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Category Archives: The Gospel

On the Atonement by Dominic Tennant

The following articles are especially concise and formidable arguments for unlimited atonement and against limited atonement. These articles were written by Dominic Tennant; however, since it would appear Dominic has cancelled his blog, I have provided links to the archived webpages via the Internet Archive Wayback Machine.

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“In this series, I forward a considered case for a universal atonement, presenting what I find to be the most compelling arguments for it, defining what exactly it entails, and interacting with the most common and persuasive objections against it.”

Arguments forwarded

The following four reasons are, in my opinion, the strongest for believing in a universal atonement over and against a particular one:

1. Particular atonement is incongruent with federal headship and forensic imputation;
2. Particular atonement removes all grounds for the universal gospel call (either as a command or as an invitation); and
3. Particular atonement removes the objective grounds for Christian faith.

Objections considered

There are three main objections against the universal position which, in my estimation, are compelling enough to warrant discussion. These are:

4. Universal atonement implies that God’s desires are frustrated in some sense;
5. Universal atonement implies either universal salvation or double payment for sins; and
6. Universal atonement fails to actually accomplish redemption for anyone.

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On the Atonement: Introduction

On the Atonement, part 1: federal headship and forensic imputation

On the Atonement, part 2: the grounds for the universal gospel call

On the Atonement, part 3: the objective grounds for faith

On the Atonement, part 4: God’s desires frustrated?

On the Atonement, part 5: universal salvation, or double payment

On the Atonement, part 6: universal atonement fails to actually accomplish redemption for anyone

 

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Oh Horrible Decree by Charles Wesley

Ah! Gentle, gracious Dove,
And art thou grieved in me,
That sinners should restrain thy love,
And say, “It is not free:
It is not free for all:
The most, thou passest by,
And mockest with a fruitless call
Whom thou hast doomed to die.”

They think thee not sincere
In giving each his day,
“Thou only draw’st the sinner near
To cast him quite away,
To aggravate his sin,
His sure damnation seal:
Thou show’st him heaven, and say’st, go in
And thrusts him into hell.”

O HORRIBLE DECREE
Worthy of whence it came!
Forgive their hellish blasphemy
Who charge it on the Lamb:
Whose pity him inclined
To leave his throne above,
The friend, and Saviour of mankind,
The God of grace, and love.

O gracious, loving Lord,
I feel thy bowels yearn;
For those who slight the gospel word
I share in thy concern:
How art thou grieved to be
By ransomed worms withstood!
How dost thou bleed afresh to see
Them trample on thy blood!

To limit thee they dare,
Blaspheme thee to thy face,
Deny their fellow-worms a share
In thy redeeming grace:
All for their own they take,
Thy righteousness engross,
Of none effect to most they make
The merits of thy cross.

Sinners, abhor the fiend:
His other gospel hear—
“The God of truth did not intend
The thing his words declare,
He offers grace to all,
Which most cannot embrace,
Mocked with an ineffectual call
And insufficient grace.

“The righteous God consigned
Them over to their doom,
And sent the Saviour of mankind
To damn them from the womb;
To damn for falling short,
“Of what they could not do,
For not believing the report
Of that which was not true.

“The God of love passed by
The most of those that fell,
Ordained poor reprobates to die,
And forced them into hell.”
“He did not do the deed”
(Some have more mildly raved)
“He did not damn them—but decreed
They never should be saved.

“He did not them bereave
Of life, or stop their breath,
His grace he only would not give,
And starved their souls to death.”
Satanic sophistry!
But still, all-gracious God,
They charge the sinner’s death on thee,
Who bought’st him with thy blood.

They think with shrieks and cries
To please the Lord of hosts,
And offer thee, in sacrifice
Millions of slaughtered ghosts:
With newborn babes they fill
The dire infernal shade,
“For such,” they say, “was thy great will,
Before the world was made.”

How long, O God, how long
Shall Satan’s rage proceed!
Wilt thou not soon avenge the wrong,
And crush the serpent’s head?
Surely thou shalt at last
Bruise him beneath our feet:
The devil and his doctrine cast
Into the burning pit.

Arise, O God, arise,
Thy glorious truth maintain,
Hold forth the bloody sacrifice,
For every sinner slain!
Defend thy mercy’s cause,
Thy grace divinely free,
Lift up the standard of thy cross,
Draw all men unto thee.

O vindicate thy grace,
Which every soul may prove,
Us in thy arms of love embrace,
Of everlasting love.
Give the pure gospel word,
Thy preachers multiply,
Let all confess their common Lord,
And dare for him to die.

My life I here present,
My heart’s last drop of blood,
O let it all be freely spent
In proof that thou art good,
Art good to all that breathe,
Who all may pardon have:
Thou willest not the sinner’s death,
But all the world wouldst save.

O take me at my word,
But arm me with thy power,
Then call me forth to suffer, Lord,
To meet the fiery hour:
In death will I proclaim
That all may hear thy call,
And clap my hands amidst the flame,
And shout,—HE DIED FOR ALL

 
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Posted by on February 13, 2010 in All, Charles Wesley, Free Grace, The Gospel

 

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Does Regeneration Precede Faith?

A Christian Brother asked me to put together a response to the following article:

I’d love to hear your comments on this topic and post. Please review the article below. Till then, God-speed brothers

http://theopenlife.blogspot.com/2009/10/which-comes-first-regeneration-or-faith.html

I have often corresponded in years past with the author of TheOpenLife blog on the SermonIndex forums and I disagreed with him then too. : )
The following critique is in no way meant to be derogatory against my fellow and outstanding Christian brother.

I would disagree with the statement that there is a “sense in which regeneration precedes faith.” As it is, Faith logically precedes Regeneration. And while it is true that “There is no such thing as a faithless regenerate person, nor are there unregenerate persons who posses real faith in Christ”; it is not simultaneous in the sense that Michael explains it. To say otherwise is to put the cart before the horse. I completely agree with Michael’s description, “regeneration is a sovereign and monergistic act, etc.” But you will notice, he does not similarly describe what Faith is. But from briefly reviewing his link, “The Relative Freedom of the Will,” it is evident enough that man’s Faith is also being defined as “a sovereign and monergistic act, etc.” Which is to say, when God regenerates the obstinate heart, Saving Faith is instantly generated. Therefore God becomes both the agent of man’s Salvation, Faith, and the agent of man’s act upon Faith. What is man’s role? Nothing; he is entirely a passive respondent (ie. a puppet who’s strings are being pulled). This is supposedly an attempt to preserve God’s sovereignty, but it has no such intended effect. Positively, concerning salvation, it is conceivable how this view of God’s active work of grace could lead us to think like this; however, Negatively, concerning reprobation and damnation, because of this construction of God’s sovereign grace, God is logically the Author of Sin, as well. And this we know to be impossible, God cannot sin neither does He tempt (or cause) any man to evil. The Epistle of James makes this abundantly clear. While it is true that we often read “God tempted them, etc.” the context is always an external or providential temptation; wherein opportunity is given to test and prove the hearts of men, so that it may be manifest whether or not they sincerely love God with their whole hearts. Whereas James speaks of the internal movement of the soul to sin. God is never identified as the cause or agent of man’s sin either actively or passively. As John Forbes defined this universal principle,

“All good (and only good) originates from God. All evil originates from the creature.”

Therefore the creature is capable of originating an act which is not God’s.

For “God has delegated to man a portion of His own power, however small, yet sufficient to constitute him as an independent agent by giving him a will which can originate an act opposed to God’s will. Sin is the breaking off of the creature’s will from God’s will. But God’s will cannot oppose His own will; it must therefore be the self-willed and self-originated act of the creature.”

I would highly recommend buying his book, “Predestination and Freewill and the Westminster Confession of Faith.”

You will notice, Michael defines the Will in a peculiar manner, saying, “It is not the will which decides anything; the will is only that which acts upon the behalf of one’s judgment, which is rooted in the heart, or ‘nature’… In the sense that God is unchanging, He cannot will to sin, simply because His nature will never approve of it. His will and all wills, act only within the bounds of the nature and judgment of the willful being.” Now, a Will being only able to act within the bounds of its inherent nature and judgment is one thing, but to therefore say that the Will “decides nothing” is the metaphysical error of much of Calvinistic theology. Jonathan Edwards’ treatise, “The Freedom of the Will,” is founded upon this same fundamental error.

The general problem begins with the judgment (as used by Michael) referring to Motive, and the Motive (or judgment) is being defined as the causative agent that is determining the Will. This is false; and it is equivalent to saying man’s ideas are themselves independent and causative agents which are externally acting upon and determining the Will. I would recommend, if you are interested, looking up some critiques of Edwards’ work on the nature of the Will. This system of man’s nature literally destroys the distinction between Mind and Matter. Just as a chunk of matter, such as a rock, is deterministically bound by the physical laws of the universe (physics) and is therefore amoral, being morally inculpable even if this rock were to crush a baby; so, likewise, this system of the Will is literally determined by the exact same method of cause-and-effect as Matter in the physical universe; and if we cannot righteously judge a rock for moral crimes, how shall we judge man if he is also under the same deterministic laws as a rock? While I could give some more examples for this, the following quotation from Daniel D. Whedon will be sufficient to present my point:

“it will be very difficult to find exception to the rule that all Atheists, Pantheists, Materialists, and professed Fatalists are necessitarians. From Leucippus and Democritus, through Spinoza and Hume, down to d’Holbach and Comte, the whole mass, one and all, will agree with Edwards in maintaining the absolute universal necessitation of all events, whether volitional or non-volitional. The doctrine that one principle of causation or fixed invariable sequence rules all things, material or mental, and all events of Will or of physics, is central with the d’Holbachian Atheism and Edwardean Calvinism.”

Daniel D. Whedon in his book, “Freedom of the Will: A Wesleyan Response to Jonathan Edwards,” writes, pg. 418-9,

“In the matter of Regeneration we are told by necessitarian divines that the agent is the Holy Spirit, and that his operation therein in securing the consent of the Will is always effectual and irresistible. Yet we are told by their great standard divine, John Owen [among many others, including the Westminster Confession, ch. 3, art. 1], that the Holy Spirit herein works upon our minds ‘according to their natures and natural operations.’ That is, the Holy Spirit secures the consent of the Will, in the natural and normal way, by presenting the necessitative strongest motive. This is the old mechanical freedom TO, without freedom FROM… Dr. Hodge, quoting another passage from Stapfer, interprets him as meaning that the Holy Spirit, ‘though producing conviction, offers no more violence to the mind than a demonstration of a proposition in Geometry’… That is, the Will is free, because unimpededly necessitated.”

Whedon’s book may be read online: http://books.google.com/books?id=HwtVAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&client=firefox-a&source=gbs_navlinks_s#v=onepage&q=&f=false

To bear it down, if it be logically true that Regeneration precedes Faith then it must also be maintained that we are logically Saved before Faith—Titus 3:5, For God “saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost.” However, such a position is entirely untenable with the theme of the Gospel call, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved”; and again, Romans 10:8-10, “But what saith (the righteousness which is of faith)? The word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth, and in thy heart: that is, the word of faith, which we preach; That if thou confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.” You will further notice, Confess and Believe are given in the Active Voice, meaning the subject, “you,” is the doer of them. And the act of Confession and Believing are in the Subjunctive Mood meaning their is a potential that it may or may not happen (a proper view of the Freedom of the Will, with a freedom FROM, which necessitarians deny). And lastly, to Confess and Believe are given in the Aorist Tense while “shalt be saved” is distinctly Future Tense. The great emphasis which this conveys may be seen in that “God hath raised Him” is also given in the Aorist Tense. It is for this very reason (you may have noticed) that I removed “shalt” before Confess and Believe in the KJ-translation of Rom. 10:9, so that the chronological (and logical) sequence of events would not be confused. I have never met one yet who argued that Salvation preceded Faith, and that for obvious reasons. But it is evident that if Regeneration (by which Salvation is wrought in a man) precedes Faith then we come to just such a mistaken conclusion.

Likewise, to argue that Regeneration and Faith are simultaneous, in the sense that within Regeneration is contained that Saving Faith, is to destroy the nature of man as the image bearer of God, as a Living Soul; just as the previous remarks and quotations from Whedon were espousing; for this is no different than Mormons who claim Spirit is but a very fine and purer form of Matter (Materialists). Just as it needs to be recognized that the death of Christ, though the sufficient grounds, is not the sufficient cause of our justification; for we are “justified by faith.” (Gal. 3:24; Acts 26:18; Rom. 5:1; 2 Cor. 1:24; Heb. 10:38; etc.) Therefore, righteousness “is of faith, that it might be by grace.” For this reason, while it is impossible that there should exist Saving Faith without Regeneration, it is false to say Regeneration is the cause of that Faith, as though Faith were through Regeneration; but rather, Faith is the condition by which Regeneration is wrought in the heart—”For by grace are ye saved through faith.”

The proper manner of understanding the nature of the Will is to recognize that the Will is not determinedly caused by the Motives. The Will is the causative agent of the Mind, not the Affections (wherein lies Motives) or the Intellect. Though it is true that the Will is bound within or to the limitations of the Affections and the Intellect (according to our nature) it is not governed by them, but rather is itself the Governor of them in an indirect manner. For the Affections and the Intellect are mechanical, or necessitated, in their own way by categorizing, recognizing, and reacting to the input from the sensory organs of the physical body. Edwardean Calvinists would say, therefore, the Will is also necessitated as a reaction to the Affections and Intellect, just as these are reactions to the sensory organs; thus, equating the Mind with Matter.

We say, the Will has the capacity or power to choose contrary, or otherwise, to the present and strongest Motive. This is a Libertarian (or Freedomist) doctrine of the Will (not to be confused with Libertarian theology). Which essentially means there is power to choose contrarily (a freedom TO act and a freedom FROM acting) even when the strongest Motive is sin. The pitfall in this view lies not in the doctrine itself but in the error of separating man’s limited and delegated freedom of Will from God who gives it. Thus, we come to lay out the fuller applications of Prevenient Grace, or the preparatory work of God in the unregenerate heart, whereby God enables man to receive and act upon Faith unto Salvation. In Calvinistic theology Prevenient Grace is more commonly known as Common Grace, wherein is contained Restraining and Illuminating Grace. And it is called ‘Common’ because it is universally received by all men, irrespectively. The difference is that Common Grace is often denied as having any sequential connection to Special, or Saving, Grace—but it needs to be recognized that such a denial is the very essence of Antinomianism; and indeed, this is the very heart of that philosophy which claims, in any sense, Regeneration precedes Faith.

 

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The Gospel is the Gospel: Calvinism and Arminianism are but Shadows Cast by that Heavenly Light

The famed and beloved preacher, Charles Spurgeon, in a sermon titled A Defense of Calvinism made the following declaration,

A most admirable text, “Salvation is of the Lord.” That is just an epitome of Calvinism; it is the sum and substance of it. If anyone should ask me what I mean by a Calvinist, I should reply, “He is one who says, Salvation is of the Lord.” . . .

I have my own private opinion that there is no such thing as preaching Christ and Him crucified, unless we preach what nowadays is called Calvinism. It is a nickname to call it Calvinism; Calvinism is the gospel, and nothing else. I do not believe we can preach the gospel, if we do not preach justification by faith, without works; nor unless we preach the sovereignty of God in His dispensation of grace; nor unless we exalt the electing, unchangeable, eternal, immutable, conquering love of Jehovah; nor do I think we can preach the gospel, unless we base it upon the special and particular redemption of His elect and chosen people which Christ wrought out upon the cross; nor can I comprehend a gospel which lets saints fall away after they are called, and suffers the children of God to be burned in the fires of damnation after having once believed in Jesus. Such a gospel I abhor.

With the exception of whether or not a saint may be damned after having believed in Jesus (see Romans 11:22; 1 Cor. 9:27; 2 Cor. 6:1; Col. 1:23; Heb. 3:12-14; 2 Peter 2:20); and, likewise, putting aside the speaker’s implicit definitions for his lofty expressions; it is agreeable to say that these words may indeed exemplify the Gospel. However, these highly generalized (though succinctly orthodox) statements are no more a description of Calvinism than they are of Reformed Arminianism (many forget that Arminius was also a Reformer). The subtlety with which Spurgeon here speaks may be categorized as Richard Baxter once said, using “the Terms of primitive Simplicity.” That is, the mannerism of his carefully chosen words may be equally used to describe nearly every aspect of all orthodox denominations of Christianity. Therefore, to imply that he speaks of “Calvinism” is a misnomer.

Neither Calvinism nor Arminianism (being, historically, the two primary branches of modern, fundamental Christianity) are an epitome of the Gospel. And they are certainly not the substance and sum of the Gospel. Quite the contrary, the Gospel is itself the sum and substance of every variety of orthodox systematic theology.

The Gospel is the goal, or purity, of which Calvinism strives to encapsulate; as does Arminianism. These systems are but comparable to fruits of the True Vine—dare we then boast against the Branch as though our theologies were rather the Root that gives life and substance to the Gospel? When did Calvinism become the father of the Gospel of Christ? This is completely backwards!

Consider these controversies:
1) Is it necessary unto eternal life to grasp the high mystery of predestination; whether it be irresistibly determined or infallibly ordained according to God’s foreknowledge? No.

2) Is it necessary unto that saving faith to know with certainty whether Christ died for the elect only or for the sins of the whole world? No.

3) Is it necessary unto everlasting joy to affirm without doubt that the saints cannot fall away from the living God or that we ought rather to fear the deceitfulness of sin and hold the beginning of our confidence stedfast unto the end, lest we fall short of entering into His eternal rest? No.

But this alone is needful, that all who call upon the Name of the Lord may cry unashamedly, “Jesus Christ ‘loved me, and gave himself for me!’ ” That is the Gospel. Therefore let us not confound this holy faith with sectarian dogma, regardless of the seeming purity and conformity to the Holy Book. And let us be crucified with Christ that He may live in us and let this blessed peace assure our hearts before Him. For “what does the LORD require of you, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God?”

 
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Posted by on September 25, 2009 in All, The Gospel

 

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