Reprobation
The flip side of predestination - something we do not like to think
about.
From
A.W. Pink's book: THE SOVEREIGNTY OF GOD
Chapter
5
THE
SOVEREIGNTY OF GOD IN REPROBATION
by A.W. Pink
"Behold
therefore the goodness and the severity of God"
Romans.
11:22
In
the last chapter when treating of the Sovereignty of God the Father in
Salvation, we examined seven passages which represent Him as making a
choice from among the children of men, and predestinating certain ones
to be conformed to the image of His Son. The thoughtful reader will
naturally ask, And what of those who were not "ordained to
eternal life?" The answer which is usually returned to this
question, even by those who profess to believe what the Scriptures teach
concerning God’s sovereignty, is, that God passes by the
non-elect, leaves them alone to go their own way, and in the end
casts them into the Lake of Fire because they refused His way,
and rejected the Saviour of His providing. But this is only a part of
the truth; the other part—that which is most offensive to the carnal
mind—is either ignored or denied.
In
view of the awful solemnity of the subject here before us, in view of
the fact that today almost all—even those who profess to be
Calvinists—reject and repudiate this doctrine, and in view of the fact
that this is one of the points in our book which is calculated to raise
the most controversy, we feel that an extended enquiry into this aspect
of God’s Truth is demanded. That this branch of the subject of God’s
sovereignty is profoundly mysterious we freely allow, yet, that is no
reason why we should reject it. The trouble is that, nowadays, there are
so many who receive the testimony of God only so far as they can
satisfactorily account for all the reasons and grounds of His conduct,
which means they will accept nothing but that which can be measured in
the petty scales of their own limited capacities.
Stating
it in its baldest form the point now to be considered is, Has God
fore-ordained certain ones to damnation? That many will be eternally
damned is clear from Scripture, that each one will be judged according
to his works and reap as he has sown, and that in consequence his
"damnation is just" (Rom. 3:8), is equally sure, and that God decreed
that the non-elect should choose the course they follow
we now undertake to prove.
From
what has been before us in the previous chapter concerning the election
of some to salvation, it would unavoidably follow, even if Scripture
had been silent upon it, that there must be a rejection of others. Every
choice, evidently and necessarily implies a refusal, for where there is
no leaving out there can be no choice. If there be some whom God has
elected unto salvation (2 Thess. 2:13), there must be others who
are not elected unto salvation. If there are some that the Father
gave to Christ (John 6:37), there must be others whom He did not give
unto Christ. If there are some whose names are written in the Lamb’s
book of Life (Rev. 21:27), there must be others whose names are not
written there. That this is the case we shall fully prove
below.
Now
all will acknowledge that from the foundation of the world God certainly
fore-knew and fore-saw who would and who would not receive Christ as
their Saviour, therefore in giving being and birth to those He knew would
reject Christ, He necessarily created them unto damnation.
All that can be said in reply to this is, No, while God did foreknow these
ones would reject Christ, yet He did not decree that they should.
But this is a begging of the real question at issue. God had a
definite reason why He created men, a specific purpose why He
created this and that individual, and in view of the eternal destination
of His creatures, He purposed either that this one should spend
eternity in Heaven or that this one should spend eternity in the Lake of
Fire. If then He foresaw that in creating a certain person that that
person would despise and reject the Saviour, yet knowing this beforehand
He, nevertheless, brought that person into existence, then it is clear
He designed and ordained that that person should be eternally lost.
Again; faith is God’s gift, and the purpose to give it only to some,
involves the purpose not to give it to others. Without faith
there is no salvation—"He that believeth not shall be
damned"— hence if there were some of Adam’s descendants to whom
He purposed not to give faith, it must be because He ordained that they
should be damned.
Not
only is there no escape from these conclusions, but history confirms them.
Before the Divine Incarnation, for almost two thousand years, the vast
majority of mankind were left destitute of even the external means of
grace, being favored with no preaching of God’s Word and with no
written revelation of His will. For many long centuries Israel was the only
nation to whom the Deity vouchsafed any special discovery of
Himself—"Who in times past suffered all nations to walk in
their own ways" (Acts 14:16)—"You only (Israel) have
I known of all the families of the earth" (Amos 3:2). Consequently,
as all other nations were deprived of the preaching of God’s Word,
they were strangers to the faith that cometh thereby (Rom. 10:17). These
nations were not only ignorant of God Himself, but of the way to please
Him, of the true manner of acceptance with Him, and the means of
arriving at the everlasting enjoyment of Himself.
Now
if God had willed their salvation, would He not have vouchsafed them the
means of salvation? Would He not have given them all things necessary to
that end? But it is an undeniable matter of fact that He did not. If,
then, Deity can, consistently, with His justice, mercy, and benevolence,
deny to some the means of grace, and shut them up in gross darkness and
unbelief (because of the sins of their forefathers, generations before),
why should it be deemed incompatible with His perfections to exclude
some persons, many, from grace itself, and from that eternal life which
is connected with it? seeing that He is Lord and sovereign Disposer both
of the end to which the means lead, and the means which lead to that
end?
Coming
down to our own day, and to those in our own country—leaving out the
almost innumerable crowds of unevangelized heathen—is it not evident
that there are many living in lands where the Gospel is preached, lands
which are full of churches, who die strangers to God and His holiness?
True, the means of grace were close to their hand, but many of them knew
it not. Thousands are born into homes where they are taught from infancy
to regard all Christians as hypocrites and preachers as arch-humbugs.
Others, are instructed from the cradle in Roman Catholicism, and are
trained to regard Evangelical Christianity as deadly heresy, and the
Bible as a book highly dangerous for them to read. Others, reared in
"Christian Science" families, know no more of the true Gospel
of Christ than do the unevangelized heathen. The great majority of these
die in utter ignorance of the Way of Peace. Now are we not obliged to
conclude that it was not God’s will to communicate grace to them?
Had His will been otherwise, would He not have actually communicated
His grace to them? If, then, it was the will of God, in time, to refuse
to them His grace, it must have been His will from all eternity,
since His will is, as Himself, the same yesterday, and today and
forever. Let it not be forgotten that God’s providences are but
the manifestations of His decrees: what God does in
time is only what He purposed in eternity—His own will being
the alone cause of all His acts and works. Therefore from His actually
leaving some men in final impenitency and unbelief we assuredly gather
it was His everlasting determination so to do; and consequently that He
reprobated some from before the foundation of the world.
In
the Westminster Confession it is said, "God from all eternity did
by the most wise and holy counsel of His own will, freely and
unchangeably foreordain whatsoever comes to pass". The late
Mr. F. W. Grant—a most careful and cautious student and
writer—commenting on these words said: "It is perfectly, divinely
true, that God hath ordained for His own glory whatsoever comes to
pass." Now if these statements are true, is not the doctrine of
Reprobation established by them? What, in human history, is the one
thing which does come to pass every day? What, but that men and
women die, pass out of this world into a hopeless eternity, an eternity
of suffering and woe. If then God has foreordained whatsoever comes
to pass then He must have decreed that vast numbers of human beings
should pass out of this world unsaved to suffer eternally in the Lake of
Fire. Admitting the general premise, is not the specific conclusion
inevitable?
In
reply to the preceding paragraphs the reader may say, All this is simply
reasoning, logical no doubt, but yet mere inferences. Very well,
we will now point out that in addition to the above conclusions there
are many passages in Holy Writ, which are most clear and definite in
their teaching on this solemn subject; passages which are too plain to
be misunderstood and too strong to be evaded. The marvel is that so many
good men have denied their undeniable affirmations.
"Joshua
made war a long time with all those kings. There was not a city that
made peace with the children of Israel, save the Hivites the inhabitants
of Gibeon: all other they took in battle. For it was of the Lord to
harden their hearts, that they should come against Israel in battle,
that He might destroy them utterly, and that they might have no favour,
but that He might destroy them, as the Lord commanded Moses" (Josh.
11:18-20). What could be plainer than this? Here was a large number of
Canaanites whose hearts the Lord hardened, whom He had purposed to
utterly destroy, to whom He showed "no favour". Granted
that they were wicked, immoral, idolatrous; were they any worse
than the immoral, idolatrous cannibals of the South Sea Islands (and
many other places), to whom God gave the Gospel through John G. Paton!
Assuredly not. Then why did not Jehovah command Israel to teach the
Canaanites His laws and instruct them concerning sacrifices to the true
God? Plainly, because He had marked them out for destruction, and
if so, that from all eternity.
"The
Lord hath made all things for Himself: yea, even the wicked for the day
of evil." (Prov. 16:4). That the Lord made all, perhaps
every reader of this book will allow: that He made all for Himself is
not so widely believed. That God made us, not for our own sakes, but for
Himself; not for our own happiness, but for His glory; is, nevertheless,
repeatedly affirmed in Scripture—Revelation 4:11. But Proverbs 16:4
goes even farther: it expressly declares that the Lord made the wicked for
the Day of Evil: that was His design in giving them
being. But why? Does not Romans 9:17 tell us, "For
the Scripture saith unto Pharaoh, Even for this purpose have I raised
thee up, that I might shew My power in thee, and that My name might be
declared throughout all the earth"! God has made the wicked that,
at the end, He may demonstrate "His
power"—demonstrate it by showing what an easy matter it is for
Him to subdue the stoutest rebel and to overthrow His mightiest enemy.
"And
then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: Depart from Me, ye that
work iniquity" (Matt. 7:23). In the previous chapter it has
been shown that, the words "know" and
"foreknowledge" when applied to God in the Scriptures, have
reference not simply to His prescience (i.e. His bare knowledge beforehand),
but to His knowledge of approbation. When God said to Israel,
"You only have I known of all the families of the
earth" (Amos 3:2), it is evident that He meant, "You only had
I any favorable regard to." When we read in Romans 11:2 "God
hath not cast away His people (Israel) whom He foreknew,"
it is obvious that what was signified is, "God has not finally
rejected that people whom He has chosen as the objects of His love—cf.
Deuternomy 7:7, 8. In the same way (and it is the only possible
way) are we to understand Matthew 7:23. In the Day of
Judgment the Lord will say unto many, "I never knew you".
Note, it is more than simply "I know you not". His solemn
declaration will be, "I never knew you"—you were
never the objects of My approbation. Contrast this with "I know (love)
My sheep, and am known (loved) of Mine" (John 10:14). The
"sheep", His elect, the "few", He does "know";
but the reprobate, the non-elect, the "many" He knows not—no,
not even before the foundation of the world did He know them—He
"NEVER" knew them!
In
Romans 9 the doctrine of God’s sovereignty in its application to both
the elect and the reprobate is treated of at length. A detailed
exposition of this important chapter would be beyond our present scope;
all that we can essay is to dwell upon the part of it which most clearly
bears upon the aspect of the subject which we are now considering.
Verse
17: "For the Scripture saith unto Pharaoh, Even for this same
purpose have I raised thee up, that I might show My power in thee, and
that My name might be declared throughout all the earth." These
words refer us back to verses 13 and 14. In verse 13 God’s love to
Jacob and His hatred to Esau are declared. In verse 14 it is asked
"Is there unrighteousness with God?" and here in verse
17 the apostle continues his reply to the objection. We cannot do
better now than quote from Calvin’s comments upon this verse.
"There are here two things to be considered,—the predestination
of Pharaoh to ruin, which is to be referred to the past and yet the
hidden counsel of God,—and then, the design of this, which was to make
known the name of God. As many interpreters, striving to modify this
passage, pervert it, we must first observe, that for the word ‘I have
raised thee up’, or stirred up, in the Hebrew is, ‘I have
appointed’, by which it appears, that God, designing to show that the
contumacy of Pharaoh would not prevent Him to deliver His people, not
only affirms that his fury had been foreseen by Him, and that He had
prepared means for restraining it, but that He had also thus designedly
ordained it and indeed for this end,—that he might exhibit a more
illustrious evidence of His own power." It will be observed that
Calvin gives as the force of the Hebrew word which Paul renders
"For this purpose have I raised thee up,"—"I
have appointed". As this is the word on which the
doctrine and argument of the verse turns we would further point out that
in making this quotation from Exodus 9:16 the apostle significantly
departs from the Septuagint—the version then in common use, and from
which he most frequently quotes—and substitutes a clause for the first
that is given by the Septuagint: instead of "On this account thou
hast been preserved", he gives "For this very end have I
raised thee up"!
But
we must now consider in more detail the case of Pharaoh which sums up in
concrete example the great controversy between man and his Maker.
"For now I will stretch out My hand, that I may smite thee and thy
people with pestilence; and thou shalt be cut off from the earth. And
in very deed for this cause have I raised thee up, for to show in
thee My power; and that My name may be declared throughout all the
earth" (Ex. 9:15, 16). Upon these words we offer the following
comments:
First,
we know from Exodus 14 and 15 that Pharaoh was "cut
off", that he was cut off by God, that he was cut off in the very
midst of his wickedness, that he was cut off not by sickness nor by the
infirmities which are incident to old age, nor by what men term an
accident, but cut off by the immediate hand of God in judgment.
Second,
it is clear that God raised up Pharaoh for this very end—to
"cut him off," which in the language of the New Testament
means "destroyed." God never does anything without a previous
design. In giving him being, in preserving him through infancy and
childhood, in raising him to the throne of Egypt, God had one end in
view. That such was God’s purpose is clear from His words to
Moses before he went down to Egypt, to demand of Pharaoh that
Jehovah’s people should be allowed to go a three days’ journey into
the wilderness to worship Him—"And the Lord said unto Moses, When
thou goest to return into Egypt, see that thou do all these wonders
before Pharaoh, which I have put in thine hand: but I will harden his
heart, that he shall not let the people go" (Ex. 4:21). But not
only so, God’s design and purpose was declared long before this. Four
hundred years previously God had said to Abraham, "Know of a surety
that thy seed shall be a stranger in a land that is not theirs, and
shall serve them; and they shall afflict them four hundred years; and
also that nation, whom they shall serve, will I judge" (Gen.
15:13, 14). From these words it is evident (a nation and its king being
looked at as one in the O. T.) that God’s purpose was formed long
before He gave Pharaoh being.
Third,
an examination of God’s dealings with Pharaoh makes it clear that
Egypt’s king was indeed a "vessel of wrath fitted to
destruction." Placed on Egypt’s throne, with the reins of
government in his hands, he sat as head of the nation which occupied the
first rank among the peoples of the world. There was no other monarch on
earth able to control or dictate to Pharaoh. To such a dizzy height did
God raise this reprobate, and such a course was a natural and necessary
step to prepare him for his final fate, for it is a Divine axiom that
"pride goeth before destruction and a haughty spirit before a
fall." Further,—and this is deeply important to note and highly
significant—God removed from Pharaoh the one outward restraint which
was calculated to act as a check upon him. The bestowing upon Pharaoh of
the unlimited powers of a king was setting him above all legal influence
and control. But besides this, God removed Moses from his
presence and kingdom. Had Moses, who not only was skilled in all the
wisdom of the Egyptians but also had been reared in Pharaoh’s
household, been suffered to remain in close proximity to the throne,
there can be no doubt but that his example and influence had been a
powerful check upon the king’s wickedness and tyranny. This, though
not the only cause, was plainly one reason why God sent Moses into
Midian, for it was during his absence that Egypt’s inhuman king
framed his most cruel edicts. God designed, by removing this restraint,
to give Pharaoh full opportunity to fill up the full measure of his
sins, and ripen himself for his fully-deserved but predestined ruin.
Fourth,
God "hardened" his heart as He declared He would (Ex. 4:21).
This is in full accord with the declarations of Holy
Scripture—"The preparations of the heart in man, and the answer
of the tongue, is from the Lord" (Prov. 16:1);
"The king’s heart is in the hand of the Lord, as the rivers of
water, He turneth it whithersoever He will" (Prov.
21:1). Like all other kings, Pharaoh’s heart was in the hand of the
Lord; and God had both the right and the power to turn it whithersoever
He pleased. And it pleased Him to turn it against all good. God
determined to hinder Pharaoh from granting his request through Moses to
let Israel go, until He had fully prepared him for his final overthrow,
and because nothing short of this would fully fit him, God hardened his
heart.
Finally,
it is worthy of careful consideration to note how the vindication of
God in His dealings with Pharaoh has been fully attested. Most
remarkable it is to discover that we have Pharaoh’s own testimony in
favor of God and against himself! In Exodus 9:15 and 16 we learn how God
had told Pharaoh for what purpose He had raised him up, and in verse 27
of the same chapter we are told that Pharaoh said, "I have
sinned this time: the Lord is righteous, and I and my people are
wicked." Mark that this was said by Pharaoh after he knew
that God had raised him up in order to "cut him off", after
his severe judgments had been sent upon him, after he had
hardened his own heart. By this time Pharaoh was fairly ripened for
judgment, and fully prepared to decide whether God had injured him, or
whether he had sought to injure God; and he fully acknowledges that he
had "sinned" and that God was "righteous". Again; we
have the witness of Moses who was fully acquainted with God’s conduct
toward Pharaoh. He had heard at the beginning what was God’s design in
connection with Pharaoh; he had witnessed God’s dealings with him; he
had observed his "long-sufferance" toward this vessel of wrath
fitted to destruction; and at last he had beheld him cut off in Divine
judgment at the Red Sea. How then was Moses impressed?
Does
he raise the cry of injustice? Does he dare to charge God with
unrighteousness? Far from it. Instead, he says, "Who is like unto
Thee, O Lord, among the gods? "Who is like Thee, glorious in
holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders!" (Ex. 15:11).
Was
Moses moved by a vindictive spirit as he saw Israel’s
arch-enemy "cut off" by the waters of the Red Sea? Surely not.
But to remove forever all doubt upon this score, it remains to be
pointed out how that saints in heaven, after they have
witnessed the sore judgments of God, join in singing "the song of Moses
the servant of God, and the song of the Lamb saying, Great and
marvelous are Thy works, Lord God Almighty; just and true are Thy
ways, Thou King of Nations" (Rev. 15:3). Here then is the climax,
and the full and final vindication of God’s dealings with Pharaoh.
Saints in heaven join in singing the Song of Moses, in which that
servant of God celebrated Jehovah’s praise in overthrowing Pharaoh and
his hosts, declaring that in so acting God was not unrighteous
but just and true. We must believe, therefore, that the Judge of
all the earth did right in creating and destroying this vessel of wrath,
Pharaoh.
The
case of Pharaoh establishes the principle and illustrates the
doctrine of Reprobation. If God actually reprobated Pharaoh, we may
justly conclude that He reprobates all others whom He did not
predestinate to be conformed to the image of His Son.
This inference the apostle Paul manifestly draws from the fate of
Pharaoh, for in Romans 9, after referring to God’s purpose in raising
up Pharaoh, he continues, "therefore". The case
of Pharaoh is introduced to prove the doctrine of Reprobation as the
counterpart of the doctrine of Election.
In
conclusion, we would say that in forming Pharaoh God displayed neither
justice nor injustice, but only His bare sovereignty. As the potter is
sovereign in forming vessels, so God is sovereign in forming moral
agents.
Verse
18: "Therefore hath He mercy on whom He will have mercy, and
whom He will He hardeneth". The "therefore"
announces the general conclusion which the apostle draws from all he had
said in the three preceding verses in denying that God was unrighteous
in loving Jacob and hating Esau, and specifically it applies the
principle exemplified in God’s dealings with Pharaoh. It traces
everything back to the sovereign will of the Creator. He loves one and
hates another, He exercises mercy toward some and hardens others,
without reference to anything save His own sovereign will.
That
which is most repellant to the carnal mind in the above verse is the
reference to hardening—"Whom He will He
hardeneth"— and it is just here that so many commentators and
expositors have adulterated the truth. The most common view is that the
apostle is speaking of nothing more than judicial hardening,
i.e., a forsaking by God because these subjects of His
displeasure had first rejected His truth and forsaken Him. Those
who contend for this interpretation appeal to such scriptures as Romans
1:19-26—"God gave them up", that is (see context) those who
"knew God" yet glorified Him not as God (v. 21). Appeal is
also made to 2 Thessalonians 2:10-12. But it is to be noted that the
word "harden" does not occur in either of these
passages. But further. We submit that Romans 9:18 has no reference
whatever to judicial "hardening". The apostle is not
there speaking of those who had already turned their backs on God’s
truth, but instead, he is dealing with God’s sovereignty, God’s
sovereignty as seen not only in showing mercy to whom He wills, but
also in hardening whom He pleases. The exact words are "Whom
He will"—not "all who have rejected His
truth"—"He hardeneth", and this, coming immediately
after the mention of Pharaoh, clearly fixes their meaning. The case of
Pharaoh is plain enough, though man by his glosses has done his best
to hide the truth.
Verse
18: "Therefore hath He mercy on whom He will have mercy, and
whom He will He hardeneth". This affirmation of God’s
sovereign "hardening" of sinners’ hearts—in
contradistinction from judicial hardening—is not alone. Mark the
language of John 12:37-40, "But though He had done so many miracles
before them, yet they believed not on Him: that the saying of Isaiah 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 (why?), because that Isaiah said again, He
hath blinded their eyes, and hardened their hearts (why? Because
they had refused to believe on Christ? This is the popular belief, but
mark the answer of Scripture) that they should not see with their
eyes, nor understand with their heart, and be converted, and I should
heal them." Now, reader, it is just a question as to whether or not
you will believe what God has revealed in His Word. It is not a matter
of prolonged searching or profound study, but a childlike spirit which
is needed, in order to understand this doctrine.
Verse
19: "Thou wilt say then unto me, Why doth He yet find fault?
For who hath resisted His will?" Is not this the very
objection which is urged today? The force of the apostle’s questions
here seems to be this: Since everything is dependent on God’s will,
which is irreversible, and since this will of God, according to which He
can do everything as sovereign—since He can have mercy on whom He
wills to have mercy, and can refuse mercy and inflict punishment on whom
He chooses to do so—why does He not will to have mercy on all, so as
to make them obedient, and thus put finding of fault out of court? Now
it should be particularly noted that the apostle does not repudiate the
ground on which the objection rests. He does not say God does not find
fault. Nor does he say, Men may resist His will. Furthermore; he
does not explain away the objection by saying: You have altogether
misapprehended my meaning when I said ‘Whom He wills He treats kindly,
and whom He wills He treats severely’. But he says, "first, this
is an objection you have no right to make; and then, This is an
objection you have no reason to make" (vide Dr. Brown). The
objection was utterly inadmissible, for it was a replying against
God. It was to complain about, argue against, what God had
done!
Verse
19: "Thou wilt say then unto me, Why doth He yet find fault?
For who hath resisted His will?" The language which the
apostle here puts into the mouth of the objector is so plain and
pointed, that misunderstanding ought to be impossible. Why doth He yet find
fault? Now, reader, what can these words mean? Formulate your
own reply before considering ours. Can the force of the apostle’s
question be any other than this: If it is true that God has
"mercy" on whom He wills, and also "hardens" whom
He wills, then what becomes of human responsibility? In such a case
men are nothing better than puppets, and if this be true then it
would be unjust for God to "find fault" with His
helpless creatures. Mark the word "then"—Thou wilt say then
unto me—he states the (false) inference or conclusion which
the objector draws from what the apostle had been saying. And mark, my
reader, the apostle readily saw the doctrine he had formulated would raise
this very objection, and unless what we have written
throughout this book provokes, in some at least, (all whose
carnal minds are not subdued by divine grace) the same objection,
then it must be either because we have not presented the doctrine which
is set forth in Romans 9, or else because human nature has changed since
the apostle’s day. Consider now the remainder of the verse (19). The
apostle repeats the same objection in a slightly different
form—repeats it so that his meaning may not be misunderstood—namely,
"For who hath resisted His will?" It is clear then that
the subject under immediate discussion relates to God’s
"will", i.e., His sovereign ways, which confirms what
we have said above upon verses 17 and 18, where we contended that it is not
judicial hardening which is in view (that is, hardening because of
previous rejection of the truth), but sovereign "hardening",
that is, the "hardening" of a fallen and sinful creature for
no other reason than that which inheres in the sovereign will of God.
And hence the question, "Who hath resisted His will?"
What then does the apostle say in reply to these objections?
Verse
20: "Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God?
Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me
thus?" The apostle, then, did not say the objection was
pointless and groundless, instead, he rebukes the objector for his impiety.
He reminds him that he is merely a "man", a creature, and
that as such it is most unseemly and impertinent for him to
"reply (argue, or reason) against God". Furthermore, he
reminds him that he is nothing more than a "thing formed", and
therefore, it is madness and blasphemy to rise up against the Former
Himself. Ere leaving this verse it should be pointed out that its
closing words, "Why hast thou made me thus" help
us to determine, unmistakably, the precise subject under discussion. In
the light of the immediate context what can be the force of the
"thus"? What, but as in the case of Esau, why hast thou made
me an object of "hatred"? What, but as in the case of Pharaoh,
Why hast thou made me simply to "harden" me? What other
meaning can, fairly, be assigned to it?
It
is highly important to keep clearly before us that the apostle’s
object throughout this passage is to treat of God’s sovereignty in
dealing with, on the one hand, those whom He loves—vessels unto honor
and vessels of mercy, and also, on the other hand, with those
whom He "hates" and "hardens"—vessels unto
dishonor and vessels of wrath.
Verses
21-23: "Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same
lump, to make one vessel unto honour, and another unto dishonour?
What if God, willing to shew His wrath, and to make His power known,
endured with much longsuffering the vessels of wrath fitted to
destruction: And that He might make known the riches of His glory on the
vessels of mercy, which He had afore prepared unto glory." In
these verses the apostle furnishes a full and final reply to the
objections raised in verse 19. First, he asks, "Hath not the potter
power over the clay?" etc. It is to be noted the word here
translated "power" is a different one in the Greek from the
one rendered "power" in verse 22 where it can only
signify His might; but here in verse 21, the "power"
spoken of must refer to the Creator’s rights or sovereign prerogatives;
that this is so, appears from the fact that the same Greek
word is employed in John 1:12—"As many as received Him, to them
gave He power to become the sons of God"—which, as is well known,
means the right or privilege to become the sons of God. The R. V.
employs "right" both in John 1:12 and Romans 9:21.
Verse
21: "Hath not the potter power over the clay of the same lump,
to make one vessel unto honour, and another unto dishonour?"
That the "potter" here is God Himself is certain from the
previous verse, where the apostle asks "Who art thou that repliest
against God?" and then, speaking in the terms of the
figure he was about to use, continues, "Shall the thing formed say
to Him that formed it" etc. Some there are who would rob these
words of their force by arguing that while the human potter makes
certain vessels to be used for less honorable purposes than others,
nevertheless, they are designed to fill some useful place. But the
apostle does not here say, Hath not the potter power over the clay of
the same lump, to make one vessel unto an honorable use and another to a
less honorable use, but he speaks of some "vessels" being made
"unto dishonour". It is true, of course, that God’s wisdom
will yet be fully vindicated, inasmuch as the destruction of the
reprobate will promote His glory—in what way the next verse
tells us.
Ere
passing to the next verse let us summarize the teaching of this and the
two previous ones. In verse 19 two questions are asked, "Thou wilt
say then unto me, Why doth He yet find fault? For who hath resisted His
will?" To those questions a threefold answer is returned.
First, in verse 20 the apostle denies the creature the right to sit in
judgment upon the ways of the Creator—"Nay but, O man who art
thou that repliest against God? Shall the thing formed say to Him that
formed it, Why hast Thou made me thus?" The apostle insists
that the rectitude of God’s will must not be questioned.
Whatever He does must be right. Second, in verse 21 the
apostle declares that the Creator has the right to dispose of His
creatures as He sees fit—"Hath not the Potter power over the
clay, of the same lump, to make one vessel unto honor, and another unto
dishonor?" It should be carefully noted that the word for
"power" here is exousia—an entirely different word from the
one translated "power" in the following verse ("to make
known His power"), where it is dunaton. In the words "Hath not
the Potter power over the clay?" it must be God’s power justly
exercised, which is in view—the exercise of God’s rights consistently
with His justice,—because the mere assertion of His omnipotency
would be no such answer as God would return to the questions asked in
verse 19. Third, in verses 22, 23, the apostle gives the reasons why
God proceeds differently with one of His creatures from another: on
the one hand, it is to "shew His wrath" and to "make His
power known"; on the other hand, it is to "make known the
riches of His glory."
"Hath
not the potter power over the clay of the same lump, to make one vessel
unto honour, and another unto dishonour?" Certainly God has the
right to do this because He is the Creator. Does He exercise this
right? Yes, as verses 13 and 17 clearly show us—"For this same
purpose have I raised thee (Pharaoh) up".
Verse
22: "What if God, willing to shew His wrath, and to make His
power known, endured with much longsuffering the vessels of wrath fitted
to destruction". Here the apostle tells us in the second
place, why God acts thus, i.e., differently with different
ones—having mercy on some and hardening others, making one vessel
"unto honour" and another "unto dishonour". Observe,
that here in verse 22 the apostle first mentions "vessels of
wrath", before he refers in verse 23 to the "vessels of
mercy". Why is this? The answer to this question is of first
importance: we reply, Because it is the "vessels of wrath"
who are the subjects in view before the objector in verse 19. Two
reasons are given why God makes some "vessels unto
dishonour": first, to "shew His wrath", and secondly
"to make His power known"—both of which were exemplified in
the case of Pharaoh.
One
point in the above verse requires separate consideration—"Vessels
of wrath fitted to destruction". The usual explanation which
is given of these words is that the vessels of wrath fit themselves to
destruction, that is, fit themselves by virtue of their wickedness; and
it is argued that there is no need for God to "fit them to
destruction", because they are already fitted by their own
depravity, and that this must be the real meaning of this
expression.
Now if by "destruction" we understand punishment, it is
perfectly true that the non-elect do "fit themselves",
for every one will be judged "according to his works"; and
further, we freely grant that subjectively the non-elect do fit
themselves for destruction. But the point to be decided is, Is this what
the apostle is here referring to? And, without hesitation, we reply it
is not. Go back to verses 11-13: did Esau fit himself to be an
object of God’s hatred, or was he not such before he was born?
Again; did Pharaoh fit himself for destruction, or did not God
harden his heart before the plagues were sent upon Egypt?—see
Exodus 4:21!
Romans
9:22 is clearly a continuation in thought of verse 21, and verse
21 is part of the apostle’s reply to the questions raised in
verse 20: therefore, to fairly follow out the figure, it must be
God Himself who "fits" unto destruction the vessels of wrath.
Should it be asked how God does this, the answer, necessarily,
is, objectively,—He fits the non-elect unto destruction by His
fore-ordinating decrees. Should it be asked why God does this,
the answer must be, To promote His own glory, i.e., the glory of His
justice, power and wrath. "The sum of the apostle’s answer here
is, that the grand object of God, both in the election and the
reprobation of men, is that which is paramount to all things else in the
creation of men, namely, His own glory" (Robert Haldane).
Verse
23: "And that He might make known the riches of His glory
on the vessels of mercy, which He had afore prepared unto glory."
The only point in this verse which demands attention is the fact
that the "vessels of mercy" are here said to be "afore
prepared unto glory". Many have pointed out that the previous
verse does not say the vessels of wrath were afore prepared unto
destruction, and from this omission they have concluded that we must
understand the reference there to the non-elect fitting themselves in
time, rather than God ordaining them for destruction from all eternity.
But this conclusion by no means follows. We need to look back to verse
21 and note the figure which is there employed. "Clay" is inanimate
matter, corrupt, decomposed, and therefore a fit substance to
represent fallen humanity. As then the apostle is contemplating
God’s sovereign dealings with humanity in view of the Fall, He
does not say the vessels of wrath were "afore" prepared unto
destruction, for the obvious and sufficient reason that, it was not
until after the Fall that they became (in themselves) what
is here symbolized by the "clay". All that is necessary to
refute the erroneous conclusion referred to above, is to point out that
what is said of the vessels of wrath is not that they are fit for destruction
(which is the word that would have been used if the reference had been
to them fitting themselves by their own wickedness), but fitted
to destruction; which, in the light of the whole context, must mean
a sovereign ordination to destruction by the Creator. We quote
here the pointed words of Calvin on this passage—"There are
vessels prepared for destruction, that is, given up and appointed to
destruction; they are also vessels of wrath, that is, made and formed
for this end, that they may ‘be examples of God’s vengeance and
displeasure.’ Though in the second clause the apostle asserts more
expressly, that it is God who prepared the elect for glory, as he had
simply said before that the reprobate are vessels prepared for
destruction, there is yet no doubt but that the preparation of both is
connected with the secret counsel of God. Paul might have otherwise
said, that the reprobate gave up or cast themselves into destruction,
but he intimates here, that before they are born they are destined to
their lot". With this we are in hearty accord. Romans 9:22 does
not say the vessels of wrath fitted themselves, nor does it
say they are fit for destruction, instead, it declares they are
"fitted to destruction", and the context shows plainly
it is God who thus "fits" them—objectively by His
eternal decrees.
Though
Romans 9 contains the fullest setting forth of the doctrine of
Reprobation, there are still other passages which refer to it, one or
two more of which we will now briefly notice: —
"What
then? That which Israel seeketh for, that he obtained not, but the
election obtained it, and the rest were hardened" (Rom. 11:7 R.
V.). Here we have two distinct and clearly defined classes which are set
in sharp antithesis: the "election" and "the rest";
the one "obtained", the other is "hardened". On this
verse we quote from the comments of John Bunyan of immortal
memory:—"These are solemn words: they sever between men and
men—the election and the rest, the chosen and the left, the embraced
and the refused. By ‘rest’ here must needs be understood those not
elect, because set the one in opposition to the other, and if not
elect, whom then but reprobate?"
Writing
to the saints at Thessalonica the apostle declared "For God hath
not appointed us to wrath, but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus
Christ" (1 Thess. 5:9). Now surely it is patent to any impartial
mind that this statement is quite pointless if God has not
"appointed" any to wrath. To say that God "hath
not appointed us to wrath", clearly implies that there are
some whom He has "appointed to wrath", and
were it not that the minds of so many professing Christians are so
blinded by prejudice, they could not fail to clearly see this.
"A
Stone of stumbling, and a Rock or offence, even to them who stumble at
the Word, being disobedient, whereunto also they were appointed"
(1 Pet. 2:8). The "whereunto" manifestly points
back to the stumbling at the Word, and their disobedience. Here, then,
God expressly affirms that there are some who have been
"appointed" (it is the same Greek word as in 1 Thess.
5:9) unto disobedience. Our business is not to reason about it,
but to bow to Holy Scripture. Our first duty is not to understand,
but to believe what God has said.
"But
these, as natural brute beasts, made to be taken and destroyed, speak
evil of the things that they understand not; and shall utterly perish in
their own corruption" (2 Pet. 2:12). Here, again, every
effort is made to escape the plain teaching of this solemn passage. We
are told that it is the "brute beasts" who are "made to
be taken and destroyed", and not the persons here likened to them.
All that is needed to refute such sophistry is to inquire wherein lies
the point of analogy between the "these" (men) and the
"brute beasts"? What is the force of the "as"—but
"these as brute beasts"? Clearly, it is that
"these" men as brute beasts, are the ones who, like
animals, are "made to be taken and destroyed": the closing
words confirming this by reiterating the same
sentiment—"and shall utterly perish in their own
corruption."
"For
there are certain men crept in unawares, who were before of old ordained
to this condemnation; ungodly men, turning the grace of our God into
lasciviousness, and denying the only Lord God, and our Lord Jesus
Christ" (Jude 4). Attempts have been made to escape the obvious
force of this verse by substituting a different translation. The R.V.
gives: "But there are certain men crept in privily, even they who
were of old written of beforehand unto this condemnation."
But this altered rendering by no means gets rid of that which is so
distasteful to our sensibilities. The question arises, Where were
these "of old written of beforehand"? Certainly not in
the Old Testament, for nowhere is there any reference there to
wicked men creeping into Christian assemblies. If "written
of" be the best translation of "prographo",
the reference can only be to the book of the Divine decrees. So
whichever alternative be selected there can be no evading the fact that
certain men are "before of old" marked out by
God "unto condemnation."
"And
all that dwell on the earth shall worship him (viz. the Antichrist),
every one whose name hath not been written from the foundation of
the world in the Book of Life of the Lamb that hath been slain"
(Rev. 13:8, R. V. compare Rev. 17:8). Here, then, is a positive
statement affirming that there are those whose names were not written
in the Book of Life. Because of this they shall render allegiance to and
bow down before the Antichrist.
Here,
then, are no less than ten passages which most plainly imply or
expressly teach the fact of reprobation. They affirm that the wicked are
made for the Day of Evil; that God fashions some vessels unto
dishonor; and by His eternal decree (objectively) fits them unto
destruction; that they are like brute beasts, made to be taken and
destroyed, being of old ordained unto this condemnation. Therefore in
the face of these scriptures we unhesitatingly affirm (after nearly
twenty years careful and prayerful study of the subject) that the Word
of God unquestionably teaches both Predestination and Reprobation, or to
use the words of Calvin, "Eternal Election is God’s
predestination of some to salvation, and others to destruction".
Having
thus stated the doctrine of Reprobation, as it is presented in Holy
Writ, let us now mention one or two important considerations to guard it
against abuse and prevent the reader from making any unwarranted
deductions:—
First,
the doctrine of Reprobation does not mean that God purposed to take
innocent creatures, make them wicked, and then damn them. Scripture
says, "God hath made man upright, but they have sought out many
inventions" (Eccl. 7:29). God has not created sinful creatures
in order to destroy them, for God is not to be charged with the sin of
His creatures. The responsibility and criminality is man’s.
God’s
decree of Reprobation contemplated Adam’s race as fallen, sinful,
corrupt, guilty. From it God purposed to save a few as the monuments of
His sovereign grace; the others He determined to destroy as the
exemplification of His justice and severity. In determining to destroy
these others, God did them no wrong. They had already fallen in Adam,
their legal representative; they are therefore born with a sinful
nature, and in their sins He leaves them. Nor can they complain. This is
as they wish; they have no desire for holiness; they love darkness
rather than light. Where, then, is there any injustice if God
"gives them up to their own hearts’ lusts" (Ps.
81:12)!
Second,
the doctrine of Reprobation does not mean that God refuses to save those
who earnestly seek salvation. The fact is that the reprobate have no
longing for the Saviour: they see in Him no beauty that they
should desire Him. They will not come to Christ—why then should God
force them to? He turns away none who do come—where then
is the injustice of God fore-determining their just doom? None
will be punished but for their iniquities; where then, is the supposed
tyrannical cruelty of the Divine procedure? Remember that God is the
Creator of the wicked, not of their wickedness; He is the Author of
their being, but not the Infuser of their sin.
God
does not (as we have been slanderously reported to affirm) compel the
wicked to sin, as the rider spurs on an unwilling horse. God only says
in effect that awful word, "Let them alone" (Matt. 15:14). He
needs only to slacken the reins of providential restraint, and withhold
the influence of saving grace, and apostate man will only too soon and
too surely, of his own accord, fall by his iniquities. Thus the decree
of reprobation neither interferes with the bent of man s own fallen
nature, nor serves to render him the less inexcusable.
Third,
the decree of Reprobation in nowise conflicts with God’s goodness.
Though the non-elect are not the objects of His goodness in the same way
or to the same extent as the elect are, yet are they not wholly excluded
from a participation of it. They enjoy the good things of Providence
(temporal blessings) in common with God’s own children, and very often
to a higher degree. But how do they improve them? Does the (temporal)
goodness of God lead them to repent? Nay, verily, they do but "despise
His goodness, and forbearance, and longsuffering, and after their
hardness and impenitency of heart treasure up unto themselves wrath
against the day of wrath" (Rom. 2:4, 5). On what righteous ground,
then, can they murmur against not being the objects of His benevolence
in the endless ages yet to come? Moreover, if it did not clash with
God’s mercy and kindness to leave the entire body of the fallen angels
(2 Pet. 2:4) under the guilt of their apostasy; still less can it
clash with the Divine perfections to leave some of fallen mankind in
their sins and punish them for them.
Finally,
let us interpose this necessary caution: It is utterly impossible for
any of us, during the present life, to ascertain who are among
the reprobate. We must not now so judge any man, no matter how
wicked he may be. The vilest sinner, may, for all we know, be included
in the election of grace and be one day quickened by the Spirit
of grace. Our marching orders are plain, and woe be unto us if we
disregard them—"Preach the Gospel to every creature".
When we have done so our skirts are clear. If men refuse to heed, their
blood is on their own heads; nevertheless "we are unto God a sweet
savour of Christ, in them that are saved, and in them that perish. To
the one we are a savor of death unto death; and to the other we are a
savour of life unto life" (2 Cor. 2:15, 16).
We
must now consider a number of passages which are often quoted with the
purpose of showing that God has not fitted certain vessels to
destruction or ordained certain ones to condemnation. First, we cite
Ezekiel 18:31—"Why will ye die, O house of Israel?" On this
passage we cannot do better than quote from the comments of Augustas
Toplady:—"This is a passage very frequently, but very idly,
insisted upon by Arminians, as if it were a hammer which would at one
stroke crush the whole fabric to powder. But it so happens that the
"death" here alluded to is neither spiritual nor eternal
death: as is abundantly evident from the whole tenor of the chapter. The
death intended by the prophet is a political death; a death of
national prosperity, tranquillity, and security. The sense of the
question is precisely this: What is it that makes you in love with
captivity, banishment, and civil ruin? Abstinence from the worship of
images might, as a people, exempt you from these calamities, and once
more render you a respectable nation. Are the miseries of public
devastation so alluring as to attract your determined pursuit? Why will
ye die? die as the house of Israel, and considered as a political body?
Thus did the prophet argue the case, at the same time adding—"For
I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth saith the Lord God,
wherefore, turn yourselves, and live ye." This imports: First, the
national captivity of the Jews added nothing to the happiness of God.
Second, if the Jews turned from idolatry, and flung away their images,
they should not die in a foreign, hostile country, but live peaceably in
their own land and enjoy their liberties as an independent people."
To the above we may add: political death must be what is
in view in Ezekiel 18:31, 32 for the simple but sufficient reason that
they were already spiritually dead!
Matthew
25:41 is often quoted to show that God has not fitted certain
vessels to destruction—"Depart from Me, ye cursed, into
everlasting fire, prepared for the Devil and his angels." This is,
in fact, one of the principal verses relied upon to disprove the
doctrine of Reprobation. But we submit that the emphatic word here is not
"for" but "Devil." This verse (see context) sets
forth the severity of the judgment which awaits the lost. In
other words, the above Scripture expresses the awfulness of the
everlasting fire rather than the subjects of it—if the fire be
"prepared for the Devil and his angels" then how
intolerable it will be! If the place of eternal torment into which the
damned shall be cast is the same as that in which God’s arch-enemy
will suffer, how dreadful must that place be!
Again:
if God has chosen only certain ones to salvation, why are we told that
God "now commandeth all men everywhere to repent" (Acts
17:30)? That God commandeth "all men" to repent is but the
enforcing of His righteous claims as the moral Governor of the world.
How could He do less, seeing that all men everywhere have sinned against
Him? Furthermore; that God commandeth all men everywhere to repent
argues the universality of creature responsibility. But this Scripture
does not declare that it is God’s pleasure to "give
repentance" (Acts 5:31) to all men everywhere. That the apostle
Paul did not believe God gave repentance to every soul is clear from his
words in 2 Timothy 2:25—"In meekness instructing those
that oppose themselves; if God peradventure will give them
repentance to the acknowledging of the truth."
Again,
we are asked, if God has "ordained" only certain ones unto
eternal life, then why do we read that He "will have all men to
be saved, and come to the knowledge of the truth" (1 Tim. 2:4)? The
reply is, that the words "all" and "all men", like
the term "world," are often used in a general and relative
sense. Let the reader carefully examine the following passages: Mark
1:5; John 6:45; 8:2; Acts 21:28; 22:15; 2 Corinthians 3:2 etc., and he
will find full proof of our assertion. 1 Timothy 2:4 cannot teach
that God wills the salvation of all mankind, or otherwise all
mankind would be saved—"What His soul desireth even
that He doeth" (Job 23:13)!
Again;
we are asked, Does not Scripture declare, again and again, that God is
no "respecter of persons"? We answer, it certainly does, and
God’s electing grace proves it. The seven sons of Jesse, though
older and physically superior to David, are passed by, while the young
shepherd-boy is exalted to Israel’s throne. The scribes and lawyers
pass unnoticed, and ignorant fishermen are chosen to be the apostles of
the Lamb. Divine truth is hidden from the wise and prudent and is
revealed to babes instead. The great majority of the wise and noble are
ignored, while the weak, the base, the despised, are called and saved.
Harlots and publicans are sweetly compelled to come in to the gospel
feast, while self-righteous Pharisees are suffered to perish in their
immaculate morality. Truly, God is "no respecter" of
persons or He would not have saved me.
That
the Doctrine of Reprobation is a "hard saying" to the carnal
mind is readily acknowledged—yet, is it any "harder" than
that of eternal punishment? That it is clearly taught in
Scripture we have sought to demonstrate, and it is not for us to pick
and choose from the truths revealed in God’s Word. Let those who are
inclined to receive those doctrines which commend themselves to their
judgment, and who reject those which they cannot fully
understand, remember those scathing words of our Lord’s, "O
fools, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have
spoken" (Luke 24:25): fools because slow of heart; slow of heart,
not dull of head!
Once
more we would avail ourselves of the language of Calvin: "But, as I
have hitherto only recited such things as are delivered without any
obscurity or ambiguity in the Scriptures, let persons who hesitate not
to brand with ignominy those Oracles of heaven, beware what kind of
opposition they make. For, if they pretend ignorance, with a desire to
be commended for their modesty, what greater instance of pride can be
conceived, than to oppose one little word to the authority of God! as,
‘It appears otherwise to me,’ or ‘I would rather not meddle with
this subject.’ But if they openly censure, what will they gain by
their puny attempts against heaven? Their petulance, indeed, is no
novelty; for in all ages there have been impious and profane men, who
have virulently opposed this doctrine. But they shall feel the truth
of what the Spirit long ago declared by the mouth of David, that God
‘is clear when He judgeth’ (Ps. 51 :4). David obliquely hints at the
madness of men who display such excessive presumption amidst their
insignificance, as not only to dispute against God, but to arrogate to
themselves the power of condemning Him. In the meantime, he briefly
suggests, that God is unaffected by all the blasphemies which they
discharge against heaven, but that He dissipates the mists of calumny,
and illustriously displays His righteousness; our faith, also, being
founded on the Divine Word, and therefore, superior to all the world,
from its exaltation looks down with contempt upon those mists"
(John Calvin).
In
closing this chapter we propose to quote from the writings of some of
the standard theologians since the days of the Reformation, not that we
would buttress our own statements by an appeal to human authority,
however venerable or ancient, but in order to show that what we have
advanced in these pages is no novelty of the twentieth century, no
heresy of the ‘latter days’ but, instead, a doctrine which has been
definitely formulated and commonly taught by many of the most pious and
scholarly students of Holy Writ.
"Predestination
we call the decree of God, by which He has determined in Himself, what
He would have to become of every individual of mankind. For they are not
all created with a similar destiny: but eternal life is foreordained for
some, and eternal damnation for others. Every man, therefore, being
created for one or the other of these ends, we say, he is predestinated
either to life or to death"—from John Calvin’s
"Institutes" (1536 A. D.) Book III, Chapter XXI entitled
"Eternal Election, or God’s Predestination of Some to Salvation
and of Others to Destruction."
We
ask our readers to mark well the above language. A perusal of it should
show that what the present writer has advanced in this chapter is not
"Hyper-Calvinism" but real Calvinism, pure and
simple. Our purpose in making this remark is to show that those who, not
acquainted with Calvin’s writings, in their ignorance condemn
as ultra-Calvinism that which is simply a reiteration of what Calvin
himself taught—a reiteration because that prince of theologians as
well as his humble debtor have both found this doctrine in the Word of
God itself.
Martin
Luther is his most excellent work "De Servo Arbitrio" (Free
will a Slave), wrote: "All things whatsoever arise from, and depend
upon, the Divine appointments, whereby it was preordained who should
receive the Word of Life, and who should disbelieve it, who should be
delivered from their sins, and who should be hardened in them, who
should be justified and who should be condemned. This is the very truth
which razes the doctrine of freewill from its foundations, to wit, that
God’s eternal love of some men and hatred of others is immutable and
cannot be reversed."
John
Fox, whose Book of Martyrs was once the best known work in the English
language (alas that it is not so today, when Roman Catholicism is
sweeping upon us like a great destructive tidal wave!),
wrote:—"Predestination is the eternal decreement of God, purposed
before in Himself, what should befall all men, either to salvation, or
damnation".
The
"Larger Westminster Catechism" (1688)—adopted by the General
Assembly of the Presbyterian Church—declares, "God, by an eternal
and immutable decree, out of His mere love, for the praise of His
glorious grace, to be manifested in due time, hath elected some angels
to glory, and in Christ hath chosen some men to eternal life, and the
means thereof; and also, according to His sovereign power, and the
unsearchable counsel of His own will (whereby He extendeth or
withholdeth favor as He pleases), hath passed by, and fore-ordained
the rest to dishonour and wrath, to be for their sin inflicted, to
the praise of the glory of His justice".
John
Bunyan, author of "The Pilgrim’s Progress," wrote a whole
volume on "Reprobation". From it we make one brief
extract:—"Reprobation is before the person cometh into the world,
or hath done good or evil. This is evidenced by Romans 9:11. Here you
find twain in their mother’s womb, and both receiving their destiny,
not only before they had done good or evil, but before they were
in a capacity to do it, they being yet unborn—their destiny, I say,
the one unto, the other not unto the blessing of eternal life; the one
elect, the other reprobate; the one chosen, the other refused". In
his "Sighs from Hell", John Bunyan also wrote: "They that
do continue to reject and slight the Word of God are such, for the most
part, as are ordained to be damned".
Commenting
upon Romans 9:22, "What if God willing to shew His wrath,
and to make His power known, endured with much longsuffering the vessels
of wrath fitted to destruction" Jonathan Edwards (Vol. 4, p.
306—1743 A.D.) says, "How awful doth the majesty of God appear in
the dreadfulness of His anger! This we may learn to be one end of the
damnation of the wicked."
Augustus
Toplady, author of "Rock of Ages" and other sublime hymns,
wrote: "God, from all eternity decreed to leave some of Adam’s
fallen posterity in their sins, and to exclude them from the
participation of Christ and His benefits". And again; "We,
with the Scriptures, assert: That there is a predestination of some
particular persons to life, for the praise of the glory of Divine grace;
and also a predestination of other particular persons to death for
the glory of Divine justice—which death of punishment they shall
inevitably undergo, and that justly, on account of their sins
George
Whitefield, that stalwart of the eighteenth century, used by God in
blessing to so many, wrote: "Without doubt, the doctrine of
election and reprobation must stand or fall together. . . . I frankly
acknowledge I believe the doctrine of Reprobation, that God intends to
give saving grace, through Jesus Christ, only to a certain number; and
that the rest of mankind, after the fall of Adam, being justly left
of God to continue in sin, will at last suffer that eternal death
which is its proper wages
"Fitted
to destruction" (Rom. 9:22). After declaring this phrase
admits of two interpretations, Dr. Hodge—perhaps the best known and
most widely read commentator on Romans—says, "The other
interpretation assumes that the reference is to God and that the Greek
word for ‘fitted’ has its full participle force; prepared (by
God) for destruction." This, says Dr. Hodge, "Is
adopted not only by the majority of Augustinians, but also by many
Lutherans".
Were
it necessary we are prepared to give quotations from the writings of
Wycliffe, Huss, Ridley, Hooper, Cranmer, Ussher, John Trapp, Thomas
Goodwin, Thomas Manton (Chaplain to Cromwell), John Owen, Witsius, John
Gill (predecessor of Spurgeon), and a host of others. We mention this
simply to show that many of the most eminent saints in bye-gone days,
the men most widely used of God, held and taught this doctrine which is
so bitterly hated in these last days, when men will no longer
"endure sound doctrine"; hated by men of lofty pretensions,
but who, notwithstanding their boasted orthodoxy and much advertised
piety, are not worthy to unfasten the shoes of the faithful and fearless
servants of God of other days.
"O
the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How
unsearchable are His judgments and His ways past finding out! For who
hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been His counsellor? or who
hath first given to Him, and it shall be recompensed unto him again? For
of Him, and through Him, and to Him, are all things: to whom be glory forever,
Amen" (Rom. 11:33-36). |
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