Paul's Passing Thoughts

Is T.U.L.I.P True?

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on April 16, 2012

“Here is the dirty little secret concerning this first point: many who partake in the TULIP debate do not realize that Calvin wasn’t only referring to the total depravity of unregenerate man, but also the total depravity of the saints.”

Funny how the acrostic TULIP has become a measuring rod of identification for most Christians today; are you a 1,2,3,4, or 5 point Calvinist? It’s almost like calling bandages “Band-Aids” which is a brand, not the actual product. But the brand is so pervasive that it becomes the definition of the product. And these days, if you are a really pure Christian, you are a 5-point Calvinist—anything less is like being partially pregnant.

So, what position is this post going to take? What Bible verses am I going to cite to make a case for a two, four, or five-point Calvinism? Well, I am going to make a case for a zero-point Calvinism. So, let me begin by answering the title’s question; is TULIP true? No. “But Paul, you don’t really mean to say that all of it is untrue, you mean to say some of it is untrue; like, one or two of the points, right? You’re just kidding us. At the end of this post, we are going to find out that you are at worst a four-pointer. Right?” No. “Zero” means z-e-r-o.

Let’s first begin by looking at where this TULIP acrostic came from. The five points of Calvinism really came from the five points of the followers of James Arminius. In 1610, one year after his death, his followers issued a formal protest to the Church of Holland regarding five points of faith that were major tenets guiding the official religion of Holland. “Church of Holland” is not like “First Baptist Church of Mayberry RFD.” The church and state were one and the same, with the church having more authority than the state. This excerpt from Wikipedia explains:

The third wave of the Reformation, Calvinism, arrived in the Netherlands in the 1560s, converting both parts of the elite and the common population, mostly in Flanders. The Spanish government, under Philip II started harsh persecution campaigns, supported by the Spanish inquisition. In reaction to this persecution, Calvinists rebelled. First there was the Beeldenstorm in 1566, which involved the destruction of religious depictions in Churches. Also in 1566 William the Silent, a convert to Calvinism, started the Eighty Years’ War to liberate the Calvinist Dutch from the Catholic Spaniards. The countries of Holland and Zeeland were conquered by Calvinists in 1572. A considerable number of people were Calvinist in Holland and Zeeland at that time already, while the other states remained almost entirely Catholic. The estates of Holland, led by Paulus Buys decided to support William the Silent, the Prince of Orange. All churches in the Calvinist territories became Calvinist and most of the population in these territories converted to or were forced to convert to Calvinism (Online source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_religion_in_the_Netherlands).

Therefore, enter the Calvin Institutes, which was on par with Scriptural authority regarding the faith and order of Holland. In 1618, a national Synod was called to meet in Dort to consider the protest, supposedly, in the light of “Scripture.” But to the State of Holland, Scripture  = ed Calvinism. This was a big, big, deal. The synod had 84 members, 18 secular commissioners, and 27 delegates from four different countries. It lasted seven months with sessions being held almost daily. Not only did the Synod of Dort rule against the protest, but issued five tenets that were contra to the five outlined in the Arminian protest. And not surprisingly, became known as the five points of Calvinism.

So, what was the Calvinistic intent behind these five points? These points are reflective of Calvin’s interpretation of Scripture, but what are those reflections? They bear his name, no? Holland during the Synod of Dort was a Calvinistic theocracy, no? Let’s first look at “T,” standing for Total Depravity. Here is the dirty little secret concerning this first point: many who partake in the TULIP debate do not realize that Calvin wasn’t only referring to the total depravity of unregenerate man, but also the total depravity of the saints. If the Calvin Institutes weigh in here, this is irrefutable. In 3.14.9, Calvin writes:

Although we see that the stains by which the works of the righteous are blemished, are by no means unapparent, still, granting that they are the minutest possible, will they give no offence to the eye of God, before which even the stars are not clean? We thus see, that even saints cannot perform one work which, if judged on its own merits, is not deserving of condemnation.

We must strongly insist on these two things: that no believer ever performed one work which tested by the strict judgment of  God, could escape condemnation; and, moreover, that were granted to be possible (though it is not), yet the act being vitiated and polluted by the sins of which it is certain that the author of it is guilty, it is deprived of its merit. This is the cardinal point of the present discussion (3.14.11).

The next dirty little secret is that “T” is the premise for the remaining four points. One must remember that the five points of Calvinism apply to both justification and sanctification. The vast majority of those who engage the debate in our day miss that. Calvin believed that sanctification was justification in action; or in other words, justification was not a finished work, but perpetual:

Therefore, we must have this blessedness [the perpetual forgiveness of sins for justification; he quotes Ps 32:1 to make that point] not once only, but must hold it fast during our whole lives. Moreover, the message of free reconciliation with God is not promulgated for one or two days, but is declared to be perpetual in the church (2Cor 5:18,19). Hence believers have not even the end of life any other righteousness than that which is there described (Calvin Institutes 3.14.11).

This is why Calvin believed that the gospel should not only be preached to the unregenerate, but continually preached to the  saved as well:

What Paul says of himself is applicable to all pastors; “For though I preach the gospel, I have nothing to glory of; for necessity is laid upon me; yea, woe is unto me if I preach not the Gospel” (1Cor 9:16). In short, what the apostles did to the whole world, every pastor should do to the flock over which he is appointed (Calvin Institutes 4.3.6).

This brings us to the “U” in TULIP, “Unconditional  election.” And, unconditional/unmerited in sanctification as well. Like the “T,” the “U” must be rejected because of its premise which is: people are not regenerated prior to their confession of faith. Obviously, if man cannot do anything commendable to God after “conversion,” he certainly cannot do anything AT “conversion” that wouldn’t fall short of God’s condemnation. Hence, the “U” is actually a rejection of the new birth and regeneration. Man is completely out of the loop in both justification and sanctification (if nothing else, by necessity because anything we do in sanctification would affect justification—the two being the same). Therefore, Calvin’s election, whether unmerited or not, doesn’t include regeneration because that would  lead a person to make a choice that would fall under God’s condemnation. Remember, the premise of the five points is total depravity in salvation and sanctification both; ie, nothing changes in man that imparts an ability to participate in either.

I am not that far in the Institutes as yet, but I assume that Calvin borrowed Augustine’s idea (that he got from Plato) that the new birth is not really a personal transformation, but a transport from the flesh realm into the spirit realm where manifestations of Christ’s active obedience are manifested, and not anything we do. In regard to a rough estimate, Calvin quotes Augustine on every 2.5 pages of the Institutes which are over a 1000 pages. Not only have New/Old Calvinists shared with me directly that Christians do not change, every now and then they actually write it in no uncertain terms:

1) Our flesh cannot get better.  In Romans 7:18 Paul wrote, “For I know that NOTHING good dwells in me, that is, in my flesh…”  Your flesh cannot be improved.  Flesh is flesh, and spirit is spirit.

2) Our new nature, on the other hand cannot get better, because it has already been made new and perfect through regeneration.  We have been given a “new heart” (new nature, or new spirit), and not a defective one, which would be absurd.  This new spirit has been made “one spirit with Him” (1 Corinthians 6:17), such that when we “walk according to the Spirit” (i.e., the Holy Spirit), we also walk according to our own new spirit.

3) Those who deal with Sanctification by zeroing in on so-called “Progressive” Sanctification as the main point of Sanctification, are at best in Kindergarten (Online source: http://grace-for-life.blogspot.com/search?q=sanctification).

The author of the cited post then goes on to say that we “appropriate” what has already been done for us, but on the other hand, if we don’t change, what he is really talking about is a manifestation of Christ’s obedience, and not ours. This concept of Christ obeying for us can be seen in some of the aforementioned citations from Calvin.

That brings us to the “L,” limited atonement. The danger here is to debate this question and thereby give some credibility to the whole system which is based on total depravity of man in both justification and sanctification. But even a cursory approach to this tenet reveals some unfortunate fallout. If Christ only died for certain people, the offer of salvation to all men is not a legitimate offer. Not only that, there is a problem with calling on men to make a choice that could only be condemned by God. Like it or not, that is per Calvin himself. Calvin’s gospel preached to the masses would seem to be an invitation to offend God. But the only reason that it is offensive is that a salvation is being “neglected” (Hebrews 2:3). How do you “neglect” something that’s not a legitimate offer?  In addition, Calvin seems to say that evangelism is the primary duty of the pastor/evangelist, and any kind of emphasis on the totally depraved evangelizing the totally depraved is absent from Calvin’s writings—which one would expect. Calvin states the following in chapter three of the Institutes:

We now understand what offices in the government of the church were temporary, and what offices were instituted to be of perpetual duration. But if we class evangelists with the apostles, we shall have two like offices in a manner corresponding to each other. For the same resemblance which our teachers have to the ancient prophets pastors have to the apostles. The prophetical office was more excellent in respect of the special gift of revelation which accompanied it, but the office of teachers was almost of the same nature, and had altogether the same end (section 4.3.5).

From these and similar passages which everywhere occur, we may infer that the two principle parts of the office of pastors are to preach the Gospel [remember, to both saints and sinners] and to administer the sacraments. But the method of teaching consists not merely in public addresses, it extends also to private admonitions (4.3.6).

Calvinists can harp till the cows come home that their doctrine is evangelistic friendly, but it just isn’t true. And even if it was, such a work would not be pleasing to God anyway because it is performed by the totally depraved who can do no meritorious work before God, but only that which brings condemnation. Again, like it or not, that is per the man Calvin himself.

The “L” is false because like the “U,” it circumvents regeneration, and valid participation of the saints in evangelism. And this is because of the “T.” Integration of elements containing accurate facts in TULIP does not give it the vitality that qualifies as God’s truth.  God’s truth always accomplishes sanctification, and preaching the finished work of justification to the saints does not sanctify. We are not sanctified by justification. One might well remember that the Hebrew writer warned against doctrines that require a continual application of the onetime sacrifice of Christ (Hebrews 10:12-14).

So, again, “T” qualifies “U,” “L,” “I,” and “P.” U and L pertain to initial salvation, but also have negative consequences in regard to sanctification (remember, “T” applies to both sanctification and justification), and therefore must be rejected. “T,” makes a biblical approach to the new birth and regeneration impossible, and therefore is a false gospel. Christ said, “YOU MUST be born again.”I and P primarily deal with sanctification, and we will now look at those.

Again, “I” (irresistible grace) is thought to be pertaining only to salvation in the whole TULIP debate. Not. If grace is needed in sanctification as much as it is in salvation, and according to Calvin it most certainly is, then the totally depraved cannot resist whatever the Lord wills to do in his/her life. The totally depraved saints have no more free will in their sanctification than they did in their salvation. In fact, exercising their own will in sanctification is an attempt to finish justification by their own works. Calvin saw sanctification as having the same standard as justification because sanctification supposedly finishes justification. Therefore, the law has to be kept perfectly by somebody in order to maintain justification until judgment day.  In Calvin’s theology, sanctification must be held to a justification standard. That is why Calvin taught the futility of Christians keeping the law. Law-keeping in sanctification is the same as law-keeping for justification. Hence, Calvin stated the following:

Even if it were possible for us [“us” meaning believers] to perform works absolutely pure, yet one sin is sufficient to efface and extinguish all remembrance of former righteousness, as the prophet says (Ezek 18:24). With this James agrees, “Whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, is guilty of all” (Jas 2:10) [this was James’ standard for keeping the law for justification, not sanctification]. And since this mortal life is never entirely free from the taint of sin, whatever righteousness we could acquire would ever and anon be corrupted, overwhelmed, and destroyed, by subsequent sins, so that it could not stand the scrutiny of God, or be imputed to us [Christians] for righteousness [notice that Calvin saw imputation as progressive]. In short, whenever we treat of the righteousness of works, we must look not to the legal work but the command. Therefore, when righteousness is sought by the law [we have already obtained righteousness, we now seek to please the Lord], it is in vain to produce one or two single works; we must show an uninterrupted obedience [by offering God the works of Christ by faith only, not our own]. God does not (as many foolishly imagine) impute that forgiveness of sins, once and for all, as righteousness [righteousness in not imputed once]; so having obtains the pardon of our past life we may afterward seek righteousness in the law [this is a denial of imputation for the future in order to set us free from being judged by the law]. This were only to mock and delude us by the entertainment of false hopes. For since perfection is altogether unattainable by us, so long as we are clothed with flesh, and the law denounces death and judgment against all who have not yielded a perfect righteousness, there will always be ground to accuse and convict us unless the mercy of  God interpose, and ever anon absolve us by the constant remission of sins [God’s declaration is not valid unless we live perfect lives]. Wherefore the statement which we set out is always true, if we are estimated by our own worthiness, in everything that we think or devise, with all our studies and endeavors we deserve death and destruction (Calvin Institutes 3.14.10).

So, even in sanctification, the saint is completely out of the loop, and all of his good works are elected by God and displayed as Christ’s manifested active obedience.  “I” is not just for salvation, it is for sanctification as well:

There can be no doubt that Paul, when he treats of the Justification of man, confines himself to the one point—how man may ascertain that God is propitious to him? Here he does not remind us of a quality infused into us; on the contrary, making no mention of works, he tells us that righteousness must be sought without us; otherwise that certainty of faith, which he everywhere so strongly urges, could never stand; still less could there be ground for the contrast between the righteousness of faith and works which he draws in the tenth chapter to the Romans….

Let the children of God consider that Regeneration is necessary to them, but that, nevertheless, their full righteousness consists in Christ—let them understand that they have been ordained and created unto holiness of life and the study of good works, but that, nevertheless, they must recline on the merits of Christ with their whole soul—let them enjoy the righteousness of life which has been bestowed upon them, still, however, distrusting it so as not to bring before the tribunal of God any other trust than trust in the obedience of Christ (From Kenneth A. Strand, ed., Reform Essentials of Luther and Calvin: A Source Collection (Ann Arbor: Braun-Brumfield, 1971), pp.219-222).

Therefore, according to Calvin, all of our righteousness in sanctification must be a righteousness that is completely outside of us. In the same way that God elects some for salvation and passes over others in salvation, He also predetermines our good works in sanctification, and in both cases, this grace cannot be spurned by us.

Finally, we come to “P,” the perseverance of the saints. Though many evangelicals might assent to this fact, one must reject it and reword it as “once saved, always saved” because now the discussion becomes a statement that one is a “one-point Calvinist.” Because this fact comes from a body of information that does not sanctify, it must be rejected as a whole in regard to God’s truth. Rummaging through garbage dumps to collect isolated facts that can be compiled into a body of sanctifying truth is not the duty of a Christian according to wisdom.

And it would seem we are in a day like that during the Synod of Dort when a man was the standard of truth and not the Scriptures. After all, Charles Spurgeon, a Reformed hero, is often quoted in our day as having said:

It is a nickname to call it Calvinism; Calvinism is the gospel, and nothing else.

paul

Tagged with: ,

Kevin DeYoung Sings to the Flock at the 2012 T4G Conference

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on April 14, 2012

“DeYoung finished the message by making many good statements about obedience in the Christian faith, but he was simply talking out of both sides of his mouth.”

Here we go. The lonely lovers of the truth are already singing the praises of Kevin DeYoung for “getting it right” at the T4G. Gag. Actually, I have more respect for Tullian Tchividjian because he causes me to work less. Messages like this one from I was born sitting on a fence post DeYoung have to be meticulously unraveled and explained. But here is the easy part via my I was born with good ole’ fashioned horse sense grandmother: “Birds of the feather flock together.” At the beginning of the message, DeYoung identified himself as a New Calvinist. It is what it is. His theses that New Calvinists just need a little tweaking in regard to the relationship of obedience to sanctification, doesn’t fly with me. He runs with a bunch that believes in perpetual justification, and mere tweaking doesn’t fix heresy.

DeYoung began his message with about fifteen minutes of humor which I found both annoying and out of place when one considers the gravity of this subject in our day. Finally, when he got into some substance, he reiterated the fact that New Calvinism is a “resurgence” (because everyone else is out to lunch spiritually). He also said that the “centrality of the gospel” is the primary concern of the movement. That is, central in sanctification. This is just the same old song and dance; preaching reconciliation to the already reconciled is just as important as the reconciled preaching reconciliation to the unreconciled. From there, and throughout the message, DeYoung flips back and forth between toeing the New Calvinist line and the importance of putting forth effort in sanctification. At some points, he is actually theologically correct in the sermon, stating that we must “work out what God has worked in,” but then flips back to the contradictory New Calvinist position throughout the message. It’s pathetic.

In his introduction to the main points of the message after almost 30 minutes of foolishness, he starts out strong by saying that sanctification requires both hard work by us and the grace of God. Amen, but then he listed the four points of the message: growth in godliness requires Spirit powered, gospel-driven, faith fueled effort. Even though he describes “effort” as one of the four points, it isn’t, the message is really a three point message about the three different things that drive effort in sanctification. This is a grammatical twisting. Effort does not stand alone as one of the points because the other three points are modifiers. And, effort in sanctification is not, “gospel-driven”; that’s blatantly false.

New Calvinists trade the word “justification” for “gospel” so that this error is not completely obvious; ie, “justification-driven” or perpetual justification. Our effort in sanctification is not driven by justification because justification is a finished work and a legal declaration. We are not sanctified by justification, nor is justification the power source for our sanctification—regeneration is. Though there is agreement with orthodoxy on the other two, it must be assumed that all three are needed to power sanctification, so his premise is dead on arrival. Moreover, the fact that DeYoung states that justification (gospel) is needed in sanctification speaks to his like belief with all New Calvinists that justification and sanctification are linked together, and that sanctification must derive an efficacious element of its power from the gospel of justification. Game over. He can now dress this up any way he wants to, but that dog won’t hunt.

On his first point, “Spirit powered (effort),” even though no one would disagree that sanctification is Spirit powered, DeYoung uses this point to once again toe the New Calvinist/Gospel Sanctification line. He states that the Spirit’s role is to empower, show us “sinners” our sin, while mentioning that we as Christians run from our sin and want darkness (oh really?). He states this as a primary purpose of the Spirit’s work in sanctification: to illumine “sin/truth.” Deyoung primarily speaks of illuminating sin, but slips in “truth” along with it (“sin/truth”) to insinuate that sin is not the only thing he is talking about. But then he follows with the third role of the Spirit in sanctification which is to glorify Christ. Again, this is the same old New Calvinist line that restricts the use of Scripture for showing us two things only: our sin and Christ’s glory. He prefaces “sin” with “truth” to insinuate a general, or multiplicity of truth, but never specifies anything other than “sin.” This is deliberate deception. It’s the same old  making the cross bigger as we see the depths of our sinfulness more and more, and the glory of Christ more and more. He then cites the staple New Calvinist Bible verse for this, 2Cor. 3:18 to make his point and refers to the “beholding as a way of becoming” truism.

In the second point (gospel-driven effort), he notes that “everyone agrees” that holiness flows from the gospel and good works flow from “good news.” Again, this, for all practical purposes is an admission that he believes in the fusion of justification and sanctification. And if justification is monergistic, well, you do the math. From here, DeYoung is simply trying to convince people that the horse is really a camel. He continued in the message to invoke the same old worn out all obedience flows from gratitude formula. You first contemplate the gospel and your sin which creates gratitude, then obedience flows from that. In real life, gratitude does not always walk with obedience, but often comes after. DeYoung at this point hints at orthodoxy by saying that there are “many other” motivations for obedience other than the cross, but of course, doesn’t mention them specifically or talk about them.

DeYoung finished the message by making many good statements about obedience in the Christian faith, but he was simply talking out of both sides of his mouth. He also prefaced those concluding statements with the same old “we can’t obey in our own strength” without any mention that it is not our strength only. If our strength is not involved in any way, who is doing the work? When we exercise, is it our own strength? And aren’t we supposed to do all things to the glory of God? So, if we are exercising to the glory of God, is the Holy Spirit lifting the weights for us? DeYoung criticized confusing cliché’s in this message while using the mega confusing New Calvinist cliché about “obeying God in our own strength.”

DeYoung lectured the audience about how Christians are confused by the way many are trying to make New Calvinism seem plausible in real Christian life. He acted as if his message was a clarifying voice among the background noise. What a joke. Everything about the message, especially the delivery, was a train wreck.

DeYoung is one of them. Birds of the feather flock together. He is trying to sell himself as a voice of reason among penguins. But he did make some troublesome, isolated statements about obedience. Though made out of one side of his mouth, I wonder, will he be invited back next year? I learned a lesson when I was in college: I tried to date three girls at the same time and ended up losing all of them. It will be interesting to see what the future holds for DeYoung. The penguin singing in the midst of the flock: “I just got to be me.”

paul

David Powlison’s Gnostic Counseling Paradigm

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on April 13, 2012

David Powlison is the major figure representing the counseling wing of Westminster Theological Seminary: the Christian Counseling and Educational Foundation (CCEF). Powlison was mentored by Dr. John Miller who was a professor at Westminster. Miller was the father of Sonship Theology which was his own twist on the rediscovery of the doctrine of  perpetual justification (Gospel Sanctification) via the Australian Forum think tank formed in 1970.

Powlison took the concept of progressive justification and used it to develop his Dynamics of Biblical Change project which is the foundation of counseling education at Westminster. Two former students of his, Paul David Tripp, and Timothy Lane, wrote a book entitled “How People Change”(HPC) which is a treatise on the “practical application” of Gospel Sanctification (the doctrine of the present-day New Calvinist movement). The title of the book is a lie; as we shall see, New Calvinists do not really believe that people change.

This is most evident when one reads pages 64 and 65 of HPC. Tripp and Lane describe Christians as “powerless,” “enslaved,” and “dead.” They further elaborate by writing, “When you are dead, you can’t do anything” (p. 64, HPC). How do dead Christians change? Obviously, they don’t. Hence, this is why the vast majority of present-day biblical counseling controlled by the CCEF machine is a farce: the counseling is not about change.

So what’s going on? Basically, it starts with Plato and what was later known as Gnosticism. Some refer to Gnosticism as “Platonism for Dummies,” but the basics are easier to explain through fundamental Platonism. Plato believed man was unable to know reality. The following excerpt is a good explanation of Platonism 101:

Plato, the most creative and influential of Socrates’ disciples, wrote dialogues, in which he frequently used the figure of Socrates to espouse his own (Plato’s) full-fledged philosophy. In “The Republic,” Plato sums up his views in an image of ignorant humanity, trapped in the depths and not even aware of its own limited perspective. The rare individual escapes the limitations of that cave and, through a long, tortuous intellectual journey, discovers a higher realm, a true reality, with a final, almost mystical awareness of Goodness as the origin of everything that exists. Such a person is then the best equipped to govern in society, having a knowledge of what is ultimately most worthwhile in life and not just a knowledge of techniques; but that person will frequently be misunderstood by those ordinary folks back in the cave who haven’t shared in the intellectual insight….the Allegory also attacks people who rely upon or are slaves to their senses (Analysis of The Allegory of the Cave by Plato Online source:123helpme.com/view.asp?id=135077).

Because the common man is enslaved to his own senses and can only comprehend what he can sense from the material world which is merely shadows of reality, Plato devised what we now call a cybernetic loop. This is a process that evaluates the outcomes of experience/circumstances/data for the purposes of making adjustments or reaching goals. Since the common man is not enlightened, the next best thing is to devise a system that gives him guidance from the criteria that he can experience with his senses. The enlightened ones, who should lead and govern the common man, develop these cybernetic loops to help guide mankind in their world of dark shadows. Plato believed in a world ruled by philosopher kings. Below are some illustrations of cybernetic loops:

These loops can be complicated and may involve loops that evaluate other loops. Below is another illustration in regard to Plato’s philosophy:

Plato had a vast influence on Augustine who is primarily responsible for the total depravity of the saints tenet found in Reformed theology. This prism had a profound influence in the forming of the gospel of perpetual atonement, or the idea that the effects of Christ’s death on the cross wasn’t a finished work, but was progressive for the purpose of maintaining a righteous standing for the saints. See illustration below:

This is opposed to the gospel that rejects the total depravity of the saints and propagates an enablement through the new birth:

In the second model, the believer has the responsibility to learn and apply the word of God to their lives. But the first model, because it relies mostly on Platonist philosophy, also borrows the cybernetic loop for its “practical application.” Therefore, New Calvinists merge progressive justification into various cybernetic loops for  “practical application.” Since the saints are supposedly unable to keep the law because they are still totally depraved, there has to be a way for the saints to continually partake in the same gospel that saved us. In order to come up with a way to do this, the New Calvinists went back to the basics: Plato. The first illustration of this is from CCEF’s  The Journal of Biblical Counseling vol. 18, number 1, Fall 1999:

The following are illustrations from HPC and Powlison’s Dynamics of Biblical Change:

In the following excerpt from Dr. Devin Berry’s “How to Listen to a Sermon,” Berry uses a C-loop concept to explain the New Calvinist theory on how the saints receive the word of God. The illustration following the excerpt is mine:

Note this cycle: Paul, from the Word, delivers words. The Bereans, from Paul’s words, go to the Word. The Word cycles from God, through the preacher, to the people, back to the Word, and this, verse 12 tells us, produced belief in the God of the Word. An important thing to note is that this happened daily – suggesting a regular interaction between preaching, personal study, and the Word.

The goal of all of this is not change in the believer which is impossible anyway according to their theology because Christians are still totally depraved. The goal is to make the cross (or, the works of Christ) bigger by a deeper and deeper knowledge of how totally depraved we supposedly are. This is illustrated by the following chart produced by a New Calvinist organization:

Below is a C-loop that can illustrate the above chart:

New Calvinism’s Objective Deception and Kinship With Mysticism

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on April 10, 2012

I have been watching the “Wide Is The Gate” video series by Caryl Productions. The series addresses “Christianized New Age Spirituality.” The series has many excellent observations. The following are the major ones:

 

  1. Eastern Mysticism that teaches creation is God, and that God is in every person, has been integrated into mainstream Christianity.
  2. Over the years, the integration has been fine tuned to appear orthodox.
  3. When one aspect of such a movement is exposed, they change the name.
  4. The Bible predicted that Christianity would be saturated with such false doctrines in the latter days.

There are two major movements right now that are being used by the kingdom of darkness to promote its major agenda: to get Christians as far away as possible from learning and doing God’s word. The folks at Caryl Productions are spot on; the New Age Movement never went away, it is alive and well under a different name, and in a local church near you. The video series addresses one of the major movements: the  I am divinity crowd, and the practical application is various formulas for discovering one’s own inherit godhood.  A mass of Christian thought, in various forms, falls under this category: “I am my own god.”

The host of the video makes a good point that in contrast, true evangelicals believe God to be outside of man, as opposed to mankind being inherently one with deity. Of course, the host is speaking in regard to the need for salvation. Now comes the evil sibling claiming, “the centrality of the objective gospel outside of us.” The contenders in the video make the point (and rightly so) that Christianized mysticism focuses on subjective “truth,” and the goodness within instead of God’s objective truth, and His goodness outside of us. But again, like they state well in the video, the movement continually retools in order to slip in unawares.

Enter New Calvinism. Their the centrality of the objective gospel outside of us (group A) would seem to be the perfect storm against the centrality of the subjective gospel inside of us (group B). This bunch are not amateur deceivers by any means. They introduce themselves as the extreme antithesis, while the goal is exactly the same. In fact, the practical application of both are identical: contemplationism. A primary theme in the video is the spiritual contemplationism of Christianized New Age Spirituality. And New Calvinism is no different.

I will now explain how both movements attain the exact same goal, but with different means. New Calvinists point to the means as a way to distinguish themselves from the other camp and to appear as contenders for a true gospel. New Calvinists believe that ALL reality is interpreted through “Christ” and His works. It isn’t about what Jesus SAYS to us, per se, it’s about who he is as a “person.” In the words of Paul David Tripp: “He comes as a person, not as a cognitive concept that we insert into a new formula for life” (How People Change, p.27). Tripp then proceeds (in the same book) to explain a complex Gnostic concept for replacing the learn and do “formula” propagated by Christ in Matthew 7:24-27.

Hence, rather than to say, “Truth is subjective and is found inside of us and we make truth whatever it is to us,” New Calvinists say, “Truth is found completely outside of us and is interpreted through a deeper and deeper knowledge of Christ and His works.” That’s supposedly an objective truth, but what does it mean? How do we gain a deeper and deeper knowledge of Christ as a person? By learning His word and doing it? No, because that’s not learning more and more about Christ, that’s doing what Christ commands, and since all objective truth is outside of us, we are still totally depraved and are unable to obey Him anyway.

Furthermore, New Calvinists believe that any doctrine indicating an infusion of Grace into the believer at salvation is a false gospel, and was the very crux of the Reformation; true spiritual life must remain outside of the believer. They concur with the new birth, but the new birth, to the New Calvinist, means that we are still spiritually dead and totally depraved; we have life in us (Christ), but we are still spiritually dead.

So, how do Christians change? According to New Calvinists, they don’t, but rather manifest the active obedience of Christ—the active obedience of Christ while He lived on Earth is imputed to us in this life as we “manifest” that obedience via Christ who indwells us by the Holy Spirit. How does that happen? It happens as we gain deeper and deeper knowledge of Christ through the Scriptures. To the New Calvinist, the Bible is an “objective” book about Christ only, a tool for gaining deeper knowledge about Christ. If we use it for that purpose only, the Spirit is involved, but if we use the Bible for the purpose of learning God’s imperatives for the purpose of obedience, that is using the Bible in the exact same way that the Pharisees used the Torah. Supposedly. According to New Calvinists, one is of the Spirit, the other is the “dead letter of the law.”

The final equation is simple: gospel contemplationism. Group A,  and group B end up at the same place: seeking God through meditation and contemplationism. The only difference is the object of the meditation. And both are subjective. When New Calvinists have to see Jesus in every verse of the Bible, the results are bound to be subjective. Besides, New Calvinists believe we are still totally depraved, and anything that is inside of us is subjective; ie, we really can’t know anything—we are incapable of applying cognitive truth.  What’s the difference between that and the new age idea that real truth is unknowable? Nothing. The New Calvinist way to spiritual life is meditation on Christ, and then sit back and watch what Christ might do. Paul David Tripp calls this, “New and surprising fruit.” Whatever we see in the Bible is imputed to us in the same way that righteousness was imputed to us when we were saved, resulting in “manifestations of Christ.”

The following exercise may lend some understanding on this. Find a passage in the Bible that has absolutely nothing to do with the gospel. For instance, God telling Adam to name all of the animals He created. Then, ask ten different Christians to draw a gospel meaning from the verse (ie, what does the passage say about Christ, His works, and the gospel). You can be sure that you will get ten different observations. But New Calvinists would say that all ten interpretations must be correct because they concern the gospel, and gospel interpretation is always attended by the Spirit. The subjective is therefore true because it came from a narrow, supposedly objective prism (even though a gospel result is always to be assumed). However, New Calvinists do recognize a structural aspect to the Scriptures that instructs them on how to organize church polity, but this is seen as a practical necessity for organization, not sanctification.

There is simply no difference between the two. They both seek to draw Christians away from the application of cognitive truth by replacing it with contemplationism.

paul

Why Al Mohler is a Heretic

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on April 10, 2012

Big AlListen friends, the gospel of progressive justification is a false gospel; it’s just that simple. I don’t care how educated Al is, how many followers he has, or anything else save the gospel he preaches. In the following video trailer from the 2011 Resolved Conference, Al Mohler states that the only purpose of the law in the life of a believer is to show us our ongoing need for salvation. Of course, he doesn’t word it that way. He states that believers have an ongoing need for Christ (which no Christian would refute), but note carefully: he is speaking in context of our initial salvation. So, instead of saying plainly that Christians need to be continually saved, or continually justified, he replaces that wording with “Christ.” However, again, the context is clearly salvation. He is saying that we need Christ in the same way that we needed Him for salvation.

Mohler is also saying that the law has the same relationship/purpose to unbelievers as it does believers: to show us our need for Christ. So, obviously, this is in contrast to any ability on the part of the believer to keep it. All the law can do is show NEED. Need for what? Well, what’s the context? Mohler also presents an either/or choice in regard to the law: it either shows us our need for Christ (again, what need specifically?), or we are using it to “rescue ourselves from sin.” Hmmm, what does it mean to “rescue ourselves from sin”? I believe Mohler deliberately uses the word “rescue” instead of “save” in order to add nuance to his point. “Rescue” is less direct, and could refer to a believer trying to overcome sin on his own. This is the same reason he replaces “salvation” with “Christ” in his prior point. It’s deliberate deception. Excluded is any mention that the law can be used by the believer to please God and glorify Him in all we do by “observing all that I have commanded.”

Mohler’s trailer starts at 1:35.