Tag Archives: doctrine

The Trinity

by David E. Moss

Is the Tri-unity of the three Person God-head a real biblical doctrine?

Do we worship three Gods or one Three-Person God?

One of the elements of the biblical doctrine of God is the trinity. While the word trinity is not found in the Bible, it is best understood as a contraction for the biblical concept of the “tri-unity” of God. The tri-unity of God is the doctrine which affirms that there is one and only one God, but within His oneness there are three distinct yet inseparable persons.

It is easy to establish biblically that there is only one God. Many verses affirm this truth, emphatically contradicting all religions that encourage the belief in more than one god.

Deuteronomy 6:4 – Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God is one LORD.

Deuteronomy 4:35 – Unto thee it was shewed, that thou mightest know that the LORD he is God; there is none else beside him.

Isaiah 44:6 – Thus saith the LORD the King of Israel, and his redeemer the LORD of hosts; I am the first, and I amthe last; and beside me there is no God.

Isaiah 45:5-6 – I am the LORD, and there is none else, there is no God beside me: I girded thee, though thou hast not known me: That they may know from the rising of the sun, and from the west, that there is none beside me, I am the LORD, and there is none else.

1 Corinthians 8:4-6 – As concerning therefore the eating of those things that are offered in sacrifice unto idols, we know that an idol is nothing in the world, and there is none other God but one. For though there be that are called gods, whether in heaven or in earth, (as there be gods many, and lords many,) But to us there is but one God, the Father, of whom are all things, and we in him; and one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we by him.

It is equally easy to establish biblically that God exists in three distinct yet inseparable persons emphatically contradicting those religions which deny the deity of Jesus Christ and the distinct personhood of the Holy Spirit.

The Father

God is a spirit in substance (John 4:24). He is so purely glorious that no man can look upon Him (Exodus 33:20; 1 Timothy 6:16). He is a complete personality with a mind (Exodus 3:7), emotion (Ephesians 4:30; Zephaniah 3:17), and will (John 6:38). He is self-existent (Exodus 3:14); infinite in relation to size (2 Chronicles 2:6; Psalms 139:7ff); and eternal in relation to time (Genesis 21:33; Psalms 90:2; Isaiah 57:15).

He is

  • omnipresent (Psalm 139:7-10)
  • omniscient (Hebrews 4:13; Psalm 147:5)
  • omnipotent (Genesis 17:1)
  • immutable (Malachi 3:6; James 1:17)
  • holy (Leviticus 11:44)
  • righteous and just (Romans 2:4-5)
  • good (Matthew 19:17)
  • love (1 John 4:8)
  • merciful (Ephesians 2:4)
  • gracious (Ephesians 2:8)
  • true (John 17:3)
  • and longsuffering (2 Peter 3:9)

He is the creator of all things (Genesis 1:1; Isaiah 40:25-26; Amos 4:13). He is sovereign and rules over all that is. (1 Chronicles 29:11; Daniel 4:35; Ephesians 1:11; Psalm 33:10; Ephesians 4:6).

Along with all His multiple attributes as God, He is called the Father. In relationship to mankind, He is the Father of us all because He made us (Malachi 2:10). In relationship to believers, He is our Father because He gave us life in the new birth (Romans 8:15; Galatians 4:6). In relationship to the three Persons within the Godhead (Acts 17:29; Romans 1:20; Colossians 2:9), He is the Father (Matthew 28:19). This last is an eternal role which He has always possessed, each person in the trinity being eternally as they are, Father, Son, and Holy Sprit (Isaiah 9:6).

The Deity of Jesus Christ

  1. The direct statements regarding His deity

    The Bible clearly teaches that Jesus Christ existed before He was born to Mary in Bethlehem. Jesus Himself said, Before Abraham was, I am (John 8:58. He also declared that he shared glory with the Father before the world was (John 17:5).

    In His incarnation (when He assumed human nature and was born in human flesh), Jesus Christ became the one unique Person to possess two natures, human and divine. As a man, he possessed all the elements of a true human being: body (John 2:21), soul (John 12:27), and spirit (Luke 23:46). In His human flesh He experienced all the characteristics and limitations of a normal human being: hungering (Matthew 4:2), sleeping (Matthew 8:24), and weeping (John 11:35). However, He was entirely sinless in His humanity (1 John 3:5; 2 Corinthians 5:21; 1 Peter 2:22).

    When He took on Himself human nature for the purpose of the work of redemption, Jesus Christ maintained His divine nature. He is clearly described as being God and as possessing all the attributes of God.

    He is

    • eternal (John 1:1; Revelation 1:11)
    • omnipresent (Colossians 1:27)
    • omnipotent (Hebrews 1:3)
    • omniscient (Colossians 2:3)
    • true (John 14:6)
    • righteous (1 John 2:1)
    • good (Acts 10:38 and Luke 18:19)
    • holy (John 12:41 with Isaiah 6:3)
    • pure (Luke 4:34)
    • love (John 13:34)
    • gracious (2 Corinthians 8:9)
    • merciful (Hebrews 2:17)
    • longsuffering (1 Peter 2:18-24)
    • sovereign (Acts 10:36)
    • immutable (Hebrews 1:10-12, 13:8)
    • and self-existent (John 5:26; Colossians 1:16-17)

    He did all the work of God in creation (John 1:3). He has the power to forgive sins as only God does (Luke 5:20-24). He has every right to claim to be God because He is, always has been, and always will be God.

    Philippians 2:5-6 – Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus: Who being in the form of God thought it not robbery to be equal with God.

    John 1:1 – In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.

    Matthew 1:23 – Behold, a virgin shall be with child, and shall bring forth a son, and they shall call his name Emmanuel, which being interpreted is, God with us.

  2. The testimony of His deity

    One of the most profound testimonies of the deity of Jesus Christ comes from John in his Gospel record chapter 12. John records how Jesus was talking to the people about His crucifixion (verses 32-33). The people responded with a question, We have heard out of the law that Christ abideth for ever: and howsayest thou, The Son of man must be lifted up? Who is this Son of man? (verse 34). Jesus answered their question by describing Himself as the light shining in darkness and invited them to believe in Him. He then left the people and hid himself from them (verses 35-36).

    At this point in the text, John offers a commentary about the nature of Jesus’ identity. He said in verses 37-41,

    But though he had done so many miracles before them, yet they believed not on him: That the saying of Esaias the prophet might be fulfilled, which he spake, Lord, who hath believed our report? and to whom hath the arm of the Lord been revealed? Therefore they could not believe, because that Esaias said again, He hath blinded their eyes, and hardened their heart; that they should not see with their eyes, nor understand with their heart, and be converted, and I should heal them. These things said Esaias, when he saw his glory, and spake of him.

    John testifies that the prophet Isaiah (Esaias) saw the glory of Jesus Christ and spoke of Him. He cites two statements that John made to support this. The first statement – Lord, who hath believed our report? and to whom hath the arm of the Lord been revealed? (John 12:38) – was made by Isaiah in Isaiah 53:1. This directly connects Jesus Christ to the redemptive work of the Messiah as recorded in that marvelous chapter. The second statement – He hath blinded their eyes, and hardened their heart; that they should not see with their eyes, nor understand with their heart, and be converted, and I should heal them (John 12:40) – was made by Isaiah in Isaiah 6:10, in that glorious chapter where Isaiah saw the LORD (Jehovah God) sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up! This clearly identifies Jesus Christ as the Jehovah God who sat upon the throne of glory in heaven from eternity past!

    This amazing eternal Son of God made Himself of no reputation, and took on him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men: and being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself [though He was an inseparable part of the Godhead] and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross (Philippians 2:7-8; Hebrews 2:9-18). He arose triumphantly because He is the resurrection and the life (John 11:25) and no grave could hold Him. And while He sits at the right hand of the throne of God the Father in heaven (Hebrews 12:2) representing the firstfruits of the resurrection for the people on earth who believe in Him (1 Corinthians 15:20,23), He ever remains the eternal, changeless, Son of God, inseparably part of the triune Godhead (Revelation 21:6, 22:13).

The Distinct Personhood of the Holy Spirit

In establishing the truth of the tri-unity of God, it is not only necessary to show the deity of Jesus Christ, but also the distinct personhood of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is not just an extension of the Father’s presence. He is not an impersonal force emanating from the Father as He sits on the throne. The Holy Spirit is a distinct person, yet equally inseparable from the Godhead as is the Son.

  1. The elements of the Holy Spirit’s personality

    Every person has three defining elements of personality. The Holy Spirit exhibits all three of these: mind (1 Corinthians 2:10-11) showing His ability to think, emotion (Ephesians 4:30) showing His ability to feel, and will (1 Corinthians 12:11) showing His ability to make choices and decisions.

  2. His display of divine attributes

    The Holy Spirit is also described as possessing divine attributes. He has life and can generate life in others (Romans 8:2; John 3:5-6).

    He is

    • eternal (Hebrews 9:14)
    • omnipresent (Psalm 139:7-13;1 Corinthians 6:19)
    • omniscient (1 Corinthians 2:10-11; John16:13)
    • omnipotent (Job 33:4; Psalm 104:30; Genesis 1:2)
    • true (John 14:17; John 15:26)
    • holy (Romans 1:4)
    • righteous (Romans 8:4)
    • gracious (Hebrews 10:29)
    • love (Romans 5:5; 15:30)
    • glorious (1 Peter 4:14)
    • sovereign (Daniel 4:35; 1 Corinthians 12:6,11)
    • and wise (1 Corinthians 12:8; Isaiah 11:2; John 16:13 and 14:26)

    He participated in the work of creation (Genesis 1:26,27; John 33:4).

    The Holy Spirit is one of the three distinct persons in the tri-unity of the Godhead and is fully God even as are the Father and the Son (Matthew 28:19; 2 Corinthians 13:14).

The Trinity Expressed in the Old and New Testaments

  1. Statements about the Trinity in the Old Testament

    The concept of the tri-unity of God is not just a New Testament concept. There are places in the Old Testament that testify of the three persons in the Godhead.

    In Genesis 1:26, God said, Let us make man in our image… Who was God talking to when He said “us” and “our”? The word in the Hebrew used for God in this verse is the word “Elohim.” It is the plural form of “El.” God uses the plural form of the word to refer to Himself because He consists of three distinct persons.

    In Deuteronomy 6:4 it says, Hear, O Israel: The LORD [Jehovah] our God [Elohim] is one LORD [Jehovah]. The word one in this verse is the word “echad.” It suggests the sense of a composite one as opposed to a numerical one. The one plural God is a composite of three distinct, yet inseparably linked persons.

    All three persons are identified in Isaiah 48:16. Come ye near unto me, hear ye this; I have not spoken in secret from the beginning; from the time that it was, there am I: and now the Lord God [the Father], and his spirit [the Holy Spirit], hath sent me [the Son].

    They are also identified together in Isaiah 61:1. The spirit of the Lord God [the Holy Spirit] is upon me; because the LORD [the Father] hath anointed me [the Son] to preach good tidings to the meek…

  2. Statements about the Trinity in the New Testament

    The New Testament also contains evidence of the three persons of the Godhead. They are identified distinctly in Matthew 3:16-17, and Jesus [the Son], when he was baptized, went up straight way out of the water: and, lo, the heavens were opened unto him and he saw the Spirit of God [the Holy Spirit] descending like a dove, and lighting upon him: and lo a voice from heaven [the Father] saying, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.

    Other references to the tri-unity of God in the New Testament include Matthew 28:19, John 14:26, John 15:26, 2 Corinthians 13:14, Ephesians 4:4-6, 1 Peter 1:2, and Jude 1:20-21.

  3. The fulness of God

    Another truth reinforces the inseparable connection of the three persons of the Godhead and at the same time affirms the concept of the tri-unity of God. Colossians 2:9 states that in Jesus Christ dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily. The word “dwelleth” is in the present tense, yet it is written after the resurrection and ascension of Christ. As Jesus Christ sits on the right hand of the throne of God the Father in heaven in His glorified humanity, he still possesses all the fulness of the Godhead.

    The Holy Spirit also possesses all the fulness of the Godhead which is evidenced by the effect of His indwelling the bodies of believers. The bodies of believers are called the temple of the Holy Spirit who indwells us at the time of our new birth (1 Corinthians 6:19-20). Jesus Christ promised before He left earth that as He departed from the earth, God the Father would send the Holy Spirit to abide with us (John 15:16-26). One wonderful and unique blessing for believers in the Church of Jesus Christ is the permanent indwelling of the Holy Spirit (Ephesians 1:13; 4:30). In addition, Scripture teaches us that by virtue of the Holy Spirit’s presence in us, we also have the Father in us (Ephesians 4:6) and we have the Son in us (2 Corinthians 13:5). The Holy Spirit must also, then, possess the fulness of God since by His indwelling us all three members of the Godhead are present in us.

    The Scriptures show that the three distinct persons in the Godhead are inseparably linked together by explaining that fulness of the Godhead exists in each distinct member of the Godhead. This means that though there are three distinct persons, there is only one God. We do not worship three Gods. We worship one God. We are monotheistic. But our God is so unique that He consists of three distinct persons – distinct yet inseparably linked together.

Conclusion

You shake your head and say, I do not understand how three distinct persons can be inseparably linked together and therefore exist as only one God. I do not understand it either. No one can understand it. God is so different from us human beings that it is impossible for us to fully understand Him. He is mysterious and His tri-unity is one of those mysterious elements that causes us to stand amazed at His uniqueness of being.

It is not necessary for us to understand the tri-unity of God for us to believe it. The scriptural documentation is provided above. Let the Bible speak for itself. If it is in truth the Word of God, let it effectually work in you to believe this wonderful mystery about God.

The tri-unity of God is crucial to our salvation. If Jesus Christ is not God, He could not redeem us. If God the Father is not God, He could not justify us. If the Holy Spirit is not God, He could not regenerate us. But thanks be to God, that the Three-In-One worked in harmony to create us and give us life and to save us and give us life eternal.

The Eternal Security of the Believer

by David E. Moss

Preface

The doctrine of eternal security is very important to the history of the North Hills Bible Church. The following excerpt from our records shows why. “In July of 1939, a group of Christians, including the pastor, O.M. Kraybill, left the West Poplar Street Church of God and shortly thereafter, formed the Bible Church. The new church came into being because Pastor Kraybill believed in the eternal security of the believer, and preached it openly. The Church of God (the non-charismatic denomination) hierarchy was of the persuasion that a person could lose their salvation, and was putting much pressure on Pastor Kraybill to cease and desist from preaching eternal security. Rather than continue in a system whereby he could not teach what he considered to be the truth of the Scriptures, Pastor Kraybill chose to leave the denomination.” (The Bible Church was located on North George Street in North York until 1969 at which time it moved to our present location and became the North Hills Bible Church.)

Since the doctrine of eternal security is so significant to the heritage of our church, it is extremely important that we continue today to stand on this foundation with strong conviction, lest the sacrifices of those who laid it be in vain. It is for this reason that I dedicate this article to the memory of Pastor Kraybill who faithfully preached the truth without compromise and to all those who faithfully stood with him in 1939.

Some of the text that follows has appeared in previous articles published in this paper. Some of the thoughts have been preached in sermons at the North Hills Bible Church. It is my hope that the compilation of these things together will give some clarity to biblical teaching on this subject.

Eternal Security

David said in Psalm 23:6, I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever. He did not say, “I hope so, I think so, or I might.” He said, I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever. David had tremendous confidence that He would live forever in the presence of God. He was secure in his faith and was sure that his security was eternal in nature. This was because he had placed all his confidence in the Shepherd who guarded his life.

But there are those who would disagree with David. They believe that salvation is conditional in nature and requires something from man to insure that it will endure. They view salvation like a contract that contains options for both sides. Some of them believe that when a person receives Christ as his Savior, he is given a temporary license to live that is valid as long as he performs satisfactorily. If he does so to the end of his earthly life, then, and only then, will he receive a permanent license to live eternally. Others believe that saved people maintain an option to relinquish their salvation if they ever decide to disbelieve the gospel. The one believes that God will terminate salvation if He becomes unhappy with man. The other believes that man can terminate salvation if he becomes unhappy with God.

The teaching of the Bible is very clear on this subject. In saving us, God promises to preserve our lives forever (John 3:16; Romans 6:23). This promise is effective immediately upon the salvation of our soul, and the life He produces in us is consistently and emphatically said by Scripture to be eternal! In fact, the Bible is saturated with truths that teach that once a person is saved, he is saved for eternity and will never be lost again either by an act of God or by an act of man. The following is representative of the profound nature of this doctrine as it is taught by God in His Holy Word.

  1. The Meaning Of Eternal

    The Bible says that everyone who has believed in Christ and is saved has (present tense) eternal, or everlasting life (John 3:15,16; John 5:24; I John 5:13). Something that is eternal has no end. It goes on and on with no conclusion, no ending point, no possibility of termination. So when God says a believer possesses life that has no ending point, he cannot be saying at the same time that a saved person possesses a life that can be terminated if the right conditions occur.

    God uses the word “eternal” to describe part of His own nature (Deuteronomy 33:27). In doing so, He describes two very important dimensions to His deity. One is that he lives completely outside of the context of time (Psalm 90:1-4). He cannot be defined in terms of past, present, and future because in all those time elements He simply is (Exodus 3:14). The other is that there is a definite correspondence between the nature of His existence and the concept of unchangeableness. Psalm 102:25-27 says of God,

    Of old hast thou laid the foundation of the earth; and the heavens are the work of thy hands. They shall perish, but thou shalt endure… they shall be changed: but thou are the same, and thy years shall have no end.

    When God applies the word eternal to the kind of life He gives to those who believe the Gospel of Christ, He does not change the definition of the word from its application to His own nature. As the eternal God lives outside of the context of time, the eternal life He gives to believers is a life that also exists outside of the context of time. And, as the eternal nature of God implies that He is perpetually the same throughout eternity, the eternal life He gives to those who are in Christ will never change throughout all the limitless span of eternity.

    To believe that eternal life can be terminated or changed is to require that one also believe that God can be terminated or changed. If this be so, then God is not God after all and salvation is meaningless. If the eternal God is limitless and unchangeable as He claims to be, then the eternal salvation He gives to us is equally limitless and unchangeable. And since it is, everyone who is in Christ can be eternally confident that they are secure in Christ.

  2. The Earnest Of Our Inheritance And The Seal Of God

    The Bible also says that after a person is saved by believing the Gospel he is sealed with the Holy Spirit (Ephesians 1:13-4). To understand what it means to be sealed with the Holy Spirit, it is important to look first at the word “earnest.” The word earnest means “down payment.” The earnest of the Holy Spirit means that the entrance of the Holy Spirit into the body of a believer serves as a down payment for the inheritance he has been promised in Christ. This indwelling of the Spirit is God’s pledge that He will also give us everything else He has promised us in Christ. It is the same concept as making a down payment on a mortgage at a bank. The down payment is the earnest, or the promise, to pay all the rest of the mortgage. We can only imagine all that is part of our inheritance in Christ, but we know that we will receive it because of the down payment He has made with the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.

    When the Holy Spirit is given to us as a down payment of our inheritance, God uses this to place His seal upon our lives.

    1. What the Seal Is

      A seal in Biblical times served the same purpose as a signature does today. Special rings were made with raised insignias attached that served as identifying emblems. Each insignia was unique so that whenever a particular emblem was seen, it would immediately be known to whom it belonged.

      To place a “signature” on an item, they would use a lit candle to drop a little wet wax onto the item and then press the insignia of the ring into the soft wax, leaving an impression. In Bible times, it was often true that once a document was sealed or signed by a King’s insignia, the matter addressed in the document could not be reversed or changed.

    2. The Effect of the Seal

      An example of this is found in the Book of Esther, chapter three. Haman convinced King Ahasuerus to place his seal upon a death warrant for all the Jews in his kingdom. When the King discovered that the Queen was a Jew and that Haman had tricked him into signing a death warrant for his own wife, there was nothing he could do to cancel the order. The only way he could compensate was to issue a second order giving the Jewish people the right to defend themselves.

      A similar incident occurred in Daniel chapter six when the King issued a decree that no prayers were to be offered to anyone but himself for thirty days. Daniel violated the rule, but the King did not want to punish him. However, since the King’s signature authenticated the decree it could not be altered and Daniel had to be thrown into the Lion’s den.

      This is the concept of the sealing ministry of the Holy Spirit. With the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, God places His signature upon our lives. This authenticates our membership in the Body of Christ which cannot be reversed or changed in any way. When Scripture says we are sealed with the Holy Spirit unto the day of redemption, it is a fact that can never be erased. We are God’s forever because He has sealed us with His signature. Isn’t this wonderful? This is security — the security of the signature of God authenticating our salvation and sealing it forever.

  3. Christ Living In Me

    The only reason a believer can claim to be alive is because of the living Christ who dwells within him. As Galatians 2:20 says, nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me…

    The unsaved are dead. They might be walking around on the earth, but they are dead nonetheless (Ephesians 2:1). And because unbelievers are dead, physical death acts as a wall which prevents them from entering the realm of eternal bliss. Instead, upon impact with physical death unbelievers crash down into the pit of everlasting death and eternal condemnation. While they are walking around on earth as living dead people, this is all the unsaved have to look forward to.

    But there is a law that works in the believer called the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus (Romans 8:2). This is a law established by God that cannot be broken. As a result, nothing can separate those who possess eternal life from the love of God. Romans 8:35-39 lists a number of things that might try to sever this relationship such as tribulation, distress, persecution, famine, nakedness, peril, sword, etc. In spite of every attempt to separate a person from the love of God, the believer remains eternally secure because the law of the Spirit of life prevails. For those who are alive in Christ, physical death serves only as a doorway for them to enter into the presence of God in fulfillment of that wonderful promise: to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord (II Corinthians 5:8). Thus in every believer’s life, God’s law of the Spirit of life in Christ is faithfully enforced.

  4. The Intercession Of Christ

    Even though a person has been saved from sin, it is still possible for him to sin while he continues to live on earth. Until the last trumpet sounds, the believer’s body is referred to as corrupt and mortal (I Corinthians 15:53). In that corruption and immortality is the full capacity to commit sin. Obviously, God’s desire is for His children to learn how to leave sin alone altogether, but because the sin nature continues to dwell within a believer’s flesh for the duration of his earthly experience, God understands the possibility of sin occurring (I John 2:1M).

    The question is whether or not sin can cause a believer to lose his salvation. Scripture is clear. When a saved person sins, God is not limited in His ability to save his children for eternity. Hebrews 7:25 says Christ is able to save them to the uttermost. That means He is fully capable of saving believers to the full extent, the furthest extreme, the entire duration of eternity.

    Why is He able to do this? The same verse explains that it is because throughout eternity Christ lives and makes intercession for all those who have trusted in Him. Because of Christ’s personal and perpetual work of intercession, no one can condemn a believer. Romans 8:34 asks the question, Who is he that condemneth? It then answers the question by explaining that Christ is the one who died and He also has risen from the dead and is presently at the right hand of God. Because He successfully represented us on the cross, He qualifies to represent us before the Sovereign judge to verify that our sins have been eternally adjudicated under His shed blood. The most that can happen to a saved person is that he can be accused (Revelation 12:10). But in every instance in which a saved person is accused (by any source including his own flesh, I John 3:20), he is immediately excused because of Christ’s intercession for him.

    If a Christian does sin, his advocate, Jesus Christ the righteous, makes a plea before the Father which is always accepted because Jesus totally propitiated or satisfied God concerning man’s sin in His redemptive work (I John 2:1-2). This satisfaction is so complete that it covers the sins of the whole world and for all time. As the mediator between God and man, Christ’s perpetual intercession eliminates any possibility that sin can ruin a believer’s relationship with God. We are secure in our possession of eternal life because in every instance in which we sin, Jesus Christ stands as our advocate before the Father and the Father always accepts the intercessory word of His Son.

  5. The Concept Of Biblical Hope

    Salvation includes many dynamics. There is confession and faith, mercy and forgiveness, grace, redemption, propitiation, reconciliation, justification, sanctification, peace, righteousness, eternal life, etc. But what kind of salvation would we have if God did not include hope?

    Hope implies not just a fulfilling life now but a sustaining of life for eternity. Biblical hope is not a maybe if everything turns out okay; it is an absolute certainty based on the trustworthiness of God. God cannot lie (II Thessalonians 2:1), and He said when a believer dies he does not perish but lives forever. That is our hope, our confidence, our security in Christ.

  6. The Integrity Of God’s Promises

    Salvation, therefore, and the security of salvation, rests solely on the ability of God to keep His promises. What are the promises He has made to those who have been saved by grace through faith?

    I John 2:25 – This is the promise that he hath promised us, even eternal life.

    John 6:47 – Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that believeth on me hath everlasting life.

    John 6:51 – I am the living bread which came down from heaven: if any man eat of this bread, he shall live for ever…

    Romans 6:23 – The gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.

    Titus 1:2 – In hope of eternal life, which God, who cannot lie, promised before the world began.

    John 10:27,28 – My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me; and I give unto them eternal life.

    John 11:25,26 – Jesus said, I am the resurrection, and the life: whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die.

    I John 5:11,13 – God hath given to us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. That ye may know that ye have eternal life.

    John 3:16 – For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.

    What is God’s opinion of making a promise? In Deuteronomy 23:21-23, God explains that if a person makes a vow he is required to keep it. To fail to keep a vow is to sin and every sin must be penalized. If this is God’s standard for people, it is certainly His standard for Himself. And since we know that God never sins, we know that He always keeps His Word. When He promises eternal life, He gives exactly that — eternal life — and not some cheap tenuous life that depends on human behavior or human choices to endure.

    To question the eternal security of believers in Christ is to question the very integrity of God. Has God made empty promises? Do the words of God not mean what they say? Such thoughts are ludicrous. It is impossible for God to lie (Numbers 23:19; Titus 1:2; Hebrews 6:18). But for someone to say that God’s promises are not true, it is the same thing as calling God a liar (I John 5:10). God forbid: yea, let God be true, but every man a liar… (Romans 3:4). God has promised eternal life and that is exactly what He gives.

  7. Kept By The Power Of God

    Peter discusses our wonderful salvation in the first chapter of his first letter by saying, Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible, and undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved in heaven for you (verses 3-4). This statement affirms the security of the believer with several words: saying we have a lively hope and an incorruptible inheritance which is undefiled, that fadeth not away, and is reserved in heaven for all of us who are saved. Then, to add even more emphasis to how secure we are in Christ, Peter says, we are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time (verse 5).

    Our hope is a living hope and our inheritance cannot be corrupted or damaged in any way. It is reserved for us on the basis of God’s promises and we can have the utmost confidence that we will receive what God has promised in its entirety because God Himself preserves us unto our inheritance by His own almighty, irresistible power. Our life is hid with Christ in God (Colossians 3:3) and no one is able to pluck us out of that grip which is fortified by the same power that created the universe out of nothing and that raised Jesus Christ from the dead (John 10:29)!

    As the hymn writer, Lina Sandell, proclaimed, More secure is no one ever than the loved ones of the Savior. The fourth verse of her hymn reads,

    Little flock, to joy then yield thee! Jacob’s God will ever shield thee; rest secure with this Defender, at His will all foes surrender.

    It does not matter what foe that may be: sin that wars against our flesh, the fickle will of the human soul, or the great accuser who challenges our right standing before God. The power of God prevails against every attempt to pluck us from the grip of His Hand. When a person is in Christ because he has believed the Gospel and by grace through faith alone has received the gift of eternal life, it is impossible for the gift to be removed from his life — if for no other reason than the power of the almighty God which is able to keep us.

A Word About The Belief That It Is Possible To Lose Eternal Life

There are two basic schools of thought among those who believe that it is possible to lose one’s salvation. One school of thought is that in order for man to have a free will, he must maintain the freedom to turn away from Christ even after he is saved. The other is the thought that sinning to one degree or another after the point of salvation nullifies the application of redemption to a believer’s life.

Man’s will actually becomes freer after he is saved than it was before. Romans 3:11 describes a natural man that does not seek after God. Yet Hebrews 11:6 says that God is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him. How does one change from being a non-seeker to a seeker? Faith is the answer. Before faith comes to a man’s heart, he is incapable of doing good or even seeking after God. But when the Word of God initiates faith (Romans 10:17) a man’s heart is free to choose that which he had always resisted before. When a person then chooses to believe in Christ through faith and is given the gift of eternal life by grace, God provides protection to his will by making him eternally secure in Christ. Hence, instead of being a violation of man’s will, eternal security is a means by which believers are guaranteed the opportunity to make the right choices for the rest of their lives (II Corinthians 3:5; Titus 2:11-12).

Unfortunately, a saved person does not always make the right choices and sometimes we who have the freedom to follow the will of God do not always do so. Never does Scripture suggest, however, that an irresponsible believer is in danger of losing his salvation. Those who believe it does make the mistake of not distinguishing between the contexts of salvation and sanctification. Consider how I Corinthians 3:12-17 explains that a man gets to heaven even if his entire life counts for nothing. It describes all the behavior of believers as being equal in value to either hay, wood, and stubble, or gold, silver, and precious stones. When the believer stands before the judgement seat of Christ, his irresponsible deeds are burned up like hay, wood and stubble while his acts of faithfulness endures the test of fire like gold, silver and precious stones. In the event that all the work of a particular believer is burned up, verse 15 of this passage says, he shall suffer loss: but he himself shall be saved. This tells us that even if a believer’s entire Christian life is worthless, nothing prevents him from being saved because he is secure in Christ. This in no way encourages irresponsibility among the saved; it only explains that works have no part in salvation — either in securing it for us, or in maintaining it after we are in possession of it.

Knowing that we are saved and cannot be lost is not a license to sin. Instead, eternal security provides motivation to please the One who has so richly blessed us. The sin nature, that still contaminates our flesh as long as we live on earth, persists in resisting the will of God and sometimes we lose the struggle and do those things which we really do not want to do (Romans 7:15-17). Nevertheless we are delivered from the body of this death through Jesus Christ so that while our flesh desires to serve the law of sin, we can still decide with our transformed minds to serve the law of God (Romans 7:24-25). If we get too far out of line, God chastens us and turns us back to the path of righteousness (Hebrews 12:5-10). If we persist in resisting the chastening of God and in pursuing irresponsible behavior, there is the ultimate penalty of sin unto death. This is the physical removal of a saved person from earth. He suffers the loss of opportunity to live for God on earth, but he himself shall be saved (I John 5:16-17).

But the heart of a truly saved person does not want to sin even though his flesh does. This is because loving God and obeying His Word are one and the same (I John 5:3). I heard of a person who said he did not want to get saved because then he would not be able to do the worldly things he enjoyed. The Christian who was witnessing to this person responded by saying that he could do all of those worldly things as a saved person. The unbeliever was surprised and was not sure of what to say. Then the Christian added that while he could do those things if he chose to do so, he would not want to do those things as a saved person because God would change the desires of his heart when He saved him (Philippians 2:13).

When God saves us, He does far more than give us a ticket to Heaven. Titus 2:11-12 says that the same grace of God that saves us also teaches us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts and to live soberly, righteously, and godly in this present world. God not only rescues us from the consequences of sin, but gives us the capacity to walk away from the temptations to sin that we face every day of our lives. It is in the context of our Christian walk that many warnings are given to believers — not because we are in any danger of losing our salvation, but because we are in danger of not experiencing the blessings that God has designed to accompany salvation. Thus He says in Hebrews 4:1, Let us therefore fear, lest, a promise being left us of entering into his rest, any of you should seem to come short of it. The word “seem” refers to a subjective judgment that does not match up with reality. Sin can cause a believer to lose the joy of his salvation (Psalm 51:12), which might make him feel unsaved but cannot make him become unsaved. This is why God admonishes us in Ephesians 4:1 to walk worthy of the vocation wherewith ye are called. He does not want us just to walk, but to walk worthily, not just to live, but to live soberly, righteously, and godly so that in the process we can enjoy both the hope of eternal life and all of the spiritual blessings that accompany it. Thus biblical warnings to believers are the rod of the Shepherd intended to keep us sheep walking joyfully on the right path until we reach the still waters. They are not a threat of retaliation by which we might lose the opportunity ever to arrive.

Conclusion

Eternal security is essential to the very nature of eternal life. Just as it is not within man’s power to obtain his own salvation, it is not within his power to retain it. Instead of a man needing to keep himself in the grace of God, it is the grace of God that keeps a man secure in Christ. Of course, man is given the freedom to believe the gospel or reject it. But once he willingly receives the grace of God and is saved, he is sealed by the Holy Spirit of promise and kept by the power of God forever.

At the heart of the matter is what a person is really trusting in. In every case where someone believes it is possible to lose his salvation, it is because he believes he must do something himself to satisfy God or else suffer the consequence of eternal death. There are only two possibilities. Salvation is entirely an act of God, or it is at least partially an act of man. Scripture settles the matter in very simple terms. Salvation is not of ourselves, lest any one of us should boast that we are in the grace of God by our own merit. Salvation is the gift, the free gift, and nothing but the gracious gift of God (Ephesians 2:8-9). And, as God is the one who gives us life, God is the one who keeps us alive for eternity. I am so glad I do not have to find something within myself that is adequate to the task of keeping me saved. I rejoice with thanksgiving that all I have to do is trust in God who alone saves me by His grace and keeps me by His power.

He tells me words whereby I’m saved,
He points to something done,
Accomplished on Mount Calvary
By His beloved Son;
In which no works of mine have place,
Else grace with works were no more grace.

Not saved are we by trying;
From self can come no aid;
‘Tis on the blood relying,
Once for our ransom paid.
‘Tis looking unto Jesus,
The Holy One and Just;
‘Tis His great work that saves us —
It is not ‘try’ but ‘trust’!

No deeds of ours are needed
To make Christ’s merit more:
No frames of mind or feelings
Can add to His great store;
‘Tis simply to receive Him,
The Holy One and Just;
‘Tis only to believe Him —
It is not ‘try’ but ‘trust’!

My sin — oh, the bliss of this glorious thought —
My sin — not in part but the whole,
Is nailed to His cross and I bear it no more,
Praise the Lord, praise the Lord, oh, my soul!

[Poems from “Full Assurance” by H.A. Ironside. For additional reading also consider “Shall Never Perish” by J. F. Strombeck. A copy of the latter may be found in our church library.]

Doctrinal Considerations Regarding Baptism

by David E. Moss

There are many different beliefs about baptism within the Christian community. Some believe there is no salvation if there is no water baptism. Others believe water baptism is entirely symbolic. Some baptize infants and others baptize only adults. Then there are those who focus on a baptism of the Spirit and make it an experience completely separate from salvation.

It is very important to understand what the Bible teaches about baptism. If it is necessary for salvation, then we ought to know that and participate in it lest we miss out. If it is not necessary for salvation then we ought to know that and help people avoid trusting in something that does not save. If there is something we ought to seek after salvation, then we ought to understand what that is and pursue it with passion. If there is not, then we ought to be able to defend against such teaching with scriptural evidence.

Half of all references to baptism in the Bible are found in the Gospels. Jesus himself was baptized, but His baptism is very different than Christian baptism. It served as an anointing, marking the beginning of his ministry on earth. John’s baptism of the Israelites bears some resemblance to Christian baptism in that the fruits of repentance were a prerequisite (Matthew 3:7-8). Still it was different, because those who had been baptized unto John’s baptism were re-baptized after Christ’s work on earth was completed (Acts 19:1-5). Some point to the thief on the cross to show that baptism is irrelevant. He professed belief in Christ and Christ promised him a place in paradise even though he could not possibly get down off the cross and be baptized. This was before the church began, however, and question whether or not it is appropriate to apply this specific incident to Christian baptism.

For an understanding of Christian baptism, one must study the book of Acts and the New Testament letters. A literal and dispensational interpretation of these Scriptures will show that there is a spiritual baptism that takes place at the moment a person is saved. This spiritual baptism consists of the Holy Spirit placing a believer into the body of Christ. It will also show that there is a water baptism which is entirely symbolic, serving as a public testimony of one’s salvation and as an illustration of the spiritual baptism performed by the Holy Spirit. To arrive at other conclusions about baptism requires a different method of interpreting Scripture.

The Word “Baptism”

The word baptism is a transliteration of a Greek word rather than a translation. Transliteration transfers the spelling of a word from the alphabet of one language into the alphabet of another language. Thus the Greek word ∃ςΒϑ4Φ&:Ξλ (baptismos) becomes the English word “baptism.” Translation, on the other hand, transfers the meaning of a word from the vocabulary of one language into the vocabulary of another language. If the word ∃ςΒϑ4Φ&:Ξλ (baptismos) were translated instead of transliterated, Scripture would typically read “immersed” instead of “baptism” because that is the action suggested by the meaning of the word.

The Greek verb “baptidzo” means to immerse or submerse an object into something else such as a liquid like water or dye. In each case where the word baptism or any of its forms is found in the Bible, it would be appropriate to substitute the word “immerse” as an English translation of the Greek word. It is translated “washed” in Luke 11:38 because the focus of the context is on the effect rather than the action of immersing one’s hands into a basin of water. Immersing is the action of baptism, washing or dyeing are possible effects which result from the act of immersing depending upon the specific activity involved.

God chose to use the word “baptism” in the Bible because the action of immersing describes the spiritual relationship of a believer to Jesus Christ.

  • In Romans 6:3-4, believers are

    • baptized, or immersed, into Christ;
    • and
    • baptized, or immersed, into his death.
  • In I Corinthians 12:13, believers are

    • baptized, or immersed, into one body (the spiritual body of Christ).
  • In Galatians 3:27, believers are

    • baptized, or immersed, into Christ.

Spiritual Baptism

Spiritual baptism is an act of the Holy Spirit by which he places a believer into the spiritual body of Christ. I Corinthians 12:13 says, For by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body… When a person receives Jesus Christ as his Savior, he is indwelt by the Holy Spirit who then baptizes him into the body of Christ. This latter act is called “baptism” because the Holy Spirit immerses the believer into the spiritual body of Jesus Christ called the church. Romans 6:3 and Galatians 3:27 support this concept by saying that believers are immersed into Christ; and Romans 6:3 adds that when a person is immersed into Christ, he is also immersed into His death. This means that when a believer is part of the spiritual body of Christ he is considered by God to have participated with Christ in His death on the cross. Romans 6:4 explains that the effect of this spiritual immersion into the death of Christ is a participation in the resurrection of Christ, enabling a Christian to walk in newness of life here on earth.

Spiritual baptism takes place at the very moment of salvation. It is not an experience subsequent to salvation. It is not a second blessing. It happens immediately upon a person’s receiving Christ as his personal Savior.

In that wonderful moment, when a person confesses his sinfulness to God, believes the Gospel of Christ in his heart, and prayerfully receives Christ, there are many things that happen to him. God forgives him for his sins, declares him to be justified, regenerates him, bestows eternal life upon him, indwells him by His Holy Spirit, seals him unto the day of the rapture/resurrection event, and immerses him into the body of Christ. All these things happen in a single moment of time, but some of them happen sequentially before or after others. For example, a person is forgiven before he is justified because God would not declare a person to be just before he has been forgiven. Likewise, a person is justified before he is baptized into the body of Christ because God would not include a person in Christ who has not been justified. It is very important to note that all of these things happen in exactly the same moment, and yet they do occur in a sequence.

The conclusion, therefore, is that while a person must be saved before he can be put into the body of Christ, there is no delay between these two events. They happen together in the same moment. Romans 8:9 clearly teaches that a person who has been born again and indwelt by the Holy Spirit is also in Christ. Likewise, a person who has not been born again and indwelt by the Spirit is not in Christ. These two things, salvation and spiritual baptism, are as inseparable as the two sides of a coin. You cannot have one without having the other. They must, therefore, both occur at exactly the same time.

Spiritual baptism results from salvation; it does not produce salvation. At the same time, spiritual baptism is part of the salvation event and not a separate experience. Only those who have been born again by faith in Jesus Christ are baptized by the Spirit into Christ, but all who have been saved are baptized into Christ at the very moment they are regenerated by grace through faith in the gospel of Christ and indwelt by the Holy Spirit.

Water Baptism

  1. Purpose

    Being immersed into water is not what places a person into the body of Christ, nor does it cause one to participate in the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Spiritual baptism by the Holy Spirit causes these things to happen as described above. So what then is the purpose of being baptized into water?

    Water baptism is a testimony, a public declaration, which illustrates two aspects of a believer’s relationship with Christ. First, water baptism symbolizes being placed into the body of Christ. However, because this is a permanent relationship and God did not want people left under the water permanently, He also provided, in His infinite wisdom, a second symbol in water baptism. Baptism also symbolizes being placed into the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ. As a person goes under the water, he shows that he is part of the body of Christ and as such has participated in Christ’s death and burial. When he comes up out of the water, he shows that he is a full partner in the resurrection and is now walking in the hope of that resurrection in newness of life.

    Being immersed into a body of water gives a believer the opportunity to declare openly his identity with Jesus Christ. If a person is not willing to be baptized into water, it is reasonable to wonder how real his relationship is with Christ. It seems that Christ ordered this symbolic act of water baptism to give each professing Christian the opportunity to state publicly that what he professes with his mouth is possessed in his heart.

  2. Timing

    The Scripture is very clear on when a person may be baptized into water. It can properly take place only after a person has received Christ as Savior. In Acts 2:41, those that had already “gladly received his word” were baptized. In Acts 8:12, the Samaritans were baptized when they believed the things that Philip had preached to them. In Acts 18:8, Crispus and many of the Corinthians believed the Gospel and then were baptized.

    In Acts 10:44-48, some Gentiles who believed in Christ as their Savior were indwelt by the Holy Spirit just as believing Jews had been. God verified this by the same miraculous events He had used among the believing Jews. After the verification took place, Peter asked the other believing Jews if they could possibly forbid these believing Gentiles to be baptized with water. Obviously they could not, so Peter commanded the Gentile believers to be baptized into water because they had already been saved and indwelt by the Holy Spirit.

    The Ethiopian Eunuch’s question to Philip in Acts 8:36 gives further evidence that salvation comes first and then the testimony of water baptism. He asked, See, here is water; what doth hinder me to be baptized? Philip’s reply was, If thou believest with all thine heart, thou mayest. As Roman’s 10:10 says, For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness. If the Ethiopian had not believed with his heart unto righteousness, the symbolic testimony of water baptism would not have meant anything. Salvation came first to the Ethiopian, and then he could testify about his salvation by being immersed into water.

  3. Mode

    Some churches “baptize” by pouring water over the head. Other churches “baptize” by sprinkling water on the forehead. Still others baptize by completely immersing the whole person under water. Does it matter what mode of baptism is used as long as it is done?

    In reference to pouring and sprinkling, the word baptize was put in quotation marks in the previous paragraph because neither pouring nor sprinkling is really baptism. The Greek word “baptism” means to immerse. It never means to pour or sprinkle. The Greek word which means “to pour” is “cheo.” The Greek word which means “to sprinkle” is “rantidzo.” If God had wanted pouring or sprinkling to serve as the symbol for our relationship to Christ, He would have used one of those words. Instead, He used the word “baptidzo” which in translation means only “to immerse.”

    In Acts 8:36-39 when Philip baptized the Ethiopian, they went down into the water and came up out of the water. When John the Baptist baptized, he did it in the Jordan river (Mark 1:5), at places where there was much water (John 3:23), because the water needed to be deep enough to immerse the ones being baptized.

    Pouring and sprinkling does not properly fulfill the symbolism associated with baptism. Neither can properly illustrate being placed into the body of Christ, nor participating in His death, burial and resurrection. Immersion is the only mode of baptism that fulfills this testimony and communicates the truth of our relationship with Christ. Besides, pouring and sprinkling are used typically by those who believe the ceremony itself has some spiritual effect upon the participant and Scripture no where suggests that this is so.

  4. Who should be baptized into water?

    Since water baptism is a public testimony intended to illustrate what has already happened in a person’s life, then only those who have received Christ as their Savior by grace through faith alone should be baptized into water. This eliminates infants, since they cannot believe. It also eliminates those who are old enough to believe in Christ but have not.

    Caution should be used, though, in baptizing young children who have made a profession of faith. While children are capable of truly understanding the Gospel and genuinely receiving Christ at very young ages, it is better to wait until it can be confirmed that they understand the symbolism involved in water baptism. Baptizing them too soon may confuse them and make them think that the water had something to do with their salvation.

Some Doctrinal Errors Regarding Baptism

  1. Confusing spiritual baptism with the indwelling and filling works of the Holy Spirit.

    Some erroneously refer to the “baptism of the Spirit” as the time when the Holy Spirit enters into the life of a believer. It is true that God sends His Spirit into believers’ hearts (Galatians 4:6) to dwell within them (I Corinthians 3:16). But Scripture never applies the term baptism to the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. Christian baptism in the Bible refers exclusively to the act of the Holy Spirit by which he immerses a believer into Christ and to the immersion into water which symbolizes that event.

    For those who believe that baptism is the same as indwelling, consider the analogy that Christ himself draws between being baptized with water and being baptized with the Holy Spirit. In Acts 1:5, Jesus was talking to the disciples just before He ascended into Heaven. He said, For John truly baptized with water, but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days hence. When John baptized the people with water, what did he do? Did he put the water into the people? Or did he put the people into the water? When he baptized with water, did he say, “Put your head back and open your mouth because I am going to pour water into you?” No, the baptism of John did not involve pouring water into the people. He immersed the people into water. This is clearly stated to be the process of water baptism in Acts 8:38 where Philip and the Ethiopian Eunuch “went both down into the water” where Philip immersed the Ethiopian into the water, baptizing him because of his belief in Jesus Christ.

    In the same way, baptism with the Spirit does not involve pouring or placing the Holy Spirit into a believer. Rather, it is the placing of the believer into the spiritual body of Jesus Christ by the Holy Spirit. When a believer is indwelt, the Spirit comes into him. When he is baptized by the Spirit, the believer is placed into Christ.

    Others believe that the baptism of the Spirit and the filling of the Spirit are interchangeable terms. In the Bible, baptism and filling are two distinct ministries of the Holy Spirit in the life of a believer. The biblical word “fill” refers to the effect the Holy Spirit has on a believer’s life as He dwells within him. Ephesians 5:18 explains that in contrast to the nasty effects of alcohol, but in exactly the same fashion of taking control, the Holy Spirit can radically change the behavior of a believer. After He indwells someone who has received Christ, the Spirit can alter a person’s activities from being fleshly to being spiritual. It is important to note that when God sent the Holy Spirit to indwell believers on the day of Pentecost, the spectacular things that followed were not because Christians were baptized with the Holy Spirit but because they were filled with the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:4).

    The filling of the Holy Spirit is essential for effective service in the Christian life. Without being filled, a believer will be ineffective, no matter how hard he tries to do his best for God. Being filled, the unlimited resources of God Himself become available to the Christian worker and the effectiveness of the believer becomes unrestricted. Filling, however, is a ministry of the Holy Spirit, wholly distinct from His baptizing of believers into the Body of Christ.

  2. Insisting that water baptism is necessary for salvation.

    Some believe that a person is not born again until he has been baptized with water. This is properly termed “baptismal regeneration,” although not everyone who holds this view is fond of the terminology. This doctrine is believed in several different forms by different denominations. In all its forms, however, the effect is the same — no water, no salvation. There are some verses of Scripture that sound like they promote such a doctrine, but each can be easily explained.

    Acts 2:38 – “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 Spirit.”

    The key word in understanding the intent of this verse is the word “for.” This word can have several connotations. It can mean “in order to obtain” as in the sentence, “I will give you a dollar for that book.”

    In this case an exchange is being made. A person receives a book in exchange for a dollar bill. If the word “for” is used in this sense in Acts 2:38, then God is saying, “Be baptized in exchange for, or in order to obtain, the remission of sins.” However, the word ”for” may also mean “because of” or “in honor of” as in the sentence, “He received the prize for having the best score.” In this case, the best score was achieved first and then a prize was awarded because of, or in honor of, what was already accomplished. If the word “for” is used in this sense in Acts 2:38, then God is saying “Be baptized because of, or in honor of, the fact that you have already experienced the remission of sins. The latter is the sense in which God uses the word “for” in this verse. It teaches that a person ought to repent of his sins and receive Christ as his Savior whereby his sins are forgiven. He then ought to be baptized for, because of, or in honor of, the remission of sins he has already received. Thus it does not teach baptismal regeneration.

    Acts 22:16 – “And now why tarriest thou? Arise, and be baptized, and wash away thy sins, calling on the name of the Lord.”

    These words are spoken by Ananias to Saul shortly after Christ spoke to him on the road to Damascus. Saul was not saved because Christ confronted him on the road. Saul had to make his own personal confession to the Lord and receive Christ as his Savior. Ananias implores him, knowing now what he does, to be immersed into Christ by confessing his sin and being washed clean by the redemptive work of Christ’s blood. Peter had testified on the day of Pentecost that “whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved” (Acts 2:21). Ananias was simply encouraging Saul to do what he should do now in order to be part of the body of Christ.

    Mark 16:16 – “ He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved.”

    The explanation of this statement is that this is only half a verse of Scripture. The rest of the verse says, …but he that believeth not shall be damned. Salvation is based on what a person believes as clearly stated by the second half of this verse, for if a person does not believe, he is not saved. A person who has believed is saved and a saved person willingly testifies of his identity with Christ. There is nothing more to this verse.

    Acts 13:2 – “When John had first preached before his coming the baptism of repentance to all the people of Israel.”

    This is a reference to the activity of John the Baptist before Jesus came onto the scene. In Matthew 3:2-6, John preached the message, Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand. He then baptized all who came to him “confessing their sins.” In the verses which follow, some Pharisees and Sadducees came to him to be baptized, but he refused to do so, rebuking them by saying they needed to “bring forth… fruits meet for repentance” first, and then they could be baptized. When John preached the baptism of repentance, therefore, it was not a baptism that served as an act of repentance, but a baptism that followed an act of repentance.

    I Peter 3:21 – “The like figure whereunto even baptism doth also now save us (not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience toward God,) by the resurrection of Jesus Christ.”

    Here again, the explanation is contained within the verse itself. This is not talking about water baptism saving us because, as the verse explains, the word baptism is not used here as a reference to the washing of the exterior of the body. Baptism in this verse refers to our being in Christ, and thus having participated in his death and resurrection (Romans 6:3-4), which provides a good conscience toward God because our sins are forgiven. Thus it teaches that the baptism that saves us is our immersion by faith into the resurrection of Jesus Christ, not our immersion into a body of water that washes off the exterior of our flesh.

    A similar explanation can be given for every verse that seems to teach that baptism is necessary for salvation. In some cases the word is referring to spiritual baptism, in which the Holy Spirit is placing a believer into the body of Christ after he has been saved (Romans 6:3; I Corinthians 12:13; Galatians 3:27). In other cases the word is referring to water baptism which is merely a testimony of the believer’s relationship to Christ and His work (Acts 19:3-5; I Corinthians 1:13-17).

  3. Baptizing infants is spiritually beneficial.

    Some churches believe that baptizing infants brings them into union with Christ, even though they are not able to exercise faith. Others believe that baptizing infants brings them under divine protection from depravity until they can reject the Gospel on their own. Still others believe that God uses infant baptism to claim his own and put his seal upon them in a unique way. And still others believe that infant baptism is the New Testament replacement for Old Testament circumcision.

    Infant baptism is nowhere to be found in Scripture and it contradicts what Scripture does teach about baptism. Spiritual baptism happens only to those who actually believe. Infants cannot believe. Water baptism offers no spiritual benefit to a person because it serves only as a public testimony after a person has received Christ. Infants cannot receive Christ and have no testimony to give. It is therefore totally inappropriate to baptize infants.

    There is scriptural precedent, though, for dedicating children to the Lord. Mary and Joseph went to the Temple forty days after Jesus was born to fulfill the post-natal laws of purification. In doing so, the special language of Luke 2:22 describes something they did in addition to the required animal sacrifice. It says, they brought him to Jerusalem, to present him to the Lord. Since children are an heritage of the Lord (Psalm 127:3) and parents are commissioned to bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord (Deuteronomy 6; Ephesians 6:4), it is appropriate for parents to acknowledge these things publicly and present their children to the Lord with a commitment to fulfill these duties — thereby dedicating their children to the Lord with the hope that when they come to the age of understanding they will personally receive Christ as their own Savior.

Conclusion

The Bible says there is only one baptism (Ephesians 4:5). This is true. A person is placed into the body of Christ only once and he becomes a participant in the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ only one time. Christ sacrificed himself only once to accomplish the work of salvation and satisfy God regarding man’s sins. Man believes the Gospel and receives Christ as Savior only one time and is thus baptized by the Holy Spirit into one body only once.

Water baptism symbolizes this once for all time relationship between Christ and those who believe in him. It does not produce this relationship; it merely serves as an illustration of it. Water baptism properly takes place after salvation because it testifies of something that has already happened. If a person, who is not saved, is immersed into water, it means nothing and it provides nothing spiritual to the participant.

Everyone who receives Christ as Savior ought to be baptized into water. It does not add to one’s salvation; and failure to be baptized into water does not prevent anyone from going to heaven. It does in a sense, however, provide a test of the genuineness of one’s faith. It is possible to profess to having received Christ as Savior without actually having done so. Some might profess to believe as an intellectual exercise. This is sometimes referred to as headknowledge as opposed to heart-knowledge. Others might profess to believe just because people around them expect them to and not because they really believe in their heart. A willingness to be baptized into water with a group of people watching does provide some evidence that the profession is sincere. An unwillingness to be baptized into water, apart from a water phobia, raises some questions as to the sincerity of the profession of belief.

Jesus told his disciples that they were to teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost (Matthew 28: 19-20). If Jesus instructed his disciples to baptize believers, then it is a matter of simple obedience to Christ, for all those who have believed in Him to testify of this by publicly being baptized into water. It serves as an open declaration to all who witness it of one’s identity with Jesus Christ. And, it just might be the testimony of faith in the Gospel that will encourage someone else to receive Christ as their Savior.

Catholicism: Its History and Doctrines

by David E. Moss

On March 29, 1994, a group of Evangelical Protestants offered the Roman Catholic Church a document in which they pledged brotherhood in Christ and cooperation in the work of Christ. In it they proclaimed:

We affirm together that we are justified by grace through faith because of Christ… All who accept Christ as Lord and Savior are brothers and sisters in Christ. Evangelicals and Catholics are brothers and sisters in Christ…

Through this lengthy [25 pages] and conciliatory gesture to Catholics, some Evangelical Christians sought to erase centuries of conflict between the two groups. For a number of years, people in the Evangelical community have been talking about saved Catholics and have been cooperating with Catholic people in various social crusades. The Charismatic community has gone even further, building a bridge into the Catholic community and sharing many spiritual activities as well.

If Catholicism offers salvation to mankind in the same way as Evangelical Protestantism (only a little differently), then what was the point of the Reformation? In the Sixteenth Century there was a great schism in the Roman Catholic Church, culminating from generations of persecution and execution of those who resisted the teachings of the Church. The result was the Protestant movement in which new churches were formed with doctrinal beliefs which dramatically contradicted those of Catholicism.

Was it all for nought? Was it a big mistake due to unfortunate misunderstandings? Or are there really significant differences between the teachings of the Catholic Church and Protestant Churches?

In evaluating the Doctrines of the Roman Catholic Church, one very important principle must be kept in mind. One cannot understand Catholicism by talking to individual members of the Catholic Church. What any given member of the Church believes and what the Church officially teaches may be two very different things. So whatever an individual Catholic may happen to believe cannot be taken as an affirmation of actual Catholic Doctrine.

Another important factor is that Catholic Doctrine is so complex many of its tenants appear at times to contradict each other. It has the potential for causing confusion.

Many consider Catholicism to be the original form of Christianity and Protestantism simply a derivative. Catholicism, however, is not what Christ intended His Church to be. It is rather a profound departure from the original form of the Church.

The History of the Roman Catholic Church

The Roman Catholic Church evolved around two concepts. One is that the entire Church makes up the Body of Christ and is inseparably linked together. Thus the use of the word “catholic” which means “universal.” The other is that the entire Church falls under the jurisdiction of a human being who represents Christ on earth. Thus the use of the word “Pope” for the person who fills that role.

The Roman Catholic Church identifies its beginning in the appointment of Peter as the first Pope. The first Vatican Council stated, “If anyone says that Christ the Lord did not constitute the Blessed Peter prince of all the Apostles and head of the whole church militant; or if he says that this primacy is one of mere honor and not of real jurisdiction received directly and immediately from our
Lord Jesus, let him be anathema.” The claim is that Christ himself appointed Peter to exercise jurisdiction over the whole Church and instructed him to appoint successors who would do the same throughout all generations. In addition, Peter is said to have fulfilled this jurisdiction from the Church in Rome as have all his successors.

Statements from Church leaders in the early centuries do not support this contention, however.

  • Ambrose of Milan (397 A.D.) He says the primacy of Peter is only a “primacy of confession, not of honor; of faith, not of rank,” and places the apostle Paul on an equality with Peter.
  • Augustine (430 A.D.) “For the rock is not so named from Peter, but Peter from the rock, even as Christ is not so called after the Christian, but the Christian after Christ. For the reason why the Lord says, ‘On this rock I will build my church’ is that Peter had said, ‘Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God.’ On this rock, which thou hast confessed says he, I will build my church. For Christ was the rock upon which also Peter himself was built; for other foundation can no man lay, than that is laid which is Jesus Christ.”
  • Eastern Bishops understood the primacy of Peter in the first place “simply as honorary… to whom that power was but first committed, which the Lord afterward conferred on all the apostles alike; and in the second place, they by no means favor an exclusive transfer of the prerogative to the bishop of Rome, but claim it also for the bishops of Antioch, where Peter, according to Galatians 2 sojourned a long time, and where, according to tradition, he was bishop, and appointed a successor.”

In truth, the development of the office of Pope required much time and struggle. It was not automatically recognized from the time of Peter, and in some parts of Christianity, never was acknowledged. In the early centuries, prominent Bishops existed in such cities as Ephesus, Thessalonica, Corinth, Constantinople, Alexandria, Jerusalem and Antioch as well as Rome. And in the fourth and fifth centuries, an irreparable division occurred between the churches in the eastern and western halves of the Roman Empire.

Apostolic succession was indeed an issue of the infant Church and earlier Roman Bishops did argue for their direct association with Peter. Not all agreed, however, and the true office of the papacy did not exist for many centuries in that no one exercised jurisdiction beyond the scope of their own local church, including the Bishops in Rome.

Leo the Great, Bishop of Rome from 440 to 461 A.D. was the first to successfully exercise papal authority beyond the borders of Italy, but certainly not over all Christendom. It is important to note, however that his authority was assumed and not given. He was a capable theologian and politician and as such was able by his own assertion to increase the influence and jurisdiction of the Roman Bishop’s seat. After Leo, mediocre men sat in the office of the “Pope” for a century and a half and little expansion of influence was affected by them.

While Leo called himself Pope and aspired to the authority of a universal Bishop of the Church, Gregory is better called the first real “Pope.” He refused the title, but exercised jurisdiction over a wide geographical area. He was rivaled by the Patriarch of Constantinople and was only able to achieve a stalemate in preventing him or anyone else besides the Bishop of Rome from claiming
the role of universal Bishop.

Gregory was a man of strong character, deep conviction, and capable administrative ability. He was also the beneficiary of a weakened political structure in the European arena. The western version of the Roman Empire had ceased to exist in 476, and Gaulic power had fragmented by the time Gregory became Bishop in Rome.

As a result, he was able not only to solidify the religious power of the papacy but the civil power as well, causing serious reverberation for a thousand years of European history. West of Constantinople and covering all of Europe but still falling short of universal jurisdiction, Roman Catholicism became Church and Government to the people. Popes crowned Kings, Monasteries became feudal fiefdoms and the individual lived every day of his life just as the Church said he should for fear of excommunication if he did otherwise.

What the Church had become in Roman Catholicism was far beyond what God intended it to be. God did indeed desire unity for the entire Body of Christ, but He intended it to be a spiritual unity, based upon a mutual submission to the indwelling Holy Spirit and not to a human being. Beyond the jurisdiction of the Apostles, which was eliminated with the death of those founders of the Church, the only scope of responsibility indicated by Scripture is in the context of the local church and not beyond. History records that this is precisely how things were in the early part of the Church’s existence. In spite of this, the Roman Catholic Church has written its own version of history and continues to this day in its insistence that the Pope governs the Church on earth as a substitute for
Christ and that his jurisdiction is universal.

The Doctrine of the Catholic Church

The Doctrine of the Catholic Church is a complex maze. Because it is not based solely on the Word of God, but also on the evolution of man’s imaginations, it is extremely difficult to confine to a few short pages. The following doctrines, however, are of primary importance to the definition of Roman Catholicism in distinction from Evangelical Christianity.

Tradition And Scripture

Catholic Doctrine teaches that the Bible nowhere implies it is the only source of faith. Thus, it claims that tradition is equal to Scripture.

Scripture, according to Catholicism is a tool of the Church. While a gift from God, it is nevertheless in the power of the Church to use Scripture in any way she sees fit. The Church maintains the sole privilege of declaring what the Scriptures mean and how they may be used.

The Catholic Church says that Tradition consists of the teachings of Christ and His Apostles which are not contained in Scripture. It goes far beyond these sources, however, and consists largely of decrees by Church Councils and supposedly infallible statements by the Popes. Traditions are considered to be equal in value to Scripture because they are believed to be a source of Divine
revelation in the same way Scripture is.

As a result of this belief, Catholic Doctrine need not be proved from Scripture. As long as documentation for a belief can be found in the Traditions of the Church, Catholicism considers it to be valid.

Sin and Grace

  1. Catholic Doctrine teaches that sin is a problem, but not a simple one. In fact, compensating for
    sin consumes much of what Catholicism consists. It divides sin into two categories.

    1. Original sin is one of the consequences inherited from Adam and Eve. Original sin sounds like a term which relates to the Protestant belief in the depravity of man. However, the Catholic belief says that while original sin deprives a person of seeing God and of sanctifying grace, it does not send anyone to Hell. In fact, because of its inherited nature and the absence of personal consent, original sin has little or no effect upon the human nature. In spite of inheriting the sin of Adam, human nature remains essentially good and able to do good.

    2. Personal sin is much more serious than original sin. This kind of sin consists of the specific sins a person commits and has the potential to send a person directly to Hell. There are two kinds of personal sin, venial and mortal. Venial sins are not serious. They consist of things like stealing a small item or telling a little white lie. They are easily compensated for in the course of a person’s religious experience. Mortal sins, however, cut a person off from God and from the grace that can save his soul. Whereas original sin merely causes the loss of sanctifying grace, personal mortal sins condemn the perpetrator to Hell. Knowing which sins are venial and which are mortal is sometimes difficult, though, because the determination is often left to the subjectivity of individual priests. A Catholic can never take anything for granted, therefore, and must confess all sin to be sure.

  2. Catholic Doctrine teaches that grace is the solution for sin; but just as there are several kinds of sin, there are several sources for obtaining grace to overcome sin.

    1. Original sin is the easiest to resolve. It is to this category of sin, and this category alone, that the redemptive work of Christ is applied in Catholic Doctrine. Christ’s death and shed blood redeems man from original sin only, not from personal sin. However, even this redemption is hollow, because Catholicism emphatically asserts that faith alone in the work of Christ on the cross will not save anyone, even from the meager penalty of original sin. It is actually man’s submission to baptism that saves a person. In fact, in Catholicism baptism is a more powerful force than the redemptive work of Christ, because baptism can save a person from personal sin, as well as original sin. Baptism (pouring water on the forehead in the shape of the cross) provides the grace to eliminate the penalty for original sin. Through baptism, the redemptive work of Christ is communicated to the individual who is restored to the sanctifying grace of God and all personal sins are forgiven, venial and mortal, so that if a person dies immediately after being baptized he will go directly to heaven. This is effective as long as the baptized person never commits another sin. Each personal sin committed after baptism causes a loss of grace. The individual is then responsible for retrieving that lost grace on his own.

    2. Grace to compensate for personal sin must be obtained through a variety of means, all of which consist of things man must do for himself. Venial sins (the little ones) are somewhat inconsequential since they do not damage a person’s standing before God. They may be compensated for through the general course of obtaining grace through the sacraments. Mortal sins (the big ones that can send a person to Hell) are the real problem. If mortal sin is not properly compensated for, a person goes directly to hell upon death. The Catholic Church has provided its adherents with many ways to obtain the grace needed to compensate for the personal sins they have committed.

      1. The process begins with confession. At least once each year, a Catholic is obligated to confess to an authorized priest all the specific sins he can remember committing since his last confession. This is so essential because if a person dies having committed any unconfessed mortal sins, he goes directly to Hell and there is no hope for him. The priest has the power to absolve confessed sins. The absolution is insufficient, however, because the sinner is then obligated to do something himself to obtain the needed grace to compensate for his personal sins, either while he lives on earth or after he dies. The distinction is that the Priest forgives the sins, but the sinner must bear punishment for his sins, even though they are forgiven.

      2. Penance is the activity, imposed by the authorized Priest, which the Catholic sinner may perform in order to obtain the grace which will compensate for his sin. It is supposed to be a visible form of repentance, showing that the sinner is sorry for his sin and wants to do better. Catholic doctrine teaches, however, that penance is actually a means of obtaining forgiveness and grace to live a better life. Penance, then, serves as the punishment an individual must bear for his own confessed and forgiven sin. It generally consists of a specified number of prayers but may also include alms or some other specific work. Penance is crucial because if enough penance is not performed for mortal sins, there will be consequences to pay after a person dies, even though all mortal sins were confessed and forgiven.

      3. Other means of obtaining grace include Confirmation (by which a person receives the Holy Spirit), The Holy Eucharist (Communion), Extreme Unction (anointing the sick), Holy Orders (such as the offices of Bishop, Priest, etc.) and Matrimony (marriage). Along with Baptism and Penance, these are called sacraments. A sacrament is something man can do to obtain the grace of God. Catholicism teaches that grace is conferred through all seven sacraments and that this grace is absolutely necessary for salvation. Faith alone in the work of Christ is not enough. If a sufficient amount of grace is not obtained to compensate for sins committed, venial or mortal, the remaining penalty for personal sins will have to be worked off after a person dies.

      4. If man fails to obtain all the grace he needs before he dies, Catholic Doctrine teaches that he must work off the rest of his punishment by suffering in Purgatory. The length of time a person spends in Purgatory varies according to the amount of punishment that has not been erased by the earning of grace. The Doctrine of Purgatory corresponds to the teaching that God’s forgiveness does not eliminate the need for punishment. If a living person does not sufficiently punish himself through penance, then he must complete his punishment by suffering in Purgatory after he dies.

      5. Indulgences is another way to obtain grace. Essentially, an indulgence is the release from punishment for sin in exchange for the payment of money to the Catholic Church. They are careful to say that the payment of money does not forgive sin, it only reduces the punishment for sin, continuing the distinction between these two things. Indulgences may be purchased for yourself while you are living or for dead loved ones in Purgatory. This is possible because of what is called the Treasury of the Church. Both the merits of Christ which exceeded what was needed for saving man from original sin and the merits of Mary and the Saints which exceeded their own needs were deposited into this treasury from which the church may draw to grant indulgences to those who can pay money for them.

      6. The veneration of Mary and the Saints is yet another means by which they hope to obtain favor with God. Catholicism teaches that by virtue of their achieving residency in Heaven, the Saints have the privilege of obtaining the audience of God and interceding for man. In doing so, Mary and the Saints may actually obtain divine grace for others.

Salvation and the Sacrifice of Christ

Catholic Doctrine teaches that Christ’s one sacrifice was not sufficient to pay for all sin. In the Mass, Christ is offered as a sacrifice over and over again.

The Holy Eucharist is the term the Catholic Church uses for Communion. It teaches that when the Priest, acting as Christ, says the words, “This is my body” and “This is my blood,” the bread and wine actually turn into the real body and blood of Jesus Christ.

Technically, Catholicism insists that the Eucharist is only an extension of the suffering of Christ on the Cross into the present. But the effect of each Mass is to offer Christ again and again in sacrifice to God. The proof of this is that Catholics receive Christ into their lives, not by faith in what He did for them on the Cross, but by physically swallowing the actual body of Christ in the bread of communion. It is also proven in that it is not sufficient for them to receive Christ once, even through this physical manifestation, but He must be received as many times as possible in the hope that enough grace will be obtained to avoid all punishment for the sins that were supposedly forgiven when they were confessed to the Priest.

Rebuttal

Scripture is the sole source of God’s Word to man. By the end of the First Century, it was complete and all other means of communicating God’s Revelation to mankind were done away with (I Corinthians 13:8-9; Colossians 1:25; II Timothy 3:16; Revelation 22:18-19). Tradition is emphatically denounced by Scripture as having any credibility in establishing true doctrine or directing the lives of God’s people (Matthew 15:3-6; Colossians 2:8; I Peter 1:18).

In inheriting sin from Adam, every human being not only lost the ability to see God, but obtained a depraved human nature and was condemned to Hell (Romans 5:12; John 3:18-20; Romans 3:10-19).

Every person is born with a sin nature and there is no innate goodness in man (Psalm 51:5; Jeremiah 17:9; Romans 3:11-12). One sin, regardless of its degree of seriousness, makes a man a sinner and lost (James 2:10).

The grace needed for salvation can be obtained only through faith in what Jesus Christ did for us. Jesus Christ paid for all sin, whether original or personal, whether venial or mortal, and He paid all that was required for sin. He left nothing undone in redeeming mankind, and God makes no distinction between guilt and punishment. Jesus bore all of it for all of us on the cross. It is left only
for man to believe in Jesus Christ and to trust that what He did for us was enough (Ephesians 2:8-9; Titus 3:5; I John 2:2; Hebrews 9:14-15; Romans 10:9-13).

The Evangelical Christians who seek harmony with Catholics say that “we affirm together that we are justified by grace through faith.” Catholic doctrine agrees with this statement so far as it goes. Catholicism does teach that a person is saved by grace, but by grace the individual may obtain through a variety of means. Catholicism also teaches that a person is saved through faith in Christ — but emphatically denies that a person can be saved through faith in Christ alone.

Many ask whether a person may be genuinely saved by faith in Christ alone and remain in the Catholic Church. The answer is simple. A person cannot be genuinely saved and continue to believe Catholic Doctrine because Catholic Doctrine categorically contradicts the truth of Scripture. And if you do not believe Catholic Doctrine, why would you want to remain in the Catholic Church. Christ clearly teaches His followers to mark them who do not follow the truth and have no fellowship with them.

  • Bibliography of Catholic Publications:
    • Basic Teachings For Catholic Religious Education. By the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, Publications Office, United States Catholic Conference, 1973.
    • The Doctrine of the Communion of Saints In the Ancient Church. By Dr. J.P. Kirsch, Translated by John R. M’Kee, Sand and Company, Edinburgh, 1910.
    • Father Connell Answers Moral Questions. By Very Rev. Francis J. Connell C.SS.R., The Catholic University of America Press, 1959.
    • The Maryknoll Catholic Dictionary. Compiled and Edited by Albert J. Nevins, N.M., Dimension Books, 1965.
    • The Question Box. By Rev. Bertrand L. Conway, The Paulist Press, 1929.
    • Short Dictionary of Catholicism. Edited by Charles Henry Bowden, Philosophical Library, 1958.
    • The Teaching of the Catholic Church, As Contained In Her Documents. Edited by Karl Rahner, S.J., The Mercier Press, 1967.
  • Bibliography of Other Publications
    • The Age of Faith. By Will Durant, Simon and Schuster, 1950.
    • Christianity Through the Centuries. By Earle E. Cairns, Zondervan Publishing House, 1954.
    • Ins and Outs of Romanism. By Joseph Zaccello, Loizeaux Brothers, 1956.
    • Roman Catholicism. By Loraine Boettner, The Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company, 1962.
    • Others too numerous to mention.

Calvinism: Right or Wrong?

An examination of the five points of Calvinism, including a summary of what Calvinists say and a Biblical response from a non-Calvinist, preservationist position.

by David E. Moss

What Happened Before The Foundation of the World?

Think back to eternity past before time began, before man existed, and before the creation of the world had taken place. Man was then only an idea in the mind of God. In His omniscience God knew all that would happen after creation. He foreknew what the world would be like and all the events that would occur in the course of time. He foreknew that man would sin and be hopelessly lost. However, before any of these things actually took place, God made some choices and decreed some plans regarding the future work of His Son and the salvation of mankind. God, of course, knows exactly what He did before the foundation of the world. Theologians are still
trying to understand what really happened.

Several Scripture passages give us a glimpse of the things which took place back then. God formulated an eternal purpose in Christ Jesus (Ephesians 3:11), and foreordained the Son to be a lamb without blemish and without spot (I Peter 1:19-20). The effect of this was that the lamb was slain from the foundation of the world (Revelation 13:8). In other words, the work of the cross was as good as done from the very moment God planned it in eternity past. God also promised us eternal life before the world began (Titus 1:2). He also chose us in Christ (Ephesians 1:4) and gave us his own purpose and grace in Christ Jesus (II Timothy 1:9).

All of these things are simple statements of the Word of God. Many Calvinists and non-Calvinists agree that these things happened just as they are stated. There are some significant differences, though, in how these things are interpreted. Did God design the plan of redemption first and then choose to include those whom He foreknew would believe in Christ? Or did He elect (chose) some to be saved out of mankind and then design a plan that was intended only for those who were elected or chosen? Who really is the us to whom God made these wonderful promises of eternal life?

As we study the subjects of salvation and election, we are given the impression that there are only two choices: Arminianism or Calvinism. Many Christians know they are not Arminian because they understand they are eternally secure in Christ. So they conclude that they must be Calvinist. Then they discover that Calvinists teach some things with which they do not agree. For example, Calvinists teach that Christ died only for the elect, that is, He died only for some men and not for all. Thinking that there are only two choices, non-Arminians pick off of Calvin’s tulip the petals with which they think they agree and label themselves as four point, three point, or two point Calvinists.

There are some problems, however, with non-Calvinists (who are also non-Arminian) trying to identify with Calvinists. Non-Calvinists who label themselves four point, three point, etc., generally use the same vocabulary as Calvinists, such as depravity, election and grace, but define the terms differently. By calling themselves Calvinists, non-Calvinists place themselves in “harmony” with those with whom they actually disagree, often without realizing what they are doing. In addition, it is impossible to have a genuine Calvinist tulip with less than five petals. All five petals are inter-related and inseparable. To claim to be less than five point Calvinist is to misunderstand the actual Calvinist teaching on the various points. There is another alternative: just do not call ourselves either Arminian or Calvinist. Why must we have a man’s name for a label on our theology? If we believe the Bible, to be a biblicist should be sufficient.

The objective of this paper is to show the connection of all five points of Calvinism, to show the biblical response to these points, and to explain divine election from a non-Calvinist’s understanding of Scripture.

The Calvinist’s Interpretation Of What Happened Before the World Began

Total Depravity

The Calvinist view of Total Depravity does not focus only on how bad man is, but also and especially on how bad off man is.

Man is bad off because of his total inability to turn to Christ. Whoever will may come to Christ, but man is unable to come to Christ unless the Father draws him as one of the elect. He is totally deprived of all ability to turn to Christ. He is free to turn to Christ, but utterly unable to do so.

Turning to Christ is a spiritual act and the sinner is spiritually dead. He is therefore unable to turn to Christ. Because of sin, man’s will is enfeebled. Not only will he not turn to Christ, he cannot. The sinner is disabled. He cannot save himself and will not turn to Christ for salvation until he is born again by the Spirit of God.

Unconditional Election

If any man is to be saved, God Himself must do something to bring it about.

God picked out of mankind whom He would save. He chose a number out of the whole human race to be saved. He appointed persons to believe. From eternity, God planned to save one portion of the human race and not another.

On what basis did God choose? God chose some to be saved and did not choose the rest for no other reason than His own wise, just, and gracious purpose. He did not choose on the basis of race, wealth, social position, or any other such thing. He simply picked some and left the rest unpicked.

This does not make God a respecter of persons. You can only be a respecter of persons if you make a difference between equally deserving people. You are not a respecter of persons if you make a difference between equally undeserving people.

Limited Atonement

Christ could not bear the sins of men without actually saving them, therefore, Christ did not die for all without exception since all are not saved. If Christ had borne the sins of all men without exception then all men would be saved. But this is not the experience of all men, therefore, Christ did not bear the sins of all men, but only the elect. At issue here is not the value but the efficacy of Christ’s death. Did He in dying try to save everyone? Did He in dying merely make salvation possible for everyone equally? Was this His intent? If so, then in the end it was not His death that secured our salvation. And if that is so, then His death was not enough. This is why the biblical writers emphasize that in dying, Jesus secured and accomplished the salvation of His people. He did not die in hopes that someone somewhere might somehow make His atonement efficacious. Not at all. He died to save… In His death, the work that saves was finished.

Everyone for whom Christ died is saved. The view of Christ dying only for the elect in a saving sense is the only sense that gives effectual power to His death. The death of Christ really saves all for whom it was intended. If Christ’s death is in reality a substitutionary, vicarious death it saves all for whom it was exercised and no other. That God does not save all proves that Christ did not die for all. It is a contradiction to say that Christ’s work has equal reference to both the saved and the unsaved, the elect and the non-elect. There are none for whom Christ died who do not receive salvation in its fullness. Every last person for whom Christ died will enjoy its benefits. From the stand point of justice, none for whom Jesus died can ever be condemned. Because Christ died in their place, justice demands their acquittal.

Since the Father predetermined who would be saved, and the Son foreknew who the elect were, it is illogical to think that Christ would have died for those whom he knew wo uld not be saved. He therefore limited the purpose of His death, restricting its efficacy only for the elect, the sheep, us, the many as opposed to the few.

To say that the Son redeemed all, and the Father elected but a few, is to give greater honor to the One than to the other, and to make an inequality in their operations.

God is the Savior or Preserver of all men in that Christ’s work secured a delay for unbelievers in the execution of the sentence against sin. If strict justice had been executed, the race would have been cut off at the first sin. That man lives at all after sinning is due wholly to the Cross. In that judgment is delayed, Christ has preserved the lives of the non-elect for a short time and is therefore the Preserver of the non-elect as well as the Savior of the elect.

When the Bible says that Christ died for the world, it means the world of the elect. Christ taketh away the sin of this world (John 1:29). The sin of the rest of the outer world “remaineth” (John 9:41). God loves this world (John 3:16). His wrath is upon the rest of the world (John 3:17).

When the Bible says that Christ died for all men, it means that He died for all kinds of men, i.e. all races, rich and poor, all classes of men without distinction.

“If God has caused an unsaved person to read this article, how sad and tragic that you have no Savior who died on the cross for your many sins. It is the same as if Christ never came and never hung on the cross for sinners.” (Beck)

Irresistable Grace

God would not set out to do something which He was unable to finish. If efficacious grace is the exercise of almighty power, it is irresistible. The Gospel of Christ is the power of God unto salvation! Nothing can stop it. When God calls a man into fellowship of His Son, the call is not refused.

God’s saving grace and effectual calling are irresistible, not in the sense that they are never resisted, but in the sense that they are never successfully resisted.

In electing the saved, God encounters them and regenerates them according to His own sovereign will apart from their will. A Divine interference. A man is appointed to believe. He has no choice in the matter because he is unable to choose. He cannot disbelieve if he is appointed to believe. Neither can he believe if he has not been appointed to believe. God decides who will believe and who will not believe.

Since man is unable to believe, God causes the elect to believe. Saving faith rises not from something from within us but from the work of God. We believe, yes, but only as a direct result of God’s mighty power at work within us and regenerating grace.

Perseverance

Moreover, God has justified them, and if He has justified them, who can say otherwise (Romans 8:33)? Is there anyone who can overrule Him? Still more, there is precisely no other which could ever remove God’s elect from the saving love of Christ. Nothing. No one. Not now, not ever (Romans 8:35-39).

The question, then, is not whether we might sin. The question is whether God’s grace is sufficient to keep us even though we sin (Romans 5:20).

It is further a question of God’s power. Can He keep us in faith? Indeed He can (I Peter 1:3-5).

Perseverance may be defined as that continuous operation of the Holy Spirit in the believer, by which the work of divine grace that is begun in the heart, is continued and brought to completion. (Louis Berkhof)

Such only are real believers who endure to the end… Their persevering attachment to Jesus Christ is the grand mark which distinguishes them from superficial professors.

We can have an assurance of our salvation not only for today but for all time. But the assurance that we have, or confidence in our future estate in salvation, must be based upon the right foundations. In other words, if my confidence that I will persevere is based on my confidence that I will not sin, it’s on very shaky ground. One thing the Bible makes clear to me is that even
though I am a redeemed person, I will in all likelihood, and inevitably, continue to sin to some degree. If it were up to my strength to persevere to guarantee my future salvation, then I would have very little hope of persevering… My confidence rests in the intercession of Christ and God’s ability and promise to hold on to me. In and of myself I am capable of sinning even unto the loss of my salvation, but I’m persuaded that God in His grace will keep me from that. (R.C. Sproul)

Those whom God hath accepted in the beloved, effectually called and sanctified by His Spirit, and given the precious faith of His elect unto, can neither totally nor finally fall from the state of grace but shall certainly persevere therein to the end, and be eternally saved, seeing the gifts and callings of God are without repentance, whence He still begets and nourisheth in them faith,
repentance, love, joy, hope, and all the graces of the Spirit unto immortality… This perseverance of the saints depends not upon their own free will, but upon the immutability of the decree of election, flowing from the free and unchangeable love of God the Father, upon the efficacy of the merit and intercession of Jesus Christ and union with Him, the oath of God, the abiding of His Spirit, and the seed of God within them, and the nature of the covenant of grace; from all which ariseth also the certainty and infallibility thereof… And though they may… fall into grievous sins, and for a time continue therein, whereby they incur God’s displeasure and grieve his Holy Spirit… yet shall they renew their repentance and be preserved through faith in Christ Jesus to the end. (The Baptist Confession of Faith – London, 1689)

Summary

Charles R. Smith, a professor of theology, outlines the Calvinists’ viewpoint concerning the order of events before the world began:

  1. The decision to create
  2. The decision to allow the fall
  3. The election of certain individuals
  4. The decision to provide Jesus as Savior
  5. The decision to send the Holy Spirit to accomplish salvation in regeneration

In the Calvinists’ point of view, man’s fall into sin resulted not only in the acquisition of the sin nature, but in the loss of all ability to respond to God. Man, they say, is totally deprived of all ability to turn to Christ. He is free to do so, but utterly unable to do so. Turning to Christ is a spiritual act and the sinner is spiritually dead. Because of sin, man’s will is enfeebled. The sinner is disabled. He cannot save himself and will not turn to Christ for salvation until he is born again by the Spirit of God.

Knowing this in eternity past, say the Calvinists, God decided to do for some men what they would never be able to do for themselves. In the process, He decided not to do this for everyone. God chose a certain number out of the human race to be saved and He did so without regard to any human qualifications. He picked out of mankind whom he would save regardless of their race, financial status, social position, or any other such matter. He made His choice based on no other reason than His own wise, just, and gracious purpose. On this basis alone He picked some and left the rest unpicked. The Calvinists contend that God was in no way a respecter of persons by doing this because one can only be a respecter of persons by making a difference between equally deserving people. There is no respect of persons, they say, in making a difference between equally undeserving people. So when God determined in eternity past that He would allow man to sin and knew that sin would result in man’s total inability to respond to Him, God made a difference among equally undeserving men, randomly selecting some human beings to be saved, leaving the rest to be unsaved.

Then, say the Calvinists, God ordained the Son to be the Lamb that would die for the sins of the elect only. Since the Father had predetermined who would be saved and the Son knew in eternity past who the elect were, He logically purposed to die only for those who were picked for salvation. In the Calvinistic mind, the view of Christ dying only for the elect in a saving sense is the only sense that gives effectual power to His death. They say that Christ’s death really saves all for whom it was intended. If Christ’s death is in reality a substitutionary, vicarious death, it saves all for whom it was exercised. That God does not save all proves that Christ did not die for all. Calvinists cringe at the suggestion that Christ died for some who are never saved. To them, this would mean that Christ was a failure. How could Christ die for a man without His death resulting in the salvation of that man? In eternity past, say the Calvinists, when God elected some men to be saved, He prepared a means of salvation that was intended only for them and no one else, and everyone for whom it was prepared He successfully saved by the cross.

According to the Calvinists, man has no part to play whatsoever in salvation, not even believing. God determined to save the elect completely apart from their own will. This, of course was necessary because of man’s total inability to respond to God. Since turning to Christ and believing the Gospel are spiritual acts and unsaved man is totally unable to do either, man has to be regenerated and faith implanted in his heart entirely by an act of God apart from the will of man. This is an irresistible act of grace. Nothing can stop it from happening. If a particular person is appointed to believe, God will divinely interfere in his life and cause him to repent. He will regenerate that man and give him the gift of faith entirely apart from the man’s own will. The man has no choice in the matter because he is unable to choose. Saving faith does not rise from something within man, but occurs only as a direct result of God’s mighty power at work within man and as a result of God’s irresistible regenerating grace as applied by the Holy Spirit.

Of course, if a man has not been appointed to believe, the Calvinists say he has no Savior who died on the cross for his sins. For the non-elect, it is as if Christ never came and never hung on the cross for sinners. In eternity past, they say, God prepared the plan of redemption exclusively for the limited number of human beings He picked out of all mankind to be saved. Neither the elect nor the non-elect would have any choice about the matter. God’s predetermination sealed the destiny of every individual human being before the foundation of the world. Once faith is implanted in the heart of a man, that man will persevere in the faith to the end no matter what. But if a man has not been appointed to believe, he has no hope.

The Non-Calvinist’s Interpretation Of What Happened Before the World Began

Charles R. Smith also outlined the non-Calvinist’s viewpoint concerning the order of events before the world began:

  1. The decision to create
  2. The decision to allow the fall
  3. The decision to provide Jesus as Savior
  4. The election of certain individuals
  5. The decision to send the Holy Spirit to accomplish salvation in regeneration

Total Depravity

Some of us who are non-Calvinists agree with the Calvinists that man’s fall resulted in the acquisition of the sin nature and that this fallen nature effects every part of man’s person. The Scripture is very clear that man does not have a spark of good which he can draw upon for noble acts. There is none righteous, no, not one: there is none that understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God. They are all gone out of the way, they are together become unprofitable; there is none that doeth good, no, not one (Romans 3:10-12). It couldn’t be much clearer.

But we do not agree that total depravity means total inability. Along with the idea of creating man, God decided to design man as a whole person with the ability to think, the ability to feel, and the ability to choose (Genesis 2:16-17; Deuteronomy 30:19; Joshua 24:15; Romans 6:16). He understood that man would use his will to choose to sin. He then designed a plan before creation by which all fallen men could also choose to be saved (John 1:12). This in no way suggests that man could save himself, but only that he could freely receive the salvation that God would offer to whosoever would believe (John 3:16). [Note that according to Scripture, man’s ability to choose is in no way restricted only to those who are already born again (Proverbs 1:20-33). Unbelievers are frequently depicted as making choices through Scripture (II Kings 5:1-15; Jonah 3:4-10; Acts 26:28).

Unconditional Election

Divine election, we believe then, was based upon God’s foreknowledge of who would choose to believe and who would choose not to believe, not upon a random selection of some. After God ordained the Son to be a sacrifice for the sin of all mankind, He foreknew that only some men would choose to believe in Christ and that others would choose not to believe even though they would be given the opportunity to do so. Knowing this, God was left with a choice. Would He save every one regardless of how they responded to the Gospel message, or would He save only those who believed? In His infinite wisdom, justice, and grace, God the Father decided to include only those who believed the Gospel and received Christ as their Savior. Acting on this principle before the foundation of the world, He elected, or selected, for salvation only those individuals whom He foreknew would believe and receive Christ. The Bible is very clear about this order of events. Peter was led to write to the strangers… elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father… (I Peter 1:1-2). The preposition “according to” as it is used here shows how one thing proceeds from another. In the same passage, verse 3 says, Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope… This tells us that God’s begetting us again unto a lively hope proceeded from, or out of, His abundant mercy. In the same way, verse two tells us that His electing us proceeded out of His foreknowledge. Romans 8:29-30 agrees with this order. It lists several things that God did including foreknowing, predestinating, calling, justifying, and glorifying. It is very clear from these verses that God’s foreknowledge came first: For whom he did foreknow, (first), he also (afterwards) did predestinate.

We also believe that man’s salvation is conditional: not on any condition of work or merit, but on the condition of his belief in the Gospel and his receiving Christ. But if man is depraved, how could he choose to believe? God’s plan for all mankind was to draw men to himself through His Word. It is true (because the Bible says so) that if God does not draw a man to Himself, that man will never choose to seek God on his own (John 6:44) . But consider the broader context of this verse. Verse 45 goes on to say, It is written in the prophets, And they shall be all taught of God. Every man therefore that hath heard and learned of the Father, cometh unto me. All are taught, exposed to faith through the truth and given the opportunity to respond. Only those who hear and learn (or receive) the truth are saved. The Bible says that God’s plan from the beginning was to draw all men to himself through Christ, giving everyone the opportunity to believe (John 12:32). While a man cannot come except the Father draw him, not all who are drawn come (Matthew 20:16). The opportunity to believe comes specifically through a person’s exposure to the Word of God (Romans 10:17) . Having been exposed to faith by the Word of God, man then has a viable choice — believe or refuse to believe, hear and learn (receive) the truth or reject it. There are many passages of Scripture which teach this truth, that salvation is conditional upon the belief of the individual.

  • John 3:16For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever
    believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
  • John 3:18He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is ondemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.
  • John 7:37-38…If any man thirst, let him come unto me, and drink. He that believeth on me, as the scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water.
  • John 10:9I am the door: by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved…
  • Acts 2:21And it shall come to pass that whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved.
  • Acts 10:43To him give all the prophets witness, that through his name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins.
  • Romans 10:13For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.
  • I John 4:15Whosoever shall confess that Jesus is the Son of God, God dwelleth in him, and
    he in God.
  • I John 5:1Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God…

It is a totally arbitrary definition of respecter of persons to say that one is a respecter of persons when making a difference in one instance but not in another. Noah Webster defined respecter of persons in this way: RESPECTER, n. One that respects; chiefly used in the phrase, respecter of persons, which signifies a person who regards the external circumstances of others in his judgment, and suffers his opinion to be biased by them, to the prejudice of candor, justice and equity. As an illustration, Mr. Webster sites Acts 10:34b, I perceive that God is no respecter of persons. All men have equity in the state of depravity. Choosing between equally deserving or equally undeserving people would make God a respecter of persons either way. Since God is not a respecter of persons, He would not have made such a discriminating choice.

Limited Atonement

Neither do we agree that God ordained His Son to die only for some men and not for all men. Scripture says that Christ gave himself a ransom for all (I Timothy 2:6). The Calvinists explain this away by saying that Christ died for all classes of men without distinction, not for all persons without exception. We non-Calvinists choose not to read into Scripture things it does not say. When it says that Jesus gave Himself a ransom for all, we believe all means all. When it says that Jesus tasted death for every man (Hebrews 2:9) we believe it means every man and not just every one who would have faith irresistibly implanted in his heart. When it says He is the propitiation for… the sins of the whole world (I John 2:2), we believe it means the whole world and not just for the world of the elect. When it says He gave His life a ransom for many (Matthew 20:28) we believe it means the many as opposed to a few.

On this point it is important to note that when Scripture compares many and all it generally uses these terms to refer to the same quantity (Proverbs 31:29; Acts 2:39; I Corinthians 10:17). Scripture typically uses the word few when referring to a different quantity than many (Jeremiah 42:2; Matthew 20:16). The word chosen in Matthew 20:16 is the word eklektos. It is used 23 times in the New Testament and is translated elect 16 times in such passages as Romans 8:33, Colossians 3:12, II Timothy 2:10 and I Peter 1:2 where it is used in obvious reference to the elect in Christ. When Matthew 20:16 says, for many be called, but few chosen, it is saying that God calls the many, the large group, the whole human race, but few, a small group out of the whole, are elect. Calvinists say that God only calls those whom He elects. This Scriptural statement contradicts the Calvinists.

We believe that Christ’s death sufficiently satisfied God the Father for the sins of the whole human race without exception. I John 1:2 says, And he is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world. If the whole world in this verse is restricted only to the elect, what is the sense of the contrast made in the verse between ours and the whole world? This verse obviously draws a contrast between those who are saved and those who are not, saying that Jesus Christ satisfied God for the sins of all who are saved and also for the sins of the entire world, including all the non-saved.

The purpose of the cross was to satisfy God concerning sin and not to actuate the rebirth of the elect. Propitiation and reconciliation are brought about by the cross (Ephesians 2:16; Colossians 1:20). Justification and regeneration are brought about when a man responds to the preaching of the cross (I Corinthians 1:18; Romans 5:1; I Corinthians 6:11; Titus 3:5,7). God has been satisfied concerning the sin of all men, but only those who come to Christ in repentance and faith actually have their sins forgiven.

Irresistable Grace

It is not true that grace is by definition irresistable. It is man’s rejection of God that causes God’s rejection of man (I Samuel 15:23; Jeremiah 6:19; Hosea 4:6) . God gives His grace only to those who willingly receive it (Romans 5:17).

In giving man a choice, God takes nothing away from His own sovereignty. Allowing man to sin had no adverse effect on God’s sovereignty. Allowing man to choose on his own to believe or not to believe the Gospel has no different ramifications on the nature of God than allowing man to fall into sin in the first place. God’s sovereignty gives Him the prerogative of either determining that something must happen, or that something may happen. To say that man may be saved if he believes the Gospel is totally within the scope of the sovereign will of God (Genesis 3:3; Proverbs 20:13; Romans 11:21).

None of this diminishes God’s sovereignty. All of it takes place within the scope of His sovereign rule. He sovereignly prescribes what will take place if man responds one way and He sovereignly prescribes what will take place if man responds differently. Consider the events in Nineveh as recorded in the book of Jonah. God clearly decreed that Ninevah was doomed, yet when Ninevah repented, God was already prepared to extend mercy.

In receiving salvation by faith, man in no way is actually bringing about his own salvation. Faith is not a work. Faith is merely the act of receiving the salvation that is completely and entirely accomplished by God Himself as an act of grace (John 1:13; Ephesians 2:8-9; Romans 5:2; Romans 4:5).

Neither is the force of Christ’s sacrifice diminished by saying that He died for all men without exception, including those who will never believe and be saved. In fact, the potential of the shed blood being applied to all men makes the cross much more powerful than if its efficacy was only intended for a few. How powerful is it for an evangelist to say, “I’m not sure whether Christ died for you or not. If you are one of the elect, He died for you. If you are not one of the elect, He did not die for you.” This is a weak message. The real power of the cross is in preaching “whosoever will may come.”

The fact that not everyone accepts this sacrifice made on their behalf does not make Christ a failure. Christ accomplished on the cross exactly what He intended to accomplish. He satisfied God concerning the sins of the whole world (I John 1:2). The fact that some refuse God’s offer of salvation is a testimony to the failure of man, not of God. God is not willing that any man should perish (II Peter 3:9). He wants all men to be saved (I Timothy 2:4). What would be the purpose of Scripture telling us that God wants all elect men to be saved because He does not want any elect man to perish? Would this mean that God actually wants all non-elect men to perish and not be saved? Somehow, this does not fit the nature of God who loves the world and whose heart is full of mercy and compassion (Psalm 86:15; Psalm 145:8) . God is not a failure in providing salvation for many who will never be saved. He is a great success in providing salvation that is sufficient for every human being that will ever live. The righteousness of God is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe (Romans 3:22). It is genuinely offered unto all. It is placed upon only those who believe. The work of Christ is sufficient for everyone, but it is efficient only for those who receive the Savior.

Perseverance of the Saints

This is the one point of connection that non-Calvinist preservationists have with Calvin’s tulip. We say amen to the truth that those who truly are saved will never be lost. Of course, the idea of the perseverance of the saints involves a little more than the simple truth of the eternal security of the believer. Eternal security is the belief that a true believer will never lose his salvation. Perseverance of the saints is the belief that a true believer will keep on believing throughout his earthly life. A believer is eternally secure because he is kept by the power of God alone, and not by the believer’s own merits or efforts (I Peter 1:5). But how does a saint persevere? The Calvinist says that it is by the immutability of the decree of God. If God has chosen a man to believe, that man will believe to the very end. He may fall into great depths of sin and degradation, deny faith and actually stop believing the gospel for a time, but he will ultimately repent and be preserved to faith because God has decreed it to be so.

Non-Calvinists who believe in eternal security also believe in the perseverance of the saints. If a person’s faith is genuine and he is truly born again, then he will continue to have genuine faith in his heart throughout his life on earth and that faith will be nurtured by the Holy Spirit who dwells within him. He may sin, live carnally, or remain a spiritual infant for a long time. But throughout his life while God is chastening him for his sin, he never stops believing.

When a person who professes to be saved falls off into persistent sinfulness, we rightfully question whether they were ever really saved. Those who are not truly saved but have only an empty profession, will ultimately be drawn back into the world by all of its enticements. As I John 2:19 says, They went out from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they would no doubt have continued with us: but they went out, that they might be made manifest that they were not all of us. Someone who forsakes altogether the faith he once professed is like the stony soil in Christ’s parable. There was the appearance of faith because the plant sprung up. But there was no root, no genuineness to the faith, and it could not endure because it was not real.

Real Christians persevere in their faith. This is the truth taught by such verses as follows. They are often used to suggest that a believer might lose his salvation, but they actually explain that one of the characteristics of true believers is that they persevere in their faith.

  • Colossians 1:22-23…to present you holy and unblameable, and unreproveable in his sight: if ye continue in the faith grounded and settled, and be not moved away from the hope of the gospel, which ye have heard, and which was preached to every creature which is under heaven.
  • Hebrews 3:6But Christ as a son over his own house; whose house are we, if we hold fast the confidence and the rejoicing of the hope firm unto the end.
  • Hebrews 3:14For we are made partakers of Christ, if we hold the beginning of our
    confidence stedfast unto the end
    ;

The Harmony of the Sovereignty of God And the Free Will of Man

There are many who struggle in an attempt to reconcile the sovereignty of God and the free will of man. Some in frustration throw up their hands and say that somehow they are both true, but that it is impossible for man to understand how they fit together. They read the passages of Scripture on election and believe that God has after all chosen us and we have no choice of our own. Then they read the whosoever passages and believe we must act on faith ourselves. Flustered by such contradictions, yet determined to believe all the Word of God, many simply avoid talking about these biblical subjects.

The subject of divine election is not that difficult. The sovereignty of God and the free will of man function in perfect harmony because God ordained that they should do so. God never selected some men for salvation against their will and left the rest to wander hopelessly without an opportunity to believe. Before the world began, God the Father ordained the Son to be a lamb without blemish and without spot who would offer Himself as a sacrifice for the sins of the whole world and satisfy the righteous demands of the Godhead. He foreknew which human beings would accept this plan and which ones would reject it. He decided to include only those who believed
and on the basis of His foreknowledge chose only believers to be in Christ. He prepared many wonderful things for those who would choose to love Him (I Corinthians 2:9) including the guarantee that they would never die again (John 11:26). He predestined all those who would believe to be saved physically as well as spiritually and to receive a glorified body just like that of His Son’s (Romans 8:23,29; Ephesians 1:5; I John 3). In the process, His foreknowledge took nothing away from man’s future opportunity to choose and man’s future freedom to choose took nothing away from God’s sovereignty.

If God has caused an unsaved person to read this article, how happy and fortunate that you have a Savior who died on the cross for your many sins. Christ came and hung on the cross for you just as much as anyone else. God’s invitation is open. If you will confess and repent of your sins and believe the Gospel of Christ, He will save you from your sins and give you eternal life.

Will you? The Bible says whosoever will, may.

Sources:

Some of the statements attributed to Calvinists are direct quotes and are so indicated in parenthesis following the quotations. Other statements are paraphrases, summaries, or include partial quotes of two primary sources used as representative of Calvinist statements. These sources are as follows:

  1. The Five Points of Calvinism, by Frank B. Beck, formerly Pastor of North East Baptist Church, Millerton, New York, now with the Lord. Published by Calvary Baptist church in Ashland, Kentucky.
  2. The Five Points of Calvinism, by Fred G. Zaspel, Pastor of Word of Life Baptist Church in Pottsville, PA.

Many other sources were used as well in coming to an understanding of the problems with Tulip theology.

The Biblical Doctrine of Separation

by David E. Moss

Separation is a Biblical Doctrine. It is derived from that part of Scripture which instructs us concerning the difference between good and evil, right and wrong, truth and error.

The practice of Separation is the means by which this difference is demonstrated. Acknowledging a difference is insufficient; it must be shown through some tangible means. Such difference is to be maintained by the people of God as they live in contrast to an
unregenerate world. It is also to be maintained among the people of God to prevent the infiltration of error (II Corinthians 6:17; Leviticus 10:10-11).

Separation has been practiced by God’s people in every era of human history: by the nation of Israel, by First Century Christians, by Reformers in the 1500’s, and by Believers in the early part of the Twentieth Century. It is not a new doctrine and it has perpetual relevance to every generation and to every culture.

Today, however, it is being questioned as a legitimate practice. There are those who seek to convince the people of God that loving toleration of error is more Christ-like than separating from it. Hence, in a time when it is politically incorrect to be against anything, it is becoming increasingly difficult to convince Christians to be distinctive in this world.

It is time the people of God reaffirm that Separation is a Biblical Doctrine and be instructed in its particulars. The alternative is the road to apostasy: having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof – playing church, but lacking the dynamic of genuine faith which includes obedience.

  1. The Divine Roots to the Doctrine of Separation

    If separation is a Biblical Doctrine, then it originated in the heart of God, the author of Holy Scripture. To be true, it must also be part of God’s instruction to those who believe in Him. If He instructs His followers to be separated, then it must be something He practices Himself.

    In fact, God is the one who set the precedent for separation. Long before Scripture ever began to be recorded, God separated Himself from doctrinal error and the angelic creatures who insisted upon believing it. He demonstrated consistency in the way He treated mankind, who also changed their beliefs, resulting in their rebellious actions. Throughout the Word of God, our Divine Parent has instructed us concerning the expediency of separating from all those who have rejected the truth and pursued an imaginary alternative set of beliefs.

    1. Why Did God Separate Himself from Satan?

      As a citizen of heaven, Satan became guilty of perpetrating a serious doctrinal error. He misinterpreted the nature of God, supposing that it was achievable by a lesser creature such as himself (Isaiah 14:13-14). He convinced about one third of the angels that this was possible, bringing about the first theological division in the history of creation (Revelation 12:4).

      If doctrinal differences are not grounds for separation, why then did God not attempt to agree with Satan on the essentials? Why did God not set an example of conciliation and love above division?

      By separating Satan from Himself, our Heavenly Father established a Divine principle for all His creatures to follow. He did it Himself to demonstrate what is the right thing to do under such circumstances. This supreme example, set by the One whose image believers are to reflect, defined separation as a matter of great importance.

    2. Why Did God Separate Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden?

      Adam and Eve met a similar fate as Satan. They enjoyed a beautiful habitation called the Garden of Eden which must have seemed like Heaven on earth. However, they eventually found themselves separated from this place of peace and harmony by the decree of God.

      Also like Satan, Adam and Eve’s consequences were rooted in their adopting doctrinal error. The human race did not fall into disfavor with God by a mere act of disobedience. Their act of disobedience was a result of a false doctrine they were persuaded to believe. Influenced by the Diabolical one himself, our human parents came to believe that God did not have to be obeyed and that they could assume some form of deification themselves. Only after they believed these things did they eat of the forbidden tree.

      Here was God’s opportunity to show mankind that a little difference in belief should not hinder fellowship. Why did God not invite Adam and Eve to discuss the things which they still agreed upon? Why did He insist upon being so harsh and remove the first man and woman from their beautiful Garden?

      God acted consistently with the way He had treated Satan by demonstrating that doctrinal error has consequences. His compassionate heart, however, would not allow humanity to be sealed into such a condition (Genesis 3:22-24). Unlike His treatment of the fallen angels, the God of Grace and Mercy provided mankind with a means of redemption. He separated sinful man from fellowship with Himself but promised it could be renewed when man recanted his error and unequivocally agreed that God is right about everything. A human being could prove this faith by accepting God’s plan for redemption, but there was no room for compromise (Genesis 4).

    3. Why Did God Insist that Israel Be Separated from Other Nations?

      When God eventually chose a specific family on earth, through which to express His glory to the world, He gave them some instructions in this matter of separation. The children of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob were not to inter-marry with people of other families or nations, and strangers who dwelt among them were to be distinguished from true Israelites. This was not rooted in an ethnic bias but in theological conviction (Deuteronomy 7:1-4; Exodus 29:33).

      Under modern standards, though, this makes God sound discriminatory and politically incorrect, because it is certainly not a policy of inclusivism or loving tolerance of differences. Present day “enlightened” theologians would certainly have accused God of being a right wing fundamentalist, bigoted and hateful, had they been positioned in ancient times as they are today.

      The essential element of faith, however, is believing that God is right about everything. Rather than questioning the wisdom of God (which is an act of doctrinal error), one must believe that God’s directives are pure and unquestionably justified.
      Consequently, when God says His people should separate themselves from those who believe false doctrines, it is a profoundly wise directive to be obeyed without hesitation or reservation. It is precisely what He did Himself in His relationship with Satan; and He
      consistently has given this instruction to His followers ever since.

    4. Why Does God Want the Church to Be Exclusive Rather than Inclusive?

      It is no surprise that the New Testament instruction to the Church includes the same principle of separation.

      …Ye are the temple of the living God; as God hath said, I will dwell in them, and walk in them; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you, And will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty.

      II Corinthians 6:16-18

      God insists that His people are to be an exclusive group. In the same context as the Scripture above, He says the Church is to exclude fellowship with unrighteousness, communion with darkness, concord wi th Belial, participation with infidels and agreement with idols.

      For the same reason that the Israelites were not to inter-marry with people who followed false religions, members of the Body of Christ are not to inter-mingle with the perpetrators of religious beliefs which contradict Scripture. The reason is that such contact exposes the believer of truth to the influence of error which is the first step towards the collapse of faith in God. For the strong in faith who might engage the error in battle, contact may be a plausible activity under the right circumstances. But for the weak in faith who are still learning the intricacies of truth, such contact could be irreversibly destructive.

      The application of separation thus understood, suggests a serious danger in true believers cooperating with adherents to false religions for any cause, including social activism. To be specific, marching arm in arm with believers of error in a protest against abortion, or rallying with the same in a movement to motivate men to responsible action, exposes the children of God to a confusion regarding truth. The cause may be just. But cooperation with error even for just causes is a compromise of God’s directive to be exclusive.

    Conclusion

    It is important to understand that separating from others stems more from what one believes than from how one behaves, because a person only behaves according to what he believes. Satan rebelled against God because he believed God was vulnerable. Adam and Eve disobeyed because they believed God’s Word was questionable. People act immorally because they have imagined vain beliefs about the human condition, about man’s origin and destiny, or about man’s accountability to God.

    It is also important to understand that separating from others is not an option. As God demonstrated it in His own conduct, He has commanded it for those who wish to reflect His image.

    The matter of separating from others is not questioned by all of God’s Children, but many struggle with how far to go in carrying it out. Some agree that Christians ought to be separated from the world, but not from worldly practices which are being brought into the church in immense proportions. Some agree that Christians ought to be separated from unbelievers, but not from anyone who uses the name of Christ, regardless of how they use it. Some, on the other hand insist that Christians not only are to be separated from the world and from unbelievers, but also from many who use the name of Christ in compromising ways. Still others insist that Christians ought to be separated from other Christians who are right about many things, but wrong about many others.

    It appears to be a dilemma, but only to those who fail to understand the true nature of God. God does not compromise on any issue. God never includes a single error in His fellowship. He is pure, holy, righteous, true and infinitely exclusive of their opposites — and His expectation of those who believe in Him is for the same.

    The bottom line is that a person who desires to please God can never be too exclusive in adhering to sound doctrine. Fellowship is not an option for those who believe the Word of God with those who clearly reject it.

  2. Should Some Christians be Separated from Other Christians?

    The word “separation” strikes a curious note in the Church of our modern world. For a very long time the Church divided itself into smaller and smaller groups called denominations and independent churches. In our time, however, the tide has turned. Instead of remaining divided, various segments of Christianity are moving toward closer association. It began when liberal churches were swept together in the ecumenical movement; but in more recent years, the rushing tide has reached into evangelical circles. Instead of frantically trying to define how they are different, large numbers of Christians are diligently searching for how they are the same.

    Certainly, the reunification of the Church would solve a very perplexing problem: diversity within the Church, which is a confusing puzzle to the world looking on. Under the label “Christianity” there are so many different doctrinal beliefs and convictions concerning behavior, that it makes people outside the Church hesitant to join something so diverse within itself. They are forced to wonder if all parts of Christianity can be equally valid, even though they contradict each other. And, if they are not, how does an outsider determine which version of Christianity is the true one, when the Church’s own members cannot agree?

    Ecumenists seek to address this problem by sorting through all existing dogmas and opinions, hoping to find common ground among Christians. The suggestion of this process is that the things Christians differ on are not essential to the definition of true Christianity. Supposedly, only those things upon which all Christians agree are essential to the faith and sufficient to define the Church for the world at large. But, because of the wide range of differences that exist, the common ground ends up being an extremely small piece of spiritual real estate. It is difficult to believe that something so small is sufficient to convince a skeptical world that Christendom’s substantial diversity does not matter. Besides, such a watered down, common ground version of Christianity cannot possibly be what God intended for the institution that would be the “pillar and ground of the truth” (I Timothy 4:15).

    The question we must address is whether we can afford to ignore any Scripture that is profitable for doctrine, reproof, correction, and instruction in righteousness for the sake of unity. If God is right and the whole Bible fits into these categories, what man has the authority to decide that some truth may be sacrificed in order that disagreeing Christians may cooperate? The choice is clear — do we associate with everyone who calls himself a Christian because of a humanized ecumenical philosophy, or do we separate from some according to divine instruction in the Bible?

    Biblical Christianity prescribes both a proper association with adherents to a “like precious faith” and a proper separation from Christians who contradict their identity with the truth. Holy Scripture is clear in its instructions on how to maintain this balance in the Christian life.

    1. The True Basis of Separation

      For a Christian to know whether to associate with one person or to separate from another, it is essential for him to understand the principles upon which such choices may be made wisely. If he does not, he will have difficulty recognizing what endangers his purity. The 6 classic illustration for this point is that the United States Bureau of Printing and Engraving trains its employees to identity flaws in the newly printed dollar bills by exposing them in training sessions to perfect bills only! Once they are indoctrinated with a perfect standard, they have no difficulty identifying what is acceptable and what is not.

      So what is the basis upon which a Christian associates with or separates from certain individuals or organizations? It is a Biblically correct relationship with Jesus Christ — which is not as general a statement as it may seem. If the real Christ is in us and His real Spirit is expressing Himself through us, the outward characteristics of our Christianity, such as theology, behavior, appearance, etc., will conform from within to the values of Christ as defined by Scripture. Christ will not contradict Himself. Therefore, He will produce the same theology and the same behavior and the same life values in everyone who belongs to him. Thus, all those who have the real Christ will outwardly look very much like each other. Associations will be obvious because of the striking similarity. Separations will be easy because of the obvious differences.

      The flaw in the evangelical ecumenism being promoted today is that it uses an erroneous basis for getting together. Christian unity, they say, is not based upon the striking similarity of all those who belong to Jesus Christ, but upon the ability of those who use His name to lay aside their differences. This raises a serious question — from where do the differences come? They certainly do not come from Jesus Christ, because He would never lead two different people to believe contradictory things about himself or anything else. For at least one of any two contradictory beliefs, there must always be a source other than Christ. And if a
      “Christian” is being molded by a source other than Christ, one must be concerned about the effect this un-Christ influence will have on Christ’s true followers (Biblical Christians) if they join hands.

      The Bible cautions the disciples of Christ against associations with those who claim to follow the Lord but whose doctrine and behavior give evidence they really do not (I Corinthians 5:7-11; Romans 16:17; Galatians 1:7-9; Philippians 3:14-21; Colossians 2:4-8; II Thessalonians 3:6,14; II Peter 2:1-2; II John 10; Revelation 2:14,20). It also instructs that both the error and the people who proclaim it are clearly identified so that less discerning believers may guard against associating with potentially harmful influences. Paul said “mark them” (Romans 16:17) and “note that man” (II Thessalonians 3:14). Talking in generalities about those from whom believers ought to be separated is not always sufficient. Sometimes it is necessary to be very specific.

    2. The Personal Aspect of Separation

      The Scriptures talk about the togetherness of the people who make up the body of Christ. Ephesians 4:14-16 says it this way: “That we…may grow up into him in all things, which is the head, even Christ: from whom the whole body fitly joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth, according to the effectual working in the measure of every part, maketh increase of the body unto the edifying of itself in love.” In other places, the Bible uses words like fellowship, unity, assembling together, and oneness of mind to emphasize the importance of the integration of believers. How sweet is the fellowship of the Saints! Or is it?

      The people who make up the Church of Jesus Christ are definitely not fitly joined together. Nor has there ever really been a time in which this has been the case. Since the Church at Corinth in the first century, there have been divisions and schisms among those who claim to be God’s people. How could it be that the group which is intended to be so much together could have so many lines of separation within it? Does the Bible really support such fragmentation? Or, has the doctrine of separation erroneously led to the departmentalization of all those who are truly part of the body of Christ?

      The Bible does indeed instruct Christians to separate from other Christians along two lines: (1) those who claim identity with Jesus Christ but fail to confirm that identity with purity in their behavior, and (2) those who claim identity with Jesus Christ but fail to confirm that identity with purity in what they believe.

      1. Separating from Disorderly Beleivers

        God’s Word is very clear regarding a believer’s withdrawal of fellowship from disorderly brethren. One category of this type is found in I Corinthians 5:11 where several behavioral problems are said to dictate separation: including fornication, covetousness, idolatry, railing, drunkenness, and extortion. Another category of this type is found in II Thessalonians 3:6-15 where the disorderly brethren may not be committing heinous sins but they are failing to conform to Biblical instruction on responsible Christian behavior. These also are to be shunned.

        The purpose of such withdrawal is to impress the guilty person with the error of his ways and to direct him to re-evaluate his participation in such activities. Ultimately the separating believer is to seek an opportunity to offer forgiveness and comfort, confirming that the withdrawal of fellowship was based on love and not on snobbish piety (II Corinthians 2:6-8). This suggests that any association with disorderly Christians should be confined to exhortation and restoration ministries and not include recreation or fellowship.

        The moral dimension of Scripture requires that God’s children not touch the unclean thing (II Corinthians 6:17). Before we are saved we are all as an unclean thing, and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags (Isaiah 64:6). However, when we are born again by faith in Jesus Christ, we are made clean and our scarlet sinfulness is made white as snow (Isaiah 1:16-18). Being clothed with the cleanliness of God’s righteousness (II Corinthians 5:21), we are automatically separated from the filth of a world saturated with ungodliness (II Corinthians 6:14-16). It is our duty to honor our association with Jesus Christ by refraining even from an appearance of touching unclean things (I Thessalonians 5:22).

        Unfortunately, some Christians have the potential of bearing an immoral influence when they are guilty of unrestricted indulgence in the works of the flesh. It is, therefore, not safe to spend a lot of time with people like this, lest we be enticed by them to touch the unclean things which have spoiled their testimonies (I Corinthians 15:33).

      2. Separating from Doctrinally Impure Believers

        Separating from professing believers who are doctrinally impure is a much more intense situation. They may appear to be very moral people and upstanding members of the Christian community. Yet, fellowship and cooperative ministry between these people and Biblical Christians offers a serious threat to the integrity of the Church.

        The reason for separating along doctrinal lines involves a policy of protectionism. As Paul admonished the Corinthians, “I fear, lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve through his subtlety, so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ” (II Corinthians 11:3). Fellowship with those who fail the test of sound doctrine threatens the purity of those who pass. Separation is necessary in order to prevent the leaven of false doctrine from corrupting their minds.

        Laying aside doctrinal differences is not really a proof that we love one another anyway. Instead, it is a destructive force that eats away at the truth. Fellowship and cooperative ministry among those who disagree doctrinally waters down the value of the inerrancy of Scripture. A willingness to compromise what one believes communicates a lack of complete confidence in
        the words holy men of God wrote as they were moved by the Holy Spirit. Are they true or not? If they are, they must be non-negotiable.

        The purpose of doctrinal separation is to challenge people to question the validity of what they believe. Ultimately, we hope for an opportunity to exhort and convince (II Timothy 2:24-26; Titus 1:9). Wisdom, of course, must be used in distinguishing between the opportunities to correct false doctrine and the danger it poses in a context of fellowship and cooperation. The only reason a Biblical Christian should have contact with adherents to false doctrine is to exhort, teach and rescue. All other contact risks the purity of what a Biblical Christian has obtained in Christ.

        Isolation from believers of false doctrine may be a necessary step. II John declares that such should not be received into one’s home, or into a local congregation. Romans 16:17 states that those who hold to contrary doctrine should be avoided. II Peter 2:1-3 proclaims that the failure to clean a house doctrinally can be destructive to the Body of Christ because of the contrary influence false teachers can have. These are all very definite statements about total avoidance of contact with those who promote unbiblical doctrine. They eliminate any and all forms of cooperation for the purpose of ministry or fellowship among those who do not agree doctrinally, regardless of how good the ecumenists make it sound.

    Conclusion

    The current fragmented state of the church is discouraging. Compacting is not happening. The joints are not supplying what is needed. There is ineffectual working in every part and the body at large is not being increased unto the edifying of itself in love. There is a real solution, however — accept the full volume of Holy Scripture as the exhaustive definition of true Christianity, full of doctrines to believe and guidelines for living: all of which is essential and none of which can be laid aside (II Timothy 3:16-17). Believe that true Christianity is thorough, substantive and authoritative; and, that it brings its adherents together, unified in their distinction from everything inside and outside the Church which does not agree.

    Separation for the Biblical Christian will be a logical outworking of his spiritual wisdom. He will understand its necessity to protect the weak, but he will constantly seek opportunity to admonish and correct the errant. He will know when and how to dine with sinners without damaging his identity and when it would be better to stay away. He will be able to discern when to associate with disobedient brethren, so that he may teach them the way more perfectly, and when to withdraw, demonstrating to them the error of their ways.

    His associations will also stem from a mature understanding of Biblical truth. They will be confined to those who are strikingly similar to himself and to those whose doctrine and living standards provide a compatibility that is natural and not forced by compromise.

    It is unfortunate that separation is as much a necessity in the Christian life as association, but real unity in the Body of Christ can only be secured by an unedited agreement in Biblical truth. The lesser process of agreeing on the essentials and elevating “love” above truth actually destroys the integrity of the Church rather than enhancing it. God Himself says it best in His own rhetorical question, “Can two walk together, except they be agreed?” (Amos 3:3).