Arminian Opinions
Another Arminian document of their
perverted beliefs concerning saving "grace."
The
following is one of 2 documents held by the Remonstrants (Arminians) as
a statement of their faith in response to "reformed" teaching.
This document has been condemned as heresy by the reformed churches at
the Synod of Dordt, 1618-1619.
The
Remonstrant Opinions
Only with difficulty
did the Synod obtain from the Remonstrants, who had been charged by the
political authorities to appear before the synod, a statement of their
convictions on the points in dispute.
After appearing a day later than scheduled and holding
conferences among themselves, they presented their opinions on the first
article at the 31st session, on December 13, and on the other
articles at the 34th session, on December 17.
The Sententiae are essential to a proper understanding and
evaluation of the Canons, since at many points the latter are so phrased
as to show clearly wherein the synod was convinced that the Remonstrants
erred.
The Latin Edition of
this material can be found in Acta Synodi Nationalis, pp. 113,
116-118; in Bakhuizen vanden Brink: De Nederlandsche
Belijdenisgesschriften, pp. 283-288; and the Dutch edition in Acta
ofte Handelinghen des Nationalen Synodi (ed. Canin, 1621), pp.
138-139; 152-158. For the
translation provided here we are indebted to Dr. Anthony A. Hoekema,
professor of Systematic Theology at Calvin Theological Seminary.
A. The Opinion of the Remonstrants
regarding the first article, dealing with the decree of Predestination.
1.
God has not decided to elect anyone to eternal life, or to reject
anyone from the same, prior to the decree to create him, without any
consideration of preceding obedience or disobedience, according to His
good pleasure, for the demonstration of the glory of His mercy and
justice, or of His absolute power and dominion.
2.
Since the decree of God concerning both the salvation and
perdition of each man is not a decree of the end absolutely intended, it
follows that neither are such means subordinated to that same decree by
which the elect and the reprobate are efficaciously and inevitably led
to their final destination.
3.
Therefore God has not with this plan created in the one Adam all
men in a state of rectitude, has not ordained the fall and the
permission of it, has not withdrawn from Adam the grace which was
necessary and sufficient, has not brought it about that the Gospel is
preached and that men are externally called, does not confer on them any
gifts of the Holy Spirit by means of which he leads some of them to
life, but deprives others of the benefit of life, Christ, the Mediator,
I not solely the executor of election, but also the foundation of that
same decree of election: the reason why some are efficaciously called,
justified, persevere in faith, and are glorified is not that they have
been absolutely elected to eternal life.
That others are left in the fall, that Christ is not given to
them, that they are either not called at all or not efficaciously called
– these are not the reasons why they are absolutely rejected from
eternal salvation.
4.
God has not decreed to leave the greatest part of men in the
fall, excluded from every hope of salvation, apart from intervening
actual sins.
5.
God has ordained that Christ should be a propitiation for the
sins of the whole world, and by virtue of that decree He has determined
to justify and to save those who believe in Him, and to provide for men
means necessary and sufficient for faith in such a way as He knows to be
in harmony with His wisdom and justice.
But He has by no means determined, by virtue of an absolute
decree, to give Christ the Mediator solely to the elect, and through an
efficacious calling to bestow faith upon, justify, preserve in the faith
and glorify them alone.
6.
No one is rejected from life nor from the means sufficient for it
by an absolute antecedent decree,, so that the merit of Christ, calling,
and all the gifts of the Spirit can be profitable to salvation for all,
and truly are, unless they themselves by the abuse of these gifts
pervert them to their own perdition; but to unbelief, to impiety, and to
sins, a means and causes of damnation, no one is predestined.
7.
The election of particular persons is decisive, out of
consideration of faith in Jesus Christ and of perseverance; not,
however, apart from a consideration of faith and perseverance in the
true faith, as a condition prerequisite for electing.
8.
Rejection from eternal life is made on the basis of a
consideration of antecedent unbelief and perseverance in unbelief; not,
however, apart from a consideration of antecedent unbelief and
perseverance in unbelief.
9.
All the children of believers are sanctified in Christ, so that
no one of them who leaves this life before the use of reason will
perish. By no means,
however, are to be considered among the number of the reprobate certain
children of believers who leave this life in infancy before they have
committed any actual sin in their own persons, so that neither the holy
bath of baptism nor the prayers of the church for them in any way be
profitable for their salvation.
10.
No children of believers who have been baptized in the name of
the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, living in the state of
infancy, are reckoned among the reprobate by an absolute decree.
B. The Opinion of the Remonstrants
regarding the second article, which deals with the universality of the
merit of the death of Christ.
- The
price of redemption which Christ offered to God the Father is not
only in itself and by itself sufficient for the redemption of the
whole human race but has also been paid for all men and for every
man, according to the decree, will, and the grace of God the Father;
therefore no one is absolutely excluded from participation in the
fruits of Christ’s death by an absolute and antecedent decree of
God.
- Christ
has, by the merit of his death, so reconciled God the Father to the
whole human race that the Father, on account of that merit, without
giving up His righteousness and truth, has been able and has willed
to make and confirm a new covenant of grace with sinners and men
liable to damnation.
- Though
Christ has merited reconciliation with God and remission of sins for
all men and for every man, yet no one, according to the pact of the
new and gracious covenant, becomes a true partaker of the benefits
obtained by the death of Christ in any other way than by faith; nor
are sins forgiven to sinning men before they actually and truly
believe in Christ.
- Only
those are obliged to believe that Christ died for them for whom
Christ has died. The
reprobates, however, as they are called, for whom Christ has not
died, ore not obligated to such faith, nor can they be justly
condemned on account of the contrary refusal to believe this.
In fact, if there should be such reprobates, they would be
obliged to believe that Christ has not died for them.
C. The Opinion of the Remonstrants
regarding the third and fourth articles, concerning the grace of God and
the conversion of man.
- Man
does not have saving faith of himself, nor out of the powers of his
free will, since in the state of sin he is able of himself and by
himself neither to think, will, or do any good (which would indeed
to be saving good, the most prominent of which is saving faith).
It is necessary therefore that by God in Christ through His
Holy Spirit he be regenerated and renewed in intellect, affections,
will, and in all his powers, so that he might be able t understand,
reflect upon, will and carry out the good things which pertain to
salvation.
- We
hold, however, that the grace of God is not only the beginning but
also the progression and the completion of every good, so much so
that even the regenerate himself is unable to think, will, or do the
good, or to resist any temptations to evil, apart from that
preceding or prevenient, awakening, following and cooperating grace.
Hence all good works and actions which anyone by cogitation
is able to comprehend are to be ascribed to the grace of God.
- Yet
we do not believe that all zeal, care, and diligence applied to the
obtaining of salvation before faith itself and the Spirit of renewal
are vain and ineffectual – indeed, rather harmful to man than
useful and fruitful. On
the contrary, we hold that to hear the Word of God, to be sorry for
sins committed, to desire saving grace and the Spirit of renewal
(none of which things man is able to do without grace) are not only
not harmful and useless, but rather most useful and most necessary
for the obtaining of faith and of the Spirit of renewal.
- The
will in the fallen state, before calling, does not have the power
and the freedom to will any saving good.
And therefore we deny that the freedom to will saving good as
well as evil is present to the will in every state.
- The
efficacious grace by which anyone is converted is not irresistible;
and though God so influences the will by the word and the internal
operation of His Spirit that he both confers the strength to believe
or supernatural powers, and actually causes man to believe – yet
man is able of himself to despise that grace and not to believe, and
therefore to perish through his own fault.
- Although
according to the most free will of God the disparity of divine grace
is very great, nevertheless, the Holy Spirit confers, or is ready to
confer, as much grace to all men and to each man to whom the Word of
God is preached as is sufficient for promoting the conversion of men
in its steps. Therefore
sufficient grace for faith and conversion falls to the lot not only
of those whom God is said to will to save according to the decree of
absolute election, but also of those whoa re not actually converted.
- Man
is able through the grace of the Holy Spirit to do more good than he
actually does, and to avoid more evil than he actually avoids; and
we do not believe that God simply does not will that man should do
more good than he does and avoid more evil than he does avoid, and
that God has decreed precisely from eternity that both should so
happen.
- Whomever
God calls to salvation, he calls seriously, that is, with a sincere
and completely unhypocritical intention and will to save; nor do we
assent to the opinion of those who hold that God calls certain ones
externally whom He does not will to call internally, that is, as
truly converted, even before the grace of calling has been rejected.
- There
is not in God a secret will which so contradicts the will of the
same revealed in the Word that according to it (that is, the secret
will) He does not will the conversion and salvation of the greatest
part of those whom He seriously calls and invites by the Word of the
Gospel and by His revealed will; and we do not here, as some say,
acknowledge in God a holy simulation, or a double person.
- Nor
do we believe that God calls the reprobate, as they are called, to
these ends: that He should the more harden them, or take away
excuse, or punish them the more severely, or display their
inability; nor, however, that they should be converted, should
believe, and should be saved.
- It
is not true that all things, not only good but also bad, necessarily
occur, from the power and efficacy of the secret will or decree of
God, and that indeed those who sin, out of consideration of the
decree of God, are not able to sin; that God wills to determine and
to bring about the sins of men, their insane, foolish, and cruel
works, and the sacrilegious blasphemy of His name – in fact, to
move the tongues of men to blasphemy, and so on.
- To
us the following is false and horrible: that God impels men to sins
which He openly prohibits; that those who sin do not act contrary to
the will of God properly named; that what is unrighteous (that is,
what is contrary to the will of God properly named; that what is
unrighteous (that is, what is contrary to His precept) is in
agreement with the will of God; indeed, that it is truly a capital
crime to do the will of God.
D. The Opinion of the Remonstrants with
respect to the fifth article, which concerns Perseverance.
- The
perseverance of believers in the faith is not an effect of the
absolute decree by which God is said to have chosen singular persons
defined by no condition of obedience.
- God
provides true believers with as much grace and supernatural powers
as He judges, according to His infinite wisdom, to be sufficient for
persevering and for overcoming the temptations of the devil, the
flesh, and the world; it is never charged to God’s account that
they do not persevere.
- True
believers call fall from true faith and can fall into such sins as
cannot be consistent with true and justifying faith; not only is it
possible for this to happen, but it even happens frequently.
- True
believers are able to fall through their own fault into shameful and
atrocious deeds, to persevere and to die in them; and therefore
finally to fall and to perish.
- Nevertheless
we do not believe that true believers, though they may sometimes
fall into grave sins which are vexing to their consciences,
immediately fall out of every hope of repentance; but we acknowledge
that it can happen that God, according to the multitude of His
mercies, may recall them through His grace to repentance; in fact,
we believe that this happens not infrequently, although we cannot be
persuaded that this will certainly and indubitably happen.
- The
following dogmas, therefore, which by public writings are being
scattered among the people, we reject with our whole mind and heart
as harmful to piety and good morals: namely, 1) True believers are
not able to sin deliberately, but only out of ignorance and
weakness. 2) True believers through no sins can fall out of the
grace of God. 3) A thousand sins, even all the sins of the whole
world, are not able to render election invalid. 4) To believers and
to the elect no sins, however great and grave they can be, are
imputed; but all present and future sins have already been remitted.
5) True believers, having fallen into destructive heresies, into
grave and most atrocious sins, like adultery and homicide, on
account of which the church, after the justification of Christ, is
compelled to testify that it is not able to tolerate them in its
external communion and that they will have no part in the kingdom of
Christ unless they are converted, nevertheless are not able to fall
from faith totally and finally.
- A
true believer, as for the present time he can be certain about his
faith and the integrity of his conscience, and thus also concerning
his salvation and the saving benevolence of God toward him, for that
time can be and ought to be certain; and on this point we reject the
pontifical opinion.
- A
true believer can and ought indeed to be certain for the future that
he is able, by diligent watchfulness, through prayers, and through
other holy exercises, to persevere in true faith, and he ought also
to be certain that divine grace for persevering will never be
lacking; but we do not see how he can be certain that he will never
afterwards be remiss in his duty but that he will persevere in faith
and in those works of piety and love which are fitting for a
believer in this school of Christian warfare; neither do we deem it
necessary that concerning this thing a believer should be certain.
Peter
Y. DeJong, Crisis in the Reformed Churches: Essays in Commemoration
of the Great Synod of Dordt, 1618-1619, Reformed Fellowship, Inc.,
Grand Rapids, MI: 1968. Pages
220ff. |
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