Hypercalvinism
Sourpuss Stamp Reviews
This book is an attempt at
resurrection. How do you bring a dead theological system back to life?
You hide it in the shadows, you misquote quote important people, and you
butcher exegetical work on the Bible. Those who participate in
propagating such theological drivel should be banished...or
worse?

Hyper-Calvinism
and the Call of the Gospel
by David J. Engelsma
Reformed Free Publishing Association, Grandville, MI: 1980.
216 Pages, Paperback.
David
Engelsma is part of a small denomination called the
Protestant Reformed Church.
Their numbers and effectiveness seem to be settled within their
denominational lines. They attempt
to hold steadfast to their hyper-Calvinistic tendencies, and
Englesma's book is the hallmark of their defense. Englesma's
book relies on half quotes, bad exegetical work, and
does
not convince at all. The only redeemable quality of the book is
the forward written by John Gerstner - and even Gerstner is not
explaining himself too well in comparison to the rest of his works
already published.
There
is not a great deal of technical or exegetical work documented at all, which is
always a very bad sign if one is going to defend a position, and his
conclusions seem to be more parroted than hermeneutical. His
parrots, however, are parroted in half truths. Engelsma deals much with his denomination and the
problems they had in their split with the Christian Reformed Church (but
a split nonetheless right and true since the CRC has gone apostate in
many ways).
Oftentimes, any writer from the PRC seems to write with a chip on their shoulder
instead of simply exegeting the Bible (this is particularly true of
"The Standard Bearer" - their quarterly journal for their
denomination). In many of the books and papers I have read on this subject, it
is often that they are simply writing to add additional comments on their split
with CRC, and I believe that it is not only unnecessary to do this, but
more condemning of their own lack of compassion and further aggravation
of the subject. It
is one thing to stand for the truth, but to continually harp on the
split and bring up the same ideas over and over to defend their Hypercalvinism
is tedious at best. Englesma's book is a reflection of that
attitude.
Englesma's
attempt to free himself and his denomination of Hypercalvinism biblically
and historically
fails. The only historical figures that agree with the PRC
and Englesma's position is the advocates
surrounding John Gill - and at
that point only in some manner. He
quotes sections of Turretin,
which is always refreshing to read, but does not quote everything
Turretin said or stated on the views he is attempting to propagate.
I would have enjoyed seeing him quote Turretin's use of the love
of God for all men. Engelsma is not fair with anyone he
quotes since he selectively cites them to prove his own points. Engelsma thinks he is fair with Calvin
- but he out rightly disagrees with Calvin, seemingly to imply that
Calvin did not really spend so much time on the subject of the love of
God and His bounty to all men, both reprobate and elect. This is
certainly not fair to the Institutes, nor even of Calvin's
Calvinism. Calvin emphatically states that
God loves all
men,
and the Scripture passages to prove this are
"innumerable." Calvin spent a great deal of time
surrounding "God's Fatherly Love" for all men, but we see
Engelsma spending very little time on that subject (and rightly so, for
if he did, he would be denying what he was writing and what he says
Calvin stood for.) Engelsma and the PRC deny that God loves
all men, but they like to quote Turretin. However, Turretin
defines the biblical position of what he calls a "love of men."
Rather, their elitist mentality propagates that God only loves the elect
and only hates the wicked. They do not believe god hates
the elect, or ever has (although I have not seen anything well done on
Ephesians 2 - were we not "children of wrath" like the
others?) Their unbalanced emphasis on
reprobation is clearly evident, where the Biblical evidence leans more
heavily to the call of all men to repent and believe the Gospel.
The denial of common bounty to all men, and the forcefulness of the
assertion that God only hates the reprobate are Hypercalvinist ideologies
stemming back from the time of John Gill and his mentor John
Hussey. The PRC may be better termed the "Husseites",
not akin to Jan Huss. Engelsma, in trying to protect his view and his
denomination from Hypercalvinism, simply admits to it by their position
and this book. I
had to give this work over to the Sour Puss Stamp...
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