “next power,” or an ability to believe in order of nature antecedent unto believing itself, wrought in us by the grace of God, the Scripture is silent.
Those words destroy the idea that "regeneration" is a giving of power to believe, repent, or be converted. It also destroys the idea that regeneration is defined by what God does alone.
Monday, October 23, 2023
WERE YOU EVER INVITED?
Recently, I have engaged in discussions with a "Reformed Baptist" and a Presbyterian. The two are so much alike, one can hardly tell the difference, save for the mode of baptism. Both affirm that regeneration precedes faith, and neither believe it is the duty of a church to "invite" sinners to pray a "sinner's prayer" or beseeched to come forward at the end of the service for what some call the "altar call". They say that is an Arminian practice, which produces no real converts. They detest what they call "decisional regeneration". I have a few questions for those Reformed Calvinists.
1. Where have most of your church members come from? How can you be against a practice, that was used in the conversion of the vast majority of your members? Did you ever "decide" to trust Christ, or did you just wake up one morning trusting Him?
2. Why do you repeat falsehoods, saying Spurgeon never employed such practices?
3. How many have actually been converted to Christ under your ministry?
So I decided to dig a little to see if I could answer these questions. First, The Reformed churches have always been the smallest in number of all other churches. Even at their height, the Presbyterians never were more than 2% of the U.S. population, while the Methodists were three times that number, and the Baptists (of all kinds) were 6 times that number. If it weren't for the Methodists, Baptists, and later the Pentecostal style churches, the Reformed churches would be all but extinct. I hate to put it this way, but the Reformed churches must proselytize in order to fill their ranks, because they do not reproduce! They rarely have conversions, so they expend all their efforts in "evangelizing" the "Arminians".
Second, it is an absolute falsity that Spurgeon did not employ the "altar call" or "invitation". Let's also not forget, that Spurgeon was converted in the Methodist church! Let's look at the methods Spurgeon used.
"C. H. Spurgeon earnestly exhorted those who had accepted Christ as their Saviour to come forward amongst his people and avow their attachment to His person and name. Words of kindly encouragement and of loving persuasiveness, were addressed to the timid and retiring ones, who feared to avow themselves to be the Lord's lest they should fall back into sin and dishonor His name. This was followed by an appeal to those who had confessed the name of Jesus — an appeal of so stirring and searching a nature, that many must have felt constrained to say, 'Lord what wilt thou have me to do?' Prayer for more earnest living, abiding, practical godliness, followed this address." —The address to the "timid ones" would be those who needed to be "persuaded" to trust in Jesus. They had not yet "avowed themselves". They would be the ones saying "I must get my act together and stop sinning before I come to Christ"
The Sword and The Trowel Magazine, 1865, page. 70 .
‘Before you leave this place breathe an earnest prayer to God, saying, ‘God be merciful to me a sinner. Lord, I need to be saved. Save me. I call upon Thy name….Lord, I am guilty, I deserve Thy wrath. Lord, I cannot save myself. Lord, I would have a new heart and a right spirit, but what can I do? Lord, I can do nothing, come and work in me to do of Thy good pleasure.Thou alone hast power, I know To save a wretch like me; To whom, or whither should I go If I should run from Thee? But I now do from my very soul call upon Thy name. Trembling, yet believing, I cast myself wholly upon Thee, O Lord. I trust the blood and righteousness of Thy dear Son…. Lord, save me tonight, for Jesus’ sake.’ (C.H. SPURGEON)
"Pastor Murray Gossett still has two promotional signs in his office from the last time his church participated in a Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA) event. They read: “Texas Panhandle Festival 2000 with Franklin Graham.”
The father of five, who has been the pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Amarillo, Texas, for the past 31 years, cherishes the signs as poignant reminders of when his sons professed their faith in Christ. “All three of my boys, at different times, went forward during the multi-night Franklin Graham Festival,” Gossett recalls fondly. “All three continue to walk with Christ, and they’re doing good things.”
As Gossett prayerfully anticipates the Route 66 God Loves You Tour in Amarillo on Sept. 26, he realizes that a lot has changed since Franklin last preached in the region 21 years ago, and the need for mass evangelism is urgent."The Word Regenerates Prior To Faith In It?
"The great difficulty in this doctrine, however, yet remains; we mean the question whether regeneration precedes faith in the Saviour, or faith in the Saviour precedes regeneration, or whether the two are simultaneous —Two things are clear.
First—That the reception of Christ by the sinner is ascribed to a divine influence. Hence faith is styled "the gift of God" (Ephes. ii. 8), and "a fruit of the Spirit" (Gal. v. 22); "the heart is opened" to receive Christ (Acts xvi. 14); "flesh and blood do not reveal Jesus to the soul, but our Father who is in heaven" (Matt. xvi. 17 ); "God reveals these things unto babes" (Matt. xi. 25); "They are spiritually discerned" (1 Cor. ii. 14). But another truth is as clearly asserted in Holy Scripture, viz. :
Secondly—That until a man has received the Saviour he has no life in him. Thus our Lord testified, "Verily, verily, I say unto you, except ye eat the flesh and drink the blood of the Son of man, ye have no life in you" (John vi. 53). Until a man by faith receives the sacrifice of Christ, he has no life, not even its first elements, in his soul. There are several other passages which are in the same strain. "To as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God" (John i. 12). "Ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus" (Gal. iii. 26). "If a man eat of this bread he shall live for ever" (John vi. 51). "He that eateth Me shall live by Me" (John vi. 57). Thus Christ is emphatically our life, while without faith in Him we have no life.
Here, then, is the difficulty; if men receive a divine influence in order to believe in Christ, are they not made alive to God by this influence, and are they not consequently regenerated before receiving Christ into the soul? But if they are regenerated before believing in the Saviour, and if they were to die in this state, they would assuredly go to heaven (for no regenerate soul can be lost), and would thus obtain eternal life without having believed in Christ, which is contrary to one of the first principles of revelation. Our Lord emphatically says that, except we eat His flesh and drink His blood, we have No life in us.
"In earlier years we did not ourselves perceive the distinction which is pointed by John 6:63 and 1 Peter 1:23: the former referring unto the initial act of the Spirit in "quickening" the spiritually-dead soul, the latter having in view the consequent "birth" of the same. While it is freely allowed that the origin of the "new creature" is shrouded in impenetrable mystery, yet of this we may be certain, that life precedes birth. There is a strict analogy between the natural birth and the spiritual: necessarily so, for God is the Author of them both, and He ordained that the former should adumbrate the latter. Birth is neither the cause nor the beginning of life itself: rather is it the manifestation of a life already existent: there had been a Divine "quickening" before the child could issue from the womb. In like manner, the Holy Spirit "quickens" the soul, or imparts spiritual life to it, before its possessor is "brought forth" (as James 1:18 is rightly rendered in the R.V.) and "born again" by the Word of God (1 Pet. 1:23)."
Sunday, October 22, 2023
Reformed & Hardshell Baptist Premise Refuted
Friday, October 20, 2023
A True Belief, or a Political Tool?
Thomas Sowell is one whose writings I thoroughly enjoy. If I step away from the Bible, theology, or classic literature (my other passions), and decide to learn more about our culture, he’s one of the first ones I consult.
Yet something he stated in his essay The Left and Crime from
his book Dismantling America has once again raised the question within
me (as I’m always wrestling with it) as to whether or not today’s intelligentsia
really believe the mantras they tout, or is it merely propaganda used to advance
an agenda.
He references a speech given by former Oakland, CA Mayor Ron
Dellums (2007-2011) in which the reason for the high crime was cited to be because
“we have closed our eyes to the injustices and inequities, and now we are reaping
the wild winds of that disregard for a whole range of people.”
Sowell then responds:
“It was precisely the rise to power in the 1960s (in the
courts as well as in politics) of those who believed that ‘injustices and
inequities’ were the causes of crime which marked a de-emphasis on law enforcement
and imprisonment – and marked one of the most dramatic increases in crime in
our history.”
In typical Sowell fashion, he then cites evidence to show
that the murder rate had been going down for decades, but that it “suddenly doubled
between 1961 and 1974”.
What arrests my attention, however, is the notion that those
in power do in fact BELIEVE these things.
Do they? That’s what
I wanna know. And if I don’t figure it
out, I may end up pulling my hair out to the point of being mistaken for a mad
scientist.
Now it’s much easier for me to believe that the originators and respective contemporaries of humanistic ideologies (e.g. Marx,
Rousseau, Kant, Hegel, Nietzsche) honestly believed what they proposed (but I even
question this to some extent), but I have a wall in my mind preventing me from
believing that today’s elite believe it.
Is it not rather that they know their ideas are wrong, but are merely
using their rhetoric to influence and further an agenda?
We are often told that ideas have consequences, but does
that mean that the future generations have to actually believe the idea which originated in 19th century Germany for instance? Can it not be that the idea is not believed
at all, but is a convenient wedge to advance a cause? The idea itself may not be personally believed, but still can be used politically, and the consequences still ensue.
Systemic racism. The advantages of ‘diversity’. Climate change. A whole list of talking points fall under this
umbrella of things which are either 1) actually and truly believed, or 2) just politics.
I believe the powerful claims of the Apostle in Romans 1 may
be of help here. We read of men whom God
gives over to reprobate minds, many of which are currently in our midst, in my
opinion. No accurate assessment of the state of our culture can be made without
taking into consideration the fact that debased minds are themselves the result
of God’s judgment upon a society. The
only question is in what direction does that depraved mind venture? Is it debased to the extent that it actually believes
a lie (2 Thes. 2:11), or does it know it’s wrong, but gives the deceitful appearance
of assent in order to further a certain political or societal end?
This is one of the greatest questions I have today as I
survey the current state of our world. It would be nice for me to get a satisfactory
answer.
After all, I'd like to keep my hair.
Thursday, October 19, 2023
Smooth Talking Preachers & Politicians
Wednesday, October 18, 2023
Reformed Baptists Irritate Me
Thursday, October 12, 2023
EVEN SATAN BELIEVES
When I was a child, the church and my family told me Jesus was the Son of God, and I believed them.
They told me He was sinless and I believed them.
They told me He died for my sins, and I believed them.
They told me He rose from the dead and I believed them.
I just took everyone's word for it, but I had never taken God's word for it. Then one day, I decided to believe God instead of everybody else. It was then that I was saved!Tuesday, October 10, 2023
Beliefs about the Afterlife (xxx)
“He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches; To him that overcomes will I give to eat the tree of life, which is in the midst of the paradise of God.” (Rev. 2: 7)
While he was on the cross he said to the penitent believing sinner being crucified to his right "Verily I say unto thee, Today shalt thou be with me in paradise.” (Luke 23: 43)
Another mention of paradise occurs in 2 Corinthians 12:4. Paul writes: “How that he was caught up into paradise, and heard unspeakable words, which it is not lawful for a man to utter.” In verse two he identifies paradise with "the third heaven." This would be "the highest heaven."
Scholars tell us that the English word "paradise" is from the ancient Greek word paradeiso and the Hebrew pardec and literally means a "park" or "garden." It speaks of a pleasure ground or grove. So Eden was called (Gen. 2: 5), being a garden of delight. In the old testament it sometimes referred to an orchard. Says the encyclopedia (See here):
"The word paradise originated from Old Persian pairidaeza, which meant "walled enclosure, pleasure park, garden." Pairidaeza came into Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek retaining its original meanings. It appears three times in the Hebrew scriptures (Neh. 2:8, Eccl. 2:5, Sg. 4:13) and also in later rabbinic literature. In the Septuagint, the Hebrew word for "garden" was usually translated by the Greek paradeisos. In Genesis 2–3 paradeisos refers to the original Garden of Eden (lit., "delight")."
In Ezekiel we have God saying to the king of Tyre (representing Lucifer the fallen angel) "thou hast been in Eden the garden of God." (28: 13) Eden was a paradise on earth, reflecting paradise in heaven. Further, the texts in Revelation speak of at least one tree in the Edenic garden, the "tree of life," one that produced twelve kinds of fruit and whose leaves were for the health of "the nations." (Rev. 22: 2) We also see a beautiful and glorious river running through the midst of the new Eden, in the "new heavens and earth" (21: 1), things which were present in the Eden where Adam was placed. In the midst of this glorious paradise is the city of God, "New Jerusalem," "the holy Jerusalem," with its streets of gold, jasper walls, pearly gates, etc. It is a picture of a "great city" (Greek megalopolis). Other texts also show that paradise is a place of gardens, with trees, plants, and exquisite landscapes.
"And Lot lifted up his eyes, and beheld all the plain of Jordan, that it was well watered every where, before the LORD destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah, even as the garden of the LORD, like the land of Egypt, as thou comest unto Zoar." (Gen. 13: 10; See also Isaiah 51: 3; Eze. 36: 35; Joel 2: 3)
The God of the Bible, as well as the gods of the heathen, are all intimately connected with having lavish gardens (in fact there is a place called "garden of the gods" in Colorado, being a 1300+ acre park). So too did wealthy kings have their gardens. Famous among these are the "hanging gardens of Babylon" and the many gardens of king Solomon. In Song of Solomon there is frequent mention of the several luscious gardens of king Solomon and what joys and pleasures were experienced there. There is mention of a "garden inclosed" and describes it in these words:
"A garden inclosed is my sister, my spouse; a spring shut up, a fountain sealed. Thy plants are an orchard of pomegranates, with pleasant fruits; camphire, with spikenard, Spikenard and saffron; calamus and cinnamon, with all trees of frankincense; myrrh and aloes, with all the chief spices: A fountain of gardens, a well of living waters, and streams from Lebanon. Awake, O north wind; and come, thou south; blow upon my garden, that the spices thereof may flow out. Let my beloved come into his garden, and eat his pleasant fruits." (4: 12-16 kjv)
"The cedars in the garden of God could not hide him: the fir trees were not like his boughs, and the chesnut trees were not like his branches; nor any tree in the garden of God was like unto him in his beauty. I have made him fair by the multitude of his branches: so that all the trees of Eden, that were in the garden of God, envied him." (Eze. 31: 8-9)
Thus, paradise, or heaven, or the new heavens and earth, has all manner of trees and vegetation. It is a place to enjoy, to eat and drink, to fellowship with others, to stroll, to admire all the sights, smells, tastes, etc.
The phrase “under their vine and fig tree” is found three times in Scripture: Micah 4:4, 1 Kings 4:25, and Zechariah 3:10.
"But they shall sit every man under his vine and under his fig tree; And none shall make them afraid: For the mouth of the Lord of hosts hath spoken it." (Mic. 4: 4)
The words "dwell safely" are added in I Kings 4: 25. I take that to mean that there will be both common and private areas for all the inhabitants of the new heavens and earth. Each of the redeemed of mankind will have an apartment in the New Jerusalem mega complex and each will no doubt have his or her own private estates.
Everlasting Pleasures