CALVINISM
AN ESSAY
READ BEFORE THE
Georgia Baptist Ministers’ Institute,
AT MARIETTA, GA., AUGUST 13, 1868
BY P. H. MELL
PUBLISHED BY VOTE OF THE INSTITUTE
ATLANTA, GA:
GEO. C. CONNOR.
1868
"Calvinism"
has been assigned to me as the theme for an essay. Though the subject is
embraced in a single word, the topics it contains are too numerous to admit of
thorough discussion within the limits assigned me. My essay, therefore, will
rise only to the dignity of notes on Calvinism.
What is Calvinism?
It is a system of doctrine believed to be contained in the Bible, developed
first more elaborately and consistently by John Calvin, and therefore called by
his name. This term, though, is used merely for convenience as a designation,
and not to imply, either that these doctrines owed their origin to the Genevan
Reformer, or that Calvinists are responsible for all the sentiments advanced by
him.
The distinctive
characteristic of Calvinism is that it maintains God's sovereignty over all
things, sin not excepted; and that His will is shown either efficiently or
permissively in all existences and all events on earth. He is not only a
creator and preserver, but a sovereign and efficient ruler. His providence and
His grace, therefore control all things and events, great and small, good and
bad, material and mental. From intelligent choice, he permits everything in men
that is morally wrong, and by his grace, efficiently works in them everything
that is morally right. As creator, an upholder, and a governor, he has intelligence
enough to know what objects he would accomplish; and his wisdom and power are
adequate to all the demands of the undertaking in its incipiency, its process,
and its consummation. The world, therefore, in all its physical and moral
details, is just as he designed it to be; and in all the terms of its
history—in its special as well as its general results, he will accomplish
that which he designed in its creation, in its preservation, and in its
government. He did not err in his plan; therefore nothing operates in his
system unexpectedly to him. He is not deficient in power, therefore nothing
operates there in spite of him. "God disposes of and directs to some
particular end, every person and thing to which he has given, or is yet to
give, being; and makes the whole creation subservient to and declarative of his
own glory." "The Lord hath made all things for himself; yea, even the
wicked for the day of evil" (Prov. 14:4). "Whatsoever the Lord
pleased, that did he in heaven, and in earth, in the seas, and all deep
places" (Ps. 135:6). "The Lord of hosts hath sworn, saying, Surely as
I have thought, so shall it come to pass: and as I have purposed so shall it
stand. This is the purpose that is purposed upon the whole earth; and this is
the hand that is stretched out upon all the nations. For the Lord of hosts hath
purposed, and who shall disannul it? And his hand is stretched out, and who
shall turn it back!" (Isa. 14:24, 26, 27). "For of him, and through
him, and to him, are all things: to whom be glory forever. Amen" (Rom.
11:36).
Descending to
particulars, and limiting our view to the scheme of salvation, Calvinism
teaches,
First, in regard to
men in a state of nature.
1st. That they are
totally depraved, utterly destitute of any remaining natural good, or any
communicated spark of grace. This total depravity is not to be confounded with
corruption, nor to mean that men are as depraved as they can be; for it is
consistent with the admission that they have amiable feelings and upright
deportment among themselves; but to be understood to mean a total destitution
of any principle of conformity to God’s law, which requires supreme love
to God, and deportment towards men regulated by a design to please and glorify
Him. In a state of nature, God is not in all their thoughts. "I know that
in me, that is, in my flesh, dwelleth no good thing" (Rom. 5:18).
2nd. As to the
origin of this depravity, Calvinism teaches that it was in consequence of
Adam’s sin. The progenitor of the race was the federal head of his
descendants, submitting to the test for all. His sin, therefore, was imputed to
his posterity; and in his fall, they fell. "By the offence of one,
judgment came upon all men to condemnation" (Rom. 5:16).
3rd. As to the
means of recovery, Calvinism teaches man’s utter helplessness. Being
sinners in character and conduct, none are able to renew their hearts, nor make
atonement for their sins. Even after the atonement of Christ is offered in the
gospel to their acceptance, none, without divine influence, are willing to accept
Christ as Saviour, nor are able to understand experimentally the truth as it is
in Jesus. "The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God,
for they are foolishness unto him; neither can he know them, for they are
spiritually discerned." In this condition, and without divine
influence—while they will never attempt to glorify God—nothing that
they can do can please him; for "they that are in the flesh cannot please
God."
4th. As to
justification, it teaches that men are just with God, through the righteousness
of Christ imputed to them. Nothing that they can do will be accepted as the
ground of justification; for "by the deeds of the law shall no flesh be
justified in his sight." "To him that worketh not, but believeth on him
that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness" (Rom.
4:5). "By the obedience of one shall many be made righteous" (Rom.
5:19). "Being justified by his blood, we shall be saved from wrath through
him" (Rom. 5:9). "He hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin,
that we might be made the righteousness of God in him" (2 Cor. 5:21).
"David describeth the blessedness of the man unto whom God imputed
righteousness" (Rom. 4:6). "Abraham believed God, and it was counted
unto him for righteousness" (4.3). "For us also, to whom it shall he
imputed, if we believe" (4:24).
Second, As it respects Divine agency in the scheme of
redemption, Calvinism teaches,
1st. That God is
the efficient author of everything morally good in the creature. Whatever he
does in man’s behalf, is done in accordance with a purpose entertained
from eternity. This purpose found its development in the covenant of redemption
entered into by the persons of the Trinity, and its execution in the work thus
assigned to them severally. The Father, as the representative of the godhead,
devised the plan and sent his Son to execute it; the Son, as the substitute for
the sinner, makes atonement and works out complete righteousness; and the
Spirit applies the work of Christ in the regeneration, justification,
sanctification, and salvation of the sinner.
Calvinism
teaches, again,
2nd. That God
proceeds in the salvation of sinners on a definite plan which descends to all
the details. In the covenant of redemption he gave to his Son a definite number
of the human race to be his people, whom he would redeem from the curse of the
law, bring into newness of life by regeneration, justify freely by his grace,
keep by his power through faith unto salvation, guide by his counsel, and
afterward receive into glory. "Whom he did predestinate, them he
also called, and whom he called, them he also justified, and whom he justified,
them he also glorified." Those thus chosen and saved, are designated not
because of faith and good works foreseen in them; but, in part, that they might
have faith and might perform good works. Those not chosen are not reprobated in
the sense that, they are prohibited from seeking the benefits of salvation; nor
in the sense that any influence is imparted to them inducing them to reject the
gospel; but they are simply passed by and permitted to follow their own
inclinations, without any invincible influence adequate to make them willing in
the day of his power. In this election and rejection, God is influenced by no
difference of natural character in the parties perceived, nor in any conduct
foreseen; but only by his will, sovereign and infinitely wise; and this, too,
for the manifestation of his glorious perfections. "For he saith to Moses,
I will mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I
will have compassion" (Rom. 9:15). "What if God, willing to show his
wrath, and to make his power known, 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?" (9:22,
23).
II. Though this
system, as a whole, is sustained by the general tenor of the Scriptures, and in
all its parts by definite passages, men sometimes hesitate to receive it
because serious objections seem to lie against it. All such objections may be
resolved into the three following:
1.
The
system seems to make God the author of sin:
2.
It seems
to exhibit God as a partial being:
3.
It seems
to represent that he makes men merely to damn them.
Before taking them
up in order, it is proper to remark that these objections do not lie
exclusively against the Calvinistic system.. It can he shown that they press
just as heavily against the Arminian, with others just as grave superadded.
[This the present writer has shown in a published work on predestination; the
part answering these objections can be read in this connection if the Institute
desire it.] The only way to escape the objections is to deny, with the
Pelagians and Socinians, God’s foreknowledge; and if this be denied, then
there comes in a flood of other objections more pressing and more weighty
still.
The great
difficulty in the Calvinistic system, is the sovereignty which it ascribes to
God over sin; and the occasion it offers, therefore, for the plausible
objection that if sin exists by his will of purpose, he is then, if not the
author, at least in some sense the favorer of it. It is easy and safe to admit
that his will is all-powerful in everything that is morally good; and that his
agency can he efficient in securing such good without doing violence to human
freedom; for we can easily see how he can legitimately and philosophically work
in men to will and to do of his good pleasure. But how can we, consistently
with correct views of his character, say that in any manner wicked men perform
wicked actions in accordance with his will? It may help us to elucidate this
question if we consider it in connection with the two most prominent instances
of sin recorded in the Bible:
1st. Take the first
instance given—Adam’s sin. Did God have no volition concerning it
before it occurred? Was he taken by surprise? Having failed in his first
intention, viz.: to have nothing but good in his system, did he reluctantly
submit to the existence of evil, and doing the best he could in the
circumstances, set up against it an antagonistic influence which should wage
war against it a precarious warfare that, after a struggle of six thousand
years, leaves sin, if not triumphant, at least unsubdued and unexpelled? Did God
not know before he created Adam, that if he made and placed him in the Garden
of Eden, he would sin and fall? We are bound to answer in the affirmative, not
only because we admit God’s Infinite foreknowledge, but because we are
told (2 Tim. 1:9) that a provision was made in eternity in anticipation of that
event; for there was a purpose and a grace given us in Christ Jesus before the
world began. Did he not, then, permit Adam to sin? We must reply in the
affirmative; for, foreseeing the event, he could have declined to create him;
or he could have kept the tempter away from him; or he could have strengthened
him against his wiles. Having permitted him to sin, did he not will to
do so? And having willed to permit him to sin, did he so will from necessity; i.e.,
as a choice of evils which he could not entirely escape, or did he have
some infinitely glorious end to attain, of which Adam’s sin was to be the
occasion?
We do not escape
this difficulty by saying Adam was a free agent, whose nature it was not
God’s purpose to violate; that he was placed in the Garden of Eden,
endowed with reason and a moral constitution, possessing all the light
necessary to discriminate between right and wrong, and having impressed upon
him all the motives to impel him to choose the right and reject the wrong; that
Adam, then, in the exercise of his native freedom, on very natural principles,
by his own voluntary choice, in spite of God’s will of precept, wickedly
transgressed and fell. All this we also grant and maintain; but it does not
remove the difficulty. Did not God know, before he had created him, that this
voluntary agent whom he would make, subjected to this test which he would
impose, would, acting upon these natural principles, transgress and fall?
Admitting God’s foreknowledge, we must admit that before he created Adam,
he knew that he would fall and willed to permit it. Can any reason be suggested
why God by His will of purpose should ordain that an event so heinous and, in
some respects, so disastrous as the sin of Adam should occur? We can at least,
see this, that if sin had not entered into the world neither would there have
been a Savior. God would not have been manifested in the flesh. Christ would
not have been preached as the Savior of sinners. The attributes of God would
not have been exhibited and harmonized before the intelligent universe by the
cross of Christ at which mercy and truth meet together and righteousness and
peace kiss each other. We know that the intelligent universe has gained
infinitely more by the acquisition of Christ than it lost by the sin of Adam.
Now if God knew from eternity the infinite value of the mission of Christ, and
saw that the sin of man was necessary as the occasion for that mission, does He
necessarily become either the author or the favorer of that sin because He
resolved to permit Adam to commit it? For Calvinism, while it asserts
God’s sovereignty over sin, abhorrently rejects the supposition that He
tempts men, or works within them to influence them to sin. In what respect, then,
is it unphilosophical or unscriptural to say that God, looking at Adam’s
transaction in its character as a sin, by His will of precept, forbid it, and,
by his judicial dispensation, punishes it; but regarding it as the
indispensable occasion for the bestowal of his glorious grace, by His will of
purpose, ordained it, and in His providence furnished the occasion for it? And
is not Calvinism philosophically and scripturally sustained, then, when it
discriminates between God’s will of precept and His will of purpose, and
asserts that the former is the rule prescribed for the government of his
creatures, which, when violated, justly brings condemnation and punishment upon
its infractors: while the latter is a rule to govern himself, which will he
infallibly secured whether men obey him or sin against him ? If the mere fact
that God willed to permit Adam to sin, makes him the author or the favorer of
that sin, then no system of doctrine would relieve him from such embarrassment
excepting one which would ascribe to him profound ignorance of that
transaction, both before and at the time of its performance, and would banish
him, like the God of the Epicureans, to some remote part of his universe, away
from all cognizance of human affairs.
2nd. Again: passing
over the many other instances recorded in the Bible which illustrate the
doctrine of God’s sovereignty over sin, take the case of the crucifixion
of Christ. In regard to this, without hesitation, we must admit two things: 1st
that the crucifixion of Christ was the most atrocious and heaven-daring crime
recorded in earth’s annals; and 2nd, that, wicked as it was, God ordained
that it should occur just as it did. Had the Jews not despised and rejected
Christ he could not have been crucified; and if he had not died in the place,
at the time, and in the way in which he did, multitudes of prophecies would
have failed of fulfillment; God’s plan of recovering mercy would have
been thwarted; and all men would have perished in their sins. Should we
hesitate therefore to say that God ordained the crucifixion of Christ, wicked
as it was? And, should we say so, would we in effect be charging God, with
being the author or the favorer of that horrid crime? Did the company of
disciples misrepresent the holy God, or admit that he was the author or favorer
of the atrocious sin, when he said, "For of a truth, against thy holy
child, Jesus, whom thou hast anointed, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the
Gentiles, and the people of Israel, were gathered together, for to do whatsoever
thy hand and thy counsel determined before to be done?"—(Acts 4: 27,
28) Did Peter speak unadvisedly, and does his language admit of the dreadful
interpretation that God was the author or the favorer of this great sin, when
he asserted, "Him, being delivered by the determinate counsel and
foreknowledge of God, ye have taken and with wicked hands have crucified and
slain?"
Peter’s
assertion, when analyzed, contains three propositions. 1st, That the Jews acted
with perfect freedom when they crucified Christ. 2nd, That God exercised
complete sovereignty over their sin. And 3rd, that their wickedness suffered no
abatement because it was in harmony with God’s determinate counsel and
foreknowledge. And this, in a nut-shell, is the doctrine of Calvinism. But how
can God’s sovereignty over sin and man’s free-agency in it be both
true, and yet God be free from all complicity with it? Pelaganism and
Socinianism escape the difficulty by severing the Supreme Being, in some sort,
from connection with his creatures, and banishing him to some remote region of
his universe, where he is kept in profound ignorance of sins at least until
after they have been committed. Arminianism, while it admits God’s
foreknowledge, and grants that he permits the commission of sin, thinks it relieves
itself from embarrassment by denying his sovereignty over it. According to this
system, God makes man a free-agent, gives to him a constitution that enables
him to make moral distinctions, sets before him the right as distinguished from
the wrong, and plies him with motives in the shape of arguments, persuasions,
warnings, threatenings and promises of reward; but he has in advance no purpose
to subserve by men’s sins. All that he does, acting contemporaneously
with the sin, is to restrain it; overrule it for good; in the best way possible
counteract it; and, in the last resort, punish it. But the system strangely
shuts its eyes to the fact, that, in admitting God’s foreknowledge and
his permission of sin, it logically grants his sovereignty over it. Before the
world was, he foreknew that Adam would sin, and that the Jews would crucify
Christ; and, in eternity, he resolved to permit these sinful deeds. Now,
whether he thus resolved for ulterior objects, as Calvinism asserts, or for no
reason beyond the mere resolution itself, in the view of the objector to
Arminianism he is seriously complicated with those sins. If he resolved to
permit sin for ulterior purpose, then the objector to Arminianism may charge
that it exhibits God as favoring sin because of the good of which it is made
the occasion. If he resolved to permit it for no reason beyond the mere
resolution itself, then the objector may denounce Arminianism for intimating
the horrid proposition that God resolved to permit sin for the mere pleasure that
he found in it.
1st. Calvinism
holds that man’s free-agency in the commission of sin and God’s
sovereignty over it are both true, though to harmonize them may be above human
faculties. Consciousness and the word of God both assure us, that, when we sin
against God, we do so, not by compulsion, but freely and willingly; and reason
and scripture both teach that God is sovereign ruler of the universe,
accomplishing his ends in great things and in small, by bad things as well as
by good, making the wrath of man praise him, and where, in its excess, it would
fail of this, restraining it. Did God, who by his determinate counsel and
foreknowledge delivered Christ, authorize the Jews to crucify him, or put
it in their hearts to do so? Calvinism, abhorrently and with emphasis,
answers no! How, then, can God secure his determinate counsel in the wicked
actions of free agents without influencing them in those actions? Calvinism has
no answer to give. This is one of the deep things the human mind cannot fathom;
one of the high things it cannot reach. But our want of capacity does not
vitiate the truth. What human mind can form of the Triune God a conception
which could be transferred to the canvas? But what renewed heart has not
demonstrated in its experience the subsistence of the Godhead in the persons of
the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit? So, knowing from consciousness and
the word of God that we are free agents; believing from reason and from
scripture that God is a sovereign and almighty ruler, who accomplishes all his
pleasure; and seeing, as well from what God says as from his treatment of sin,
that he is neither the author nor the favorer of it; we may well refuse to give
up any or all of these truths, so clearly revealed and so easily understood,
because there springs out of their combination another question pertaining to
the working of the Infinite Mind, and the operations of the Infinite Agent,
which our ignorant and finite minds cannot solve.
2nd. The second
objection, viz.: That Calvinism represents God as a partial Being, springs from
a confusion of ideas, or from a misapprehension of terms. Partiality results
from some quality in the object, or connected with it, to attract favor.
Now, Calvinism teaches, that all men are equally destitute of such quality; and
all are equally the subjects of God’s condemnation and disfavor. He
feels, therefore, no partiality to any; for all are, by nature, children of
wrath. He chooses some to salvation and eternal life; not because he feels any
peculiar complacency towards them, but influenced solely by the good pleasure
of his will, to the praise and glory of his grace. He has a reason, infinitely
wise, for choosing one and rejecting another; but that reason is not to be
found in the character of the chosen. The very statement of the Calvinistic
doctrine, therefore, is a sufficient answer to the objection. If this is not
satisfactory, let the fallacy of the objection be exposed in another way. God
has, towards some, a love of benevolence, which is exhibited in choosing them
to eternal life. Is that, properly, called partiality? Very well call it so, if
you please. Then, it becomes a proposition to be disproved, if denied, and not
a series of words to be shaped into the form of an objection to itself.
3rd. The objection,
that God seems, by this system, to make men merely to damn them, does not lie
against Calvinism, because of any essential difference between it and
Arminianism. Indeed, no system, acknowledging future punishments, can entirely
escape it, excepting by a denial of God’s foreknowledge. If to decree,
from eternity, to permit men to follow their own inclinations, and to punish
them for their sins, is equivalent to resolving to make men merely to damn
them, then, to foreknow from eternity, that if they were created, they would
thus perish, and to resolve to create them notwithstanding, though there was no
invincible necessity to do so, is equivalent to the same thing. We would not,
then, escape this difficulty, by abandoning our ground and going over to Arminianism.
The only sure way to escape it, is to believe with the Universalists—that
there are no future punishments; or, with the Pelagians—that there
is no divine foreknowledge. But, neither of these opinions can we receive, so
long as the Bible teaches—that they that believe not shall be damned;
and, that known unto God are all his works, from the beginning.
III. While the
scriptural support to the Calvinistic system is ample and entire, and reason
can furnish the most irrefragable arguments, from admitted premises, to sustain
it, the system finds not a mean corroboration from the character of its influence
and effects.
It will, no doubt,
be admitted, that in their lives, Calvinists, as a class, do not fall below the
standard of morality and piety, attained by the advocates of other systems; and,
that in good works, and in the enterprises of benevolence, they are not
outstripped by those who differ from them. We waive, therefore, all argument on
this point. For, no doubt, it will be readily admitted by all intelligent and
candid persons, that Antinomians and Fatalists are as essentially different
from Calvinists, as they are from Arminians or Pelagians.
1st. What is the
influence of Calvinism upon the unconverted? Its tendency is to produce in them
that conviction, without which they cannot be induced to take the first
step towards attaining the salvation wrought out by Christ. The great
difficulty in the way of their prompt movement, is the lurking hope, if not
belief, that their case is not a desperate one; that their sins are not so
heinous but that they can be obviated, very easily. In their delusion, they
suppose it is only necessary for them to will, which they can easily do at any
time; and put into execution their resolution, which is also, completely in their
power; and their salvation is at once secured. They, consequently, act upon the
principle, that it is running no great risk to postpone salvation to a more
convenient season. Give me, say they, but a day’s notice, while on my
dying bed, and I will make my peace with God. Now, let the doctrine that
Calvinism teaches be received by the sinner, and his self-complacency is gone,
and his sense of security is gone. Seeing that he is totally destitute of any
good—that he is inexcusably complicated with sins of the darkest
dye—and that he is utterly helpless—he abhors himself repents in
dust and ashes, and cries to God for help. It is no offset to this to say that
sinners, who hear the Calvinistic doctrines, plead that if such things are
true, there is no need for any action on their part, at all; since, if they are
to be saved, they will be, any how. This is not the language of a candid man,
who believes the doctrine of his own sinfulness, and helplessness, but a
disbeliever, who thinks that by this pretended reductia ad absurdum, he
can best parry the thrusts of truth, and best maintain himself in the
determination to postpone salvation, and to continue in sin. The one beyond his
depth, away from shore, will feel but little, if any, concern, so long as he is
convinced that the water is not deep, or that by a few muscular strokes,
directed by his own will, he can reach firm footing. But, let him feel that he
is in unfathomable depths, and that his skill and strength are less than
nothing; and he will make the welkin ring with his cries for help. So Calvinism
teaches the sinner that he is utterly lost, and that in God alone is his help;
and urges him to look to God, and to call upon him.
2nd. The awakened
sinner is in danger of taking up with a refuge of lies. The most common is the
temptation to make himself the object of his trust. He is in danger of making,
what he does, or what he feels, or both, a substitute for his Savior. He has
done certain things, he has experienced certain feelings, and he is in a certain
state; he has felt, first, very badly, and then, by a sudden transition,
very good, therefore, he has been accepted. Calvinism tells him, that not
deeds, and feelings, and frames, but Christ, is his Savior; that, at this
point, there is nothing for him to do, but to believe in Jesus. Just as he is,
must he accept Christ as his Savior; for, "he that worketh not, but
believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith shall be counted
to him for righteousness." Never until, if not in theory, at least, experimentally,
he can. receive the Calvinistic doctrines of his utter sinfulness and
helplessness; of God’s sovereign grace; and of a righteousness wrought
out for him by Christ, and imputed to him on his believing, can he obtain
scriptural comfort, and eternal life.
3rd. The system
finds confirmation in the experience of the Christian. Only while he admits, in
all its force, the total depravity of his heart by nature, does he experience
humility and self abasement. So long as he has no doubt, that God, by his own
sovereign grace, without any merit perceived or foreseen in him, regenerated
him by his Spirit, and adopted him into his family, does he experience the
depths of gratitude, and ascribe praise to him for that salvation. So far from
being paralyzed by a sense of dependence upon God, it is only when he admits,
in all its force, that it is God who works in him, to will and to do, that he
works out his own salvation with fear and trembling. He knows, and
demonstrates, in his own experience, Paul’s paradox: "When I am
weak, then am I strong." Placed upon his knees, he never uses the language
of the Pharisee: "God, I thank thee that I am not as other men are;"
but rather the sentiment of the poet
Why was I made to hear his voice,
And enter while there’s room;
While thousands make a wretched choice,
And rather starve than come?
‘Twas the same love that spread the feast,
Which sweetly forced me in;
Else I had still refused to taste,
And perished in my sin.
In his confessions,
he admits his ignorance, his native depravity, and his helplessness, and
looks to God, not only for forgiveness, but for help, in his petitions he
recognizes God’s sovereignty. Does he ask for blessings for himself? He
bases his plea upon no merit in himself, even the least, but upon Christ’s
merits, and upon God’s free, undeserved favor. Does he beseech blessings
for others? He appeals to God on the supposition, that he rules in all things.
Without reserve, he asks him to renew the hearts of unconverted friends; to
bestow upon them conviction, and repentance, and faith; and to draw them by the
cords of love. Whatever may be the Christian’s theoretic belief, in his
prayers he acts upon the assumption, that salvation, in himself and in others,
is all of God.
4th. The doctrines
of Calvinism, if believed, are a sovereign remedy against the two great
heresies in the so-called Christian world, viz.: ritualism, or sacramental
salvation, on the one hand, and rationalism, on the other; the one the
offspring of superstition, the other, the product of infidelity. The former, a
mere bodily exercise, substitutes ceremony and the manipulations of the priest,
for the work of the Spirit and the experience of the heart: the latter makes
religion a mere intellectual exercise, and exalts reason above the authority of
God’s word. Rejecting everything in the Bible above human comprehension,
it selects, of the comprehensible, only that which the understanding ratifies
as reasonable and proper. An infallible safeguard against each of these,
is Calvinism, if its doctrines are cordially embraced. No one accepting, in its
fulness, the doctrines of human depravity, and the necessity of a change
wrought by a supernatural agency—who believes in regeneration effected by
the mysterious operations of God’s Spirit, and justification by the
imputed righteousness of Christ—in short, no one who believes in a
spiritual religion and that grace reigns, through righteousness, unto eternal
life, by Jesus Christ our Lord, can ever be foolish enough to risk his
soul’s salvation upon forms and ceremonies; or presumptuous enough to
prescribe what God ought to teach or to reject anything that He reveals,
because it does not meet the demands of his finite reason. Rather would such a
man say, "Let God be true, but every man a liar." True, some of the
"Reformed churches," who hold the Calvinistic system, have, in their
formularies, expressions which would seem to indicate that baptism, administered
to unconscious infants, will, somehow, work the regeneration of their
souls. But this results because they inconsistently brought out with them, from
Rome, this relic of Popery. Under the influence, though, of the
Calvinism they preach these utterances have become a dead letter; for their
intelligent advocates explain them away, and indignantly deny, that in their
practice they are influenced by any such unscriptural and inconsistent dogma.
5th. It is no
inconsiderable argument in favor of the Calvinistic system that, as one of its
effects, it presents God in a dignified and honorable aspect. It is surely a
worthy view of God, to represent him as a sovereign and efficient ruler, who
accomplishes all his pleasure and is never thwarted; who is the author
of everything good in his system and who is especially entitled to all the
praise of our salvation. What a contrast is there between this system, and that
which would represent him as anxious and impotent—as waiting with
solicitude for men to give him a pretext to interpose; now, passing a decree in
their favor, upon the supposition that they have furnished justifiable
occasion, and then, reconsidering and reversing, when he has discovered that he
acted on insufficient grounds; and all the while, surrounded by inextricable
confusion, which, an invincible necessity prevents him from abating, and which
he must reluctantly content himself with overruling, and directing to results
that are attainable, since he cannot secure the highest and the best. Such a
God, impotent, and subordinate, and changeable, dependent on contingencies that
he does not ordain, and distracted by confusion that he cannot control, is not
the God of Calvinism. Our God is in the heavens; he hath done whatsoever he
pleased. For of him, and through him, and to him, are all things. To whom be
glory forever. Amen.
In conclusion, it
becomes a serious and practical question—whether we should not make these
doctrines the basis of all our pulpit ministrations. If this be, indeed, the
gospel system, sustained by such arguments, and attested by such effects, every
minister should be imbued with its spirit, and furnished with its panoply. It
is not necessary, indeed, that we should present its truths, always in
the form of dogmatic or polemic theology—though, even these
should not he entirely neglected, if our people are not, as yet, thoroughly
indoctrinated—but our hearers should never be left in doubt as to the
fundamental truths, that sinners are totally depraved, and utterly helpless
that men must he regenerated by God’s Spirit, and justified by the
righteousness of Christ imputed to them, before they can obtain God’s
favor; that God’s people are created by him, in Christ Jesus, unto good
works, which he had before ordained that they should walk in them, and
that they are kept by God’s power, through faith, unto salvation that God
is the sovereign ruler of the universe, and the author of every thing, morally
good, in the creature. In short, that the sinner has destroyed himself, but in
God is his help. And, surely, it will not impair the efficiency of the minister
himself, for him ever to remember that his sufficiency is of God.
Savannah, Georgia:
J. H. ESTILL, Public Printer.
1875