James Arminius, The
Declaration of Sentiments (October 30, 1608)
A
link to the full version (as published in the Bagnall [American] edition) is
here: http://evangelicalarminians.org/files/Arminius.%20Declaration%20of%20Sentiments_0.pdf
Below
are excerpts from his lengthy section on Predestination.
I. ON
PREDESTINATION
The
first and most important article in religion on which I have to offer my views,
and which for many years past has engaged my attention, is the Predestination
of God, that is, the Election of men to salvation, and the Reprobation of them
to destruction. Commencing with this article, I will first explain what is
taught concerning it, both in discourses and writings, by certain persons in
our Churches, and in the University of Leiden. I will afterwards declare my own
views and thoughts on the same subject, while I show my opinion on what they
advance.
On
this article there is no uniform and simple opinion among the teachers of our
Churches; but there is some variation in certain parts of it in which they
differ from each other.
1. THE FIRST OPINION, WHICH I REJECT, BUT WHICH IS ESPOUSED BY [SUPRALAPSARIANS]
The
opinion of those who take the highest ground on this point, as it is generally
contained in their writings, is to this effect:
I.
God by an eternal and immutable decree has predestinated, from among men, (whom
he did not consider as being then created, much less as being fallen,) certain
individuals to everlasting life, and others to eternal destruction, without any
regard whatever to righteousness or sin, to obedience or disobedience, but
purely of his own good pleasure, to demonstrate the glory of his justice and
mercy; or, (as others assert,) to demonstrate his saving grace, wisdom and free
uncontrollable power.
II.
In addition to this decree, God has pre-ordained certain determinate means
which pertain to its execution, and this by an eternal and immutable decree.
These means necessarily follow by virtue of the preceding decree, and
necessarily bring him who has been predestinated, to the end which has been
fore-ordained for him. Some of these means belong in common both to the decree
of election and that of rejection, and others of them are specially restricted
to the one decree or to the other.
III.
The means common to both the decrees, are three: the first is, the creation of
man in the upright [or erect] state of original righteousness, or after the
image and likeness of God in righteousness and true holiness. The second is, the
permission of the fall of Adam, or the ordination of God that man should sin,
and become corrupt or vitiated. The third is, the loss or the removal of
original righteousness and of the image of God, and a being concluded under sin
and condemnation.
IV.
For unless God had created some men, he would not have had any upon whom he
might either bestow eternal life, or superinduce everlasting death. Unless he
had created them in righteousness and true holiness, he would himself have been
the author of sin, and would by this means have possessed no right either to
punish them to the praise of his justice, or to save them to the praise of his
mercy. Unless they had themselves sinned, and by the demerit of sin had
rendered themselves guilty of death, there would have been no room for the
demonstration either of justice or of mercy.
V.
The means pre-ordained for the execution of the decree of election, are also
these three. The first is, the pre-ordination, or the giving of Jesus Christ as
a Mediator and a saviour, who might by his meet deserve, [or purchase,] for all
the elect and for them only, the lost righteousness and life, and might
communicate them by his own power [Or virtue]. The second is, the call [or
vocation] to faith outwardly by the word, but inwardly by his Spirit, in the
mind, affections and will; by an operation of such efficacy that the elect
person of necessity yields assent and obedience to the vocation, in so much
that it is not possible for him to do otherwise than believe and be obedient to
this vocation. From hence arise justification and sanctification through the
blood of Christ and his Spirit, and from them the existence of all good works.
And all that, manifestly by means of the same force and necessity. The third
is, that which keeps and preserves the elect in faith, holiness, and a zeal for
good works; or, it is the gift of perseverance; the virtue of which is such,
that believing and elect persons not only do not sin with a full and entire
will, or do not fall away totally from faith and grace, but it likewise is
neither possible for them to sin with a full and perfect will, nor to fall away
totally or finally from faith and grace.
VI.
The two last of these means [vocation and perseverance,] belong only to the
elect who are of adult age. But God employs a shorter way to salvation, by
which he conducts those children of believers and saints who depart out of this
life before they arrive at years of maturity; that is, provided they belong to
the number of the elect, (who are known to God alone,) for God bestows on them
Christ as their saviour, and gives them to Christ, to save them by his blood
and Holy Spirit, without actual faith and perseverance in it [faith]; and this
he does according to the promise of the covenant of grace, I will be a God unto
you, and unto your seed after you.
VII.
The means pertaining to the execution of the decree of reprobation to eternal
death, are partly such as peculiarly belong to all those who are rejected and
reprobate, whether they ever arrive at years of maturity or die before that
period; and they are partly such as are proper only to some of them. The mean
that is common to all the reprobate, is desertion in sin, by denying to them
that saving grace which is sufficient and necessary to the salvation of any
one. This negation [or denial,] consists of two parts. For, in the first place,
God did not will that Christ should die for them [the reprobate,] or become
their saviour, and this neither in reference to the antecedent will of God, (as
some persons call it,) nor in reference to his sufficient will, or the value of
the price of reconciliation; because this price was not offered for reprobates,
either with respect to the decree of God, or its virtue and efficacy. (1.) But
the other part of this negation [or denial] is, that God is unwilling to
communicate the Spirit of Christ to reprobates, yet without such communication
they can neither be made partakers of Christ nor of his benefits.
VIII.
The mean which belongs properly only to some of the reprobates, is obduration,
[or the act of hardening,] which befalls those of them who have attained to
years of maturity, either because they have very frequently and enormously
sinned against the law of God, or because they have rejected the grace of the
gospel. (1.) To the execution of the first species of induration, or hardening,
belong the illumination of their conscience by means of knowledge, and its
conviction of the righteousness of the law. For it is impossible that this law
should not necessarily detain them in unrighteousness, to render them
inexcusable. (2.) For the execution of the second species of induration, God
employs a call by the preaching of his gospel, which call is inefficacious and
insufficient both in respect to the decree of God, and to its issue or event.
This calling is either only an external one, which it is neither in their
desire nor in their power to obey. Or it is likewise an internal one, by which
some of them may be excited in their understandings to accept and believe the
things which they hear; but yet it is only with such a faith as that with which
the devils are endowed when they believe and tremble. Others of them are
excited and conducted still further, so as to desire in a certain measure to
taste the heavenly gift. But the latter are, of all others, the most unhappy,
because they are raised up on high, that they may be brought down with a
heavier fall. And this fate it is impossible for them to escape, for they must
of necessity return to their vomit, and depart or fall away from the faith.
IX.
From this decree of Divine election and reprobation, and from this
administration of the means which pertain to the execution of both of them, it
follows, that the elect are necessarily saved, it being impossible for them to
perish -- and that the reprobate are necessarily damned, it being impossible
for them to be saved; and all this from the absolute purpose [or determination]
of God, which is altogether antecedent to all things, and to all those causes
which are either in things themselves or can possibly result from them.
These
opinions concerning predestination are considered, by some of those who
advocate them, to be the foundation of Christianity, salvation and of its
certainty. On these sentiments they suppose, “is founded the sure and undoubted
consolation of all believers, which is capable of rendering their consciences
tranquil; and on them also depends the praise of the grace of God, so that if
any contradiction be offered to this doctrine, God is necessarily deprived of
the glory of his grace, and then the merit of salvation is attributed to the
free will of man and to his own powers and strength, which ascription savours
of Pelagianism.”
These
then are the causes which are offered why the advocates of these sentiments
labour with a common anxiety to retain the purity of such a doctrine in their
churches and why they oppose themselves to all those innovations which are at
variance with them.
2. MY SENTIMENTS ON THE
PRECEDING SCHEME OF PREDESTINATION.
But,
for my own part, to speak my sentiments with freedom, and yet with a salvo in
favour of a better judgment, I am of opinion, that this doctrine of theirs
contains many things that are both false and impertinent, and at an utter
disagreement with each other; all the instances of which, the present time will
not permit me to recount, but I will subject it to an examination only in those
parts which are most prominent and extensive. I shall, therefore, propose to
myself four principal heads, which are of the greatest importance in this
doctrine; and when I have in the first place explained of what kind they are, I
will afterwards declare more fully the judgment and sentiments which I have
formed concerning them. They are the following:
I.
That God has absolutely and precisely decreed to save certain particular men by
his mercy or grace, but to condemn others by his justice: and to do all this
without having any regard in such decree to righteousness or sin, obedience or
disobedience, which could possibly exist on the part of one class of men or of
the other.
II.
That, for the execution of the preceding decree, God determined to create Adam,
and all men in him, in an upright state of original righteousness; besides
which he also ordained them to commit sin, that they might thus become guilty
of eternal condemnation and be deprived of original righteousness.
III.
That those persons whom God has thus positively willed to save, he has decreed
not only to salvation but also to the means which pertain to it; (that is, to conduct
and bring them to faith in Christ Jesus, and to perseverance in that faith ;)
and that He also in reality leads them to these results by a grace and power
that are irresistible, so that it is not possible for them to do otherwise than
believe, persevere in faith, and be saved.
IV.
That to those whom, by his absolute will, God has fore-ordained to perdition,
he has also decreed to deny that grace which is necessary and sufficient for
salvation, and does not in reality confer it upon them; so that they are
neither placed in a possible condition nor in any capacity of believing or of
being saved.
After
a diligent contemplation and examination of these four heads, in the fear of
the Lord, I make the following declaration respecting this doctrine of predestination.
3. I REJECT THIS
PREDESTINATION FOR THE FOLLOWING REASONS:
I.
Because it is not the foundation of Christianity, of Salvation, or of its
certainty.
- It is not the foundation of Christianity:
(1.) For this Predestination is not that decree of God by which Christ is
appointed by God to be the saviour, the Head, and the Foundation of those
who will be made heirs of salvation. Yet that decree is the only
foundation of Christianity. (2.) For the doctrine of this Predestination
is not that doctrine by which, through faith, we as lively stones are
built up into Christ, the only corner stone, and are inserted into him as
the members of the body are joined to their head.
- It is not the foundation of Salvation:
(1.) For this Predestination is not that decree of the good pleasure of
God in Christ Jesus on which alone our salvation rests and depends. (2.)
The doctrine of this Predestination is not the foundation of Salvation:
for it is not “the power of God to salvation to every one that believeth:”
because through it “the righteousness of God” is not “revealed from faith
to faith.”
- Nor is it the foundation of the certainty
of salvation: For that is dependent upon this decree, “they who believe,
shall be saved:” I believe, therefore, I shall be saved. But the doctrine
of this Predestination embraces within itself neither the first nor the
second member of the syllogism.
This
is likewise confessed by some persons in these words: “we do not wish to state
that the knowledge of this [Predestination] is the foundation of Christianity
or of salvation, or that it is necessary to salvation in the same manner as the
doctrine of the Gospel,” &c.
II.
This doctrine of Predestination comprises within it neither the whole nor any
part of the Gospel. For, according to the tenor of the discourses delivered by
John and Christ, as they are described to us by the Evangelist, and according
to the doctrine of the Apostles and Christ after his ascension, the Gospel
consists partly of an injunction to repent and believe, and partly of a promise
to bestow forgiveness of sins, the grace of the Spirit, and life eternal. But
this Predestination belongs neither to the injunction to repent and believe,
nor to the annexed promise. Nay, this doctrine does not even teach what kind of
men in general God has predestinated, which is properly the doctrine of the
Gospel; but it embraces within itself a certain mystery, which is known only to
God, who is the Predestinater, and in which mystery are comprehended what particular
persons and how many he has decreed to save and to condemn. From these premises
I draw a further conclusion, that this doctrine of Predestination is not
necessary to salvation, either as an object of knowledge, belief, hope, or
performance. A Confession to this effect has been made by a certain learned
man, in the theses which he has proposed for discussion on this subject, in the
following words: “Wherefore the gospel cannot be simply termed the book or the
revelation of Predestination, but only in a relative sense. Because it does not
absolutely denote either the matter of the number or the form; that is, it
neither declares how many persons in particular, nor (with a few exceptions,)
who they are, but only the description of them in general, whom God has
predestinated.”
III.
This doctrine was never admitted, decreed, or approved in any Council, either
general or particular, for the first six hundred years after Christ. …
…
VII.
I affirm, that this doctrine is repugnant to the Nature of God, but particularly
to those Attributes of his nature by which he performs and manages all things,
his wisdom, justice, and goodness.
- It is repugnant to his wisdom in three
ways. (1.) Because it represents God as decreeing something for a
particular end [or purpose] which neither is nor can be good: which is,
that God created something for eternal perdition to the praise of his
justice. (2.) Because it states, that the object which God proposed to
himself by this Predestination, was, to demonstrate the glory of his mercy
and justice: But this glory he cannot demonstrate, except by an act that
is contrary at once to his mercy and his justice, of which description is
that decree of God in which he determined that man should sin and be
rendered miserable. (3.) Because it changes and inverts the order of the
two-fold wisdom of God, as it is displayed to us in the Scriptures. For it
asserts, that God has absolutely predetermined to save men by the mercy
and wisdom that are comprehended in the doctrine of the cross of Christ,
without having foreseen this circumstance, that it was impossible for man
(and that, truly, through his own fault,) to be saved by the wisdom which
was revealed in the law and which was infused into him at the period of
his creation: When the scripture asserts, on the contrary, that “it
pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe;”
that is, “by the doctrine of the cross, after that in the wisdom of God
the world by wisdom knew not God.” (1 Cor. 1:21.)
- It is repugnant to the justice of God, not
only in reference to that attribute denoting in God a love of
righteousness and a hatred of iniquity, but also in reference to its being
a perpetual and constant desire in him to render to every one that which
is his due. (1.) It is at variance with the first of these ideas of
justice in the following manner: Because it affirms, that God has
absolutely willed to save certain individual men, and has decreed their
salvation without having the least regard to righteousness or obedience:
The proper inference from which, is, that God loves such men far more than
his own justice [or righteousness.] (2.) It is opposed to the second idea
of his justice: Because it affirms, that God wishes to subject his
creature to misery, (which cannot possibly have any existence except as
the punishment of sin,) although, at the same time, he does not look upon
[or consider] the creature as a sinner, and therefore as not obnoxious
either to wrath or to punishment. This is the manner in which it lays down
the position, that God has willed to give to the creature not only
something which does not belong to it, but which is connected with its
greatest injury. Which is another act directly opposed to his justice. In
accordance, therefore, with this doctrine, God, in the first place,
detracts from himself that which is his own, [or his right,] and then
imparts to the creature what does not belong to it, to its great misery
and unhappiness.
- It is also repugnant to the Goodness of
God. Goodness is an affection [or disposition] in God to communicate his
own good so far as his justice considers and admits to be fitting and
proper. But in this doctrine the following act is attributed to God, that,
of himself, and induced to it by nothing external, he wills the greatest
evil to his creatures; and that from all eternity he has pre-ordained that
evil for them, or pre-determined to impart it to them, even before he
resolved to bestow upon them any portion of good. For this doctrine
states, that God willed to damn; and, that he might be able to do this, be
willed to create; although creation is the first egress [or going forth]
of God’s goodness towards his creatures. How vastly different are such
statements as these from that expansive goodness of God by which he confers
benefits not only on the unworthy, but also on the evil, the unjust and on
those who are deserving of punishment, which trait of Divine beneficence
in our Father who is in heaven, we are commanded to imitate. (Matt. 5:45)
VIII.
Such a doctrine of Predestination is contrary to the nature of man, in regard
to his having been created after the Divine image in the knowledge of God and
in righteousness, in regard to his having been created with freedom of will,
and in regard to his having been created with a disposition and aptitude for
the enjoyment of life eternal. These three circumstance, respecting him, may be
deduced from the following brief expressions: “Do this, and live :” (Rom. 10:5)
“In the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die.” (Gen. 2:17.) If
man be deprived of any of these qualifications, such admonitions as these
cannot possibly be effective in exciting him to obedience.
- This doctrine is inconsistent with the
Divine image, which consists of the knowledge of God and holiness. For
according to this knowledge and righteousness man was qualified and
empowered, he was also laid under an obligation to know God, to love,
worship, and serve him. But by the intervention, or rather by the
prevention, of this Predestination, it was pre-ordained that man should be
formed vicious and should commit sin, that is, that he should neither know
God, love, worship, nor serve him; and that he should not perform that
which by the image of God, he was well qualified and empowered to do, and which
he was bound to perform. This is tantamount to such a declaration as the
following, which any one might make: “God did undoubtedly create man after
his own image, in righteousness and true holiness; but, notwithstanding
this, he fore-ordained and decreed, that man should become impure and
unrighteous, that is, should be made conformable to the image of Satan.”
- This doctrine is inconsistent with the
freedom of the will, in which and with which man was created by God. For
it prevents the exercise of this liberty, by binding or determining the
will absolutely to one object, that is, to do this thing precisely, or to
do that. God, therefore, according to this statement, may be blamed for
the one or the other of these two things, (with which let no man charge
his Maker!) either for creating man with freedom of will, or for hindering
him in the use of his own liberty after he had formed him a free agent. In
the former of these two cases, God is chargeable with a want of
consideration, in the latter with mutability. And in both, with being
injurious to man as well as to himself.
- This Predestination is prejudicial to man
in regard to the inclination and capacity for the eternal fruition of
salvation, with which he was endowed at the period of his creation. For,
since by this Predestination it has been pre-determined, that the greater
part of mankind shall not be made partakers of salvation, but shall fall
into everlasting condemnation, and since this predetermination took place
even before the decree had passed for creating man, such persons are
deprived of something, for the desire of which they have been endowed by
God with a natural inclination. This great privation they suffer, not in
consequence of any preceding sin or demerit of their own, but simply and
solely through this sort of Predestination.
IX.
This Predestination is diametrically opposed to the Act of Creation.
- For creation is a communication of good
according to the intrinsic property of its nature. But, creation of this
description, whose intent or design is, to make a way through itself by
which the reprobation that had been previously determined may obtain its
object, is not a communication of good. For we ought to form our estimate
and judgment of every good, from the mind and intention of Him who is the
Donor, and from the end to which or on account of which it is bestowed. In
the present instance, the intention of the Donor would have been, to
condemn, which is an act that could not possibly affect any one except a
creature; and the end or event of creation would have been the eternal
perdition of the creature. In that case creation would not have been a
communication of any good, but a preparation for the greatest evil both
according to the very intention of the Creator and the actual issue of the
matter; and according to the words of Christ, “it had seen good for that
man, if he had never been born!” (Matt. 26:24.)
- Reprobation is an act of hatred, and from
hatred derives its origin. But creation does not proceed from hatred; it
is not therefore a way or means, which belongs to the execution of the
decree of reprobation.
- Creation is a perfect act of God, by which
he has manifested his wisdom, goodness and omnipotence: It is not
therefore subordinate to the end of any other preceding work or action of
God. But it is rather to be viewed as that act of God, which necessarily
precedes and is antecedent to all other acts that he can possibly either
decree or undertake. Unless God had formed a previous conception of the work
of creation, he could not have decreed actually to undertake any other
act; and until he had executed the work of creation, he could by no means
have completed any other operation.
- All the actions of God which tend to the
condemnation of his creatures, are strange work or foreign to him; because
God consents to them, for some other cause that is quite extraneous. But
creation is not an action that is foreign to God, but it is proper to him.
It is eminently an action most appropriate to Him, and to which he could
be moved by no other external cause, because it is the very first of the
Divine acts, and, till it was done, nothing could have any actual
existence, except God himself; for every thing else that has a being, came
into existence through this action.
- If creation be the way and means through
which God willed the execution of the decree of his reprobation, he was
more inclined to will the act of reprobation than that of creation; and he
consequently derived greater satisfaction from the act of condemning
certain of his innocent creatures, than in the act of their creation.
- Lastly. Creation cannot be a way or means
of reprobation according to the absolute purpose of God: because, after
the creation was completed, it was in the power of man still to have
remained obedient to the divine commands, and not to commit sin; to render
this possible, while God had on one part bestowed on him sufficient
strength and power, he had also on the other placed sufficient
impediments; a circumstance most diametrically opposed to a Predestination
of this description.
X.
This doctrine is at open hostility with the Nature of Eternal Life, and the
titles by which it is signally distinguished in the Scriptures. For it is
called “the inheritance of the sons of God;” (Titus 3:7,) but those alone are
the sons of God, according to the doctrine of the Gospel, “who believe in the
name of Jesus Christ.” (John 1:12.) It is also called, “the reward of
obedience,” (Matt. 5:12,) and of “the labour of love;” (Heb. 6:10,) “the
recompense of those who fight the good fight and who run well, a crown of
righteousness,” &c. (Rev. 2:10; 2 Tim. 4:7-8). God therefore has not, from his own absolute
decree, without any consideration or regard whatever to faith and obedience,
appointed to any man, or determined to appoint to him, life eternal.
XI
This Predestination is also opposed to the Nature of Eternal Death, and to
those appellations by which it is described in Scripture. For it is called “the
wages of sin; (Rom. 6:23,) the punishment of everlasting destruction, which
shall be recompensed to them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of
our Lord Jesus Christ; (2 Thess. 1:8-9,) the everlasting fire prepared for the
devil and his angels, (Matt. 25:41,) a fire which shall devour the enemies and
adversaries of God.” (Heb. 10:27.) God, therefore, has not, by any absolute
decree without respect to sin and disobedience, prepared eternal death for any
person.
XII
This Predestination is inconsistent with the Nature and Properties of Sin in
two ways: (1.) Because sin is called “disobedience” and “rebellion,” neither of
which terms can possibly apply to any person who by a preceding divine decree
is placed under an unavoidable necessity of sinning. (2.) Because sin is the meritorious cause of
damnation. But the meritorious cause which moves the Divine will to reprobate,
is according to justice; and it induces God, who holds sin in abhorrence, to
will reprobation. Sin, therefore, which is a cause, cannot be placed among the
means, by which God executes the decree or will of reprobation.
XIII.
This doctrine is likewise repugnant to the Nature of Divine Grace, and as far
as its powers permit, it effects its destruction. Under whatever specious pretences
it may be asserted, that “this kind of Predestination is most admirably adapted
and quite necessary for the establishment of grace,” yet it destroys it in
three ways:
- Because grace is so attempered and
commingled with the nature of man, as not to destroy within him the liberty
of his will, but to give it a right direction, to correct its depravity,
and to allow man to possess his own proper notions. While, on the
contrary, this Predestination introduces such a species of grace, as takes
away free will and hinders its exercise.
- Because the representations of grace which
the scriptures contain, are such as describe it capable of “being
resisted, (Acts 7:51,) and received in vain;” (2 Cor. 6:1,) and that it is
possible for man to avoid yielding his assent to it; and to refuse all
co-operation with it. (Heb. 12:15; Matt. 23:37; Luke 7:30.) While, on the
contrary, this Predestination affirms, that grace is a certain
irresistible force and operation.
- Because, according to the primary
intention and chief design of God, grace conduces to the good of those
persons to whom it is offered and by whom it is received: while, on the
contrary, this doctrine drags along with it the assertion, that grace is
offered even to certain reprobates, and is so far communicated to them as
to illuminate their understandings and to excite within them a taste for
the heavenly gifts, only for this end and purpose, that, in proportion to
the height to which they are elevated, the abyss into which they are
precipitated may be the deeper, and their fall the heavier; and that they
may both merit and receive the greater perdition.
XIV.
The doctrine of this Predestination is Injurious to the Glory of God, which
does not consist of a declaration of liberty or authority, nor of a
demonstration of anger and power, except to such an extent as that declaration
and demonstration may be consistent with justice, and with a perpetual
reservation in behalf of the honour of God’s goodness. But, according to this
doctrine, it follows that God is the author of sin, which may be proved by four
arguments:
- One of its positions is, that God has
absolutely decreed to demonstrate his glory by punitive justice and mercy,
in the salvation of some men, and in the damnation of others, which
neither was done, nor could have possibly been done, unless sin had
entered into the world.
- This doctrine affirms, that, in order to
obtain his object, God ordained that man should commit sin, and be
rendered vitiated; and, from this Divine ordination or appointment, the
fall of man necessarily followed.
- It asserts that God has denied to man, or
has withdrawn from him, such a portion of grace as is sufficient and
necessary to enable him to avoid sin, and that this was done before man
had sinned: which is an act that amounts to the same as if God had
prescribed a law to man, which it would be utterly impossible for him to
fulfill, when the nature in which he had been created was taken into
consideration.
- It ascribes to God certain operations with
regard to man, both external and internal, both mediate (by means of the
intervention of other creatures) and immediate -- which Divine operations
being once admitted, man must necessarily commit sin, by that necessity
which the schoolmen call “a consequential necessity antecedent to the
thing itself,” and which totally destroys the freedom of the will. Such an
act does this doctrine attribute to God, and represents it to proceed from
his primary and chief intention, without any foreknowledge of an
inclination, will, or action on the part of man.
From
these premises, we deduce, as a further conclusion, that God really sins.
Because, according to this doctrine, he moves to sin by an act that is
unavoidable, and according to his own purpose and primary intention, without
having received any previous inducement to such an act from any preceding sin
or demerit in man.
From
the same position we might also infer, that God is the only sinner. For man,
who is impelled by an irresistible force to commit sin, (that is, to perpetrate
some deed that has been prohibited,) cannot be said to sin himself.
As
a legitimate consequence it also follows, that sin is not sin, since whatever
that be which God does, it neither can be sin, nor ought any of his acts to
receive that appellation.
Besides
the instances which I have already recounted, there is another method by which
this doctrine inflicts a deep wound on the honour of God -- but these, it is
probable, will be considered at present to be amply sufficient.
XV.
This doctrine is highly dishonourable to Jesus Christ our saviour. For, 1. It
entirely excludes him from that decree of Predestination which predestinates
the end: and it affirms, that men were predestinated to be saved, before Christ
was predestinated to save them; and thus it argues, that he is not the
foundation of election. 2. It denies,
that Christ is the meritorious cause, that again obtained for us the salvation
which we had lost, by placing him as only a subordinate cause of that salvation
which had been already foreordained, and thus only a minister and instrument to
apply that salvation unto us. This indeed is in evident congruity with the
opinion which states “that God has absolutely willed the salvation of certain
men, by the first and supreme decree which he passed, and on which all his
other decrees depend and are consequent.” If this be true, it was therefore
impossible for the salvation of such men to have been lost, and therefore
unnecessary for it to be repaired and in some sort regained afresh, and
discovered, by the merit of Christ, who was fore-ordained a saviour for them
alone.
XVI.
This doctrine is also hurtful to the salvation of men.
- Because it prevents that saving and godly
sorrow for sins that have been committed, which cannot exist in those who
have no consciousness of sin. But it is obvious, that the man who has
committed sin through the unavoidable necessity of the decree of God,
cannot possibly have this kind of consciousness of sin. (2 Cor. 7:10.)
- Because it removes all pious solicitude about
being converted from sin unto God. For he can feel no such concern who is
entirely passive and conducts himself like a dead man, with respect not
only to his discernment and perception of the grace of God that is
exciting and assisting, but also to his assent and obedience to it; and
who is converted by such an irresistible impulse, that he not only cannot
avoid being sensible of the grace of God which knocks within him, but he
must likewise of necessity yield his assent to it, and thus convert himself,
or rather be converted. Such a person it is evident, cannot produce within
his heart or conceive in his mind this solicitude, except he have
previously felt the same irresistible motion. And if he should produce
within his heart any such concern, it would be in vain and without the
least advantage. For that cannot be a true solicitude, which is not
produced in the heart by any other means except by an irresistible force
according to the absolute purpose and intention of God to effect his
salvation. (Rev. 2:3; 3:2.)
- Because it restrains, in persons that are
converted, all zeal and studious regard for good works, since it declares “that
the regenerate cannot perform either more or less good than they do.” For
he that is actuated or impelled by saving grace, must work, and cannot
discontinue his labour; but he that is not actuated by the same grace, can
do nothing, and finds it necessary to cease from all attempts. (Titus 3:14.)
- Because it extinguishes the zeal for
prayer, which yet is an efficacious means instituted by God for asking and
obtaining all kinds of blessings from him, but principally the great one
of salvation. (Luke 11:1-13.) But from the circumstance of it having been
before determined by an immutable and inevitable decree, that this
description of men [the elect] should obtain salvation, prayer cannot on
any account be a means for asking and obtaining that salvation. It can
only be a mode of worshipping God; because according to the absolute
decree of his Predestination he has determined that such men shall be
saved.
- It takes away all that most salutary fear
and trembling with which we are commanded to work out our own salvation.
(Phil. 2:12) for it states “that he who is elected and believes, cannot
sin with that full and entire willingness with which sin is committed by
the ungodly; and that they cannot either totally or finally fall away from
faith or grace.”
- Because it produces within men a despair
both of performing that which their duty requires and of obtaining that towards
which their desires are directed. For when they are taught that the grace
of God (which is really necessary to the performance of the least portion
of good) is denied to the majority of mankind, according to an absolute
and peremptory decree of God -- - and that such grace is denied because,
by a preceding decree equally absolute, God has determined not to confer
salvation on them but damnation; when they are thus taught, it is scarcely
possible for any other result to ensue, than that the individual who
cannot even with great difficulty work a persuasion within himself of his
being elected, should soon consider himself included in the number of the
reprobate. From such an apprehension as this, must arise a certain despair
of performing righteousness and obtaining salvation.
XVII.
This doctrine inverts the order of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. For in the
Gospel God requires repentance and faith on the part of man, by promising to
him life everlasting, if he consent to become a convert and a believer. (Mark 1:15;
16:16.) But it is stated in this [Supralapsarian] decree of Predestination,
that it is God’s absolute will, to bestow salvation on certain particular men,
and that he willed at the same time absolutely to give those very individuals
repentance and faith, by means of an irresistible force, because it was his
will and pleasure to save them. In the Gospel, God denounces eternal death on
the impenitent and unbelieving. (John 3:36.) And those threats contribute to
the purpose which he has in view, that he may by such means deter them from
unbelief and thus may save them. But by this
decree
of Predestination it is taught, that God wills not to confer on certain
individual men that grace which is necessary for conversion and faith because
he has absolutely decreed their condemnation.
The
Gospel says, “God so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten son, that
whosoever believeth in him should have everlasting life.” (John 3:16.)
But
this doctrine declares; “that God so loved those whom he had absolutely elected
to eternal life, as to give his son to them alone, and by an irresistible force
to produce within them faith on him.” To embrace the whole in few words, the
Gospel says, “fulfill the command, and thou shalt obtain the promise; believe,
and thou shalt live.” But this [supralapsarian] doctrine says, “since it is my
will to give thee life, it is therefore my will to give thee faith:” which is a
real and most manifest inversion of the Gospel.
XVIII.
This Predestination is in open hostility to the ministry of the Gospel.
- For if God by an irresistible power
quicken him who is dead in trespasses and sins, no man can be a minister
and “a labourer together with God,” (1 Cor. 3:9,) nor can the word
preached by man be the instrument of grace and of the Spirit, any more
than a creature could have been an instrument of grace in the first
creation, or a dispenser of that grace in the resurrection of the body
from the dead.
- Because by this Predestination the
ministry of the gospel is made “the savour of death unto death” in the
case of the majority of those who hear it, (2 Cor. 2:14-16,) as well as an
instrument of condemnation, according to the primary design and absolute
intention of God, without any consideration of previous rebellion.
- Because, according to this doctrine,
baptism, when administered to many reprobate children, (who yet are the
offspring of parents that believe and are God’s covenant people,) is
evidently a seal [or ratification] of nothing, and thus becomes entirely
useless, in accordance with the primary and absolute intention of God,
without any fault [or culpability] on the part of the infants themselves,
to whom it is administered in obedience to the Divine command.
- Because it hinders public prayers from being
offered to God in a becoming and suitable manner, that is, with faith, and
in confidence that they will be profitable to all the hearers of the word;
when there are many among them, whom God is not only unwilling to save,
but whom by his absolute, eternal, and immutable will, (which is
antecedent to all things and causes whatever,) it is his will and pleasure
to damn: In the mean time, when the apostle commands prayers and
supplications to be made for all men, he adds this reason, “for this is
good and acceptable in the sight of God our saviour; who will have all men
to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth.” (1 Tim. 2:1-4.)
- The constitution of this doctrine is such,
as very easily to render pastors and teachers slothful and negligent in
the exercise of their ministry: Because, from this doctrine it appears to
them as though it were impossible for all their diligence to be useful to
any persons, except to those only whom God absolutely and precisely wills
to save, and who cannot possibly perish; and as though all their
negligence could be hurtful to none, except to those alone whom God
absolutely wills to destroy, who must of necessity perish, and to whom a
contrary fate is impossible.
XIX.
This doctrine completely subverts the foundation of religion in general, and of
the Christian Religion in particular.
1.
The foundation of religion considered in general, is a two-fold love of God;
without which there neither is nor can be any religion: The first of them is a
love for righteousness [or justice] which gives existence to his hatred of sin.
The second is a love for the creature who is endowed with reason, and (in the
matter now before us,) it is a love for man, according to the expression of the
Apostle to the Hebrews. “for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and
that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek Him.” (11:6.) God’s love of
righteousness is manifested by this circumstance, that it is not his will and
pleasure to bestow eternal life on any except on “those who seek him.” God’s
love of man consists in his being willing to give him eternal life, if he seek
Him.
A
mutual relation subsists between these two kinds of love, which is this. The
latter species of love, which extends itself to the creatures, cannot come into
exercise, except so far as it is permitted by the former, [the love of
righteousness]: The former love, therefore, is by far the most excellent
species; but in every direction there is abundant scope for the emanations of
the latter, [the love of the creature,] except where the former [the love of
righteousness] has placed some impediment in the range of its exercise. The
first of these consequences is most evidently proved from the circumstance of
God’s condemning man on account of sin, although he loves him in the relation
in which he stands as his creature; which would by no means have been done, had
he loved man more than righteousness, [or justice,] and had he evinced a
stronger aversion to the eternal misery of man than to his disobedience. But
the second consequence is proved by this argument, that God condemns no person,
except on account of sin; and that he saves such a multitude of men who turn
themselves away [or are converted] from sin; which he could not do, unless it
was his will to allow as abundant scope to his love for the creatures, as is
permitted by righteousness [or justice] under the regulation of the Divine
judgment.
But
this [Supralapsarian] doctrine inverts this order and mutual relation in two
ways: (1.) The one is when it states, that God wills absolutely to save certain
particular men, without having had in that his intention the least reference or
regard to their obedience. This is the manner in which it places the love of
God to man before his love of righteousness, and lays down the position -- that
God loves men (as such) more than righteousness, and evinces a stronger
aversion to their misery than to their sin and disobedience. (2.) The other is
when it asserts, on the contrary, that God wills absolutely to damn certain
particular men without manifesting in his decree any consideration of their
disobedience. In this manner it detracts from his love to the creature that
which belongs to it; while it teaches, that God hates the creature, without any
cause or necessity derived from his love of righteousness and his hatred of
iniquity. In which case, it is not true, “that sin is the primary object of God’s
hatred, and its only meritorious cause.”
The
great influence and potency which this consideration possesses in subverting
the foundation of religion, may be appropriately described by the following
simile: Suppose a son to say, “My father is such a great lover of righteousness
and equity, that, notwithstanding I am his beloved son, he would disinherit me
if I were found disobedient to him. Obedience, therefore, is a duty which I
must sedulously cultivate, and which is highly incumbent upon me, if I wish to
be his heir.” Suppose another son to say: “My father’s love for me is so great,
that he is absolutely resolved to make me his heir. There is, therefore, no
necessity for my earnestly striving to yield him obedience; for, according to
his unchangeable will, I shall become his heir. Nay, he will by an irresistible
force draw me to obey him, rather than not suffer me to be made his heir.” But
such reasoning as the latter is diametrically opposed to the doctrine contained
in the following words of John the Baptist: “And think not to say within
yourselves, we have Abraham to our father: For I say unto you, that God is able
of these stones to raise up children unto Abraham.” (Matt. 3:9.)
2.
But the Christian religion also has its superstructure built upon this two-fold
love as a foundation. This love, however, is to be considered in a manner
somewhat different, in consequence of the change in the condition of man, who,
when he had been created after the image of God and in his favour, became by
his own fault a sinner and an enemy to God. (1.) God’s love of righteousness
[or justice] on which the Christian religion rests, is, first, that
righteousness which he declared only once, which was in Christ; because it was
his will that sin should not be expiated in any other way than by the blood and
death of his Son, and that Christ should not be admitted before him as an
Advocate, Deprecator and Intercessor, except when sprinkled by his own blood.
But this love of righteousness is, secondly, that which he daily manifests in
the preaching of the gospel, in which he declares it to be his will to grant a
communication of Christ and his benefits to no man, except to him who becomes
converted and believes in Christ. (2.) God’s love of miserable sinners, on
which likewise the Christian religion is founded, is, first, that love by which
he gave his Son for them, and constituted him a saviour of those who obey him.
But this love of sinners is, secondly, that by which he hath required
obedience, not according to the rigor and severity to which he was entitled by
his own supreme right, but according to his grace and clemency, and with the addition
of a promise of the remission of sins, provided fallen man repent.
The
[supralapsarian] doctrine of Predestination is, in two ways, opposed to this
two-fold foundation: first, by stating, “that God has such a great love for
certain sinners, that it was his will absolutely to save them before he had
given satisfaction, through Christ Jesus, to his love of righteousness, [or
justice,] and that he thus willed their salvation even in his own
fore-knowledge and according to his determinate purpose.” Besides, it totally
and most completely overturns this foundation, by teaching it to be “God’s
pleasure, that satisfaction should be paid to his justice, [or righteousness,]
because he willed absolutely to save such persons:” which is nothing less, than
to make his love for justice, manifested in Christ, subordinate to his love for
sinful man whom it is his will absolutely to save. Secondly. It opposes itself
to this foundation, by teaching, “that it is the will of God absolutely to damn
certain sinners without any consideration of their impenitency;” when at the
same time a most plenary and complete satisfaction had been rendered, in Christ
Jesus, to God’s love of righteousness [or justice] and to his hatred of sin. So
that nothing now can hinder the possibility of his extending mercy to the
sinner, whosoever he may be, except the condition of repentance. Unless some
person should choose to assert, what is stated in this doctrine, “that it has
been God’s will to act towards the greater part of mankind with the same
severity as he exercised towards the devil and his angels, or even with
greater, since it was his pleasure that neither Christ nor his gospel should be
productive of greater blessings to them than to the devils, and since,
according to the first offense, the door of grace is as much closed against
them as it is against the evil angels.” Yet each of those angels sinned, by
himself in his own proper person, through his individual maliciousness, and by
his voluntary act; while men sinned, only in Adam their parent, before they had
been brought into existence.
But,
that we may more clearly understand the fact of this two-fold love being the
foundation of all religion and the manner in which it is so, with the mutual
correspondence that subsists between each other, as we have already described
them, it will be profitable for us to contemplate with greater attention the
following words of the Apostle to the Hebrews: “He that cometh to God, must
believe that He is and that He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek Him.”
In these words two things are laid down as foundations to religion, in
opposition to two fiery darts of Satan, which are the most pernicious pests to
it, and each of which is able by itself to overturn and extirpate all religion.
One of them is security, the other despair. Security operates, when a man
permits himself, that, how inattentive soever he may be to the worship of God,
he will not be damned, but will obtain salvation. Despair is in operation, when
a person entertains a persuasion, that, whatever degree of reverence he may
evince towards God, he will not receive any remuneration. In what human mind
soever either of these pests is fostered, it is impossible that any true and
proper worship of God can there reside. Now both of them are overturned by the
words of the Apostle: For if a man firmly believes, “that God will bestow
eternal life on those alone who seek Him, but that He will inflict on the rest
death eternal,” he can on no account indulge himself in security. And if he
likewise believes, that “God is truly a rewarder of those who diligently seek
Him,” by applying himself to the search he will not be in danger of falling
into despair. The foundation of the former kind of faith by which a man firmly
believes, “that God will bestow eternal life on none except on those who seek
Him,” is that love which God bears to his own righteousness, [or justice,] and
which is greater than that which he entertains for man. And, by this alone, all
cause of security is removed. But the foundation of the latter kind of faith, “that
God will undoubtedly be a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him,” is that
great love for man which neither will nor can prevent God from effecting
salvation for him, except he be hindered by his still greater love for
righteousness or justice. Yet the latter kind of love is so far from operating
as a hindrance to God from becoming a rewarder of those who diligently seek
Him, that on the contrary, it promotes in every possible way the bestowment of
that reward. Those persons, therefore, who seek God, can by no means indulge in
a single doubt concerning his readiness to remunerate. And it is this which
acts as a preservative against despair or distrust. Since this is the actual
state of the case, this two-fold love, and the mutual relation which each part
of it bears to the other and which we have just unfolded, are the foundations
of religion, without which no religion can possibly exist. That doctrine,
therefore, which is in open hostility to this mutual love and to the relation
that mutually subsists between them, is, at the same time, subversive of the
foundation of all religion.
XX.
Lastly. This doctrine of Predestination has been rejected both in former times
and in our own days, by the greater part of the professors of
Christianity.
- But, omitting all mention of the periods
that occurred in former ages, facts themselves declare, that the Lutheran
and Anabaptist Churches, as well as that of Rome, account this to be an
erroneous doctrine.
- However highly Luther and Melancthon might
at the very commencement of the reformation, have approved of this
doctrine, they afterwards deserted it. This change in Melancthon is quite
apparent from his latter writings: And those who style themselves “Luther’s
disciples,” make the same statement respecting their master, while they
contend that on this subject he made a more distinct and copious
declaration of his sentiments, instead of entirely abandoning those which
he formerly entertained. But Philip Melancthon believed that this doctrine
did not differ greatly from the fate of the Stoics: This appears from many
of his writings, but more particularly in a certain letter which he
addressed to Gasper Peucer, and in which, among other things, he states: “Lælius
writes to me and says, that the controversy respecting the Stoical Fate is
agitated with such uncommon fervour at Geneva, that one individual is cast
into prison because he happened to differ from Zeno. O unhappy times! When
the doctrine of salvation is thus obscured by certain strange disputes!”
- All the Danish Churches embrace a doctrine
quite opposed to this, as is obvious from the writings of Nicholas
Hemmingius in his treatise on Universal Grace, in which he declares that
the contest between him and his adversaries consisted in the determination
of these two points: “do the Elect believe ,” or, “are believers the true
elect?” He considers “those persons who maintain the former position, to
hold sentiments agreeable to the doctrine of the Manichees and Stoics; and
those who maintain the latter point, are in obvious agreement with Moses
and the Prophets, with Christ and his Apostles.”
- Besides, by many of the inhabitants of
these our own provinces, this doctrine is accounted a grievance of such a
nature, as to cause several of them to affirm, that on account of it, they
neither can nor will have any communion with our Church. Others of them
have united themselves with our Churches, but not without entering a
protest, “that they cannot possibly give their consent to this doctrine.”
But, on account of this kind of Predestination, our Churches have been
deserted by not a few individuals, who formerly held the same opinions as
ourselves: Others, also, have threatened to depart from us, unless they be
fully assured that the Church holds no opinion of this description.
- There is likewise no point of doctrine
which the Papists, Anabaptists, and Lutherans oppose with greater
vehemence than this, and through whose sides they create a worse opinion
of our Churches or procure for them a greater portion of hatred, and thus
bring into disrepute all the doctrines which we profess. They likewise
affirm “that of all the blasphemies against God which the mind of man can
conceive or his tongue can express, there is none so foul as not to be
deduced by fair consequence from this opinion of our doctors.”
- Lastly. Of all the difficulties and
controversies which have arisen in these our Churches since the time of
the Reformation, there is none that has not had its origin in this
doctrine, or that has not, at least, been mixed with it. What I have here
said will be found true, if we bring to our recollection the controversies
which existed at Leiden in the affair of Koolhaes, at Gouda in that of
Herman Herberts, at Horn with respect to Cornelius Wiggerston, and at
Mendenblich in the affair of Tako Sybrants. This consideration was not
among the last of those motives which induced me to give my most diligent
attention to this head of doctrine, and endeavour to prevent our Churches
from suffering any detriment from it; because, from it, the Papists have
derived much of their increase. While all pious teachers ought most
heartily to desire the destruction of Popery, as they would that of the
kingdom of Antichrist, they ought with the greatest zeal, to engage in the
attempt, and as far as it is within their power, to make the most
efficient preparations for its overthrow.
The
preceding views are, in brief, those which I hold respecting this novel
doctrine of Predestination. I have propounded it with all good faith from the
very expressions of the authors themselves, that I might not seem to invent and
attribute to them any thing which I was not able clearly to prove from their
writings.
2. A SECOND KIND OF
PREDESTINATION.
But
some other of our doctors state the subject of God’s Predestination in a manner
somewhat different. We will cursorily touch upon the two modes which they
employ. Among some of them the following opinion is prevalent:
- God determined within himself, by an
eternal and immutable decree, to make (according to his own good
pleasure,) the smaller portion out of the general mass of mankind
partakers of his grace and glory, to the praise of his own glorious grace.
But according to his pleasure he also passed by the greater portion of
men, and left them in their own nature, which is incapable of every thing
supernatural, [or beyond itself,] and did not communicate to them that
saving and supernatural grace by which their nature, (if it still retained
its integrity,) might be strengthened, or by which, if it were corrupted,
it might be restored -- for a demonstration of his own liberty. Yet after
God had made these men sinners and guilty of death, he punished them with
death eternal -- for a demonstration of his own justice.
- Predestination is to be considered in
respect to its end and to the means which tend to it. But these persons
employ the word “Predestination” in its special acceptation for election
and oppose it to reprobation. (1.) In respect to its end, (which is
salvation, and an illustration of the glorious grace of God,) man is
considered in common and absolutely, such as he is in his own nature. (2.)
But in respect to the means, man is considered as perishing from himself
and in himself, and as guilty in Adam.
- In the decree concerning the end, the
following gradations are to be regarded. (1.) The prescience of God, by
which he foreknew those whom he had predestinated. Then (2.) The Divine
prefinition, [or predetermination,] by which he foreordained the salvation
of those persons by whom he had foreknown. First, by electing them from
all eternity: and secondly, by preparing for them grace in this life, and
glory in the world to come.
- The means which belong to the execution of
this Predestination, are (1.) Christ himself: (2.) An efficacious call to
faith in Christ, from which justification takes its origin: (3.) The gift
of perseverance unto the end.
- As far as we are capable of comprehending
their scheme of reprobation it consists of two acts, that of preterition
and that of predamnatian. It is antecedent to all things, and to all
causes which are either in the things themselves or which arise out of
them; that is, it has no regard whatever to any sin, and only views man in
an absolute and general aspect.
- Two means are fore-ordained for the
execution of the act of preterition: (1.) Dereliction [or abandoning] in a
state of nature, which by itself is incapable of every thing supernatural:
and (2.) Non-communication [or a negation] of supernatural grace, by which
their nature (if in a state of integrity,) might be strengthened, and (if
in a state of corruption,) might be restored.
- Predamnation is antecedent to all things,
yet it does by no means exist without a fore-knowledge of the causes of
damnation. It views man as a sinner, obnoxious to damnation in Adam, and
as on this account perishing through the necessity of Divine justice.
- The means ordained for the execution of
this predamnation, are (1.) Just desertion, which is either that of
exploration, [or examination,] in which God does not confer his grace, or
that of punishment when God takes away from a man all his saving gifts,
and delivers him over to the power of Satan. (2.) The second means are
induration or hardening, and those consequences which usually follow even
to the real damnation of the person reprobated.
3. A THIRD KIND OF
PREDESTINATION.
But
others among our doctors state their sentiments on this subject in the
following manner:
- Because God willed within himself from all
eternity to make a decree by which he might elect certain men and
reprobate the rest, he viewed and considered the human race not only as
created but likewise as fallen or corrupt, and on that account obnoxious
to cursing and malediction. Out of this lapsed and accursed state God
determined to liberate certain individuals and freely to save them by his
grace, for a declaration of his mercy; but he resolved in his own just
judgment to leave the rest under the curse [or malediction] for a
declaration of his justice. In both these cases God acts without the least
consideration of repentance and faith in those whom he elects, or of
impenitence and unbelief in those whom he reprobates.
- The special means which relate
particularly to the execution both of election and reprobation, are the
very same as those which we have already expounded in the first of these
kinds of Predestination, with the exception of those means which are
common both to election and reprobation; because this [third] opinion
places the fall of man, not as a means fore-ordained for the execution of
the preceding decree of Predestination, but as something that might
furnish a fixed purpose or occasion for making this decree of
Predestination.
4. MY JUDGMENT RESPECTING THE
TWO LAST DESCRIBED SCHEMES OF PREDESTINATION.
Both
these opinions, as they outwardly pretend, differ from the first in this point
-- that neither of them lays down the creation or the fall as a mediate cause
fore-ordained by God for the execution of the preceding decree of
Predestination. Yet, with regard to the fall, some diversity may be perceived
in the two latter opinions. For the second kind of Predestination places
election, with regard to the end, before the fall; it also places before that
event preterition, [or passing by,] which is the first part of reprobation.
While the third kind does not allow any part of election and reprobation to
commence till after the fall of man. But, among the causes which seem to have
induced the inventors of the two latter schemes to deliver the doctrine of
Predestination in this manner, and not to ascend to such a great height as the
inventors of the first scheme have done, this is not the least -- that they
have been desirous of using the greatest precaution, lest it might be concluded
from their doctrine that God is the author of sin, with as much show of
probability as, (according to the intimation of some of those who yield their
assent to both the latter kinds,) it is deducible from the first description of
Predestination.
Yet
if we be willing to inspect these two latter opinions a little more closely,
and in particular if we accurately examine the second and third kind and
compare them with other sentiments of the same author concerning some subjects
of our religion, we shall discover, that the fall of Adam cannot possibly,
according to their views, be considered in any other manner than as a necessary
means for the execution of the preceding decree of Predestination.
1.
In reference to the second of the three, this is apparent from two reasons
comprised in it:
The
first of these reasons is that which states God to have determined by the
decree of reprobation to deny to man that grace which was necessary for the
confirmation and strengthening of his nature, that it might not be corrupted by
sin; which amounts to this, that God decreed not to bestow that grace which was
necessary to avoid sin; and from this must necessarily follow the transgression
of man, as proceeding from a law imposed on him. The fall of man is therefore a
means ordained for the execution of the decree of reprobation.
The
second of these reasons is that which states the two parts of reprobation to be
preterition and predamnation. These two parts, according to that decree, are
connected together by a necessary and mutual bond, and are equally extensive.
For, all those whom God passed by in conferring Divine grace, are likewise
damned. Indeed no others are damned, except those who are the subjects of this
act of preterition. From this therefore it may be concluded, that “sin must
necessarily follow from the decree of reprobation or preterition, because, if
it were otherwise, it might possibly happen, that a person who had been passed
by, might not commit sin, and from that circumstance might not become liable to
damnation; since sin is the sole meritorious cause of damnation: and thus
certain of those individuals who had been passed by, might neither be saved nor
damned -- which is great absurdity.
This
second opinion on Predestination, therefore, falls into the same inconvenience
as the first. For it not only does not avoid that [conclusion of making God the
author of sin,] but while those who profess it make the attempt, they fall into
a palpable and absurd self-contradiction -- while, in reference to this point,
the first of these opinions is alike throughout and consistent with
itself.
2.
The third of these schemes of Predestination would escape this rock to much
better effect, did not the patrons of it, while declaring their sentiments on
Predestination and providence, employ certain expressions, from which the
necessity of the fall might be deduced. Yet this necessity cannot possibly have
any other origin than some degree of Predestination.
(1.)
One of these explanatory expressions is their description of the Divine
permission, by which God permits sin. Some of them describe it thus: “permission
is the withdrawing of that Divine grace, by which, when God executes the
decrees of his will through rational creatures, he either does not reveal to
the creature that divine will of his own by which he wills that action to be
performed, or does not bend the will of the creature to yield obedience in that
act to the Divine will.” To these expressions, the following are immediately
subjoined: “if this be a correct statement, the creature commits sin through
necessity, yet voluntarily and without restraint.” If it be objected that “this
description does not comport with that permission by which God permitted the
sin of Adam:” We also entertain the same opinion about it. Yet it follows, as a
consequence, from this very description, that “other sins are committed through
necessity.”
(2.)
Of a similar tendency are the
expressions which some of them use, when they contend, that the declaration of
the glory of God, which must necessarily be illustrated, is placed in “the
demonstration of mercy and of punitive justice.” But such a demonstration could
not have been made, unless sin, and misery through sin, had entered into the
world, to form at least some degree of misery for the least sin. And in this
manner is sin also necessarily introduced, through the necessity of such a
demonstration of the Divine glory. Since the fall of Adam is already laid down
to be necessary, and, on that account, to be a means for executing the
preceding decree of Predestination; creation itself is likewise at the same
time laid down as a means subservient to the execution of the same decree. For
the fall cannot be necessarily consequent upon the creation, except through the
decree of Predestination, which cannot be placed between the creation and the
fall, but is prefixed to both of them, as having the precedence, and ordaining
creation for the fall, and both of them for executing one and the same decree
-- to demonstrate the justice of God in the punishment of sin, and his mercy in
its remission. Because, if this were not the case, that which must necessarily
ensue from the act of creation had not seen intended by God when he created,
which is to suppose an impossibility.
But
let it be granted, that the necessity of the fall of Adam cannot be deduced
from either of the two latter opinions, yet all the preceding arguments which
have been produced against the first opinion, are, after a trifling
modification to suit the varied purpose, equally valid against the two latter.
This would be very apparent, if, to demonstrate it, a conference were to be
instituted.
5. MY OWN SENTIMENTS ON
PREDESTINATION.
I
have hitherto been stating those opinions concerning the article of
Predestination which are inculcated in our Churches and in the University of Leiden,
and of which I disapprove. I have at the same time produced my own reasons, why
I form such an unfavourable judgment concerning them; and I will now declare my
own opinions on this subject, which are of such a description as, according to
my views, appear most conformable to the word of God.
I.
The first absolute decree of God concerning the salvation of sinful man, is
that by which he decreed to appoint his Son, Jesus Christ, for a Mediator,
Redeemer, saviour, Priest and King, who might destroy sin by his own death,
might by his obedience obtain the salvation which had been lost, and might
communicate it by his own virtue.
II.
The second precise and absolute decree of God, is that in which he decreed to
receive into favour those who repent and believe, and, in Christ, for his sake
and through Him, to effect the salvation of such penitents and believers as
persevered to the end; but to leave in sin, and under wrath, all impenitent
persons and unbelievers, and to damn them as aliens from Christ.
III.
The third Divine decree is that by which God decreed to administer in a
sufficient and efficacious manner the means which were necessary for repentance
and faith; and to have such administration instituted (1.) according to the
Divine Wisdom, by which God knows what is proper and becoming both to his mercy
and his severity, and (2.) according to Divine Justice, by which He is prepared
to adopt whatever his wisdom may prescribe and put it in execution.
IV.
To these succeeds the fourth decree, by which God decreed to save and damn
certain particular persons. This decree has its foundation in the foreknowledge
of God, by which he knew from all eternity those individuals who would, through
his preventing grace, believe, and, through his subsequent grace would
persevere, according to the before described administration of those means
which are suitable and proper for conversion and faith; and, by which
foreknowledge, he likewise knew those who would not believe and persevere.
Predestination,
when thus explained, is
- The foundation of Christianity, and of
salvation and its certainty.
- It is the sum and the matter of the
gospel; nay, it is the gospel itself, and on that account necessary to be
believed in order to salvation, as far as the two first articles are
concerned.
- It has had no need of being examined or
determined by any council, either general or particular, since it is
contained in the scriptures clearly and expressly in so many words; and no
contradiction has ever yet been offered to it by any orthodox Divine.
- It has constantly been acknowledged and
taught by all Christian teachers who held correct and orthodox
sentiments.
- It agrees with that harmony of all
confessions, which has been published by the protestant Churches.
- It likewise agrees most excellently with
the Dutch Confession and Catechism. This concord is such, that if in the
Sixteenth article these two expressions “those persons whom” and “others,”
be explained by the words “believers” and “unbelievers” these opinions of
mine on Predestination will be comprehended in that article with the
greatest clearness. This is the reason why I directed the thesis to be
composed in the very words of the Confession, when, on one occasion, I had
to hold a public disputation before my private class in the University.
This kind of Predestination also agrees with the reasoning contained in
the twentieth and the fifty-fourth question of the Catechism.
- It is also in excellent accordance with
the nature of God -- with his wisdom, goodness, and righteousness; because
it contains the principal matter of all of them, and is the clearest
demonstration of the Divine wisdom, goodness, and righteousness [or
justice]
- It is agreeable in every point with the
nature of man -- in what form soever that nature may be contemplated,
whether in the primitive state of creation, in that of the fall, or in
that of restoration.
- It is in complete concert with the act of
creation, by affirming that the creation itself is a real communication of
good, both from the intention of God, and with regard to the very end or
event; that it had its origin in the goodness of God; that whatever has a
reference to its continuance and preservation, proceeds from Divine love;
and that this act of creation is a perfect and appropriate work of God, in
which he is at complaisance with himself, and by which he obtained all
things necessary for an unsinning state.
- It agrees with the nature of life eternal,
and with the honourable titles by which that life is designated in the
scriptures.
- It also agrees with the nature of death
eternal, and with the names by which that death is distinguished in
scripture.
- It states sin to be a real disobedience,
and the meritorious cause of condemnation; and on this account, it is in
the most perfect agreement with the fall and with sin.
- In every particular, it harmonizes with
the nature of grace, by ascribing to it all those things which agree with
it, [or adapted to it,] and by reconciling it most completely to the
righteousness of God and to the nature and liberty of the human will.
- It conduces most conspicuously to declare
the glory of God, his justice and his mercy. It also represents God as the
cause of all good and of our salvation, and man as the cause of sin and of
his own damnation.
- It contributes to the honour of Jesus
Christ, by placing him for the foundation of Predestination and the meritorious
as well as communicative cause of salvation.
- It greatly promotes the salvation of men:
It is also the power, and the very means which lead to salvation -- by
exciting and creating within the mind of man sorrow on account of sin, a
solicitude about his conversion, faith in Jesus Christ, a studious desire
to perform good works, and zeal in prayer -- and by causing men to work
out their salvation with fear and trembling. It likewise prevents despair,
as far as such prevention is necessary.
- It confirms and establishes that order
according to which the gospel ought to be preached, (1.) By requiring
repentance and faith -- (2.) And then by promising remission of sins, the
grace of the spirit, and life eternal.
- It strengthens the ministry of the gospel,
and renders it profitable with respect to preaching, the administration of
the sacraments and public prayers.
- It is the foundation of the Christian
religion; because in it, the two-fold love of God may be united together
-- God’s love of righteousness [or justice], and his love of men, may,
with the greatest consistency, be reconciled to each other.
- Lastly. This doctrine of Predestination,
has always been approved by the great majority of professing Christians,
and even now, in these days, it enjoys the same extensive patronage. It
cannot afford any person just cause for expressing his aversion to it; nor
can it give any pretext for contention in the Christian Church.
It
is therefore much to be desired, that men would proceed no further in this
matter, and would not attempt to investigate the unsearchable judgments of God
-- at least that they would not proceed beyond the point at which those
judgments have been clearly revealed in the scriptures.
This,
my most potent Lords, is all that I intend now to declare to your mightinesses,
respecting the doctrine of Predestination, about which there exists such a
great controversy in the Church of Christ. If it would not prove too tedious to
your Lordships, I have some other propositions which I could wish to state,
because they contribute to a full declaration of my sentiments, and tend to the
same purpose as that for which I have been ordered to attend in this place by
your mightinesses.
There
are certain other articles of the Christian religion, which possess a close
affinity to the doctrine of Predestination, and which are in a great measure
dependent on it: Of this description are the providence of God, the free-will
of man, the perseverance of saints, and the certainty of salvation. On these
topics, if not disagreeable to your mightinesses, I will in a brief manner
relate my opinion.