Perseverance of the Saints
Encouragement for the struggling
Christian.
The
Perseverance of the Saints, Encouraging to the Christian
By
Dr. C. Matthew McMahon
One of the greatest hindrances to a comfortable walk with God as
a Christian is their fickle nature.
Christians have a problem with their fallen emotions.
Their emotions often overtake their good sense, and as a result
of their sin, especially their besetting sin, the greatest question that
continues to arise all through their Christian walk is “Am I really
saved?” Instead of
resting on the hope of God, they wonder, based on their works, whether
they have been truly saved. As
the Westminster Confession of Faith states, these good works “are the
fruits and evidences of a true and lively faith.”
It is true, and a good thing, that professing Christians look at
their works. Works are one
of those litmus tests that demonstrate if the heart has truly been
changed and regenerated. As
1 John 3:9 states quite emphatically, “Whoever has been born of
God does not sin, for His seed remains in him; and he cannot sin,
because he has been born of God.”
At this point the Christian trembles because he knows he sins.
So is he not born of God? The
text itself is quite plain, but it is plain in the Greek syntax, tense
and grammar, otherwise the translation is lost in English.
He who is born of God does not continue to sin as habit.
It is not that Christians do not sin, rather, they do not
habitually sin, and plan out their sin and enjoy their sin as a lifestyle.
That does not give them the right to say, “Well, I am going to
sin, so I might as well sin big.”
No. Shall we gone on
sinning that grace may abound? Certainly
not! Instead, they desire
to be holy. But this
dynamic of assurance, coupled with fallen emotions, makes Christians
fickle. Oftentimes they are
uneasy about their walk, and often doubt their salvation.
What can a Christian do in order to gain a sense of assurance and
stability in their salvation? The
Calvinistic tradition has understood election as unconditional,
regeneration as permanent, and the certitude of final perseverance as a
genuine reality for the believer in Christ.
Within the sphere of Christian
doctrine, there emerged a teaching called the “perseverance of the
saints.” It has long been
taught, even from the beginning of the early church, and was defined
well by Aurelius Augustine, or St. Augustine as many know him, in his Treatise
on the Gift of Perseverance. Thomas
Aquinas, Luther, Calvin and others wrote extensively on it as well.
Later, during the early 17th century, the Synod of
Dort made a defining mark on the history of this doctrine while they
battled the false teachings of James Arminius and the Remonstrants as
the error of the Pelagians again rose its head in the subtle guise of
Christian doctrine. Here,
at this synod, the five points of Calvinism were defined, and the
doctrines of grace in its form of TULIP were settled.
The “P” of TULIP is “The Perseverance of the Saints.”
The Synod of Dort explains the
doctrine of perseverance concisely.
First they state that even though Christians are saved, they
still sin. Though they have
been delivered from the bondage of sin, and sin no longer reigns or has
rule over them, they still fall into grievous sins.
However, though Christians sin, God still preserves them that
they may not utterly fall away. Dort says, “By reason of these remains of indwelling sin,
and also because of the temptations of the world and of Satan, those who
are converted could not persevere in that grace if left to their own
strength. But God is faithful, who, having conferred grace, mercifully
confirms and powerfully preserves them therein, even to the end.”
If men are left to themselves, without the powerful working of
God’s Holy Spirit to motion them to good works, they will never be
able to motion themselves without His help. Hypothetically speaking, if the Christian man has the power
of God removed from him, he would simply be a fallen sinner.
What can a fallen sinner do against sin but remain enslaved in
it? The Spirit of God must
motion the Christian to good works, and must be the agent that secures
the application of the power of the cross to the Christian’s soul.
That is why Dort says, “But God is faithful…”
It is not that man has power to sustain himself, but that God
must preserve Him by grace. Oftentimes,
then, theologians call “The Perseverance of the Saints” as “The
Preservation of the Saints.”
There are common misconceptions about the doctrine of The Perseverance
of the Saints. This
doctrine does not mean "once saved always saved".
This corruption of the doctrine has been popular in recent years, but
has never been a true representation of the doctrine.
"Once saved always saved" is more keenly given the name
"Perseverance of the Sinner" instead of "the saint"
for it teaches that man can be saved by Christ and then sin habitually,
do whatever he wants, and still "persevere to the end".
It is often used as an excuse and caricature of the Reformed doctrines
of grace because such a teaching does in fact bring reproach on those
who would believe it. The
Bible does not say that a man can be a Christian and may never change.
To say that one is eternally secure and that such a man may still
sin any way is a false misrepresentation of the doctrine as a whole.
Perseverance of the saints teaches that once God has renewed the heart
of a sinner through the application of the redemption wrought by Christ
upon the cross, He will continue to be saved and show forth the fruits
of that salvation. The sinner perseveres because of Christ, but he
continually shows himself as one who has been changed by Christ.
God has saved the individual and will sanctify him until the end when he
is ultimately glorified, and in heaven. It does not mean man has a
license to sin. Dort
explains this well in that if a Christian should fall, God “preserves
in them the incorruptible seed of regeneration from perishing or being
totally lost.”
The sovereign work of the Spirit on the heart of the individual
cannot be undone (John 3:1-16). It
is the same sentiments that Peter states, “1 Peter 1:23, "Being
born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the word
of God, which liveth and abideth for ever."
Regeneration, the changing of the heart from a heart of stone to
a heart of flesh, cannot be revoked.
It is a deposit of an incorruptible seed that cannot be taken
away. Just after a long
two-chapter discourse on election, Paul, in Romans 11:29, says, “For
the gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable.” Thus, if the Scripture is to stand firm, and the promises of
God cannot be revoked, then perseverance is a biblical and logical
necessity. If the opposite
of this were true, Christians would be miserable people.
Calvin says, “A fine confidence of salvation is left to us, if
by moral conjecture we judge that at the present moment we are in grace,
but we know not what will become of us tomorrow! The apostle speaks far
otherwise: “I am surely convinced that neither angels, nor powers, nor
principalities, nor death, nor life, nor
things present, nor things to come…will separate us from the love by
which the Lord embraces us in Christ” [Romans 8:38-39 p.].”
Why
do theologians call the doctrine “The Perseverance of the Saints?” Why not, “The Preservation of the Saints by God?”
The reason lies in the emphasis that since election is true, and
God preserves the Christian, that they must demonstrate this true
preservation by their outward conformity to the Word of God.
In other words, the fruit of the life demonstrate that they are
truly saved and will truly persevere.
Dorst says that such a salvation “renders them much more
careful and solicitous to continue in the ways of the Lord,”
not to continue in sin. It
is important to note that such works do not save them, or improve on the
promises of the salvation they have in Christ.
But they do demonstrate that they have been saved.
The fruit of a tree does not make the tree good or bad, but
demonstrates whether the tree is a good tree or a bad tree.
It is fitting to say, then, that the saints of God must
persevere, and in that perseverance is demonstrated the preservation of
God.
There
are numerous Scriptures that demonstrate the final perseverance of the
believer. Christ says in John 6:37-39, "All that the Father giveth me shall come to me; and
him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out. For I came down
from heaven, not to do mine own will, but the will of him that sent me.
And this is the Father's will which hath sent me, that of all which he
hath given me I should lose nothing, but should raise it up again at the
last day." Jesus
Christ will lose none that the Father has given him.
He will not lose one. He
will raise them up in the last day.
All that the Father has deposited unto the Son, and all for whom
the Son intercedes shall be saved.
Paul says in Phil. 1:6, "Being confident of this very thing,
that he which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until
the day of Jesus Christ:" Christians
can be confident that God will continue and finish the work he had begun
in them as a result of the work of Christ and its continued application
by the power of the Sprit of God. Calvin
says, “This declaration is clearly against the schoolmen, who
idly talk and say, that no one is certain of final perseverance, except
through the gift of special revelation, which they make to be very rare.
By such a dogma the whole faith is destroyed, which is certainly
nothing, except it extends to death and beyond death. But we, on the
contrary, ought to feel confident, that he who has begun in us a good
work, will carry it on until the day of the Lord Jesus.”
God is always faithful to
His promises as 1 Thess. 5:23-24 says, "And the very God of peace
sanctify you wholly; and I pray God your whole spirit and soul
and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus
Christ. Faithful is he that calleth you, who also will do it."
God will do it. There are reasons that we will explore as to “why” God
will do this, but we have written for our hope the truth that He will.
God will preserve His people blameless until the coming of
Christ, and then at that time He will glorify them.
Paul was confident of this for himself when he said, “And the
Lord shall deliver me from every evil work, and will preserve me unto
his heavenly kingdom: to whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen (2
Tim. 4:18)." Such a
life of preservation is echoed in Ephesians 2:10 where, just after Paul
says that Christians have been saved by grace through faith, the real
emphasis on election and preservation comes forth when he says, “For
we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which
God hath before ordained that we should walk in them."
God ordains the steps of the Christian and orders the very works
that they shall do to glorify Him in the truth.
Though the Scriptures are plain that God preserves His children to the
end, there are Scriptures that demonstrate the possibility of falling
from grace and winding up in hell.
Is this a contradiction to the doctrine of the saint’s
perseverance? Not at all.
It may seem at the outset that it is, especially using the
wording above, but if time is taken to look at passages that seem
contradictory, the true nature of those statements becomes evident. One such passage is Hebrews 6:3-6. This is probably the most famous passage that is most often
quoted again the doctrine of perseverance all through church history,
and it will do well as an example.
It reads, “For it is impossible for those who were once
enlightened, and have tasted the heavenly gift, and have become
partakers of the Holy Spirit, and have tasted the good word of God and
the powers of the age to come, if they fall away, to renew them again to
repentance, since they crucify again for themselves the Son of God, and
put Him to an open shame.” This
is a serious list. These
people have been 1) enlightened, 2) have tasted the heavenly gift, 3)
have become partakers of the Holy Spirit, 4) have tasted the good Word
of God, 5) have tasted of the powers of the age to come, and, most
critically, they 6) have the possibility of falling away.
The text is saying that though all these things have occurred,
these “professing Christians” will utterly miscarry their souls into
all eternity. Does this
sound like perseverance? This
sounds more like a warning to instill fear rather than assurance!
However, one key unlocks the meaning of the passage that is often
overlooked. If the
Christian would continue reading he would find that the writer of
Hebrews makes a valid distinction between these people in verse 3-6, and
the true Christian who will be saved.
In verse 9 it says, “But, beloved, we are confident of better
things concerning you, yes, things that accompany salvation, though we
speak in this manner.” Better
things? Things that
accompany salvation? It is
clear that in the mind of the writer of this inspired epistle, he does
not equate what he formally says in verses 3-6 to salvation. Whatever the writer is talking about in being enlightened,
tasting the heavenly gift and the like, he is not speaking about
salvation. In verse 9 he is
quite sure that the brethren spoken about here are in contrast to these
other people who seem to fall away.
In actuality, these people were never saved though they, in some
way, partook of the covenant community and the blessings there.
There is a dividing line between those who are saved (verse 9)
and those who are under some kind of strong delusion that allows them to
believe they are saved (verses 3-6).
Those acts mentioned in verse 3-6 are things that do not
accompany salvation and should not be confused with the idea that
Christians who are truly regenerated may ultimately fall away and become
lost. Christians have the
Holy Spirit residing in them as a regenerated elect sinner.
However, this list in verses 3-6 are not regenerating ordinances
at all. The problem lies in
the human inability to distinguish who are the elect and who are not.
“While regeneration is irreversible and leads to final
perseverance, in the visible Church it is not humanly possible to
infallibly distinguish the truly regenerate from those who are not.”[8]
That is why Christians who are not theologically sound make rash
judgments about the nature of election because they see that a person
they thought was a Christian finally falls away and goes back to the pig
pen of the world. In this
they believe that Christians fall away and that places them in a state
of terror believing they might do the same.
Though
having a healthy fear of falling away is not in itself bad, the
continued state of un-assurance will render the Christian pressed into a
state of spiritual depression, or simply one who thinks that salvation
and assurance are totally on their shoulders. Rather, in the infallible
work of Jesus Christ there is the union of the believer and the Lord
which remains inseparable. The
Westminster Larger Catechism asks this in question 79, “May not true
believers, by reason of their imperfections, and the many temptations
and sins they are overtaken with, fall away from the state of grace?
The answer is given, “True believers, by reason of the
unchangeable love of God, and his decree and covenant to give them
perseverance, their inseparable union with Christ, his continual
intercession for them, and the Spirit and seed of God abiding in them,
can neither totally nor finally fall away from the state of grace, but
are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation. (Jer. 31:3; 2
Tim. 2:19-21; 2 Sam. 23:5; 1 Cor. 1:8-9; Heb. 7:25; Luke 22:32; 1 John
2:27; 3:9; Jer. 32:40; John 10:28; 1 Peter 1:5).”
There are too many biblical factors that overthrow man’s
ability to thwart the salvation attained by God.
Perseverance of the Saints can be seen in a number of various
scriptural lights. The
Scriptures are exceedingly plain as to the reasons that it presses into
the conscience of the Christian the truth of the matter that God is
truly the Savior and He will save His people from their sins.
They are, 1) There is no failure in the decreed counsel of God.
2) There is no change in the Divine being (which is essential to this
doctrine of perseverance), 3) There is no failure in the work of Christ,
4) There is no failure in the Love of God to the elect, and 5) the elect
cannot cease to be what they are by God’s decree.
First,
there is no failure in the decreed counsel of God.
Everything which resides within the mind of God is not potential
but is an eternal actual. A
fancy name given to this actuality, so finite human beings can grasp the
idea in some sense, is an Eternal Decree.
The eternal decree of God is that perfect, complete, infinite
plan from which all things transpire in our time and space as history
unfolds. It is the next
step in understanding the Eternal Counsel, more appropriately, what God
did in that counsel. God
has planned this decree carefully and to its most minute detail.
Jesus says, “Are not two sparrows sold for a penny?
Yet not one of them will fall to the ground apart from the will
of your Father. And even
the very hairs on your head are all numbered (Matthew 10:29,30).”
How infinite is this great Continuum where God himself numbers
the hairs on your head! He
is there when every sparrow falls for His plan is vast.
He leaves nothing to chance nor anything to a whimsical fling.
All things are under His power and authority and all things have
been planned accordingly (Genesis 50:20; Psalm 75:9-25; John 10:29).
“Divine salvation is a supernatural work which produces supernatural
effects.”
The
decrees of God are purposed filled.
The decreed counsel of God is the will of God willed in purpose. God’s knowledge is eternal, as is His essence. Therefore,
it is necessary that the decree upon which this is set forth is also
eternal. Every decree of
God is eternal. We lower
God’s standards when we see that God’s redemptive, eternal plan
rests on the will of man apart from God.
Nothing functions apart from the will of the Divine Creator and
sustainer of life. For if
God is so impotent that He must wait on man for His will to be
effectual, then He is hardly a God at all.
The Westminster Confession of Faith says, “God, from all
eternity, did, by the most wise and holy counsel of his own will,
freely, and unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass.”
All things are decreed by God in an eternal and unchangeable act.
This decree takes place at an appointed time and nothing can
change it, for if it could change then this would contradict the
Scriptures which state that God’s decrees do not change (Isaiah
46:10; Ephesians 1:9; Matthew 18:7; 26:54; Luke 22:22; Acts 2:23; 1
Corinthians 11:19). Even
the most casual of instances are seen as part of the divine decree:
accidental death (Exodus 21:12); lots (Proverbs 16:33); the preservation
of the bones of Christ (John 19:36).
Turretin states, “For the certainty does not arise from second
causes, which are free and contingent, but extrinsically from the
immutable decree.”
God’s purposes stand (Proverbs 19:21).
God’s decrees in the purpose of salvation are not a matter of
foreknowing who will do what or how well they did it, but of decreed
completeness as God exercises His good pleasure in shaping a people for
His very own (Deuteronomy 4:37; 7:6-8; 8:17; 9:4-6; Psalm 135:4; Ezekiel
16:1; Amos 3:8; Malachi 3:17). Based
on that decree, the perseverance of the saint is secure – their
salvation to the end is secure. If
God decrees anything, such a decree renders the action certain to come
to pass. But why is God’s
will “iron” and “immovable” in this way?
This is the next point.
Secondly,
there is no change in the Divine being.
What this means is that the character of God remains the same,
and thus his promises remain the same.
Why is this important to the saint and his perseverance?
The divine being is immutable (has no fluctuation or change). An
immutable, infinite, eternal, necessary act of God’s will cannot be
violated or halted by the devil, by man, by beast or by anything at all. The essential characteristics of His nature dictate that this
is so. God is immutably
holy, immutably loving, immutably perfect, etc. (James 1:17; Mal. 3:6).
Immutability is defined as something “not capable of or
susceptible to change.” If
God wills something, and God cannot change, then such a decree cannot
change. John Gill states
this rightly speaking of the perseverance of the Christian, “The
immutability of God is concerned in this affair; I am the Lord, I change
not, therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed (Malachi 3:6).”
Jacob, though treacherous, and his sons, though equally
treacherous, are not consumed by the holiness of God because God does
not change. He is immutable
in his promises and His decrees. When
God states that “I will lose none,” He is bound by divine oath to
carry out that statement for He cannot lie.
“I do not change” says God.
Imagine how horrible it would be if God were to change His promises.
Imagine that the Christian reads that God holds out the promise
of life, and God alone saves the sinner, “by which have been given to
us exceedingly great and precious promises.” (2 Peter 1:4)
Imagine then, that the Christian dies, stands before God, and God
says that He changed His mind and has decided to throw him into hell.
To even think that such could be the case would remove all hope
even from this life and make salvation (life even!) a sick joke.
Hodge states, “The apostle’s confidence in the steadfastness
and final perseverance of believers was founded neither on the strength
of their purpose to persevere, nor on any assumption that the principle
of religion in their hearts was indestructible, but simply on the
fidelity of God.”
It is upon the immutability of God and His promises that such
realties are able to take place, which otherwise would never take place.
Gill says that may be further concluded “from the special and
particular promises made in this covenant [i.e. promises], and which
stand on divine record [i.e. promises], relating to the perseverance of
the saints.”
Without the unchangeable nature of such promises, the Christian
has no hope but what he can muster of himself.
Such a possibility is sheer horror, and of no comfort to the soul
at all. No.
The unbreakable tenor of the promises of God rest in the nature
of God and His will. His
will is as unchanging as the promises that issue forth.
The Christian can rest heartily on the reality that God is the
sovereign Savior, and He will be true to His word.
Thirdly, there is no failure
in the work of Christ. Christ
shall accomplish all that He sets out to do.
Within the Covenant of Redemption, where the Son enters into a
covenant with the Father to “do His will” for the Redemption of his
elect, John Owen describes this “covenant” as a “compact.”
He says, “The…act of this sending is his entering into
covenant and compact with his Son concerning the work to be
undertaken, and the issue or event thereof.” Owen describes the Covenant of Redemption as a covenant where
the Son must work, based on the Father’s decree to send Him to save
and redeem sinners, “so as that God might be everlastingly glorified
in the work which he was designed unto, and which by him he had to
accomplish.” (Hebrews, 3:78)
Owen links this to the creative power of the Son in framing the
worlds, that there would be a context in which His work would take
place. However, though the
Son takes up the “work” decreed for Him to accomplish, if men
attempt to take up this work themselves, they will consistently fail. Owen says, “Those who seek him according to the law of
works, and by the best of their obedience thereunto, shall never find
him as a rewarder, nor attain that which they seek after; as the apostle
expressly declares, Romans 9:31, 32.” (Hebrews, 6:56).”
The reason for this failure is their mutable inability to uphold
the demands of the Law in any covenant.
God must send a Mediator, then, to uphold His Law perfectly, and
satisfy divine justice. Jesus
Christ accomplishes this. Christ
achieves this by coming into the world incarnate, and taking up the
offices of the prophet, priest and king which He executes perfectly.
He offers Himself as a sacrifice to God on behalf of His elect,
chosen people. In doing so,
He secures their salvation and by necessity, their perseverance.
The Scriptures state that Christ saved his people, “, "And
she shall bring forth a son, and thou shalt call his name JESUS: for he
shall save his people from their sins (Matthew 1:21); His sheep, “As
the Father knoweth me, even so know I the Father: and I lay down my life
for the sheep (John 10:15);” His friends, “Greater love hath no man
than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends (John 15:13);”
His church, “Take heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the
flock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed
the church of God, which he hath purchased with his own blood (Acts
20:28), and, "Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved
the church, and gave himself for it (Ephesians 5:25)."
The Christian, then, sees the gift of eternal life as completed
and finished, as Christ said, “It is finished.”
They are able to hope in it as permanent, “For
whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to
the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren
(Romans 8:29).” As
Edwards so nicely states, “God, when he had laid out himself to
glorify his mercy and grace in the redemption of poor fallen men, did
not see meet [did not see fit], that those who are redeemed by Christ,
should be redeemed so imperfectly, as still to have the work of
perseverance left in their own hands.”
And again he says, “Again, Christ came into the world to do
that in which mere men failed.”
In knowing that the sacrifice
of Christ is effectual, and actually saves, demonstrates that
perseverance must follow, otherwise, Christ did nothing, and the
Christian can hope in nothing. Many
people feel as though they are saved, but that they always have the
possibility of falling away hanging over their heads.
This does injustice to the finished work of Christ on the cross.
Christ is the Savior. Man
cannot do anything to add to the blessed sacrifice of the Lord.
Calvin demonstrates the absurdity of this when he says, “Then,
how absurd it is that the certainty of faith be limited to some point of
time, when by its very nature it looks to a future immortality after
this life is over!”
In other words, if a Christian says they are saved right now, how
certain can this be if they believe at any point they can fall away?
Such a thought is absurd. Christ is the second Adam who fulfills
God’s requirements and procures for His people their salvation, of
which He shall lose nothing. Garlington
states, “Therefore, the Adam/Christ analogy is intended to ground the
final perseverance of the saints in the perseverance (obedience) of
Christ himself, because the one who now lives by the power of an
indissoluble life (Heb 7:16) was obedient unto death (Phil 2:8).”[20]
Out of the reality of Christ’s obedience and sacrifice,
Christians have the ability to be lead back to the law and to be
obedient. They do not do
this to gain eternal life, but to please Him who has already purchased
it infallibly for His people.
John Owen rightly exhorts Christians to listen to the Word of
Jesus Christ, “But will this be granted, that wherever the
saints are said to hear the voice of Christ, perseverance is included?
— we shall quickly have a fresh supply of Scripture proofs for the
demonstration of the truth in hand. But what attempt is made for the
proof hereof? “It is so because the words immediately following are,
‘I give unto them eternal life,’ which presuppose their final
perseverance;” and this must be so, because it is so said. “I give
unto them eternal life,” is either an intimation of what he doth for
the present, by giving them a spiritual life in himself, or a promise he
will do so with respect to eternal life consummated in heaven, which
promise is everywhere made upon believing; and it is a promise of
perseverance, not given upon perseverance.”
Fourthly,
there is no failure in the love of God to the elect.
Though one may believe this should remain under the rubric of
God’s character as immutable since He is love, it is still
important to treat this in some manner separately since Christians often
have a hard time believing they are accepted before God as sons and
daughters. John Gill
succinctly states, “The final perseverance of the saints, may be
concluded from the everlasting love of God unto them. Those who are once
the objects of God’s love, are always so; his love to them in every
state and condition into which they come is invariable and unalterable:
it is constant, permanent, perpetual, and for ever God loves his people
with the same love he loves his Son, and therefore it will always
continue; and if it always continues, it is impossible they should ever
perish; can a man perish everlastingly, and yet be the object of
everlasting love? the love of God to him must cease, or he can never
perish; God always rests in his love to his people; it is more
immovable than hills and mountains; they may depart, but
his loving-kindness never shall, that is from everlasting to
everlasting; I have loved thee, saith the Lord (Jeremiah 31:3), with
an everlasting love, therefore with lovingkindness have I drawn thee.”
[these] things were written aforetime, were written for our
learning, that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might
have hope (Romans 15:4).”
God’s everlasting love cannot desire something it cannot have
and will not have. If God
loves the Christian, then for all time, the Christian shall be loved by
an immutable love that never changes.
The reason such a love rests on the Christian is that Christ
dwells in them and His righteousness covers them.
God then sees the Christian as if looking at Jesus Christ.
It is His righteousness, the imputation of the active obedience
of Christ to the law of God kept perfectly, that justifies us in His
sight. It is His cross, his
propitiation of God’s wrath and expiation of our sin, that secures our
place in the redemption plan of the elect.
God loves His people and the Scriptures demonstrate this love
over and over: Romans 5:8, “But God demonstrates His own love toward
us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”
2 Corinthians 5:14, “For the love of Christ compels us, because
we judge thus: that if One died for all, then all died.”
Ephesians 5:2, “And walk in love, as Christ also has loved us
and given Himself for us, an offering and a sacrifice to God for a
sweet-smelling aroma.” 2
Timothy 1:7, “For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power
and of love and of a sound mind.”
1 John 3:16, “By this we know love, because He laid down His
life for us.” 1 John
4:10, “In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us
and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins.”
It is difficult to ponder the reality that God loves sinful men.
However, it is a reality nonetheless.
If He begins to love them, and has decreed to save them by this
love, they shall never be lost. They shall persevere to the end and be saved. The Christian
must believe this as 1 John 4:16 exhorts, “And we have known and
believed the love that God has for us.”
Pink says, “God does not love His people because they love Him.
No, we read of “His great love wherewith He loved us even when we were
dead in sins” (Ephesians 2:4, 5): when we had no desire to be loved by
Him, yea when we were provoking Him to His face and displaying the
fierce enmity of our unrenewed hearts.”
What might the Christian do to please God?
What righteous deed might they do in order to win over His favor?
Nothing. God loves
His people because He loves them through Jesus Christ.
His love is immutable and unchangeable.
The sons of Jacob are not consumed by God’s anger against their
sin because He does not change, and He cannot change. His love is everlasting.
Jeremiahs 31:3, “Yes, I have loved you with an everlasting
love.”
The doctrine of the Perseverance
of the Saints has withstood the test of time and critic.
It is rooted and grounded in the bible and gives the saint an
infallible assurance of salvation, though presses him on to good work in
grateful humility before his sovereign Benefactor.
It is by way of awe and reverence, incomprehensible to the
Christian heart. It is not that it is incomprehensible to the brain –
Christians can certainly see this from Scripture quite clearly if they
take the time to read through the Bible.
But it forces the Christian into a state of awe due to God’s
immeasurable love for him that is undeserved.
It is a real truth, but a high truth.
Dort, in summing up the positive aspects of this doctrine in
their section on perseverance says, that God has impressed this truth to
the hearts of believers, but there are outside influences that desire to
destroy it, “The carnal mind is unable to comprehend this doctrine of
the perseverance of the saints and the certainty thereof, which God has
most abundantly revealed in His Word, for the glory of His Name and the
consolation of pious souls, and which He impresses upon the hearts of
the believers. Satan abhors it, the world ridicules it, the ignorant and
hypocritical abuse it, and the heretics oppose it.”
Though opposition stands in the way of the assurance of the
Christian, the Sovereign God of the Universe, and His Son Jesus Christ,
are upholding him even when he may feel deceived as to the truth of it.
Dort continues to say, “But the bride of Christ has always most
tenderly loved and constantly defended it as an inestimable treasure;
and God, against whom neither counsel nor strength can prevail, will
dispose her so to continue to the end. Now to this one God, Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit, be honor and glory forever. Amen.”
Christians should never doubt God at His word.
God says He will save and Christ does the saving.
The Christian must remember the promises of God and say along
with Hodge, “If God of his own good pleasure elects some [me] to
eternal life, they [I] cannot fail of salvation.”[26]
[8]John
Jefferson Davis, Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society
Volume 34, Perseverance of the Saints throughout Church
History, 1991;2002. Page 217.
Charles
Hodge, Commentary on 1 Corinthians, Libronix Digital Software, Page 30.
[20]
D. B. Garlington,
Westminster Theological Journal Volume 55, The
Obedience of Faith in the Letter to the Romans,
Westminster
Theological Seminary, 1993;2002, Page 96.
[26]
Charles Hodge, Systematic Theology. Originally published
1872., Vol. 2, Page 161. Oak Harbor, WA: Logos Research Systems,
Inc., 1997.
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