After college I moved to a new city and began attending an independent Charismatic church with a twist: they were Reformed/Calvinist with regard to salvation. They taught the doctrine of sovereign election and predestination in that salvation is all of God from beginning to end. Man’s will is so corrupted that he is unable to choose God. God therefore not only initiates in salvation, but because of man’s inability to choose Him, He chose before the foundation of the world those whom He would act upon and change their hearts so they would follow Him and respond to His call. Others, though His general call to salvation was given to them, were not chosen and would thus be left to die in their sins. The Calvinist would claim that unless God acts on some, no amount of mere wooing will cause a man dead in his sins to respond to God’s call. Since God is not a universalist (meaning He chooses everyone and no one ends up in Hell), He either acts on some to demonstrate His undeserved grace and purposes in the world or everyone dies in their sins and goes to Hell.
This was my first encounter where Calvinism was fully explained to me. I later attended a Presbyterian church and then a non-denominational one, both of which taught the doctrine of sovereign election and predestination, and in an even better fashion than the Charismatic church that first introduced me to it. I devoured books like The Bondage of the Will by Luther, The Sovereignty of God by Arthur Pink, Chosen By God by R.C. Sproul and others. For the next 10 years or so, I was an ardent Calvinist so far as the subject of man’s salvation was concerned.
Since beginning this study of Church history, I’ve come to realize there is actually a third path that Catholics, Orthodox and others take on this subject that is neither Arminian nor Calvinist. There are even some nuances between Calvinists and Lutherans on the issues. And I've come to the conclusion that I can no longer honestly affirm the soteriology of Calvinism, at least not the way it is typically explained. But that’s a discussion for another time that requires some deep thinking on Occam, Aquinas, Scholasticism and nominalist notions that I’m ill-equipped to discuss at the moment. My focus is the issue of eternal security, or more colloquially, “once saved, always saved.”
Growing up Arminian, this notion never made a bit of sense to me. But once I became a Calvinist, it made perfect sense. Why? Because if a person’s salvation is utterly dependent upon God choosing them, giving them the faith to believe and effectually calling them to Himself and is not a result of his own free will choice, then his it logically follows that his salvation is ultimately accomplished by God as well. In other words, his salvation never in any way depended upon his own efforts. It was all of God. Therefore, “He who began a good work in you will be faithful to complete it in Christ Jesus.” In this picture, God is the author, sustainer and finisher of salvation in all whom He has chosen. No one He chooses can fall away because it’s not ultimately up to them and their efforts.
But in an Arminian context, it becomes completely illogical. As soon as you insert the idea that God does not sovereignly choose some to salvation and that He merely calls/woos/persuades people, but the person makes a free will choice, you have to leave open the possibility that at some point down the road, a person can use their free will to “unchoose.” They can later reject God and His offer of grace and salvation and turn away from Him.
Other non-Baptist Arminians affirm this in various ways. Without detailing all the nuances of difference, it generally works out something like this: A person could come to Christ, be “born again” and obtain salvation. And while they don’t generally believe that any one sin in and of itself would cause someone to instantly lose salvation, they would affirm that a pattern of unrepentant sin, over time, would have a corrosive effect on the person’s heart and eventually they would by their own actions and a change of their heart and will, have turned away from the faith. They will have “lost salvation” and if they died in that state, would be condemned to hell. And of course they would also affirm that it could be more explicit such as a person deciding at some point that they simply no longer believe in God at all, or even if God is real, they no longer wish to obey or serve Him. Such a person has made an explicit rejection of God and will have forfeited salvation as well. Even Catholics, though not considered Arminian, affirm that a person can “lose salvation” by their actions after the initial moment of repentance and justification.
For all of the Baptist huffing and puffing about free will against the Calvinists, they completely deny human free will once a person has made a sincere repentance and has committed their life to Christ. I find it odd that they think that a person who has not been regenerated by the Holy Spirit, in their darkened state has the free will ability to choose God, but that once a person has done so, they no longer have a free will! They simply CANNOT decide to walk away from Him. And when you point out examples of those who came to Christ, lived for years as faithful believers, but then at some point walked away from the faith and rejected God or have lived for years in unrepentant sin then died, they say that the person simply never was truly a believer. Mind boggling.
So to me, there are two groups being logically consistent with the beliefs they claim to hold. The Calvinists and the non-Baptist “free-willers.” The Calvinist can logically affirm “once saved, always saved” because salvation is effected by God alone and He is not wishy washy. He chose those whom He would save before the foundations of the world and all those whom He has chosen will persevere to the end, being upheld and sustained by Him. Methodists, Catholics and other free-will affirmers can logically affirm that because man must cooperate with the offer of grace to obtain salvation, if the same man later chooses to cease cooperating or to explicitly turn his back on God and reject that grace, he will have forfeited salvation. But this crazy idea that human beings can only choose God, but are not allowed or are unable to “unchoose” Him simply doesn’t add up.
Thoughts?
4 comments:
Hi Ragamuffin,
I have been looking into all this a lot myself lately, and was just last night trying to sort out the actual Calvinist position. In the Institutes, Calvin says something about those who live for Christ for a time and fall away, trying to make it consistent with the once saved, always saved belief. There's some kind of confusing waffle about them being aware of God's grace and such and at the same time not actually having it, etc. I confess I do not understand his explanations to deal with that exception. To me, it sounds as if Calvin denies God's goodness with predestination, then makes Him a liar and tormentor to those that fall away.
I have spent much more time trying to understand the Catholic view that we can do nothing good apart from God's grace and will, even turn to Him, but that we may of our own will turn away from Him. I have a large post attempting to explain the balance here, I don't know if you've seen it.
Ragamuffin,
I’m confused; I thought most Baptists were Calvinist, is that not true? If not, what are the tenets that make one a “Baptist” other than rejection of infant baptism?
I agree that it is logically inconsistent to hold to “once saved, always saved” and to “free-will” election. I don’t know about “non-Baptist ‘free-willers’.” I know Baptist-ish Protestants who don’t believe in “once saved, always saved” so if they also believe in “free-will” election then I would see that as consistent.
What I never understood about the whole unconditional election thing was if you held to it, why push evangelization? If God does all the heavy-lifting then all that should be necessary is to be available and inviting. Those that God has pre-destined should just show up on their own accord or come in with a simple invitation. Why then expend so much energy “taking it to the streets” or having revivals or even preaching hellfire and damnation? I guess it’s because deep down, nobody really believes in unconditional election. It’s just a fairy tale they tell themselves to sooth their own fears of personal damnation.
James G
Stacey: There's some kind of confusing waffle about them being aware of God's grace and such and at the same time not actually having it, etc. I confess I do not understand his explanations to deal with that exception. To me, it sounds as if Calvin denies God's goodness with predestination, then makes Him a liar and tormentor to those that fall away.
Both the Calvinists and the Baptists get this idea from this verse:
(1 John 2:19) "They went out from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they would have continued with us. But they went out, that it might become plain that they all are not of us."
Basically that those who do not persevere to the end were never really believers to begin with, even though they exhibited some outward signs of being "of us." I think they are stretching the meaning of this verse, being that it really wasn't a discourse on salvation John was giving. But that's it in a nutshell.
As far as the last sentence, they would say that in terms of what man deserves, all men deserve hell. If God graciously chooses to save some, that doesn't make him unjust. Those who are saved get a gift they did not earn and the rest get what they earned. "God will have mercy on whom He has mercy."
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James: I’m confused; I thought most Baptists were Calvinist, is that not true? If not, what are the tenets that make one a “Baptist” other than rejection of infant baptism?
Actually though they are Calvinist in heritage, most Baptists these days (particularly the Southern Baptist Convention) is as I described above.
What I never understood about the whole unconditional election thing was if you held to it, why push evangelization? If God does all the heavy-lifting then all that should be necessary is to be available and inviting. Those that God has pre-destined should just show up on their own accord or come in with a simple invitation. Why then expend so much energy “taking it to the streets” or having revivals or even preaching hellfire and damnation? I guess it’s because deep down, nobody really believes in unconditional election. It’s just a fairy tale they tell themselves to sooth their own fears of personal damnation.
Well, if you'll notice, Calvinists tend not to be revivalists or street preachers. You also typically do not see altar calls in churches that hold to Calvinism. Now, that's not to say they don't evangelize. But they simply don't do it in that typical Baptist/fundamentalist fashion. Now the question could be asked, "why evangelize at all?" They would answer "because God has commanded us to do so and has ordained the hearing of the word of God as the primary means by which people come to know Christ" (reference the verse that says "faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God" Rom. 10:17)
*LOL* I have never been able to figure out the Baptist free-willer OSAS position. It IS inconsistent. :)
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