Paul's Passing Thoughts

The Reformation False Gospel Denies the New Birth

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on November 15, 2012

“This can be plainly seen in one of the most well-articulated Reformed treatises on the subject of the new birth: it is an article endorsed by the Reformed icon Graeme Goldsworthy, and the article is entitled, The False Gospel of the New Birth. Any questions?”

“This Gnostic paradigm enables those of the Reformed tradition to affirm the truthfulness of the new birth, while denying its significance. The new birth is a mere shadow of the only important thing that can power our lives. Like their Gnostic parents, they are masters of deception in this way. It enables them to dismiss the plain sense of Scripture on a large scale while building their antinomian juggernaut.”

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Hopefully, the Reformation will one day take its proper place in history as one of the great cults. Like all cults, it utilizes familiar biblical terminology, but has assigned a different meaning to the terms. Though the Reformers and their offspring frame explanations of salvific elements in biblical plausibility, their words are carefully chosen to deceive those who are not “ready” for their deep Reformation “truth.”

Basic elements of Reformed ideology are a direct affront to the Lord Jesus Christ Himself. Christ said, “You must be born again,” and this the Reformers deny. The biblical meaning of the new birth is a total recreation of the saved person. The old self was put to death and no longer lives—we are new creatures. “Behold, all things are new.” The old man who was inflamed in temptation by the law is now dead, and the believer is now free via the new birth to pursue freedom in the law, though not perfectly. This is what the new birth does: it changes the relationship of the law to the saved individual. He/she is no longer under it for justification, but upholds it as a kingdom citizen and slave to Jesus Christ. Failure thereof temporarily disrupts the intimate family relationship with the Father and the Son, but can be restored through a repentance that is not a washing, for we are already washed.

This creates an abundance of difficulties for Reformed theology. An actual transformation of the individual that includes the efficacious union of Christ, rather than the life of Christ being the only life in a spiritually dead believer, is the Waterloo of Reformed theology. Are we alive with Christ? Or are we still dead with Christ? Is sanctification by faith alone because we are still dead, or are we creditable colaborers who are able to truly love our Lord through our actions?

In Reformed theology, there is no new birth that makes us new creatures with Christ, the “new birth” is “Christ for us.” Not just for forgivenessof sins, but for EVERYTHING. “You can do nothing without me,” is translated, you can’t do anything at all because you are still spiritually dead.

Reformed theology is a let go and let God doctrine on steroids. And in Reformed theology, to deny that Christians remain spiritually dead is paramount to works salvation because the law remains the standard for justification. Instead of being dead to the law for justification, we are still dead to law for sanctification as well—the relationship has not changed—Christ must keep the law for us to maintain our just standing. This is why, according to most Reformed theology, you can lose your salvation if you do not live the Christian life by, “faith alone.” Trying to obey the law in sanctification is supposedly insanity because the standard is still perfection—we are still under the law. Not only that, we are still spiritually dead to boot. Justification texts are deceptively applied to sanctification and vice versa. It’s all the same.

This is why Reformed theology turns truth completely upside down at every point. It is a gargantuan library of lies that cover for other lies. It started with a false premise, and has spent over 500 years building, refining and crafting its narrative. It uses the same metaphysics that Satan needed to be equal with God. To compete with God, Satan needed to be different—so he created the antithesis of God: evil. Therefore, in Satan’s book, the whole story, or the rest of the story, or the totality of “wisdom,” should have included his creation as well: the knowledge of good and evil. Knowledge of good alone is knowledge of God alone—Satan would have none of that.

Hence, the first sentence of the Calvin institutes describes wisdom as primarily the knowledge of God and us (who remain totally depraved). Therefore, according to the same garden metaphysics, we must remain evil in order to have a working epistemology. If we change, if we become more and more like God, the epistemological gateway is diminished. A deeper and deeper knowledge of our depravity can no longer be set against a deeper and deeper knowledge of God’s holiness—leading to more and more “wisdom.” Therefore, the idea of the new birth drives a stake through the heart of the first sentence of the Calvin institutes. The transformation of us just points more to knowledge about God and less about our former condition—this seems to upset Calvin’s epistemological apple cart.

But whether or not you buy my working theory on the deeper issue of metaphysics, the fact remains that Reformed theology clearly teaches that we remain totally depraved as Christians. The only argument is whether or not neo-Calvinism has distorted the original intent of the Reformers. I contend that they have not. And if they have, the Calvin purists can blame themselves because an apt treatise against the neo-Calvinists is nowhere to be found, but rather fellowship. If Calvinists don’t want to wear the shoe that fits, let them come out from among them.

In the Reformed mindset, to claim transformation through the new birth is to make salvation about us, and less about God. Such is not the truth because God doesn’t need evil to better define Himself, nor does He need evil as a contrast to magnify His glory. Therefore, pointing to our own evil does not glorify God. Becoming more like God glorifies God; Christ makes this clear in the Sermon on the Mount. But notable contemporary Reformers state the opposite, saying that emphasizing the enabling power of the new birth (as Christ did with the word, “must”) “eclipses” the glory of Christ:

It robs Christ of His glory by putting the Spirit’s work in the believer above and therefore against what Christ has done for the believer in His doing and dying.

~ Geoffrey Paxton (Australian Forum)

But to whom are we introducing people to, Christ or to ourselves? Is the “Good News” no longer Christ’s doing and dying, but our own “Spirit-filled” life?

~ Michael Horton

And the new-birth-oriented “Jesus-in-my-heart” gospel of evangelicals has destroyed the Old Testament just as effectively as has nineteenth-century liberalism. (footnoted to Paxton’s article with above quote).

~ Graeme Goldsworthy (Australian Forum)

In it [Goldsworthy’s lecture at Southern] it gave one of the clearest statements of why the Reformation was needed…. I would add that this “upside down” gospel has gone away— neither from Catholicism nor from Protestants.

~ John Piper

Another way those of the Reformed tradition explain away plain truth about the new birth is the Reformed Emphasis Hermeneutic which is based on Gnosticism. Truth is beyond what the five senses can ascertain. What the five senses can ascertain are shadows and forms of the vision of the good. So, to “emphasize” what the Holy Spirit is helping us do within is emphasizing what we sense, and what Reformers call “subjective experience.” The only true objective truth is “the objective gospel outside of us” which is a Reformed mantra (http://www.objectivegospel.org/). What they have done is reversed normal metaphysics in the same way Gnosticism does. What we observe is no longer empirical, but deemed subjective; only the true vision of the good is objective; ie, the gospel outside of us. Therefore, to emphasize the new birth is to emphasize the shadows and forms of the higher good, and not the higher good. It is “emphasizing a good thing, but not the best thing,” and, “emphasizing the fruit, and not the root.” This Gnostic paradigm enables those of the Reformed tradition to affirm the truthfulness of the new birth, while denying its significance. The new birth is a mere shadow of the only important thing that can power our lives. Like their Gnostic parents, they are masters of deception in this way. It enables them to dismiss the plain sense of Scripture on a large scale while building their antinomian juggernaut. This can be plainly seen in one of the most well-articulated Reformed treatises on the subject of the new birth: it is an article endorsed by the Reformed icon Graeme Goldsworthy, and the article is entitled, The False Gospel of the New Birth. Any questions?

Reformed theology is in no wise truthful on any point other than some facts that are used as coconspirators in their evil plot to take away from God’s objective truth, and also add to it. Their doctrine drives a stake through the very heart of the true gospel. They boldly deny the words of the Lord of Lords, the glorious Holy King: “You must be born again.”

And their desert will be just.

paul

156 Responses

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  1. Barba's avatar Barba said, on November 18, 2012 at 6:28 PM

    Lydia,

    “Which means you have no responsibility and cannot do anything. So when you sin, it was God controlling every molecule of what you do. There is no real sanctification in Calvinism which is why the Justification has to be progressive. God does not allow humans to make decisions or have rational thought. Everything is controlled by God. Jesus obeys for you.”

    Can you give me a quotation from a Calvinist who actually wrote or said that? That is one of the more bizarre statements I have ever heard. If I had some evidence that that was the official Calvinist’s doctrine, I would never ever call myself a Calvinist. Please tell me where I can find that in official Calvinistic writings.

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  2. Barba's avatar Barba said, on November 18, 2012 at 6:36 PM

    I still don’t know what you people mean by justification being progressive. If you mean, as Calvin wrote, that our future sins as well as our past sins must be pardoned by the sacrifice of Christ, I don’t see a problem with it. The thing is, all our sins were future when Jesus died. What Calvin wrote was that the best works of the believer still fail to meet the standard necessary for justification before God. We still need God’s pardoning grace in Christ to forgive our sins. Just as the apostle Paul wrote, “I don’t consider myself to have arrived at perfection yet. . .” SInce perfection would be the standard for justification, we will never be able to produce that.

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  3. Barba's avatar Barba said, on November 18, 2012 at 7:15 PM

    Paul,

    I left some comments here, and when I returned they weren’t here. Do you know what happened?

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  4. Barba's avatar Barba said, on November 18, 2012 at 7:26 PM

    Never mind. They are back now.

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  5. Barba's avatar Barba said, on November 19, 2012 at 12:27 AM

    But the believer’s profound appreciation for it does, doesn’t it?

    Like

  6. trust4himonly's avatar trust4himonly said, on November 19, 2012 at 12:36 AM

    “God preordained, for his own glory and the display of His attributes of mercy and justice, a part of the human race, without any merit of their own, to eternal salvation, and another part, in just punishment of their sin, to eternal damnation.”

    John Calvin

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    • Paul M. Dohse Sr.'s avatar paulspassingthoughts said, on November 19, 2012 at 7:12 AM

      T4H,

      And by the way, Muslims believe the exact same thing.

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  7. trust4himonly's avatar trust4himonly said, on November 19, 2012 at 12:50 AM

    “Who then shall be saved? That is what His sovereign will decides and nothing else. It is purely a matter of the divine sovereign will which, doubtless for good reasons known to God Himself but none of them relative to anything distinguishing one man morally from another, chooses some and rejects the rest. God’s election has nothing to do with foreknowledge except in so far as he foreknows who are to be members of the human race” (Calvin’s Institutes III, xxiii, page 10).

    John Calvin wrote,

    “The only time free will might be reasonably asserted to have existed was in Adam before the fall . Adam could have resisted if he would, since he fell merely by his own will. In this integrity man was endowed with free will, by which, if he had chosen, he might have obtained eternal life. Nevertheless, there is no reality in the free will thus attributed to man, in as much as God had decreed the fall, and therefore must have in some wise already biased Adam’s will. It was not left in neutral equilibrium, nor was his future ever in suspense or uncertainty. It was certain that sooner or later Adam would fall into evil, and with that inevitable fall there disappeared every trace of the free will which man may have had. From that time the will became corrupt along with the whole of nature . Man no longer possessed the capacity to choose between good and evil” (Calvin’s Institutes II, iv, Page 8).

    Hmmm…..I thought that both Adam and Eve ate of the tree of Knowledge of good and evil and now were able to KNOW both good and evil. The thing is before, Adam and Eve only knew good and were innocent, but were given free will to choose. After eating of the tree, they had the knowledge; of course God could not allow one sin in His sight- this is why we have Christ dying on the cross, because there was no possible way for man or woman to do perfectively good in Gods sight. Even if man or woman were capable to do good- which happens all the time in our secular world- look at what a husband and wife will do for their children or for each other; or the good charitable deeds that take place around the world—–it still would not be enough to cover our sin to be accepted in Gods sight. This is where the choice comes in- God gave us a way through His Son, Jesus Christ; But unfortunately, many “good” people and bad will not accept His gift.

    It really is quite simple –really. Too bad we have shisters who love to come and complicate it all.

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  8. trust4himonly's avatar trust4himonly said, on November 19, 2012 at 12:56 AM

    “You are much deceived if you think that the eternal decrees of God can be so mutilated as that he shall have chosen some to salvation but destined none to destruction. There must be a mutual relation between the elect and the reprobate” (The Teaching of Calvin, Chapter Vl, Page 109).

    “Their fate was the direct immediate appointment of God, justified indeed by their life but not in necessary consequence. He might have saved them from their doom as He did in the case of the elect who were no more worthy in themselves to be saved; but that doom was fixed from all eternity and nothing in them could transfer them to the contrary class, any more than anything in the elect could result in their becoming reprobate…” (Calvin’s Institute III, iii, page 4).

    Whew… this is a doosey- can kind of see this kind of philosophy taking hold right now.

    “According to which out of the visible church there is no ordinary possibility of salvation.”

    “The church is no amorphous, vaguely defined body, a haphazard collection of individuals accidentally, temporarily, and loosely associated by reason of common beliefs or sympathies. It is not an institution toward which one might adopt an attitude of indifference, or with which professing Christians might decline to enter into relations. To stand outside of the church is to cut oneself off from God’s storehouse of the bread of life, for the Church is the sphere within which the grace of God exclusively operates. It is the sole reservoir and distributor of the blessings of the Gospel otherwise unattainable. Only by the forgiveness of sins was entrance into it to be gained, for without pardon we can have no union with God. But that benefit is so peculiar to the Church that we cannot enjoy it unless we continue in communion with the Church” (Calvin’s Institutes IV, i, page 20; iv, page 10; Comm. Romans xiii, 8; (Institute IV, i, page 22).

    Hmmm…wow- infant baptism
    “By infant baptism, regeneration is begun though sin remains, but condemnation ceases because guilt is no longer charged. It is like a sealed charter by which God gives confirmation that all our sins are so erased, canceled, and blotted out, that they may never come in His sight nor be rehearsed or imputed” (The Teaching of John Calvin, Chapter IX, part Vl, page 175).

    Now this is my kind of doctrine:
    “The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance” (II Peter 3:9).

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  9. Unknown's avatar lydiasellerofpurple@yahoo.com said, on November 19, 2012 at 9:06 AM

    “Calvinist don’t believe God directly causes everything He has decreed”

    OH MY WORD.

    All I can say is Q.E.D.

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    • Paul M. Dohse Sr.'s avatar paulspassingthoughts said, on November 19, 2012 at 9:19 AM

      In research for TRM, what is astounding is the similarities between Calvinism and Islam.

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  10. Unknown's avatar lydiasellerofpurple@yahoo.com said, on November 19, 2012 at 9:12 AM

    “Could you direct me to the place where Calvin or a Calvinist teaches that God controls our every action in the sense that he causes us to do what he has forbidden? I don’ think I have ever read that in Calvin or in any Calvinist literature. I am quite certain that is not my view. Since you know Calvin’s writings so well, it shouldn’t be difficult to produce at least on quotation.”

    Surely Calvin’s behavior and beliefs were driven by his doctrine? Why else would he think it “biblical” to banish, drown or imprison other believers just because they dissented from the “state church”? Or was he acting against what he wrote and believed? Perhaps folks are not considering the logical outcomes of his doctrines.

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