Is Gospel-Driven Sanctification Really “Sonship” Theology?
Two weeks ago, sitting in my office with my feet propped on a bookcase and chatting with Susan, I happened to be looking up at my Jay Adams shelf. Since it had been too long since I’d read any of his material (at least two weeks), I put my feet down on the floor and began perusing what I haven’t lent to other people; and thinking, “Hmmm, wonder what this is: ‘Biblical Sonship.’”
I always read the preface. So you have the cover, cover page, copyright, contents, and preface. I was reading the first page of the preface, and in the third paragraph, when I read the following: “It claims that a person can change this sad state of affairs by continuing to preach the gospel to himself and by repenting and believing over and over again. It teaches that not only justification, but also sanctification, is by faith in the good news.”
Barely a hundred words into the book, and I was stunned. That is the exact same thesis as gospel sanctification, a movement I have been researching for three years. The movement (gospel sanctification, or “gospel-driven sanctification”) is huge and its propagators are the who’s who of the evangelical world that they are supposedly trying to save: DA Carson, Michael Horton, Paul David Tripp, David Powlison, Tim Keller, John Piper, Al Mohler, Mark Devers, Francis Chan, Jerry Bridges, and many, many others. The theology is also propagated by several missionary alliances and church planting organizations like the Antioch School in Ames, Iowa.
As Jay Adams notes in his book, the Sonship movement was started by Jack Miller, a former professor of practical theology at Westminster Seminary who is now deceased. According to other sources, Jack Miller’s epiphany concerning Sonship occurred while he was on an extended trip in Spain with his family. An article I read by Geoff Thomas in Banner of Truth was written in 2003, and he mentions the trip to Spain as being about twenty years prior; so figure 1980, or around that time, for the birth of Sonship theology.
In all of my studies concerning gospel sanctification, I had never heard of Jack Miller or Sonship theology, but it became clear from the Jay Adams book that the two theologies are the same thing with the usual peripheral aberrations from the basic form; and the basic form being, but not confined to, progressive justification, sanctification by faith alone, substitutionary monergistic sanctification, and the total depravity of the saints. There is absolutely no doubt – this theology turns orthodoxy completely upside down while the intestinal fortitude of the rest of the evangelical community wanes. Apparently, big names like Jerry Bridges and others are like GM, they’re just too big to fail. As one brother wrote to me: “How dare you criticize DA Carson, one the greatest theological minds of our day!” Furthermore, as Dr. Peter Masters has noted, it is interesting that doctrine doesn’t matter if you are “gospel-driven” in your beliefs. For example, Charismatic and emergent church leaders are readily excepted into the new Calvinism clan if they are “gospel-centered.”
But what came first? Sonship, or gospel sanctification? Did gospel-driven sanctification come from Sonship? Is Jack Miller the father of new Calvinism? It’s looking that way. Historical precedent for gospel sanctification (GS) cannot be found before (approx.)1980. It is the brainchild of Dr. David Powlison, professor at CCEF, the biblical counseling wing of Westminster Seminary. GS came out of his “Dynamics of Biblical Change” curriculum developed and taught by him at Westminster. Two of his former students articulated the doctrine in the book “How People Change.” This is made clear by Powlison in the forward he wrote for the same book. Shortly prior to the book’s release, the doctrine’s theories were tested in local churches via a pilot program. In the reformed church I attended that was part of the pilot program, the curriculum was taught in a Sunday school class with a limited number of participants.
“How People Change” articulates a theology that is virtually identical to Sonship theology. And, it just so happens that David Powlison himself claims that Jack Miller is his “mentor.” He recently stated this as fact while teaching a seminar at John Piper’s church, and in the midst of fustigating Jay Adams for criticizing Jack Miller for telling people to “preach the gospel to themselves everyday” *see endnote. I thought this phrase was originally coined by Jerry Bridges, but Jerry Bridges attributes the phrase to Jack Miller in the preface of “The Disciplines of Grace.” Tim Keller, a looming figure in the new Calvinism / gospel-driven / gospel sanctification movement, was teaching GS under the “Sonship” nomenclature as late as 2006. On the Puritan Board, a faint cry for help was uttered by a person saying the following: “ The Sonship theology of Tim Keller has taken a hold of the church I attend. Am I the only one, or does anyone else have a problem with this?”
Furthermore, my research would strongly suggest that the development of other contemporary theologies like New Covenant Theology, (many attribute its conception to Westminster Seminary sometime during the 80’s or 90’s), heart theology (definitely conceived at Westminster during the 90’s), redemptive-historical hermeneutics, and Christian hedonism (latter conceived by John Piper in the 80’s) were primarily driven by the need to validate Sonship / GS doctrine. Sonship needs the NCT perspective on the law, the supposed practical application of finding idols in the heart via heart theology, the perspective of how Sonship is experienced through Christian hedonism, and more than anything else, an interpretive redemptive prism supplied by the redemptive-historical hermeneutic.
But why has gospel sanctification enjoyed freedom from ridicule not afforded to Sonship? They are, for all practical purposes, the same exact thing and encompass many of the same teachers. Probably because gospel sanctification has the word “gospel” in it. In this age of hyper-grace, people will shy away from any appearance of being against “the gospel.” I have to believe that the movement has traded the Sonship label, with its share of bullet holes, for the “gospel-driven” label. Sonship has been besieged by two works, the book by Jay Adams and a lengthy article by Van Dixhoorn, a former student at Westminster. Sonship has also been pelted with its share of the “antinomian” accusation, and rightfully so. In my second addition of “Another Gospel,” I write the following on page 78:
“….if the same gospel that saved us also sanctifies us, and Christ said that we are sanctified by the word; and certainly He did say that as recorded in John 17:17, then every word in the Bible must be about justification, or what God has done and not anything we could possibly do, being a gospel affair. Furthermore, if we are sanctified by the gospel which is God’s work alone, we may have no more role in spiritual growth than we did in the gospel that saved us. The Scriptures are clear; no person is justified by works of the law. Is that not the gospel? Therefore, when the antinomians speak of obedience, it should be apparent that they are not speaking of our obedience, even though they allow us to assume otherwise.”
At least one book, a lengthy pamphlet, and several articles defend Sonship against Adams and Van Dixhoorn, but the theological arguments are woefully lame. Nevertheless, my point is that gospel sanctification, though the same thing, is enjoying widespread acceptance throughout the church without controversy while unifying camps that are theologically suspect to say the least.
It is what it is; while mad theological scientist concoct all sorts of new potions in the lab and send their minions out to commit first-degree doctrinal felonies in broad daylight, while many who profess to love the real gospel say nothing. I pray that will change, while thanking God for those who love the truth more than the acceptance and praises of men.
Endnote:
Powlison failed to mention that the criticism came in the form of a book that is an apology against Sonship theology. Failure to mention that put Adams in an anti-gospel light as well as depriving him of the ability to contextualize the criticism. As an aside, Powlison, in the same seminar, criticized “idol hunting”; but yet, he is the inventor of “X-ray questions”(which he also mentioned in positive terms without the “X-ray” terminology, but rather something like “reorienting questions”) which are designed to identify heart idols (see page 163 of “How People Change”). His mentor, Jack Miller, developed a complex system of idol hunting that included twenty different categories of heart idols (Jack Miller, “Repentance and the 20th Century Man”CLC 1998). This kind of disingenuous double-speak is commonplace within the movement.

i think the line from Miller to Keller is pretty direct; like, If i recall, Keller was a follower of Miller.
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I am not sure you provide an alternative to Sonship Theology. Are you saying we get sanctified by works?
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Why not? It has nothing to do with justification and does not draw its power from justification. Sanctification is a colaboring with the Spirit.
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Gospel-centered sanctification did not begin with Jack Miller or any of the more recent men. As Jerry Bridges told me, he came to see the principles long before he ever heard of Jack M. But, if you read “The Disciplines of Grace,” by Bridges, you will find it littered with quotes from the Puritans. It is a Reformation doctrine. I was convinced of it and of the poor critique by Adams of Miller by reading John Owen’s 5th volume – on Justification. His work on Mortification of Sin is an early articulation of gospel-centered sanctification. Walter Marshall’s “Gospel Sanctification” was a classic. Sadly, Dr. Adams’ work was largely a personal strike at Miller and treated some lectures with comments that were taken out of context (voice inflection context, since Adams just read the transcripts). And it was written after Miller’s death, so he could not defend himself or correct the conclusions reached by Adams. I love much of Jay Adams’ work, but he seemed to succomb to wanting to get another book published when he wrote it. Knowing both of them, it was a mischaracterization of Dr. Miller and the Sonship course.
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JE,
Gospel Sanctification and Sonship Theology are the same thing. I was on a journey and traced it back to Sonship, thanks to Jay Adams. From there, I traced it back to the Australian Forum, and then back to the Reformers themselves. Adams did nothing wrong towards Miller, but his book was an accurate treatise concerning the problem with Sonship/Gospel Sanctification’s fusion of justification and sanctification. Adams is like many Calvinists of our day, he didn’t realize the Reformers propagated progressive justification. That’s why he came out against Miller. Miller did in fact teach what the Reformers taught. Adams’ spot-on indictment of Sonship Theology is really an indictment against Reformed Theology. Because of the tyranny that always results from Reformed Theology, and the fact that people eventually realize that it is a false gospel, it dies a social death every 100-150 years. 1970 was the latest resurgence of it. Over the years, when the movement dies, remnants of Calvinism lives on without the same soteriology, but with many other elements–especially the eschatology. Adams fits that category. I call them sanctified Calvinists. The pushback against New Calvinism by present-day Reformed Baptists and Presbyterians is evidence of this–railing against the doctrine as being, “sanctification by justification.” But New Calvinism is dead-on regarding its Reformed theology.
And that’s why Calvin and Luther were heretics.
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Hi Jeff and all who are reading this. I used to be a missionary with the mission agency that Jack Miller has started. Then it was called World Harvest Mission and now Serge. I did not meet Jack since he passed away by the time I went for a missionary candidate program called “Sonship”. To tell you the truth I came away from that week of studying rather confused and discouraged. I was and am just an old blue-collar guy, I ain’t never went to a Seminary, just wanted to tell many about Jesus in the US and over the ocean. By God’s grace I have and still am, though not as part of a mission agency no more. I wanted to tell this world that Christ came to set you free and that you will be a new creation once He saves you. And that you will need to obey His word and commands once you are saved. Yes sir, obey and act on it with His help! We are in the war with Satan’s forces over people’s souls after all. Am I doing it perfectly? No. But I am not what I used to be yesterday either, Thank Jesus!
I used to be a member at New life church PCA which Jack Miller founded and I have seen how the Sonship theology gets people confused. A number have left the church for a different ones. I ask them if I run into them” why have you left?” and the answer is usually is “because of Sonship saturated sermons”. While at WHM I voiced my concerns over Sonship and told some of the leaders there that there is not enough teaching on what sanctification is in that material. They said I was not the only one who voiced that concern and that they would work on revising it. And one thing bothered me about the way they went about Jay Adam”s book. I happened to be at a weekly prayer meeting at the mission’s head office that day. They said that Jay’s book was bad and not true and that they told Jack’s wife not to read it. And none of us were encouraged to read it either. Where is the openness ?! Maybe brother Adams had something good to say from the Bible?!
Any how, let me stop here.
Jesus is Semper Fi
greg
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“I wanted to tell this world that Christ came to set you free and that you will be a new creation once He saves you. And that you will need to obey His word and commands once you are saved. Yes sir, obey and act on it with His help! …Am I doing it perfectly? No. But I am not what I used to be yesterday either”
“Doing it perfectly” is not the point. If perfect law-keeping is the standard for righteousness, then one is still “under law”, the Biblical definition of an unsaved person. You said it right when you mentioned being a new creation. The New Birth is the standard of righteousness. It is a righteousness that is our very own because we are the literal offspring of God and therefore have a righteousness that is just like the Father’s! And we CAN act on our salvation and pursue good works because the law’s condemnation has been ended. We do not have to fear judgment. We are free aggressively strive to obey the law and thus fulfill the law of love; for all the law is fulfilled in one word, even this: thou shall love thy neighbor as thyself!
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Sonship (the manifestations of the Son’s of God) was brought in by George Hawtin as early as 1960… in Battleford. Sk. at a Pentacostal Bible school. long before the above mentioned Jack Miller… Possibly he caught wind of the movement and made it his own.. here is a link to George Hawtins writings… http://www.dimensionsoftruth.org/other-writings/george-r-hawtin/
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Tracy,
Sonship is based on the Reformed gospel of progressive justification. I am sure that there are Sonship movements anywhere between now and when Luther was roaming about. But I am interested in the link you have provided. Jack Miller was primarily inspired by the rage of that day that was saturating Westminister via the Australian Forum. However, the information you cite could have a link to SGM in some way. First of all, I will have to evaluate the theology–if it’s Sonship–it’s progressive justification. If not, it is something else with a Sonship label.
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One must recognize that the bible speaks of sanctification (or being set apart) in at least TWO distinct ways. There is LEGAL / POSITIONAL sanctification which is a monergistic work of God involved in our eternal salvation (Jude 1:1). There is also ETHICAL / PRACTICAL sanctification which is a synergistic work that involves our personal obedience in discipleship to which men are exhorted and which plays absolutely NO PART in the work that brought God’s people eternal salvation, because the bible teaches that we are made righteous “by the obedience of one” (Romans 5:19) Apart from rightly dividing the topic of sanctification into these two categories one runs into endless confusion and ends up conjoining works with eternal salvation – which is strictly forbidden (Romans 11:6).
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