God's Election
In our Confession,
Chapter 3, Sections 3, 4, and 7, we have this description of it: "By the decree
of God, for the manifestation of his glory, some men and angels are predestined
unto everlasting life and others foreordained to everlasting death" (3). "These
angels and men, thus predestinated and foreordained, are particularly and
unchangeably designed; and their number is so certain and definite that it
cannot be either increased or diminished" (4).
"The rest of mankind, God
was pleased, according to the unsearchable counsel of his own will, whereby he
extendeth or withholdeth mercy as he pleaseth, for the glory of his sovereign
power over his creatures, to pass by, and to ordain them to dishonor and wrath
for their sin, to the praise of his glorious justice" (7).
The first and second
sections of this tract prove absolutely this sad but stubborn fact, that no
sinner ever truly regenerates himself. One sufficient reason is, that none ever
wish to do it, but always prefer, while left to themselves by God, to remain as
they are, self-willed and worldly. That is to say, no sinner ever makes himself
choose God and holiness, because every principle of his soul goes infallibly to
decide the opposite preference. Therefore, whenever a sinner is truly
regenerated, it must be God that has done it. Take notice, after God has
done it, this new-born sinner will, in his subsequent course of repentance and
conversion, freely put forth many choices for God and holiness; but it is
impossible that this sinner can have put forth the first choice to reverse his
own natural principles of choice. Can a child beget its own father? It must
have been God that changed the sinner. Then, when he did it he meant to do
it. When was this intention to do it born into the divine mind? That same
day? The day that sinner was born? The day Adam was made? No! These answers are
all foolish. Because God is omniscient and unchangeable he must have known from
eternity his own intention to do it. This suggests, second, that no man can date
any of God's purposes in time without virtually denying his perfections of
omniscience, wisdom, omnipotence, and immutability. Being omniscient, it is
impossible he should ever find out afterward anything he did not know from the
first. Being all-wise, it is impossible he should take up a purpose for which
his knowledge does not see a reason. Being all-powerful, it is impossible he
should ever fail in trying to effect one of his purposes. Hence, whatever God
does in nature or grace, he intended to do that thing from eternity. Being
unchangeable, it is impossible that he should change his mind to a different
purpose after he had once made it up aright under the guidance of infinite
knowledge, wisdom, and holiness. All the inferior wisdom of good men but
illustrates this. Here is a wise and righteous general conducting a defensive
war to save his country. At mid-summer an observer says to him, "General, have
you not changed your plan of campaign since you began it?" He replies, "I have."
Says the observer, "Then you must be a fickle person?" He replies, "No, I have
changed it not because I was fickle, but for these two reasons: because I have
been unable and have failed in some of the necessary points of my first plan;
and second, I have found out things I did not know when I began." We say that is
perfect common sense, and clears the general from all charge of fickleness. But
suppose he were, in fact, almighty and omniscient? Then he could not use those
excuses, and if he changed his plan after the beginning he would be fickle.
Reader, dare you charge God with fickleness? This is a sublime conception of
God's nature and actions, as far above the wisest man's as the heavens above the
earth. But it is the one taught us everywhere in Scripture. Let us beware how in
our pride of self-will we blaspheme God by denying it. Third. Arminians
themselves virtually admit the force of these views and scriptures; for their
doctrinal books expressly admit God's particular personal election of every
sinner that reaches heaven. A great many ignorant persons suppose that the
Arminian theology denies all particular election. This is a stupid mistake.
Nobody can deny it without attacking the Scripture, God's perfections, and
common sense. The whole difference between Presbyterians and intelligent
Arminians is this: We believe that God's election of individuals is
unconditioned and sovereign. They believe that while eternal and particular,
it is on account of God's eternal, omniscient foresight of the given sinner's
future faith and repentance, and perseverance in holy living. But we
Presbyterians must dissent for these reasons: It is inconsistent with the
eternity, omnipotence, and sovereignty of the great first cause to
represent his eternal purposes thus, as grounded in, or conditioned on, anything
which one of his dependent creatures would hereafter contingently do or leave
undone.
Will or will not that
creature ever exist in the future to do or to leave undone any particular thing?
That itself must depend on God's sovereign creative power. We must not make an
independent God depend upon his own dependent creature. But does not Scripture
often represent a salvation or ruin of sinners as conditioned on their own faith
or unbelief? Yes. But do not confound two different things. The result ordained
by God may depend for its rise upon the suitable means. But the acts of God's
mind in ordaining it does not depend on these means, because God's very purpose
is this, to bring about the means without fail and the result by the means.
Next, whether God's
election of a given sinner, say, Saul of Tarsus, be conditioned or not upon the
foresight of his faith, if it is an eternal and omniscient: foresight it must
be a certain one. Common sense says: no cause, no effect; an uncertain cause
can only give an uncertain effect. Says the Arminian: God certainly foresaw that
Saul of Tarsus would believe and repent, and, therefore, elected him. But I say,
that if God certainly foresaw Saul's faith, it must have been certain to take
place, for the Omniscient cannot make mistakes. Then, if this sinner's faith was
certain to take place, there must have been some certain cause insuring that it
would take place. Now, no certain cause could be in the "free-will" of this
sinner, Saul, even as aided by "common sufficient grace." For Arminians say,
that this makes and leaves the sinner's will contingent. Then, whatever made God
think that this sinner, Saul, would ever be certain to believe and repent?
Nothing but God's own sovereign eternal will to renew him unto faith and
repentance.
This leads to the
crowning argument. This Saul was by nature "dead in trespasses and in sins"
(Eph. 2:1), and, therefore, would never have in him any faith or repentance to
be foreseen, except as the result of God's purpose to put them in him. But the
effect cannot be the cause of its own cause. The cart cannot pull the horse;
why, it is the horse that pulls the cart. This is expressly confirmed by
Scripture. Christ says (Jn. 15:16): "Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen
you, and ordained you, that ye should go and bring forth fruit, and that your
fruit should remain." Romans 9:11-13: "For the children being not yet born,
neither having done any good or evil, that the purpose of God according to
election might stand, not of works, but of him that calleth; It was said unto
her, The elder shall serve the younger. As it is written, Jacob have I loved,
but Esau have I hated;" and verse 16: "So then, it is not of him that: willeth,
nor of him that runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy." What is not? The
connection shows that it is the election of the man that willeth and runneth, of
which the apostle here speaks. Paul here goes so dead against the notion of
conditional election, that learned Arminians see that they must find some
evasion, or squarely take the ground of infidels. This is their evasion: that by
the names Esau and Jacob the individual patriarchs are not meant, but the two
nations, Edom and Israel, and that the predestination was only unto the
privation or enjoyment of the means of grace. But this is utterly futile:
First, because certainly the individual patriarchs went along with the two
posterities whom they represented. Second, because Paul's discussion in
this ninth chapter all relates to individuals and not to races, and to salvation
or perdition, and not to mere church privileges. Third, because the
perdition of the Edomite race from all gospel means must have resulted in the
perdition of the individuals. For, says Paul: "How could they believe on him of
whom they have not heard?"
This is the right place
to notice the frequent mistake when we say that God's election is sovereign and
not conditioned on his foresight of the elected man's piety. Many pretend to
think that we teach God has no reason at all for his choice; that we make it an
instance of sovereign divine caprice! We teach no such thing. It would be
impiety. Our God is too wise and righteous to have any caprices. He has a
reasonable motive for every one of his purposes; and his omniscience shows him
it is always the best reason. But he is not bound to publish it to us. God knew
he had a reason for preferring the sinner, Jacob, to the sinner Esau. But this
reason could not have been any foreseeing merit of Jacob's piety by two
arguments: The choice was made before the children were born. There never was
any piety in Jacob to foresee, except what was to follow after as an effect of
Jacob's election. Esau appears to have been an open, hard-mouthed, profane
person. Jacob, by nature, a mean, sneaking hypocrite and supplanter. Probably
God judged their personal merits as I do, that personally Jacob was a more
detestable sinner than Esau. Therefore, on grounds of foreseen personal deserts,
God could never have elected either of them. But his omniscience saw a separate,
independent reason why it was wisest to make the worse man the object of his
infinite mercy, while leaving the other to his own profane choice. Does the
Arminian now say that I must tell him what that reason was? I answer, I do not
know, God has not told me. But I know He had a good reason, because he is God.
Will any man dare to say that because omniscience could not find its reason in
the foreseen merits of Jacob, therefore it could find none at all in the whole
infinite sweep of its Providence and wisdom? This would be arrogance run mad and
near to blasphemy.
One more argument for
election remains: Many human beings have their salvation or ruin practically
decided by providential events in their lives. The argument is, that since these
events are sovereignly determined by God's providence, the election, or
preterition of their souls is thereby virtually decided, Take two instances:
Here is a wilful, impenitent man who is down with fever and is already
delirious. Will he die or get well? God's providence will decide that. "In his
hands our breath is, and his are all our ways" (Dan. 5:23). If he dies this time
he is too delirious to believe and repent; if he recovers, he may attend revival
meetings and return to God. The other instance is, that of dying infants. This
is peculiarly deadly to the Arminian theory, because they say so positively that
all humans who die in infancy are saved. (And they slander us Presbyterians by
charging that we are not positive enough on that point, and that we believe in
the "damnation of infants.") Well, here is a human infant three months old. Will
it die of croup, or will it live to be a man? God's providence will decide that.
If it dies, the Arminian is certain its soul is gone to heaven, and therefore
was elected of God to go there. If it is to grow to be a man, the Arminian says
he may exercise his freewill to be a Korah, Dalthan, Abiram, or Judas. But
the election of the baby who dies cannot be grounded in God's foresight of its
faith and repentance, because there was none to foresee before it entered
glory; the little soul having redeemed by sovereign grace without these means.
But there is that
sentence in our Confession, Chapter 10, Section 3: "Elect infants, dying in
infancy, are regenerated and saved by Christ through the Spirit, who worketh
when and where and how he pleaseth." Our charitable accusers will have it that
the antithesis which we imply to the words "elect infants dying in infancy" is,
that there are non-elect infants dying in infancy are so damned. This we always
deny. But they seem to know what we think better than we know ourselves. The
implied antithesis we hold is this: There are elect infants not dying in
infancy, and such must experience effectual calling through rational means, and
freely believe and repent according to Chapter 10. There were once two Jewish
babies, John and Judas; John an elect infant, Judas a non-elect one. Had John
the Baptist died of croup he would have been redeemed without personal faith and
repentance; but he was predestinated to live to man's estate, so he had to be
saved through effectual calling. Judas, being a non-elect infant, was also
predestinated to live to manhood and receive his own fate freely by his own
contumacy. Presbyterians do not believe that the Bible or their Confession
teaches that there are non-elect infants dying in infancy and so damned. Had
they thought this of their Confession, they would have changed this section long
ago.
When an intelligent being
makes a selection of some out of a number of objects, he therein unavoidably
makes a preterition (a passing by) of the others; we cannot deny this without
imputing ignorance or inattention to the agent; but omniscience can neither be
ignorant nor inattentive. Hence, God's preordination must: extend to the saved
and the lost.
But here we must
understand the difference between God's effective decree and his permissive
decree, the latter is just as definite and certain as the former; but the
distinction is this: The objects of God's effective decree are effects which he
himself works, without employing or including the free-agency of any other
rational responsible person, such as his creations, miracles, regenerations of
souls, resurrections of bodies, and all those results which his providence
brings to pass, through the blind, compulsory powers of second causes, brutish
or material. The nature of his purpose here is by his own power to determine
these results to come to pass.
But the nature of his
permissive decree is this: He resolves to allow or permit some creature
free-agent freely and certainly to do the thing decreed without impulsion from
God's power. To this class of actions belong all the indifferent, and especially
all the sinful, deeds of natural men, and all those final results where such
persons throw away their own salvation by their own disobedience. In all these
results God does not himself do the thing, nor help to do it, but intentionally
lets it be done. Does one ask how then a permissive decree can have entire
certainty? The answer is, because God knows that men's natural disposition
certainly prompts them to evil; for instance, I know it is the nature of lambs
to eat grass. If I intentionally leave open the gate between the fold and the
pasture I know that the grass will be eaten, and I intend to allow it just as
clearly as if I had myself driven them upon the pasture.
Now, it is vain for those
to object that God's will cannot have anything to do with sinful results, even
in this permissive sense, without making God an author of the sin, unless these
cavilers mean to take the square infidel ground. For the Bible is full of
assertions that God does thus foreordain sin without being an author of sin. He
foreordained Pharaoh's tyranny and rebellion, and then punished him for it. In
Isaiah 10 he foreordains Nebuchadnezzar's sack of Jerusalem, and then punishes
him for it. In Acts 2:23 the wicked Judas betrays his Lord by the determinate
purpose and foreknowledge of God. In Romans 9:18, "he hath mercy on whom he will
have mercy, and whom he will he hardeneth," so in many other places. But our
Confession, Chapter 10, Section 7, makes this express difference between God's
decree of election and of preterition. The former is purely gracious, not
grounded in any foresight of any piety in them because they have none to
foresee, except as they are elected and called, and in consequence thereof. But
the non-elect are passed by and foreordained to destruction "for their sins,
and for the glory of God's justice."
We thus see that usual
fiery denunciations of this preterition are nothing but absurd follies and
falsehoods. These vain-talkers rant as though it were God's foreordination which
makes these men go to perdition. In this there is not one word of truth.
They alone make themselves go, and God's purpose concerning the wretched result
never goes a particle further than this, that in his justice he resolves to let
them have their own preferred way. These men talk as though God's decree of
preterition was represented by us as a barrier preventing poor striving sinners
from getting to heaven, no matter how they repent and pray and obey, only
because they are not the secret pets of an unjust divine caprice.
The utter folly and
wickedness of this cavil are made plain by this, that the Bible everywhere
teaches none but the elect and effectually called ever work or try in earnest to
get to heaven; that the lost never really wish nor try to be saints; that their
whole souls are opposed to it, and they prefer freely to remain ungodly, and
this is the sole cause of their ruin. If they would truly repent, believe, and
obey, they would find no decree debarring them from grace and heaven, God can
say this just as the shepherd might say of the wolves: if they will choose to
eat my grass peaceably with my lambs they shall find no fence of mine keeping
them from my grass. But the shepherd knows that it is always the nature of
wolves to choose to devour the lambs instead of the grass, which former their
own natures, and not the fence, assuredly prompts them to do, until almighty
power new-creates them into lambs. The reason why godless men cavil so fiercely
against this part of the doctrine, and so fully misrepresent it, is just this:
that they hate to acknowledge to themselves that free yet stubborn godlessness
of soul which leads them voluntarily to work their own ruin, and so they try to
throw the blame on God or his doctrine instead of taking it on themselves.
In fine, unbelieving men
are ever striving to paint the doctrine of election as the harsh, the
exclusive, the terrible doctrine, erecting a hindrance between sinners and
salvation. But properly viewed it is exactly the opposite. It is not the harsh
doctrine, but the sweet one, not the exclusive doctrine, not the hindrance of
our salvation, but the blessed inlet to all the salvation found in this
universe. It is sin, man's voluntary sin, which excludes him from salvation; and
in this sin God has no responsibility. It is God's grace alone which persuades
men both to come in and remain within the region of salvation; and all this
grace is the fruit of election. I repeat, then, it is our voluntary sin which is
the source of all that is terrible in the fate of ruined men and angels. It is
God's election of grace which is the sweet and blessed source of all that is
remedial, hopeful, and happy in earth and heaven. God can say to every angel and
redeemed man in the universe: "I have chosen thee in everlasting love; therefore
in loving kindness have I drawn thee." And every angel, and saint on this earth
and in glory responds, in accordance with our hymn:
"Why was I made to hear his voice
And enter while there's room,
While others make a wretched choice
And rather starve than come?
'Twas the same love that spread the feast
That sweetly drew me in;
Else I had still refused to taste
And perish in my sin."
And now dare any sinner
insolently press the question, why the same electing love and power in God did
not also include and save all lost sinners? This is the sufficient and the awful
answer: "Who art thou, O man, that repliest against God?" (Romans ix. 20.) Hast
thou any claim of right against God, O man, to force thee against thy preference
and stubborn choice to embrace a redemption unto holiness which thou dost hate
and wilfully reject in all the secret powers of thy soul? And if thou destroyest
thyself, while holy creatures may lament thy ruin, all will say that thou art
the last being in this universe to complain of injustice, since this would be
only complaining against the God whom thou dost daily insult, that he did not
make thee do the things and live the life which thou didst thyself wilfully and
utterly refuse!
Others urge this captious
objection: that this doctrine of election places a fatal obstacle between the
anxious sinner and saving faith. They ask, How can I exercise a sincere,
appropriating faith, unless I have ascertained that I am elected? For the
reprobate soul is not entitled to believe that Christ died for him, and as his
salvation is impossible, the truest faith could not save him even if he felt it.
But how can man as certain God's secret purpose of election toward him?
This cavil expressly
falsifies God's teachings concerning salvation by faith. As concerning his
election the sinner is neither commanded nor invited to embrace as the object of
his faith the proposition "I am elected." There is no such command in the Bible.
The proposition he is invited and commanded to embrace is this: "Whosoever
believes shall be saved" (Rom. 10:11.) God has told this caviler expressly,
"Secret things belong to the Lord our God, but the things that are revealed
belong to you and your children, that ye may do all the words of this law."
(Deut. 29:29.) Let us not cavil, but obey. God's promises also assure us "that
whosoever cometh unto God through Christ, he will in no wise cast off" (Jn.
6:37). So that it is impossible that any sinner really wishing to be saved can
be kept from salvation by uncertainty about his own election. When we add that
God's decree in no wise infringes man's free agency, our answer is complete.
Confession, Chapter 3, Section 1., by this decree, "No violence is offered to
the will of the creatures, nor is the liberty or contingency of second causes
taken away, but rather established.
But it is stubbornly
objected that those who are subject to a sovereign, immutable decree cannot be
free agents; that the two propositions are contradictory, and the assertion of
both an insult to reason. We explained that there are various means by which we
see free agents prompted to action, which are not compulsory, and yet certain of
effect, and that our God is a God of infinite wisdom and resources. God tells
them that in governing his rational creatures according to his eternal purpose,
he uses only such means as are consistent with their freedom. Still, the
arrogant objectors are positive that it cannot be done, even by an infinite God!
that if there is predestination, there cannot be free-agency. Surely the man who
makes this denial should be himself infinite!
But, perhaps, the best
answer to this folly is this: Mr. Arminian, you, a puny mortal, are actually
doing, and that often, the very thing you say an almighty God cannot do!
Predestining the acts of free-agents, certainly and efficiently, without their
freedom. For instance: Mr. Arminian invites me to dine with him at one
o'clock PM. I reply, yes, provided dinner is punctual and certain, because I
have to take a railroad train at two PM He promises positively that dinner shall
be ready at one PM How so, will he cook it himself? Oh, no! But he employs a
steady cook, named Gretchen, and he has already instructed her that one PM must
be the dinner hour.
That is predestination
he tells me, certain and efficacious.
I now take up Mr.
Arminian's argument, and apply it to Gretchen thus: He says predestination and
free-agency are contradictory. He predestinated you, Gretchen, to prepare
dinner for one o'clock, therefore you were not a free agent in getting dinner.
Moreover, as there can be no moral desert where there is no freedom, you have
not deserved your promised wages for cooking, and Mr. Arminian thinks he is not
at all bound to pay you.
Gretchen's common sense
replies thus: I know I am a free agent; I am no slave, no machine,
but a free woman, and an honest woman, who got dinner at one o'clock because I
chose to keep my word; and if Mr. Arminian robs me of my wages on this nasty
pretext, I will know he is a rogue.
Gretchen's logic is
perfectly good.
My argument is, that men
are perpetually predestinating and efficiently procuring free acts of free
agents. How much more may an infinite God do likewise. But this reasoning need
not, and does not, imply that God's ways of doing it are the same as ours.
His resources of wisdom
and power are manifold, infinite. Thus this popular cavil is shown to be as
silly and superficial as it is common. It is men's sinful pride of will which
makes them repeat such shallow stuff.
Having exploded
objections, I now close this argument for election with the strongest of all the
testimonies, the Scriptures. The Bible is full of it; all of God's
prophecies imply predestination, because, unless he had foreordained the
predicted events, he could not be certain they would come to pass. The Bible
doctrine of God's providence proves predestination, because the Bible says
providence extends to everything, and is certain and omnipotent, and it only
executes what predestination plans. Here are a few express texts among a
hundred: Psalm 33:11: "The counsel of the Lord standeth forever, the thoughts of
his heart to all generations." Isaiah 46:10: God declareth "the end from the
beginning, and from ancient times the things that are not yet done, saying, my
counsel shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure." God's election of Israel
was unconditional. See Ezekiel 16:6: "And when I passed by thee and saw thee
polluted in thine own blood, I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood,
Live." Acts 8:48: "When the Gentiles heard this . . . as many as were ordained
to eternal life believed." Romans 8:29-30: "For whom he did foreknow, he also
did predestinate . . . Moreover, whom he did predestinate, them he also called,
and whom he called, them he also justified; and whom he justified, them he also
glorified." Ephesians 1:4-7: "He hath chosen us in him (Christ) before the
foundation of the world," etc. 1 Thessalonians 1:4: "Knowing, brethren, beloved,
your election of God." Revelation 21:27 ". . . . They that are written in the
Lamb's book of life."
Silly people try to say
that election is the doctrine of that harsh apostle Paul. But the loving Savior
teaches it more expressly if possible than Paul does. See, again, John 6:16: "Ye
have not chosen me, but I have chosen you," etc. John 6:37: "All that the Father
giveth me shall come to me," etc.; see also verses 39, 44; Matthew 24:22; Luke
18:7; John 10:14, 28; Mark 13:22; Matt. 20:16.
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