Introduction
The Five Points of Calvinism
ISTORICALLY, this title is of little
accuracy or worth; I use it to denote certain points of doctrine, because
custom has made it familiar. Early in the seventeenth century the
Presbyterian Church of Holland, whose doctrinal confession is the same in
substance with ours, was much troubled by a species of new-school minority,
headed by one of its preachers and professors, James Harmensen, in Latin,
Arminius (hence, ever since, Arminians). Church and state have always been
united in Holland; hence the civil government took up the quarrel. Professor
Harmensen (Arminius) and his party were required to appear before the States
General (what we would call Federal Congress) and say what their objections
were against the doctrines of their own church, which they had freely
promised in their ordination vows to teach. Arminius handed in a writing in
which he named five points of doctrine concerning which he and his friends
either differed or doubted. These points were virtually: Original sin,
unconditional predestination, invincible grace in conversion, particular
redemption, and perseverance of saints. I may add, the result was: that the
Federal legislature ordered the holding of a general council of all the
Presbyterian churches then in the world, to discuss anew and settle these
five doctrines. This was the famous Synod of Dort, or Dordrecht, where not
only Holland ministers, but delegates from the French, German, Swiss, and
British churches met in 1618. The Synod adopted the rule that every doctrine
should be decided by the sole authority of the Word of God, leaving out all
human philosophies and opinions on both sides. The result was a short set of
articles which were made a part thenceforward of the Confession of Faith of
the Holland Presbyterian Church. They are clear, sound, and moderate,
exactly the same in substance with those of our Westminster Confession,
enacted twenty-seven years afterward.
I have always
considered this paper handed in by Arminius as of little worth or
importance. It is neither honest nor clear. On several points it seeks
cunningly to insinuate doubts or to confuse the minds of opponents by using
the language of pretended orthodoxy. But as the debate went on, the
differences of the Arminians disclosed themselves as being, under a
pretended new name nothing in the world but the old semi-pelagianism which
had been plaguing the churches for a thousand years, the cousin-german of
the Socinian or Unitarian creed. Virtually it denied that the fallen Adam
had brought man's heart into an entire and decisive alienation from God. It
asserted that his election of grace was not sovereign, but founded in his
own foresight of the faith, repentance, and perseverance of such as would
choose to embrace the gospel. That grace in effectual calling is not
efficacious and invincible, but resistible, so that all actual conversions
are the joint result of this grace and the sinner's will working abreast.
That Christ died equally for the non-elect and the elect, providing an
indefinite, universal atonement for all; and that true converts may, and
sometimes do, fall away totally and finally from the state of grace and
salvation; their perseverance therein depending not on efficacious grace,
but on their own free will to continue in gospel duties.
Let any plain mind
review these five changes and perversions of Bible truth, and he will see
two facts: One, that the debate about them all will hinge mainly upon the
first question, whether man's original sin is or is not a complete and
decisive enmity to godliness; and the other, that this whole plan is a
contrivance to gratify human pride and self-righteousness and to escape that
great humbling fact everywhere so prominent in the real gospel, that man's
ruin of himself by sin is utter, and the whole credit of his redemption from
it is God's.
We Presbyterians care
very little about the name Calvinism. We are not ashamed of it; but we are
not bound to it. Some opponents seem to harbor the ridiculous notion that
this set of doctrines was the new invention of the Frenchman John Calvin.
They would represent us as in this thing followers of him instead of
followers of the Bible. This is a stupid historical error. John Calvin no
more invented these doctrines than he invented this world which God had
created six thousand years before. We believe that he was a very gifted,
learned, and, in the main, godly man, who still had his faults. He found
substantially this system of doctrines just where we find them, in the
faithful study of the Bible, Where we see them taught by all the prophets,
apostles, and the Messiah himself, from Genesis to Revelation.
Calvin also found the
same doctrines handed down by the best, most learned, most godly, uninspired
church fathers, as Augustine and Saint Thomas Aquinas, still running through
the errors of popery. He wielded a wide influence over the Protestant
churches; but the Westminster Assembly and the Presbyterian churches by no
means adopted all Calvin's opinions. Like the Synod of Dort, we draw our
doctrines, not from any mortal man or human philosophy, but from the Holy
Ghost speaking in the Bible. Yet, we do find some inferior comfort in
discovering these same doctrines of grace in the most learned and pious of
all churches and ages; of the great fathers of Romanism, of Martin Luther,
of Blaise Paschal, of the original Protestant churches, German, Swiss,
French, Holland, English, and Scotch—and far the largest part of the real
scriptural churches of our own day. The object of this tractate is simply to
enable all honest inquirers after truth to understand just what those
doctrines really are which people style the peculiar "doctrines of
Presbyterians," and thus to enable honest minds to answer all objections and
perversions. I do not write because of any lack in our church of existing
treatises well adapted to our purpose; nor because I think anyone can now
add anything really new to the argument. But our pastors and missionaries
think that some additional good may come from another short discussion
suitable for unprofessional readers. To such I would earnestly recommend two
little books, Dr. Mathews's on the Divine Purpose, and Dr. Nathan Rice's God
Sovereign and Man Free. For those who wish to investigate these doctrines
more extensively there are, in addition to their Bible, the standard works
in the English language on doctrinal divinity, such as Calvin's Institutes
(translated), Witsius on the Covenants, Dr. William Cunningham's, of
Edinburgh, Hill's and Dicks's Theologies, and in the United States those of
Hodge, Dabney, and Shedd.
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