Perseverance of the Saints
Our Confession, in
Chapter 17, Sections 1 and 2, states this doctrine thus: "They whom God hath
accepted in his beloved, effectually called and sanctified by his Spirit, can
neither totally nor finally fall away from the state of grace, but shall
certainly persevere therein to the end., and be eternally saved" (1). "This
perseverance of the saints depends not upon their own free will, but upon the
immutability of the decree of election, flowing from the free and unchangeable
love of God the Father; upon the efficacy of the merit and intercession of Jesus
Christ; the abiding of the Spirit and of the seed of God within them; and the
nature of the covenant of grace, from all which ariseth also the certainty and
infallibility thereof."
I beg the reader to weigh
these statements with candor and close attention, He will find that we do not
ascribe this stability of grace in the believer to any excellence in his own
soul, even regenerate, as source and cause, but we ascribe it to the
unchangeable purpose and efficacious grace of God dwelling and operating in
them. All the angels, and Adam, received from their Creator holy natures; yet
our first father and the fallen angels show that they could totally fall away
into sin. No one in himself is absolutely incapable of sinning, except the
unchangeable God. Converted men, who still have indwelling sin, must certainly
be as capable of falling as Adam, who had none. We believe that the saints will
certainly stand, because the God who chose them will certainly hold them up.
We do not believe that
all professed believers and church members will certainly persevere and reach
heaven. It is to be feared that many such, even plausible pretenders, live in
name only while they are actually dead (cf. Rev. 3:1). They fall fatally because
they never had true grace to fall from.
We do not teach that any
man is entitled to believe that he is justified, and therefore shall not come
again in condemnation on the proposition "once in grace always in grace,"
although he be now living in intentional, wilful sin. This falsehood of Satan
we abhor. We say, the fact that this deluded man can live in wilful sin is
the strongest possible proof that he never was justified, and never had any
grace to fall from. And, once for all, no intelligent believer can possibly
abuse this doctrine into a pretext for carnal security. It promises to true
believers a perseverance in holiness. Who, except an idiot, could infer
from that promise the privilege to be unholy?
Once more. We do not
teach that genuine believers are secure from backsliding, but if they become
unwatchful and prayerless, they may fall for a time into temptations, sins, and
loss of hope and comfort, which may cause them much misery and shame) and out of
which a covenant-keeping God will recover them by sharp chastisements and deep
contrition. Hence, so far as lawful self-interests can be a proper motive for
Christian effort, this will operate on the Presbyterian under this doctrinal
perseverance, more than on the Arminian with his doctrine of falling from grace.
The former cannot say, "I need not be alarmed though I be backslidden"; for if
he is a true believer he has to be brought back by grievous and perhaps by
terrible afflictions; he had better be alarmed at these! But further, an
enlightened self-love will alarm him more pungently than the Arminians' doctrine
will remonstrate him. Here is an Arminian who finds himself backslidden. Does be
feel a wholesome alarm, saying to himself, "Ah, me, I was in the right road to
heaven, but I have gotten out of it; I must get back into it"? Well, the
Presbyterian similarly backslidden is taught by his doctrine to say: I
thought I was in the right road to heaven, but now I see I was mistaken all
the time, because God says that if I had really been in that right road I could
never have left it (1 Jn. 2:19). Alas! therefore, I must either perish or get
back, not to that old deceitful road in which I was, but into a new one,
essentially different, narrower and straighter. Which of the two men has the
more pungent motive to strive?
As I have taken the
definition of the doctrine from our Confession, I will take thence the heads of
its proofs:
(a) The
immutability of God's election proves it. How came this given sinner to be now
truly converted? Because God had elected him to salvation. But God says, "My
[purpose] shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure" (Isa. 46:10). Since God is
changeless and almighty, this purpose to save him must certainly succeed. But no
man can be saved in his sins, therefore this man will certainly be made to
persevere in grace.
(b) The doctrine
follows from the fact that God's election is sovereign and unconditional, not
grounded in any foreseen merit in the sinner elected. God knew there was none in
him to foresee. But God did foresee all the disobedience, unthankfulness, and
provocation which that unworthy sinner was ever to perpetrate. Therefore, the
future disclosure of this unthankfulness, disobedience, and provocation by this
poor sinner, cannot become a motive with God to revoke his election of him. God
knew all about it just as well when he first elected him, and yet, moved by his
own motives of love, mercy, and wisdom, he did elect him, foreknowing all his
possible meanness.
(c) The same
conclusion follows from God's covenant of redemption with his Son the Messiah.
This was a compact made from eternity between the Father and the Son. In this
the Son freely bound himself to die for the sins of the world and to fulfill his
other offices as Mediator for the redemption of God's people. God covenanted on
this condition to give to his Son this redeemed people as his recompense. In
this covenant of redemption Christ furnished and fulfilled the whole conditions;
his redeemed people none. So, when Christ died, saying "It is finished," the
compact was finally closed; there is no room, without unfaithfulness in the
Father, for the final falling away of a single star out of our Saviour's
purchased crown; read John 17. It is "an everlasting covenant, ordered in all
things, and sure" (2 Sam. 23:5.)
(d), We must infer
the same blessed truth from Christ's love in dying for his people while sinners,
from the supreme merits of his imputed righteousness, and the power of his
intercession: "But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet
sinners, Christ died for us. Much more then, being now justified by his blood,
we shall be saved from wrath through him. For if, when we were enemies, we were
reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall
be saved by his life" (Rom. v. 8-10.) "He that spared not his own Son, but
delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all
things?" (Rom. 8:32). Of Christ, the Intercessor, it is said that the Father
hears him always (cf. Jn. 11:42). But see John 17:20: "Neither pray I for these
alone, but for them also which shall believe on me through their word." If the
all-prevailing High Priest prays for all believers, all of them will receive
what he asks for. But what and how much does he ask for them? Some temporary,
contingent and mutable grace, contingent on the changeable and fallible human
will? See verse 24: "Father, I will that they also, whom thou hast given me, be
with me where I am; that they may behold my glory, which thou hast given me."
(e) If any man is
converted, it is because the Holy Ghost is come into him; if any sinner lives
for a time the divine life, it is because the Holy Ghost is dwelling in him. But
the Bible assures us that this Holy Ghost is the abiding seed of spiritual life,
the earnest of heaven, and the seal of our redemption.3
Believers are "born again, not of corruptible seed, but of
incorruptible, by the word of God, which liveth and abideth for ever" (1 Pet.
1:23). The Apostle Paul declares4
that they receive the earnest of the Spirit, and that his
indwelling is "the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the
purchased possession" (Eph. 1:14).5
The same apostle says, "grieve not the holy Spirit of God,
whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption" (Eph. 4:30).
An earnest, or
earnest-money, is a smaller sum paid in cash when a contract is finally closed,
as an unchangeable pledge that the future payments shall also be made in their
due time. A seal is the final imprint added by the contracting parties to their
names to signify that the contract is closed and binding. Such is the
sanctifying presence of the Holy Spirit in every genuine believer; a deathless
principle of perseverance therein, God's advanced pledge of his purpose to give
heaven also, God's seal affixed to his covenant of grace. This, then, is the
blessed assurance of hope which the true believer is privileged to attain: not
only that God is pledged conditionally to give me heaven, provided I continue to
stick to my gospel duty in the exercise of my weak, changeable, fallible will. A
wretched consolation, that, to the believer who knows his own heart! But the
full assurance of hope is this: Let the Holy Spirit once touch this dead heart
of mine with his quickening light, so that I embrace Christ with a real penitent
faith; then I have the blessed certainty that this God who has begun the good
work in me will perfect it unto the day of Jesus Christ (his judgment day),6
that the same divine love will infallibly continue with me?and
notwithstanding subsequent sins and provocations, will chastise, restore, and
uphold me, and give me the final victory over sin and death. This is the hope
inexpressible and full of glory, a thousand-fold better adapted to stimulate in
me obedience, the prayer, the watchfulness, the striving, which are the means of
my victory, than the chilling doubts of possible falling from grace. Again, the
Scriptures are our best argument. I append a few texts among many: See Jeremiah
32:40: "And I will make an everlasting covenant with them, that I will not turn
away from them, to do them good; but I will put my fear in their hearts, that
they shall not depart from me." My sheep never perish, and none shall pluck
them out of my hand.7
Second Timothy 2:19: "The foundation of God standeth sure,
having this seal, the Lord knoweth them that are his." Christ himself implies
that it is not possible to deceive his elect:8
First Peter 1:5: Believers "are kept by the power of God
through faith unto salvation." The same apostle thus explains the apostasy of
final backsliders. Second Peter 2:22: "The sow that was washed returns to her
wallowing in the mire." She is a sow still in her nature, though with the outer
surface washed, but never changed into a lamb; for if she had been, she would
never have chosen the mire. The apostle (1 Jn. 2:19) explains final backslidings
in the same way, and in words which simply close the debate: "They went out from
us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they would no doubt
have continued with us; but they went out that they might be made manifest that
they were not all of us."
My affirmative argument
virtually refutes all objections. But there are two to which I will give a word.
Arminians urge always an objection drawn from their false philosophy. They say
that if God's grace in regeneration were efficient, certainly determining the
convert's will away from sin to gospel duty, it would destroy his free-agency.
Then there would be no moral nor deserving quality in his subsequent evangelical
obedience to please God, any more than in the natural color of his hair, which
he could not help. My answer is, that their philosophy is false. The
presence and operation of a right principle in a man, certainly determining him
to right feelings and actions, does not infringe his free-agency but rather is
essential to all right free-agency. My proofs are, that if this spurious
philosophy were true, the saints and elect angels in heaven could not have any
free-agency or praise-worthy character or conduct. For they are certainly and
forever determined to holiness. The man Jesus could not have had any free-agency
or merit, for his human will was absolutely determined to holiness. God himself
could not have had any freedom or praiseworthy holiness. He least of all! for
his will is eternally, unchangeably, and necessarily determined to absolute
holiness. If there is anything approaching blasphemy in this, take notice, it is
not mine. I put this kind of philosophy from me with abhorrence.
It is objected, again,
that the Bible is full of warnings to believers to watch against apostasy, like
this in 1 Corinthians 10:12: "Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest
he fall." The sophism is, that if believers cannot fall from grace, all these
warnings are absurd. I reply, they are reasonable, because believers could fall
from grace if they were left to their own natural powers. In this sense, they
naturally might fall, and therefore watchfulness is reasonably urged upon them,
because God's unchangeable purpose of grace toward them is effectuated in them,
not as if they were stocks or stones, or dumb beasts, but rational free
agents, to be guided and governed by the almighty Spirit through the means of
rational motives. Therefore, when we see God plying believers with these
rational motives not to backslide, it is not to be inferred that he secretly
intends to let them backslide fatally, but rather just the contrary.
I will close with a
little parable: I watch a wise, intelligent, watchful, and loving mother, who is
busy about her household work. There is a bright little girl playing about the
room, the mother's darling. I hear her say, "Take care, baby dear, don't go near
that bright fire, for you might get burned." Do I argue thus: "Hear that woman's
words! I infer from them that that woman's mind is made up to let that darling
child burn itself to death unless its own watchfulness shall suffice to keep it
away from the fire, the caution of an ignorant, impulsive, fickle little child.
What a heartless mother!"? But I do not infer thus, unless I am a heartless
fool. I know that this mother knows the child is a rational creature, and that
rational cautions are one species of means for keeping it at a safe distance
from the fire; therefore she does right to address such cautions to the child;
she would not speak thus if she thought it were a mere kitten or puppy dog, and
would rely on nothing short of tying it by the neck to the table leg. But I also
know that that watchful mother's mind is fully made up that the darling child
shall not burn itself at this fire. If the little one's impulsiveness and short
memory cause it to neglect the maternal cautions, I know that I shall see that
good woman instantly drop her instruments of labor and draw back her child
with physical force from that fire, and then most rationally renew her
cautions to the child as a reasonable agent with more emphasis. And if the
little one proves still heedless and wilful, I shall see her again rescued by
physical force, and at last I shall see the mother impressing her cautions on
the child's mind more effectually, perhaps by passionate caresses, or perhaps by
a good switching, both alike the expressions of faithful love.
Such is the Bible system
of grace which men call Calvinism, so often in disparagement. Its least merit is
that it corresponds exactly with experience, common sense, and true philosophy.
Its grand evidence is that it corresponds with Scripture. Let God be true, and
every man a liar." This doctrine exalts God, his power, his sovereign, unbought
love and mercy. They are entitled to be supremely exalted. This doctrine humbles
man in the dust. He ought to be humbled; he is a guilty, lost sinner, the sole,
yet the certain architect of his own ruin. Helpless, yet guilty of all that
makes him helpless, he ought to take his place in the deepest contrition, and
give all the glory of his redemption to God. This doctrine, while it lays man's
pride low, gives him an anchor of hope, sure and steadfast, drawing him to
heaven; for his hope is founded not in the weakness, folly, and fickleness of
his human will, but in the eternal love, wisdom, and power of almighty God. "O
Israel, who is like unto thee, O people saved by the Lord!" "The eternal God is
thy refuge, and underneath are the everlasting arms" (Deut. 33:29, 27.)
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