Paul's Passing Thoughts

Advocate for the Spiritually Abused? Then Wade Burleson Should Denounce Election in Sanctification

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on March 11, 2013

ppt-jpeg4“This is because Western culture has never adequately exposed Reformed theology for what it really is. As long as Protestantism clings to the Reformation myth, it will never completely break free from its bondage to anemic sanctification.”

 “If Burleson wants to be an advocate for the spiritually abused he should denounce his Reformed gospel of spiritual tyranny. While he may help some people heal from abuse, he will go back to his pulpit and produce twice as many abusers.”  

Last night at our evening Bible study we discussed election. Not election for justification (salvation), but election in sanctification (our Christian life). This is the Reformed idea that God sovereignly elects all of our good works in our Christian life in the same way that he elects some to be saved and passes over others. This leaves them to the choice that is inevitable if God doesn’t intervene; man will never choose God on his own. In the same way concerning sanctification, man is still totally depraved, and unless God intervenes will only do works that are filthy rags before God. In salvation, God only changes man’s position, not his nature. Therefore, in sanctification, God imputes His own good works to our life via intervention and leaves us to our own total depravity in the rest. Choice in justification; works in sanctification; God completely sovereign in both.

Though the application of this is somewhat complex, it boils down to the Reformation’s definition of double imputation: Christ’s righteousness was imputed to us positionally by His death, and the perfect obedience He demonstrated in His life is imputed to our sanctification as a way to keep our justification intact until glorification. Hence, to not believe in sanctified sovereignly elected works in our Christian life is paramount to works salvation. “The same gospel that saved us also sanctifies us.” Sanctification must be a continual revisiting of salvation by faith alone in order to maintain our justification. This is the very heart of Calvinism. Yes, we do something in sanctification: we continually revisit our need for the gospel, and as we do that, the works of Christ are imputed to us by faith alone in sanctification. This is the theses of the Reformation’s magnum opus, Luther’s Heidelberg Disputation to the Augustinian Order, and articulated by John Calvin in the Institutes of the Christian Religion. This opposes Biblicism which sees double imputation as our sins imputed to Christ and God’s righteousness imputed to us and sanctification being an entirely different consideration.

We discussed how this authentic doctrine of the Reformation has wreaked havoc on the church. When God is seen as completely sovereign in sanctification, ideological conclusions are then drawn from what actually happens in real life. Rape is God’s will, and the perpetrator is seen as one who is acting out expected behavior where God has not intervened. “But for the grace of God, there go I.” We have all said it. No? All of grace in salvation—all of grace in sanctification. The only difference between you and a rapist is grace; therefore, who are you to judge? Even if you are the victim. Luther and Calvin thought righteous indignation a joke, and Calvin called justice, “mere iniquity.” Luther’s theology of the cross deemed suffering as the most valuable asset of the Reformation’s inner-nihilist theology:

He, however, who has emptied himself (cf. Phil. 2:7) through suffering no longer does works but knows that God works and does all things in him. For this reason, whether God does works or not, it is all the same to him. He neither boasts if he does good works, nor is he disturbed if God does not do good works through him. He knows that it is sufficient if he suffers and is brought low by the cross in order to be annihilated all the more. It is this that Christ says in John 3:7, »You must be born anew.« To be born anew, one must consequently first die and then be raised up with the Son of Man. To die, I say, means to feel death at hand (Heidelberg Disputation: Theses 24).

Note that this constant seeking after suffering and self-deprivation leads to being “raised up” in the Christian life. This constant seeking after death leads to joyful rebirths when Christ’s obedience is imputed to us. This is the basis of John Piper’s Christian Hedonism which also implements Theses 28 of the Disputation. As you can see, it’s what they call the new birth. The new birth is something that continually reoccurs in salvation when Christ’s obedience is imputed to us.

The indifference towards suffering that this theology breeds cannot be overstated. It is such that Calvin’s beseechment of the Geneva counsel to have a detractor beheaded rather than burned with green wood is a supposed act of compassion that is Reformed folklore. And be absolutely positive of this: the roots of authentic Calvinism are %99.99 responsible for the spiritual tyranny in the contemporary church—especially among New Calvinists.

This is why I have a problem with Pastor Wade Burleson being postured as a spiritual abuse advocate. I realize that he is a well-known pastor and therefore a valuable advocate for a cause, but promoting him as a defender of the spiritually abused separates logic from consequences.  It encourages a hypothetical idea that because all Nazis didn’t execute Jews, Nazism doesn’t necessarily lead to the persecution of Jews. Right, not in all cases, but for every person Burleson helps his doctrine will produce twice the indifference and abuse in other people. Many members of the present-day Nazi party are seemingly quality people who could be utilized in good causes, but the possibility is remote because Western culture has been properly educated in regard to Nazi ideology. Such is not the case with Reformed theology. While a Nazi might make a good carpenter you would likely not hire one as an advocate for the Anti-Defamation League. There are Nazis who would do a fine job in that role but the ideology would do more harm than good in the long run.

We also discussed how authentic Calvinism dies a social death from time to time because of the tyranny that it produces and then experiences resurgence paved by the weak sanctification left in its wake. This is because Western culture has never adequately exposed Reformed theology for what it really is. As long as Protestantism clings to the Reformation myth, it will never completely break free from its bondage to anemic sanctification.

Reformation History

Burleson strongly endorses one of the core four individuals who helped found the present-day New Calvinist movement, Jon Zens:

One of my favorite theologians is Jon Zens. Jon edits the quarterly periodical called Searching Together, formerly known as the Baptist Reformation Review. Jon is thoroughly biblical, imminently concerned with the Scriptures …. The best $10.00 you will ever spend is the yearly subscription to Searching Together (http://www.wadeburleson.org/2010/09/searching-together-edited-by-jon-zens.html).

Zens, who has also been known as an advocate for the spiritually abused, was a key contributor to the Reformed think tank that launched present-day New Calvinism (The Australian Forum) of which some Burleson promoters refer to as the “Calvinistas.” It’s not meant as a compliment. But yet, Burleson’s theology is one and the same with them:

Those who have read Grace and Truth to You for any amount of time know that this author is persuaded the Bible teaches that the eternal rewards of Christians are those rewards–and only those rewards–which are earned by Christ. It is Christ’s obedience to the will and law of the Father that obtains for God’s adopted children our inheritance. It is Christ’s perfect obedience which brings to sinners the Father’s enduring favor and guarantees for us our position as co-heirs with Christ (http://www.wadeburleson.org/2011/11/therefore-knowing-terror-of-lord-we.html).

Those who have faith in Christ will never appear at any future judgment of God, or be rewarded for their good behavior. Our sins were judged at the cross, and the behavior for which we are rewarded is Christ’s behavior (Ibid).

Obviously, other than the previous points made, Burleson’s statement proclaiming Zens as “thoroughly biblical” and his outright rejection of 1COR 3:10-15 and 2COR 5:9-10 are troubling to say the least. Burleson also holds strongly to the exact same method of interpretation that makes elected works in sanctification possible among the “Calvinistas.” That would be the Bible as gospel meta narrative approach. It uses the Bible as a tool for gospel contemplationism which results in the works of Christ being imputed to our sanctification when we “make our story His story.” Luther got the concept from Pope Gregory the Great who believed that meditating on Christ’s works in the Scriptures endears us to Him romantically and thus inspires joyful obedience. It’s all the same rotten mysticism propagated today by John Piper and Francis Chan. It’s a mystical (actually Gnostic) approach to the Bible that makes elected works in sanctification possible.

As a cute way of propagating this nonsense, Burleson has named his para-church ministry “Istoria Ministries Blog.” His blog subheading noted that istoria is a Greek word that combines the idea of history and story:

Istoria is a Greek word that can be translated as both story and history. Istoria Ministries, led by Wade and Rachelle Burleson, helps people experience the life transforming power of Jesus Christ so that their story may become part of His story.

This ministry called him out on the fact that the word istoria does not appear anywhere in the Scriptures which led him to change the subheading a couple of days later. He then changed the subheading to a citation (GAL 1:18) that is the only place in the Bible where the word appears. Only thing is, even then, it’s not “istoria,” it’s “historeo”:

g2477. ιστορεω historeo; from a derivative of 1492; to be knowing (learned), i. e. (by implication) to visit for information (interview):— see.

This citation has nothing to do with his original point of naming his ministry as such. It’s simply the only reference he could find that proves that the word is in the Bible. Kinda, as I said, even then the word is not “istoria.” Istoria is a more contemporary Greek word that in fact can be used as “history” or “story.” But the earliest use of the word seems to be circa 1300, and is most prevalent in referring to the “story paintings” of medieval times. It’s just a lame, almost adolescent attempt to argue for this approach to the Bible.

If Burleson wants to be an advocate for the spiritually abused he should denounce his Reformed gospel of spiritual tyranny. While he may help some people heal from abuse, he will go back to his pulpit and produce twice as many abusers.

paul

102 Responses

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  1. trust4himonly's avatar trust4himonly said, on March 14, 2013 at 10:22 PM

    Then I commend you GRW and I am glad you do think this way, but this is not the view of many of the Big Whig Calvinists out there(such as John Piper, CJ mahaney, Mark Driscoll, Voddie Bauchman, Mark Dever, Matt Chandler, David Platt, Francis Chan, RC Sproul, RC Sproul JR., John MacArthur, Lignon Duncan, Donald Whitney, Doug Wilson, etc…..should I go on?) and were not the views of Luther, Calvin, or the Puritans. Just by reading Calvins statements/quotes and seeing how he treated fellow Christians would make anyone reject his doctrines. I mean come on you have such a problem with us little folk here- go take it up with these Big Whigs mentioned above who are obviously trashing the very name of Calvinism with their authoritarian lifestyles, works oriented doctrine, and abusing the flock mentality. We see it and we get it GWR. We are not trying to be mean or spiteful here; we are trying to uphold truth, so if I see error I will reject it, because there is no need for me to stand by a doctrine that has even the smallest amount of error. I mean the pope was elected today and seemed like a genuinely nice and humble man, but I could not accept him and his doctrine just because he seemed godly or good or even mentioned Jesus Christs name.

    So what I am wondering is why? you are coming on here to defend Calvinism if Calvinism has truth and error. Are we not to reject all error? Just because a thief robs to bring money to the poor- does this make us still friends with the thief? Just as with Arminianism, I cannot accept it as truth because it still brings in works as a prerequisite to salvation, as does Calvinism (perseverance of the saints). I also still think it interesting that you would spend the time fighting for a doctrine that was basically started by a Jesuit trained man who bought into Augustines teachings and never did reject this Catholic man?

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  2. Lydia's avatar Lydia said, on March 15, 2013 at 8:59 AM

    “All I am asking is that the things I know to be the Calvinist’s position not be misrepresented”

    There is no way around it. Because once you start questioning and replying back what someone said they say that is not what they said or what they believe. Calvinism is great on paper. IT does not do so well under questioning. It is great for leaders who don’t do interactive communication. Social media, where it is being analyzed under a microscope, has not been so good for it.

    I have seen it too many times. I have heard famous Reformed guys make declarative statements, these things are brought up on blogs, etc, and their followers will tell you that is not what they meant. They have to parse for us what their leaders mean because those making their living communicating to the masses don’t really mean what they say.

    Even Al Mohler said that some do not have the mental processes to be able to understand the doctrine.

    It is a shell game. Seen it too many times to even bother anymore. The only thing they have taught me is to believe everything they say is suspect.

    The Good News is not that complicated. Even illiterate peasants understood it.

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  3. gracewriterrandy's avatar gracewriterrandy said, on March 15, 2013 at 9:47 AM

    If you think social media is where it needs to be discussed, accept my invitation to come to my blog and discuss it. Elsewhere, my comments get cut off before the end of the discussion. One thing I do require is citations of what people have said or written, not a statement of what someone thinks they meant. I also require that an opponent’s position be stated to his satisfaction before commenting on it. This eliminates many of the straw man arguments.

    One thing I have requested from Paul time after time are quotations from people about whom he is writing. Some people within various theological camps make statements that most who hold that position would disavow. It is not right or fair to paint everyone who holds that position with the same broad brush because someone, perhaps even an outspoken leader, holds to a particular position.

    Assuming you consider yourselves Evangelical Christians, do you want to be labeled as “abortion Dr. murders” because some within the broad tent called “Evangelical Christianity” have taken it upon themselves to murder Abortion doctors? I suspect not.

    I can tell you unequovically, that no Calvinist thinks believers have to be saved again everyday. No Calvinist believes Christ active obedience is imputed to us for our sanctification so that we don’t have to obey. No Calvinist believes the work of the indwelling Spirit is unnecessary for the spiritual life of the believer. No Calvinist believes justification is progressive in the sense that we ever become any more justified than we are the first moment we believe. I could go on. Let’s have a real discussion, not one based on faulty suppositions about what Calvinists believe. I can think of many things I don’t like and believe are unbiblical about the real Reformed belief system. If you want to reject the position based on those beliefs, I don’t blame you, but please understand what you are rejecting before you reject it.

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  4. gracewriterrandy's avatar gracewriterrandy said, on March 15, 2013 at 9:53 AM

    BTW, I believe Mohler was right, not in the sense that some are mentally deficient but in the sense that a person with certain fixed presuppositions cannot arrive at the same conclusions as a person with another and different set of presuppositions. We spend too much time talking about conclusions and not enough time talking about assumptions.

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  5. gracewriterrandy's avatar gracewriterrandy said, on March 15, 2013 at 10:12 AM

    “I have seen it too many times. I have heard famous Reformed guys make declarative statements, these things are brought up on blogs, etc, and their followers will tell you that is not what they meant. They have to parse for us what their leaders mean because those making their living communicating to the masses don’t really mean what they say.”

    There are times their meaning should be obvious to anyone who considers the context. One example is the quote I have seen here numerous times about the objective gospel outside of us. The context of that statement makes it clear that it is speaking about justification. Since justification is a forensic matter, it has nothing to do with the life of God within us. That does not mean God does nothing IN us. It simply means he does nothing in us IN JUSTIFICATION. Justification is not an internal work. It is a declaration about us. Just as a judge does not make us either innocent or guilty, but merely declares us to be one or the other, so the work of justification, in itself, is not a work God performs within us.

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  6. gracewriterrandy's avatar gracewriterrandy said, on March 15, 2013 at 10:23 AM

    T4h,

    I am not defending Calvinism, I just don’t want its views to be misrepresented. Let’s talk about real issues. Reject that part of the [actual] doctrine that is in error and hold on to what is biblically sound. The Apostle wrote, “Put all things to the test, HOLD FAST that which is good.” If the Pope speaks truth, however unlikely that may be, believe it. I believe Augustine was wrong about many issues as were Calvin and Pelagius. That does not mean we must reject the truth they spoke.

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  7. trust4himonly's avatar trust4himonly said, on March 15, 2013 at 10:34 AM

    GWR, I appreciate your invitation to come to your blog, but really I do not have the time to
    go over the tenets of Calvinism and what works and what does not. Frankly, it bores me and I am sure
    you will bring out Scripture to justify your position with Calvinism and it will be an endless discussion back and forth. Also, since I am not as astute as you – you will beat with words, for I am simple in my view of the Gospel.
    Plus, I feel that it is better use of my time to teach my kids and tell the Good News to those who do not know Christ.
    Titus 3:8 This is a trustworthy saying. And I want you to stress these things, so that those who have trusted in God may be careful to devote themselves to doing what is good. These things are excellent and profitable for everyone.

    You ever heard the quote “I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it” – now I am not calling you a pig, but the whole institution of Calvinism is this way. It loves debate and I do not want to get dirty.

    Now studying Scripture on the other hand is profitable and there is no need for anymore then the Holy Spirit illuminating me in the truth. That I can trust- and you should commend me on that and wish me well.

    Titus 3:9 “But avoid foolish controversies and genealogies and arguments and quarrels about the law, because these are unprofitable and useless.”
    I think this is why we will not keep up with you GWR, because you will always have a word for whatever we will
    say. It is pointless and you should move on.

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  8. lydiasellerofpurple's avatar lydiasellerofpurple said, on March 15, 2013 at 10:35 AM

    “BTW, I believe Mohler was right, not in the sense that some are mentally deficient but in the sense that a person with certain fixed presuppositions cannot arrive at the same conclusions as a person with another and different set of presuppositions.”

    See, you parsed his words for him! You had to ‘translate’ Mohler for us. There it is again! And he makes a living communicating!

    (Paul, this is part of the ‘you are too dumb to understand what they are really saying” that so many are so sick of)

    Let us just hope all those folks who don’t have the mental processes to understand it want to continue to pay his salary to tell them that. :o)

    This is why any debate or even communication is futile, Randy. Your arrogance makes it impossible.

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  9. trust4himonly's avatar trust4himonly said, on March 15, 2013 at 10:39 AM

    “No Calvinist believes justification is progressive in the sense that we ever become any more justified than we are the first moment we believe”

    Whoa…..there we go Paul! Thats a little scary!

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  10. trust4himonly's avatar trust4himonly said, on March 15, 2013 at 10:46 AM

    Because GWR if you read on with Calvins teachings yes it does preach that there is progressive justification. I see the discussion also about this today. The Puritans believed this.

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