A Critique of Hyper-Calvinism
A heresy that continues to plague
today's church, especially in the realm, of Dutch Calvinism.
All
house and no doors: A Brief Critique of
the False Teachings of Hyper-Calvinism
by Dr. C. Matthew McMahon
This
article is directed towards those who may ask, “Doesn’t
Hyper-Calvinism teach…?” They are those who may be unsure what the doctrine entails,
and why men are called Hyper-Calvinists.
It is not intended to be an exegetically extensive rebuttal of
Hyper-Calvinistic thought. It
is a simple introduction to understanding why Hyper-Calvinism exists,
and why it is biblically inconsistent with the Scriptures.
It may be likened to a house that does not have any doors.
As the saying goes, “Hyper-Calvinism is a house with no doors,
while Arminianism is all doors but no house.”
This will become more apparent below.
Introduction
When
people undergo a brush with death they become far more paranoid of the
regular actions during their daily routines.
For instance, a man or woman who may have been involved in a car
accident, though they may be classified as a safe driver, will be far
more cautious on the road subsequent to the accident.
The trauma enacted upon the faculties of their mind from the
wreck stimulates their awareness at turns, stops, accelerations, highway
lane changes, and the like. Brushes
with death are not exclusive to car accidents.
This may also be true when theological shifts occur in one’s
comprehensive Biblical understanding of the Gospel.
This can be classified as a brush with death, especially if one
plays with the fire of a false Gospel.
When this happens, the Christian becomes much more astute to the
dangers of false theological positions.
Hyper-Calvinism
propagates a false Gospel. Though
my encounter with this monster has spawned a 330 page book explaining
why divine sovereignty and human responsibility are good bedfellows in a
somewhat unique perspective, I thought it may be beneficial to set forth
a very brief critique of the Hyper-Calvinistic system on this site in a
paper of this sort. I sit
in good company with those who have critiqued the doctrine both
knowingly and unknowingly. The
Puritans were never Hyper-Calvinists, nor did they have Hyper-Calvinist
tendencies. Owen, Watson,
Perkins, Love, Turretin, Manton, Goodwin, and the rest, never attended
the Hyper-Calvinist dinner table, much less became bedfellows.
Actually, the Puritans unknowingly refuted the practice of
Hyper-Calvinism quite well through their voluminous works.
Little did they know its influence would become greater just a
hundred or so years after their time in history.
Historically
Speaking
Hyper-Calvinism
is not a movement which has withstood the test of time.
It is like Dispensationalism in that it is a fairly new invention
in the scheme of Church History. Hyper-Calvinism
formally took shape in 1707 at the time of John Hussey and his disciple,
John Skepp. Skepp in turn
prompted the young, and soon to be well-known Dr. John Gill, down a road
that would spawn one of Hyper-Calvinism’s “greater” works, The
Cause of God and Truth. Though
Hyper-Calvinism had appeared in the writing of Hussey and the preaching
of Skepp, Gill’s work far surpassed them both in notoriety and volume. Gill’s Hyper-Calvinist work focused on dismantling the
heresy of Arminianism, the opposite extreme on the theological spectrum.
However, in doing so, Gill’s result was an unbridled
Hyper-Calvinism. (For a more in depth look at the history of these men
and the debate surrounding Charles Spurgeon in later years see Iain
Murray’s book Spurgeon and Hyper-Calvinism: the Battle for Gospel
Preaching.) Later on,
William Huntington kept this position alive through his influence and
writing. But nowhere do we find scores of theologically astute men
contending for this doctrine at any one time, or ever after, this time.
The Protestant Reformed Church has recently taken these reigns in
current years. They are the
only denomination to still rigorously fight for Hyper-Calvinistic
theology without calling it Hyper-Calvinism.
They would deem it the Gospel.
Prof. David Engelsma has written a defense of this in a book
called Hyper-Calvinism and the Call of the Gospel.
In it he hoped to clear the denomination of the heresy of
Hyper-Calvinism, but in my opinion, he did not accomplish that task.
A critique of that book can be found
at
this link.
The
Hyper-Calvinist cannot claim one Puritan to their side, nor any weighty
theologians through the last 2000 years of church history.
They cannot opt for full support from Augustine, Aquinas, Calvin,
Luther, Turretin, the English or American Puritans, the Princeton
theologians, or any reputable preacher or theologian to date, though
they appeal to them. Hyper-Calvinists
claim certain theological aspects of these theologians and
preachers, but not the system of doctrine which they would fully
support. In other words, to
gain any help from these by-gone saints, they would have to quote them out
of context, which is often the case.
For instance, Francis Turretin will be quoted on his work
concerning the call of the reprobate and the Hyper-Calvinist will shout
“Amen!” However, they
will never be consistent with Turretin’s thought and quote his section
on the love of God for all men.
Turretin was unswerving with himself on these points.
Such is the same undertaking with Augustine, Calvin, Rutherford,
Edwards, and others. Hyper-Calvinists
pick and choose what they would like them to say, but not what they really
say in their context. Just
about any web-based article you can find on the internet by
Hyper-Calvinists engage in this type of bibliographic blunder.
The
Teachings of Hyper-Calvinism
What
does Hyper-Calvinism teach? Some
papers on critiquing Hyper-Calvinism have attempted to sum up this
theological monstrosity in 5 easy steps, or 3 concise points.
The animal will simply not be caged in this manner.
There are a variety of ideas and points which Hyper-Calvinism
purports, borrows, twists and skews out of orthodox doctrine. I have attempted to be orderly for the reader by numbering my
points, but the avenues which could be taken in any one of the following
positions is readily apparent. Thus,
I plead forgiveness for my brevity here.
Initially,
it is vital to remember that the Hyper-Calvinist mind is in a conundrum. They simply do not understand how to reconcile the
Sovereignty of God and the human responsibility of man.
That is why Hyper-Calvinism exists.
(In essence, that is why Arminianism exists as well!)
They desire to tread where theological license has not officiated
them to travel. I suppose,
then, we could say with the proverb, “Curiosity killed the cat.”
For Hyper-Calvinism, unwarranted curiosity in the decrees and
counsel of God has caused them to enter a realm where God has not
revealed Himself.
Hyper-Calvinism
so desires to rescue God from man’s “free” actions (as if God
needed rescuing) that at the expense of man’s duty, they reside
almost exclusivistically in the house of God’s sovereignty.
The difficultly in rescuing these two true theological points,
though, is not unique to Hyper-Calvinism alone, but to all theological
distinctions which attempt to derive answers from the Bible.
The problem arises when one is denied at the expense of the
other. Arminianism denies
the Biblical picture of God’s complete sovereignty and stresses the
“free-will” of man. Hyper-Calvinism
stresses the complete sovereignty of God at the expense of the
“free-will” man. Thus,
instead of remedying the problem, they deny the doctrine instead.
Though the Bible is emphatic on the responsibility of men in
their duty towards God, Hyper-Calvinism would deny this out rightly.
1.
The Problem of a Consistent Hermeneutic
Hyper-Calvinism interprets the
Bible through a grid of Supralapsarianism to a fault.
They deny passages, or rarely if ever, speak about passages which
cause problems for their theological grid to handle.
In its essentials, Supralapsarianism teaches that God’s order
of decrees do not fall in line with the Biblical record.
His decrees, from the foundation of world, are to damn some men
and save others by His good pleasure alone.
Calvinism believes this, but the “this” is qualified.
Hyper-Calvinism believes this without a qualification.
The qualification is this – men cannot be saved or damned
without being fallen. The
Hyper-Calvinist teaches that God saves and damns as a result of God’s
pleasure, without consideration of man’s fallen state.
This is to hold creatures responsible for sin they have not
committed, or have not had imputed to them.
Why would this be so? For
a number of reasons: 1) Man cannot be the object of predestination
without first being a real entity.
A non-entity cannot be an object.
Supralapsarianism considers man without man being a man, much
less a fallen man. 2) Both
predestination and reprobation consider man as fallen, not man as a
non-entity. Mercy and
justice are integral parts of predestination and reprobation. To consider men predestinate, those who are true entities,
without considering the fall imputed to them, would be to misuse the
ideas of justice and mercy. Neither
would be necessary, thus, predestination would not really be a
predestination from anything to anything.
3) Francis Turretin makes the point that all men would have been
considered predestinate if this was the case since all men were
non-entities and there would have been no possible distinguishing unless
they had being. (See Institutes of Elenctic Theology, Volume 1,
Pages 347ff) No one would
have any rational basis to exclude one or the other.
4) Predestination is always linked with affects of the fall –
such as calling, regeneration, and the like.
5) God cannot be said to reprobate men unless they had a reason
to be reprobatable. 6)
God cannot rightly be said to hate those who are not hatable, or have
some cause of hatred. 7)
Sin is not the result of damnation, but damnation is a result of sin.
God cannot be good, nor wise, to damn men for no reason.
Without the fall He is doing just that.
Hyper-Calvinism
Objects: The Scriptures say that men are chosen and damned “before
the foundation of the world…” (Ephesians 1:4).
But this text is taken out of the Biblical context of other
passages such as 1 Peter 1:18-20 that says Jesus was the Lamb slain before
the foundation of the world. How
could Jesus be the Lamb slain before the foundation of the world by
God’s good pleasure alone? His
cross would be an act to save men with no sin if sin was not taken into
account. Furthermore, His
death would have been in vain since it would not have been for the sin
of anyone, and God would have killed His only Son, before the foundation
of the world, for no reason but His good pleasure.
A
Neglected Hermeneutic: God
has revealed Himself and His works to us into two distinct senses
through the Bible. One
sense shows us God from a perspective of His decrees.
This is where the Hyper-Calvinist desires to live at the expense
of the other sense. The
other is the perspective of God’s actions and desires in the realm
man’s activity. To deny
one at the expense of the other is to fall into the extremes of either
Hyper-Calvinism or Arminianism. As
Spurgeon said, “No one will ever get a right view of the gospel until
he knows how to look at the two lines [senses] at once.”
A truism.
2.
The Noetic Influence of Sin
For
the Hyper-Calvinist, at the will and disposition of fallen men is a
point of contention – the Noetic influences of man’s fallenness.
Genuine Hyper-Calvinism teaches that man is utterly
depraved in his mind. The
Fall has left man so ruined that his mind is not just totally depraved,
but utterly bankrupt. He
cannot think about God, nor desires to do so.
He cannot understand God, nor desires to do so, and so on.
The Hyper-Calvinist quotes Romans 3:10 (all are worthless) at the
expense of Romans 1:18ff (men hate God – and they must know Him to
hate Him). The
Hyper-Calvinist denies that men have any functioning thoughts concerning
God. Here, the
Hyper-Calvinist would also vehemently fight against the Puritan doctrine
of seeking. Men like
John Owen and Jonathan Edwards would have appealed to men’s minds as a
rational basis towards conversion.
The Hyper-Calvinist would never do this.
They would say that men are not able to understand God in their
fallenness at all. Preaching
to them, then, would be in vain. They
would first need to be saved before they could ever be told anything
about salvation.
A
Wrong View of the Noetic Influence: Since the Noetic influences of
sin are so complete in the mind of men, Hyper-Calvinism says that
preaching must come after regeneration, not before.
Thus, Hyper-Calvinism teaches that men do not come to Christ
because he is lost, but because He is saved.
This is not the Gospel at all.
If this was the case the Hyper-Calvinist is left with the age old
question, “which came first the chicken or the egg?”
If preaching by the word is the instrumental cause of faith, how
could a noetically dead man ever come to faith?
God always uses means to accomplish His ends.
He does not just “zap” people.
This idea the Hyper-Calvinist seems to forget.
Matthew 11:28-30ff, “Come unto me, all ye that labour
and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly
in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.
For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”
Those who are weary and heavy laden are not saved, but know the
burden of their sin. They
will find rest with Christ, but they do not already have rest with
Christ before they come to Christ.
The Gospel is intended for sinners who are in need of the
Gospel, not those who already have it.
Hyper-Calvinism
Objects: The Hyper-Calvinist says that preaching to lost men is a
denial of Total Depravity and the Sovereignty of God.
But here the Hyper-Calvinist has forgotten that the Sovereign God
of the universe always uses means to accomplish His ends.
The instrument of regeneration is the hearing of the Word.
The external call of the Gospel is the instrument that the actual
cause, the Holy Spirit, will use to call men to repentance.
The Holy Spirit then applies the blood of Christ (the efficient
cause) to the sinner.
Men
understand what repentance is before they are converted, not after.
(Acts 2:37) The Holy
Spirit enables them (which is the internal call) and then they repent.
But they would not know what to do at all if the Noetic
influences of sin are truly as the Hyper-Calvinist claims.
What would be happening is that a dead corpse would stand there,
listening to something he does not understand at all, then suddenly is
changed, and in an instant fully comprehends the doctrine of repentance
in order to repent. This is
nonsense. Here we see the
Hyper-Calvinist treating men as if they were dead static beings.
But the Gospel never treats them in this fashion.
The Gospel always appeals to man’s responsibility.
Isaiah 45:22 says, “Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends
of the earth: for I am God, and there is none else.”
Why would he beckon them to look, unless He desired they look?
3.
The Demand for Faith
This, then, leads us into the
next problem of Hyper-Calvinism which is their denial that man is
responsible to have faith as their duty before they are converted.
Hyper-Calvinism neglects human responsibility in this manner
because it is unsure how to explain the “apparent contradiction”
between the sovereignty of God and human responsibility.
To deny Biblical texts which teach human responsibility is not
the answer to this.
The Bible continually
demonstrates a two fold appeal to the call of the Gospel – first
doctrine is presented, then the offer of the Gospel or salvation is
tendered based on the doctrine given.
Here are a few examples of this:
1) Doctrine: John 11:27, "All things are delivered unto me
of my Father: and no man knoweth the Son, but the Father; neither
knoweth any man the Father, save the Son, and he to whomsoever
the Son will reveal him.
Offer: John
11:28
"Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I
will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am
meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my
yoke is easy, and my burden is light."
2) Doctrine: Acts 17:22-23, "Ye men of Athens, I
perceive that in all things ye are too superstitious. For as I passed
by, and beheld your devotions, I found an altar with this inscription,
TO THE UNKNOWN GOD. Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, him
declare I unto you."
Offer: v. 27, "That they should seek the Lord,
if haply they might feel after him, and find him, though he be not far
from every one of us."
3) Doctrine: Acts 2:30 through v. 36, "...Therefore let
all the house of Israel know assuredly, that God hath made that same
Jesus, whom ye have crucified, both Lord and Christ."
effect: v. 37, "Now when they heard this, they were pricked
in their heart, and said unto Peter and to the rest of the
apostles, Men and brethren, what shall we do?
Offer: v. 38-39, "Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be
baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the
remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy
Ghost. For the promise is unto you, and to
your children, and to all that are afar off, even as
many as the Lord our God shall call."
4) Doctrine: Acts 26:26, "For the king knoweth of these
things, before whom also I speak freely: for I am persuaded that none of
these things are hidden from him; for this thing was not done in a
corner.
Offer: Acts 26:27, "King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets?
I know that thou believest.
Then Agrippa said unto Paul, Almost thou persuadest me to
be a Christian."
5) Doctrine: Rev. 22:16, "I Jesus have sent mine angel to
testify unto you these things in the churches. I am the root and the
offspring of David, and the bright and morning star."
Offer: v. 27, "And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And
let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is
athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life
freely."
These
passages show that man has a responsibility to God even before he is
converted. If this is not
the case, then the law written on their hearts, the Gentiles being a law
to themselves, and other like passages have no meaning whatsoever.
To the Hyper-Calvinist, men are only wicked, dead corpses which
cannot think about, nor give heed to the revelation of God, which is an
unexegetical position to hold in light of special revelation.
The Hyper-Calvinist Objects: Hyper-Calvinism says this is
logically inconsistent. How
can fallen men be called to exercise faith without regeneration?
This would seem as though God desires they repent while at the
same time He does not give them the ability to repent.
The Hyper-Calvinist thinks this is a contradiction, but it is
not. What does the
Hyper-Calvinist do when the Biblical passages are quoted?
They enter into a “so-called” logical debate at the expense
of being fair to the Bible’s statements about duty-faith.
In essence, they simply deny it.
What does the Bible state? What do the offers listed above show
us about the call of God to the unsaved, whoever they may be.
We are not squabbling over covenant and non-covenant people, but
saved and lost people.
A
Problem of Consistency: Hyper-Calvinism cannot escape the problem of sanctification
with the same logic they attempt to use for the lost and the Gospel.
Men ought not to try and sanctify themselves, since this is the
Spirit’s operation – nor should they be told to do so.
If the Spirit is the one who sanctifies, then men are not
responsible for sanctification. Though they know they should continue to mortify the deeds,
they have no power to do so since it is God’s work alone. Phil 2:13, “For it is God which worketh in you both to will
and to do of his good pleasure.”
This is the exact same idea that the Hyper-Calvinist is saying
about duty-faith. Men live
in the realm of men, not in the realm of God’s decretive counsel. They live under the sense of the Bible that expostulates a
preceptive duty for all men everywhere.
Even those who are converted are supposed to make their calling
and election sure – but this is God’s work!
Christians are to mortify the deeds of the flesh by the Spirit,
but sanctification is the Spirit’s work.
Both lines of thought are true.
How they interact with one another is a question for debate all
its own. But that should
not stop Christians from trying to mortify sin, or lost men to come to
repentance.
A
problem with Antinomianism: Not
only does the Hyper-Calvinist create problems with Christian
sanctification, but by their denial of duty-faith, they also make men
captives of Antinomianism. If
the men of the world, all men for all time, are not under the objective
power of the Law, then they have become a lost Antinomian.
The Hyper-Calvinist gives them
the privilege to disregard the law since they cannot please God.
How could the law judge them if they are not bound to obey it? The Hyper-Calvinist says, “They cannot obey it, and
are not responsible to it.” This
is a fallacy. They are
still bound to obey it, and are judged for not obeying it, otherwise
God’s judgment for their disobedience would be without justification.
(cf. Romans 2:5)
4.
The Universal Call of the Gospel, or Free Offer
The
Gospel is universal in invitations.
It is a gracious command, a tendering of the call, and an
invitation to come to Christ. The
Gospel ought to involve a universal plea to all men everywhere to repent
and come to faith; since the Gospel is universal.
Hyper-Calvinism denies this claim altogether.
Hyper-Calvinism teaches that the Gospel call is never directed to
the reprobate, but only those who are converted, or have been born again
by the Spirit. Why?
Only converted men can heed the Gospel call to come.
They would even say that dead, unconverted sinners know the
Gospel is not for them, and would be offended to hear that the directive
to be saved is given to them. Preaching
is then reserved for the saved and regenerate.
Scriptures
abound concerning God’s offer of salvation to those who are dead in
sin. There are countless offers of the Gospel, and of salvation
through the entire Biblical record.
Any time there is preaching, true preaching, this is always the
case: Isa 45:22, "Look
unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth: for I am God, and
there is none else." Isa. 55:1-2, "Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and
he that hath no money; come ye, buy, and eat; yea, come, buy wine and
milk without money and without price. 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 65:2ff, "I
have spread out my hands all the day unto a rebellious people,
which walketh in a way that was not good, after their own
thoughts; A people that provoketh me to anger continually to my face;
that sacrificeth in gardens, and burneth incense upon altars of brick;
Which remain among the graves, and lodge in the monuments, which eat
swine's flesh, and broth of abominable things is in their
vessels" John 7:37,
"In the last day, that great day of the feast, Jesus stood
and cried, saying, If any man thirst, let him come unto me, and drink."
Luke 13:34, "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, which killest the prophets,
and stonest them that are sent unto thee; how often would I have gathered thy children
together, as a hen doth gather her brood under her
wings, and ye would not!"
Isa 55:3, "Incline
your ear, and come unto me: hear, and your soul shall
live; and I will make an everlasting covenant with you, even the
sure mercies of David." John
6:57, "Then said Jesus unto the twelve, Will ye also go away?"
Psalm 45:10-11, "Hearken,
O daughter, and consider, and incline thine ear; forget
also thine own people, and thy father's house; So shall the king greatly
desire thy beauty: for he is thy Lord; and worship thou
him." John 5:6,
"When Jesus saw him lie, and knew that he had been now a long time in
that case, he saith unto him, Wilt
thou be made whole?"
If these are not offers, then they are meaningless Biblical
passages. Any asking,
prompting, prodding or examination on men before regeneration is a fool
hearty exercise if men must be regenerate to hear and be responsible to
obey the command to believe.
A
problem with Subjectivity: The Gospel is not free for the
Hyper-Calvinist. Actually, there is a prerequisite which must be had before
one can heed the Gospel call. Hyper-Calvinism
is a closet “works plus grace” salvation.
They would like us to believe they are cavaliers for sovereign
grace. But this is not
true. They do not only
believe in sovereign regeneration, but a subjective knowledge of
such regeneration. The
subjective experience becomes a prerequisite for trusting in the
promises of the Gospel. The
untainted Sovereign Grace of God is mixed with a prerequisite work of
“feeling” before salvation through Gospel preaching may be obtained
or even allowed. This is a
works plus grace salvation. That
which the Hyper-Calvinist desired to guard against, he has been
propagating all along! But
believing in limiting the Gospel to those with certain subjective
experiences is to confuse the Gospel.
The inconsistency is readily apparent when we ask, “How does
the unconverted man know how to do this?
How does a lost man examine himself in this light?”
Then comes the problem that the Hyper-Calvinist has in trying to
explain this to a man. Possibly
the discussion may go like this:
Hyper-Calvinist:
Did the message affect you in any way
this
morning?
Man:
I am not sure. Should it
have?
HC:
Only if you are a Christian.
Man:
How do I know if I am a Christian?
HC:
Do you believe you are converted?
Man:
I do not know.
HC:
Well, do you believe you are regenerate?
Man:
What is regeneration?
HC: Regeneration is the working of the Spirit in your
heart. Do you think the Spirit has worked in your heart?
Man:
Maybe. How can I tell?
HC:
You really cannot tell unless He has, and, as a matter of fact, I cannot tell if he has in
you unless you can tell me he
has.
Man:
I do not know if He has. I
am unsure.
HC:
Then I suppose our conversation is at an end.
John Owen speaks to this well when he says, “1.
Regeneration doth not in order of time
precede the soul's interest in
the forgiveness that is with God, or its being made partaker of the
pardon of sin. I say no
more but that it doth not precede it in order of time, not determining
which hath precedence in order of nature.
That, I confess, which the method of the gospel leads unto is,
that absolution, acquitment, or the pardon of sin, is the foundation of
the communication of all saving grace unto the soul, and so precedeth
all grace in the sinner whatever. But
because this absolution or pardon of sin is to be received by faith,
whereby the soul is really made partaker of it and all the benefits
belonging thereunto, and that faith is the radical grace which we
receive in our regeneration, for it is by faith that our hearts
are purified, as an instrument in the hand of the great purifier, the
Spirit of God, I place these two together, and shall not dispute as to
their priority in nature; but in time the one doth not precede the
other. 2. It is hence
evident, that an assurance of
being regenerate is no way
previously necessary unto the believing of an interest in forgiveness;
so that although a man have not the former, it is, or may be, his
duty to endeavor the latter. When
convinced persons cried out, “What shall we do to be saved?” the
answer was, “Believe, and ye shall be so.”
“Believe in Christ, and in the remission of sin by his
blood,” is the first thing that convinced sinners are called unto.
They are not directed first to secure their souls that they are
born again, and then afterward to believe; but they are first to believe
that the remission of sin is tendered unto them in the blood of Christ,
and that “by him they may be justified from all things from which they
could not be justified by the law.” Nor upon this proposition is it
the duty of men to question whether they have faith or no, but actually
to believe. And faith in
its operation will evidence itself See Acts xiii. 38, 39.
Suppose, then, that you do not know that you are regenerate, that
you are born of God,-that you have no prevailing, refreshing, constant
evidence or persuasion thereof,-should this hinder you? Should this
discourage you from believing forgiveness, from closing with the
promises, and thereby obtaining in yourselves an interest in that
forgiveness that is with God? Not
at all; nay, this ought exceedingly to excite and stir you up unto your
duty herein.” (Owen, Works,
Volume 6, pages 597-598.)
The
Problem of a Universal Attestation: Hyper-Calvinism could never be a
universal attestation to the truth – here it is exclusivistic to a
fault. Calvinism is
exclusive, and the Gospel is exclusive, but never to a fault or
error. The Hyper-Calvinist
cannot preach the Gospel to every creature as directed by Christ
in Matthew 28. What does
this mean? It is not just a
speaking or dictating of facts to a crowd, it is summoning the crowd in
preaching. It could be
argued that the Hyper-Calvinist does not really know what Gospel
Preaching really entails. This
is also a dilemma. But if
Hyper-Calvinism is simply dictating facts, and then does so in a wrong
order speaking about reprobation to the unconverted without giving the
Gospel, then this could not be called true preaching, or a right
representation of the Gospel itself.
The thief on the cross did not get a lecture on predestination
and God’s utter hatred of the reprobate while he was hanging on the
cross next to Christ. He
heard the same words of forgiveness, forsakenness, agony and suffering
of Christ that we read in the Gospels.
There is nothing about predestination, election, reprobation,
God’s eternal Decrees, or the like while Christ is hanging on the
cross. But the thief
believed on Him because of who Jesus was, not because he received
a lecture on the 5 points of Calvinism.
The problem of preaching indiscriminately to all men and offering
the Gospel to every creature stems from a theological fear.
Hyper-Calvinism fears that men may taint the sovereignty of God
theologically by offering the Gospel to men who must give an effort of
faith. This is a false
assertion since the means of God’s salvation is not considered into
the equation. It is not
that men will taint the sovereignty of God, how could they?
Rather, it is the proper relationship between what god desires
and what he commands that becomes the theological conundrum. The
Hyper-Calvinist believes God cannot desire what He does not decree. This is wrong. God
desires that we do not sin, but we do.
We must, then make a distinction between the senses of the Bible
we are speaking about. Are
we speaking decretively, or preceptively?
Are we speaking by God’s counsel? Or by His revealed will to
us? They are mutually
exclusive. The free offer
does not operate in the realm of the decree, but in the realm of precept. This is another aspect in which the Hyper-Calvinist has made
his error.
Gospel
Preaching through the Centuries: The
herald of God’s word is not a lecturer but a herald.
The Greek word is reserved for those heralding the universal
proclamation of the word (karussow) as in Romans 10:14.
The herald is not discriminate in that sense; he is open about
his preaching. He is not
someone who lists facts, but takes the Scriptures and applies them to
men to “show men their sin.” The
text in Job proves this out well: Job 33:23-24, “If there be a
messenger with him, an interpreter [a minister], one among a
thousand, to shew unto man his uprightness: Then he is gracious unto
him, and saith, Deliver him from going down to the pit: I have found a
ransom.” (cf. 2 Cor.
5:18) Practically,
the ministry of reconciliation does not occur prior to the conversion of
the sinner. It happens
after. If this were not the
case, showing men their sin would be foolish – they would already
know. The
Hyper-Calvinist says preaching does not demonstrate indiscriminate love,
it demonstrates specific fact. But
this is the difference between being an advocate and a witness.
Heralds are witnesses to the truth, not advocates of it.
The
Hyper-Calvinist is acting in a disassociated manner from those he is
preaching to. Even in the
Old Testament the prophet Jeremiah is known as the weeping prophet.
Paul in the New Testament was known to weep over men.
George Whitefield would never preach in the fields to the miners
without weeping at one point or another.
I am not saying that emotionalism should be the key to draw men,
but the disposition of the preacher over the souls of men is of vital
importance in preaching. Can
the Hyper-Calvinist weep? Why
would the Hyper-Calvinist weep?
He would not need to if he believed his own theology.
His theology would not allow Him to do so.
He is simply a lecturer. That
is why Jeremiah, Paul and George Whitefield could never have been a
Hyper-Calvinists! Here, the
Hyper-Calvinist is set apart from those who are heralds, or the karux,
of the Word.
5.
The Love of God to the Reprobate and the Hatred of God to the Elect –
huh? (Yes, I understand
what I wrote in this heading)
No
doubt, Hyper-Calvinists believe that God only hates the reprobate, and
only loves the elect, in any sense whatsoever.
Hyper-Calvinism completely denies that God loves men generally in
any way and completely denies that God hates the elect in any way.
It may seem at the outset that a general love to all men is not
as radical as my inference that God hates the elect in some way. But I will qualify this.
First,
God does have a general love for all men.
This is usually deemed “common grace” but I am more
comfortable with the precise term, God’s indiscriminate providence.
God demonstrates intended goodness to the wicked by lavishing
upon them worldly goods. Cars,
apples, houses, careers, families, etc,
all given to them by God. God’s
intention in this is to display His glory, and these objects are a means
whereby God will draw men unto Himself.
If the wicked use them as a means to procure wrath, then they are
always living to fill up the measure of their sin.
But that does not negate the intended purpose of those gifts.
They display the goodness and righteousness of God to those
people. To deny this is to deny the blatant texts (Luke 2:8-14; John
3:17; Ezek. 33:7-11; Psalm 145; Isa. 62:1-3)
Second,
God does hate the wicked as rebellious sinners.
The Bible also teaches this as in Psalm 5:1, “Thou hatest all
workers of iniquity.” And
also Romans 9:13, “Jacob I loved, Esau I hated.”
This is not a disputed fact.
It is a denial of His general love for all men that is in
question. But I do not sit
in small company with this. Calvin states, “Proofs
of the love of God towards the whole human race exist innumerable,
all which demonstrate the ingratitude of those who perish or come to
perdition.” (John Calvin, Calvin’s
Calvinism, A Treatise on the Eternal Predestination of God,
translated by Henry Cole, Reformed Free Publishing Association,
Grandville, MI: 1950. Page 268.) Turretin
distinguishes them precisely. He
says, “Although the goodness of God extends itself to all creatures,
yet not equally, but exhibits the greatest diversity in the
communication of good. Hence,
one is general (by which he follows all creatures, Psalm 36:6-7); and
other special (which he has respect to men, Acts 14:17) and another most
special (relating to the elect and referred to in psalm 73:1, “God is
good to Israel.”)…From goodness flows love by which he communicates
Himself to the creature and, as it were, wills to unite himself with and
do good to it, but in diverse ways and degrees according to the
diversity of the objects. Hence
usually is made a threefold distinction in the divine love: the first,
that which follows all creatures, called “love of the creature” (philoktisia);
the second, that by which He embraces men called “love of man” (philoanthropia);
third, which is specially exercised towards the elect called “love of
the elect” (eklectophilia).”
(Francis Turretin, Institutes of Elenctic Theology, Volume 1, Presbyterian and Reformed
Publishing Company, Phillipsburg, NJ: 1992. Page 241)
John Owen states, “That God is good to all men, and bountiful,
being a wise, powerful, liberal provider for the works of his hands, and
in innumerable dispensations and various communications of his goodness
to them, and may in that regard be said to have a universal love for
them all is granted…” I
also quote him as follows, “Love to all mankind in general we
acknowledge to be required of us, and we are debtors in the fruits of it
to the whole creation of God: for he hath not only implanted the
principles of it in nature whereof we are in common partakers with the
whole race and kind, whereunto all hatred and its effects were
originally foreign, and introduced by the devil, nor only given us his
command for it, enlarging on its grounds and reasons in the gospel; but
in his design of recovering us out of our lapsed condition unto a
conformity with himself, proposeth in a special manner the example of
his own love and goodness, which are extended unto all, for our
imitation, Matthew 5:44-45.” (John Owen, Works,
Volume 15, Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA: 1966. Page 70, and Works,
Volume 12, Banner of Truth, Carlisle, PA: 1966. Page 552.)
God
also hates the elect in Adam.
Ephesians 2:1-3, “And you hath he quickened, who were
dead in trespasses and sins; Wherein in time past ye walked according to
the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the
air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience: Among
whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our
flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind; and were
by nature the children of wrath, even as others.” God’s immutability teaches us that He does not change (Mal.
3:6; James 1:17). If He
hates or loves it is an eternal hatred or love for sin or good work in
Christ. He continually, in
Adam, hates our rebellion. Yet,
He eternally loves us in Jesus Christ.
That is why we are not consumed as Jacob’s sons.
Hyper-Calvinism teaches that the elect are not hated in Adam, but
only loved in Christ. I
suppose, then, Paul was wrong in saying we were children of wrath like
the others. Is wrath a
form of love? I think not;
unless the Hyper-Calvinist would like to admit that God loves all!
No, wrath, like the others, is real wrath intended for damnation.
If it were not for Christ we would not escape this.
The reprobate are only hated in Adam, though generally loved by
God seen in His indiscriminate love for all men and the whole world as
he upholds it. The elect are exceedingly grateful (though not as they should
be) for the deliverance they have in Christ.
If God did not, or does not hate their sin, then why are they
grateful, and what did Christ die on the cross for?
The
Hyper-Calvinist Objects: God
cannot love outside of Christ. This
is probably the best defense that the Hyper-Calvinist offers on this
point, except he does not take into consideration that there may be degrees
of love. Humanly
speaking, I love my wife different than I love my enemies.
There are degrees there. God
loves His elect saints, different than he generally loves all men. Does the Bible prove this out?
The Hyper-Calvinist says no.
Orthodox Christianity disagrees with him. Turretin stated earlier the various types of love which
follow, creation, men, and the elect.
(Augustine, Calvin, Edwards, Owen and the like agree.)
These Biblical degrees of self-revelation should be enough to
silence the gainsayer. But
they are often overlooked. Love
by God can be of a chosen nation (which contained reprobates such as
Achan) Deut. 7:7; the patriarchs, Deut. 10:19; an individual as in Psalm
91:14; His elect, Jeremiah 31:3, Romans 9:13; God then rejects Israel
and does not love them anymore – Hosea 9:15.
Is this electing love or not?
Psalm 145:9 even shows God’s mercy to all – “The LORD is
good to all: and his tender mercies are over all his
works.” Here we see
different types of love, some electing, and some not.
6.
The Extent of the Atonement
The
last numbered point I would like to make is concerning the knowledge a
man possesses concerning the atonement of Christ.
Hyper-Calvinism thinks that since Christ did not die for all,
then those for whom He did not die have no right in believing in Christ.
They have no duty to believe in Him.
To be called to trust in Christ in this way is to coax men to
believe a lie. What the
Hyper-Calvinist is really saying is this: Hyper-Calvinism believes
that knowledge of the extent of the atonement is a prerequisite for
faith in the work of Christ. Again,
the sinner must obtain and understand his subjective experience of the
work of Christ for him personally.
If he does not have this, then he is commanded to believe
something that may not be true at all.
The Hyper-Calvinist cannot stomach this.
The
Problem of Preaching Limited Atonement:
Limited atonement is true.
It should be preached. Wild
horses could not drag that beautiful theological point from my soul.
But the problem lies here: through the entirety of the Bible the
concern for sinners to repent and be baptized, or to come and give up
their burdens or to believe in Christ, is the substance of Gospel
preaching. The actual
instances of preaching which includes the doctrine of Limited Atonement formally
is no majority case. It is
a further theological extension in understanding the gospel, but not
necessary in preaching the gospel each time the Gospel is given.
No one can say everything about the Gospel every time the gospel
is given. In certain
discourses of Christ we find His debates with the Pharisees a help in
understanding the sheep/Shepherd paradigm.
But never do we find Jesus preaching on the hillside His limited
atonement for some men in any explicit manner.
He never says, “I only died for the elect.” Was it not important to Him?
Of course it was! Is
it a true theological doctrine? Absolutely!
Is it the heart and substance of why men are saved?
No doubt whatsoever! Is
it a prerequisite for faith in Christ? Here I must give a resounding, NO!
Understanding the theological ramifications of the Limited
Atonement of Jesus Christ was not the prerequisite for faith in the
thief on the cross, the jailer, the Jews listening at Pentecost, and
millions of other Christians since their time.
Faith and belief in the work of Christ is always a prerequisite
for salvation, but that is not the same thing as preaching the Limited
Atonement of Christ to the lost. Again,
we come to a methodical problem with the Hyper-Calvinist when preaching.
A problem of order and necessity.
The Hyper-Calvinist requires understanding the theological
ramifications of Christ’s cross in detail, after a subjective
experience of regeneration, in order to preach the Gospel to men.
This is such a quandary for the Hyper-Calvinist.
It is as if they are saying, “I cannot preach to them until
they know what I am preaching to them about.”
And according to the Hyper-Calvinist they must be saved to do
this! A quandary indeed.
The
yoke of Hyper-Calvinism is heavier than the yoke Christ offers for weary
souls! Yet, in return, I am able to make the Hyper-Calvinist’s
yoke even heavier than they would like.
If a knowledge of the Limited Atonement is necessary, my burden
would be this – how much of a knowledge is necessary?
Speaking hypothetically, and humbly, what if I made the claim
that men could not be saved unless they had a knowledge as complete as my own concerning the Limited Atonement of Christ?
Such a prerequisite is preposterous!
It is equally preposterous to say this to the recent convert, and
the thief on the cross. Jesus did not cross-examine the thief to discover his
theological assertion “Lord remember me.”
He knew Christ was God, Lord and Savior.
But in no way could he articulate the Synod of Dort’s five
points against the Remonstrants! What
a yoke the Hyper-Calvinist has created!
Conclusion:
who is a Hyper-Calvinist?
In summary, a Hyper-Calvinist
would be one who holds any of the following points due to their logical
extensions. (Those points with asterisks are those who are slowly
leading themselves into Hyper-Calvinism.)
-
*That
God elect or damns without considering men as fallen creatures.
-
That
the mind of man, due to the fall, is utterly destroyed.
-
That
fallen men have no duty to believe in the Gospel by faith.
-
That
men must have a subjective theological knowledge of regeneration
before they can believe the Gospel.
-
That
the Gospel should not be universally tendered or offered to all men,
everywhere.
-
That
the Gospel should not be offered to men except they are regenerate.
-
That
God does not have a general love for all men in His indiscriminate
providence.
-
That
Limited Atonement must be believed in order to hear the Gospel, and
be saved and converted.
-
*That
God cannot desire things He has not decreed, or decree things He has
not desired.
Problems
for Hyper-Calvinists:
Hyper-Calvinism has many problems which have gone unanswered,
though some books and web-sites abound in their attempt to pacify the
orthodox. The little
adherence to these ideas in today’s church proves this out. No revival has ever been granted by the Spirit or blessed of
God except that which attended the free offer of the Gospel and
emphasized the love of God for all men. Those, like John Hussey, John
Gill and the PRC (both in America and Australia), have attempted to
answer some of these questions, but at the expense of the comprehensive
biblical picture, and at the misrepresentation of those they rally to
their defense from church history.
Unless they adopt a biblically comprehensive hermeneutic, they
will never escape the conundrums they have created, and will continue to
propagate a false and misleading Gospel to the few who will listen –
and those who will listen will have to already be regenerate, right?
Hopefully those who hear their message, will exhort them in love
and sound orthodoxy to change, and then stay far from their pernicious
errors. |
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