Paul's Passing Thoughts

Why Catholicism and Protestantism Both are False Gospels

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on February 15, 2014

“This is not mere semantics concerning the best way to grow spiritually; what we believe about sanctification shows what we believe about justification. Is it a finished work or not? And if it isn’t, what we believe about sanctification is a purely salvific discussion by default anyway. The Reformers, new and old, do not frame sanctification in salvific terms; this is disingenuous and they know it. Confusion in regard to sanctification enables them to speak of sanctification in a justification way.”

“According to the Reformers, contemplative repentance is the fuel that powers our car on the justification highway to heaven. If we try to get to heaven any other way; i.e., some sort of belief that the highway is not a highway at all but a finished declaration and present reality, we lose justification and sanctification both (Michael Horton: Christless Christianity; p. 62).

In other words, contemplative repentance as a work that we do is the only way to heaven. Reformers like Tullian Tchividjian insist that it is Christ + Nothing = Everything; but again, that is because, like Calvin, he deems contemplative repentance as a non-work in sanctification that doesn’t cause our justification car to run out of gas. In fact, the think tank that launched the present-day Reformation resurgence framed it in those exact terms.”

Protestantism, which came from Catholicism, is also a false gospel. This is because Protestantism only reformed the means of progressive justification and didn’t reject it. Both are guilty of fusing justification and sanctification together. Therefore, both are false gospels because according to both, justification is not a finished work and progresses through sanctification. Therefore, the question of what man must believe so that justification is properly finished is the difference between heaven and hell. Salvation becomes a matter of the right justification process as opposed to simply believing on a finished work by God.

If sanctification (the Christian life) is the progressive expression of justification, man is involved in the justification process, and when this is the case, it is salvation by works because doing is involved even if the doing is believing only. Sanctification becomes a discussion about what is works in sanctification and what isn’t a work in sanctification, but doing something, whether believing or breathing, is a work; it’s all work. Hence, all of the confusion, and if you will, denominations. The propagation of sanctification by faith alone is always indicative of a justification that is not finished.

In truth, nothing we do in sanctification is a work for justification because that work is already finished. And this is the crux in regard to what Paul wrote to the Galatians:

Gal 3:1 – O foolish Galatians! Who has bewitched you? It was before your eyes that Jesus Christ was publicly portrayed as crucified. 2 Let me ask you only this: Did you receive the Spirit by works of the law or by hearing with faith? 3 Are you so foolish? Having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh?

“Being perfected” can be a little misleading if one does not examine this text carefully. The word for “perfected” is epiteleō which means “to complete, bring to an end.” This is why Young’s Literal Translation has it this way:

O thoughtless Galatians, who did bewitch you, not to obey the truth — before whose eyes Jesus Christ was described before among you crucified? 2 this only do I wish to learn from you — by works of law the Spirit did ye receive, or by the hearing of faith? 3 so thoughtless are ye! having begun in the Spirit, now in the flesh do ye end? [ESV Olive Tree footnote: “Or now ending with”].

The issue at hand was the fact that the Galatians were being influenced by the “circumcision party” (Gal 2:12). They taught salvation by circumcision. Paul called it justification by the law, but understand what he meant by that. The circumcision party emphasized justification by circumcision, but relaxed the rest of the law. Christ referred to this same sort of theology in the Sermon on the Mount (Matt 5:19). Paul’s point is that if you want to be justified by the law, all of the law must be kept perfectly in order to do so (Gal 4:2-4).

Freedom to obey the law aggressively (as love) in sanctification points to our view of justification. Aggressive obedience in sanctification points to the belief that justification is a finished work and unrelated to our work for God and others. It embraces the whole law and pursues righteousness for the sake of loving God and others truthfully. Though we fall short and that is disappointing, it cannot affect a work that is already finished: justification. Those misleading the Galatians taught that circumcision finished justification, and perhaps, as well, that any focus on the finer points of the law would circumvent the circumcision. In essence, those leading the Galatians astray were antinomians:

Gal 2:15 – We ourselves are Jews by birth and not Gentile sinners; 16 yet we know that a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ, so we also have believed in Christ Jesus, in order to be justified by faith in Christ and not by works of the law, because by works of the law no one will be justified.

17 But if, in our endeavor to be justified in Christ, we too were found to be sinners, is Christ then a servant of sin? Certainly not! 18 For if I rebuild what I tore down, I prove myself to be a transgressor. [parabatēs “lawbreaker”].

When justification and sanctification are fused together and sanctification is the progression of justification, invariably, some tradition or combination of traditions replaces a literal adherence to law. In other words, the law needs to be dumbed down because it is part of the justification process. So, mark it well: our attitude towards the law in sanctification reveals what we believe about justification:

Gal 5:7 – You were running well. Who hindered you from obeying the truth? 8 This persuasion is not from him who calls you.

They were “running” well. “Well” (kalōs) carries the idea of good morals. Paul was certainly NOT commending them for “running well” for justification. They replaced the law keeping of love in sanctification with the supposed fulfilment of justification by the traditions of men and their interpretation of the law. In this case, the primary tradition was circumcision. This is how the Amplified Bible states it:

Gal 3:2 – Let me ask you this one question: Did you receive the [Holy] Spirit as the result of obeying the Law and doing its works, or was it by hearing [the message of the Gospel] and believing [it]? [Was it from observing a law of rituals or from a message of faith?]

The paraphrase, “observing a law of rituals” is a good one. The Galatian error involved the necessary dumbing down of the law because the Christian life is seen as an extension of justification. To the contrary, there is NO law in justification because no man can withstand its judgment for righteousness (Rom 2:12, 3:19-21, 28, 4:15, 5:13, 6:14,15, 7:1, 6, 8 “Apart from the law, sin lies dead”). However, a relaxed view of the law of love in sanctification points to a law in justification that must be fulfilled by some sort of tradition:

Gal 5:6 – For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision counts for anything, but only faith working through love. 7 You were running well. Who hindered you from obeying the truth?

Notice that faith works (Jms 2:22) “through love,” and love fulfills the law (Rom13:8). This is a “running” by “obeying the truth.” This is why justification and sanctification must be completely separate. Justification is a finished work, and sanctification is a progressive work of love through obedience to the word of God.

Gospels that fuse justification and sanctification together always posit the idea that a striving to keep God’s law truthfully, as a way to earn salvation, is the pandemic of the day. That is not true at all. An effort to “run well” is always associated with the idea that the running has nothing to do with justification at all. Justification is God’s love to us and is finished; our love towards God and others is sanctification.

1Jn 4:19 – We love because he first loved us.

“We love” is sanctification. “He first loved us” is justification.

In both Romanism and Protestantism, justification is progressive, and sanctification is the progression of justification. This calls for a special formula that keeps us from circumventing the process. It also requires that we do something to maintain the process. “But Paul, doesn’t justification have a finished aspect and also a progressive aspect?” No, but even if that point is conceded, if justification isn’t properly finished, the beginning of it is for naught. In fact, this is exactly what John Calvin taught in regard to the perseverance of the saints. He stated that all who were chosen would not necessarily persevere to the end. Hence, their initial justification was for naught (CI 3.24.6-8).

The Protestant special formula is best exemplified in the writings of John Calvin. First, he made a perfect keeping of law the standard for justification. Justification was defined by a law standard. In the Calvin Institutes (CI), Calvin claimed that Christ obtained justification “by the whole course of his obedience” (CI 2.16.5). In the same section, Calvin interprets Christ’s one act of obedience (Rom 5:19) to the cross as pertaining to his whole life (that only refers to His obedience to the cross Pil 2:8). He also notes that Christ was “born under the law” (Gal 4:4,5) and offers that “proof” as well. But all that is saying is that Christ was born into the world like all other men: under the law. Christ is the only man born into the world that could withstand a judgment by the law—that doesn’t mean he had to keep it in order to fulfill all righteousness. For that matter, all righteousness was fulfilled when He was baptized by John the Baptist (Matt 3:15).

Calvin then goes on to explain that any law-keeping by the Christian is futile because we cannot keep it perfectly (CI 3.14. 10), and no Christian has ever done a work pleasing to God (CI 3.14.11). According to Calvin, the obedience of Christ must be continually applied to our lives until we get to heaven (Ibid). Furthermore, we must continually return to the same gospel that saved us for the forgiveness of new sins committed in the Christian life (Ibid, and CI 4.1.21,22).

So, the Protestant formula is returning to the same gospel that saved us in order to maintain our justification. Supposedly, it’s not of works because the initial repentance that saved us was by faith alone, so a perpetual returning to the same gospel maintains our justification while qualifying as faith alone. This, according to Calvin, does not circumvent the “Progressive” “Sense” of justification (see title: CI 3.14).

In this Protestant construct, Martin Luther’s alien righteousness was very important. This teaches that ALL righteousness remains outside of the believer. The believer has no righteousness of his own. This is important if you are on the justification bus going to glorification. Your inner righteousness would be part of the process that keeps the progression moving forward, perseverance if you will. This version of the Protestant formula to reach heaven by the same faith alone without works that saved/justified us can be seen in the Protestant concept of Sabbath Salvation. In the same way that the Israelites were not allowed to work on the Sabbath upon pain of death, anyone who works in their Christian life will suffer eternal death. Said Calvin:

Ezekiel is still more full, but the sum of what he says amounts to this: that the Sabbath is a sign by which Israel might know God is their sanctifier. If our sanctification consists in the mortification of our own will, the analogy between the external sign and the thing signified is most appropriate. We must rest entirely, in order that God may work in us; we must resign our own will, yield up our heart, and abandon all the lusts of the flesh. In short, we must desist from all the acts of our mind, that God working in us, we may rest in him (CI 2.8.29).

Calvin was adamant that none of God’s righteousness could be transferred to the believer (CI 3.14.11) in the “two-fold grace”(i.e., two-fold justification: Calvin deliberately used perceived synonyms to nuance what he believed) of justification and sanctification. All righteousness must remain outside of the believer. If the believer has no righteousness that is his/hers, they can continually affirm their belief in justification by faith alone and continue to receive forgiveness based on faith alone. In this way, Christ’s death and obedient life is perpetually applied to the believer in sanctification until they get to heaven (Ibid).

Therefore, it stands to reason that the only duty of the believer is to see their own sinfulness in sanctification; by doing this, they affirm they have no righteousness that is their own, and can do no work pleasing to God. According to the Protestant formula, this is the only work that is not a work. It is the “mortification of the will.” So, all work in sanctification must be the same repentance that originally saved us—this keeps us in the saving graces of God.

Contemporary Calvinists like John Piper refer to this as the Gospel continuing to save us IF we continue to “live by the gospel.” In a sermon titled, How Does the Gospel Save Believers? Part 2 Piper made the following statement:

We are asking the question, How does the gospel save believers?, not: How does the gospel get people to be believers? (August 16, 1998 by John Piper | Scripture: Romans 1:16-17 | Series: Romans: The Greatest Letter Ever Written).

So, let’s be clear, what we believe the gospel is, keeps us saved. The Protestant gospel is a sanctification defined by repentance only that keeps us saved. If we believe we have a righteousness of our own, all bets are off. Because sanctification is part of the “two-fold” grace (singular) of justification, man’s righteousness cannot participate. This is opposed to another view of the gospel that we are born again of God literally (1Jn 3:9, 5:18) and therefore righteous, and in fact full of goodness (Rom 15:14).

The fact that Christians still sin as mortals does not negate the fact that they are inherently righteous as proven by a change of direction. Certainly, perfection is the goal in sanctification, but not the standard for justification. The Bible explains it as an exchange of slavery. Those “under the law” and not “under grace” are free to do good, but enslaved to unrighteousness (Rom 6:20-22). Those under grace are enslaved to righteousness, but also free to sin (Rom 7:25). The chart below may help illustrate how this results in a change of life direction.

Slavery

There is no law in justification, and it is a finished work apart from sanctification which fulfils the law by love. The law is now the standard for love in sanctification. As mentioned before, gospels that fuse justification and sanctification together in order to make justification an unfinished work often teach that obedience to the word of God circumvents the formula of salvation. In the case of Protestantism, a belief that we can please God by obeying His word assumes a righteousness that circumvents their gospel.

Hence, anything except repentance or mortification of the flesh assumes righteousness on our part. Regeneration (the new birth) must be manifested by the works of Christ alone in sanctification. There is no room here to expound on the point, but “obedience” in this construct is only an experience specifically called “vivification.” The “heart” of the believer is only changed in regard to its increased ability to experience Christ’s obedience. We experience the “active” obedience of Christ imputed to our sanctification (His “passive” obedience was His death on the cross), but we are not the ones doing it. This protestant idea can be seen in a statement by Calvinist Paul David Tripp:

When we think, desire, speak, or act in a right way, it isn’t time to pat ourselves on the back or cross it off our To Do List. Each time we do what is right, we are experiencing [underline added] what Christ has supplied for us (Paul David Tripp: How People Change; Punch Press 2006, p. 215).

John Calvin, as you will notice if you read his writings carefully, often replaced the idea of direct obedience to God with experiencing God’s works. This is very similar to the Gnostic idea of experiencing objective, or pure good subjectively. There are many variations of this throughout Protestantism, but at the very least, and in all cases, it will instigate a relaxed attitude towards the law.

And how does this relaxing of the law that Christ warned of take place? Simply stated, it takes the two-fold act of love which is sanctification, put off and put on (Eph 4:20-24), and makes them both the responsibility of Christ while we are mere experiencers of the manifestation. This is done by primarily making sanctification ALL about repentance only, but even then, it is for the purpose of more “seeing” via the “heart.” Hence, spiritual growth is defined by an increased capacity to experience Christ as opposed to being able to actually follow Him.

Therefore, the word of God is for gospel contemplationism, or better stated, repentive contemplationism, and is not actually applied to life by the kingdom citizen; that would be working for our justification. So, life application is defined as a work, and not working is defined as not a work; i.e., contemplationism is not a work. Essentially, this is the very construct Christ attacked in the Sermon on the Mount.

The Reformers, old and new, have always tried to do a metaphysical end around on this with “distinction without separation.” Unfortunately, Bible students who formidably challenged the Reformers and elicited this rebuttal in regard to the juxtaposing of justification and sanctification have been expunged from church history. The only detractors who get press were chosen by the Reformers because they had other problems theologically.

As a way to simplify this as much as possible, let’s focus on the fact that the likes of Calvin defined sanctification by repentance only. And remember, that repentance is only contemplationism as well. I will be using an article written by Cornelis P. Venema in the Mid-America Journal of Theology to make my points (Calvin’s Understanding of the “Two-Fold Grace of God” and Contemporary Ecumenical Discussion of the Gospel MJT 2007). I will underline what I want to emphasize.

The first part of Calvin’s basic formula for relating these two aspects of God’s grace [justification and sanctification] in Christ reflects his judgment that justification and sanctification concern two different questions, and denote two distinct facets of God’s relation to us. Whereas justification concerns the basis or reason for our salvation, sanctification concerns the way in which our life is converted to God (p. 79).

Note that justification is the beginning point of a “way” to “conversion” (salvation). Sanctification is the justification highway that leads to final salvation. Justification is not a finished work, it’s a starting point. The “distinction” is the beginning, or name of the highway project, and sanctification is the building project. But the Bible states that justification cannot be a building project because it is a finished work. This is not mere semantics concerning  the best way to grow spiritually; what we believe about sanctification shows what we believe about justification. Is it a finished work or not? And if it isn’t, what we believe about sanctification is a purely salvific discussion by default anyway. The Reformers, new and old, do not frame sanctification in salvific terms; this is disingenuous and they know it. Confusion in regard to sanctification enables them to speak of sanctification in a justification way.

In addition, Calvin not only made repentive contemplationism the sum and substance of sanctification, but…

Throughout all of his writings—in his Institutes, commentaries, and sermons—Calvin consistently refers to this “double grace” or twofold benefit of our reception of the grace of God in Christ as comprising the “sum of the gospel.” These two benefits, justification and sanctification (or repentance) are the “two parts” of our redemption, both of which are bestowed upon us by Christ through faith. Together they form the two ways in which the “justice of God” is communicated to us, and in which we are cleansed by the holiness of Christ and made partakers of it. They constitute that “twofold cleansing” (double lavement), or “twofold purification” (duplex purgandi), which are granted to us by the Spirit of Christ. The “twofold grace of God” answers to the two ways in which Christ lives in us, and forms the invariable content of all Christian preaching about redemption in Christ and its application to human existence (p. 70).

Calvin usually terms the second benefit of our reception of God’s grace in Christ, “regeneration” (regeneratio) or “repentance” (poenitentia). Though inseparably joined with justification and faith, this benefit must not be confused with it. “As faith is not without hope, yet faith and hope are different things, so repentance and faith, although they are held together by a permanent bond, require to be joined rather than confused” (p. 76).

The author’s heavily footnoted assertions are correct (see source), Calvin, as with all of the Reformers, made repentance (actually, repentive contemplationism/contemplative repentance) synonymous with faith, grace, redemption, justification, sanctification, hope, purification, viz, a perpetual “’justice of God’…communicated to us.”

According to the Reformers, contemplative repentance is the fuel that powers our car on the justification highway to heaven. If we try to get to heaven any other way; i.e., some sort of belief that the highway is not a highway at all but a finished declaration and present reality, we lose justification and sanctification both (Michael Horton: Christless Christianity; p. 62).

In other words, contemplative repentance as a work that we do is the only way to heaven. It’s salvation by Christ plus contemplative repentance. Reformers like Tullian Tchividjian insist that it is Christ + Nothing = Everything, but again, that is because like Calvin, he deems contemplative repentance as a non-work in sanctification that doesn’t cause our justification car to run out of gas. In fact, the think tank that launched the present-day Reformation resurgence framed it in those exact terms.

We repeat, Justification is not a thing that we pass and get behind us. As Barth rightly said, it is not like a filling station that we pass but once. As we hold to its eschatological implications, justification by faith can never become static but must remain the dynamic center of Christian existence, the continuous present. We are always sinners in our eyes, but we are always standing on God’s justification and, perhaps more importantly, moving toward it. To be justified is a present-continuous miracle to the man who present-continuously believes, knowing that he who believes possesses all things, and he who does not believe possesses nothing. Such a life is only possible where the gospel of justification is continually heard and where God’s verdict of acquittal is like those mercies which Jeremiah declared were new every morning—”great is Thy faithfulness” (Lam. 3:22-23) [Present Truth Magazine: Righteousness by Faith (Part 4) Chapter 8 — The Eschatological Meaning of Justification; Volume Thirty-Five — Article 3].

In regard to another topic in which there is no room here, said think tank criticized contemporary Reformed thinkers for moving away from the original Reformation gospel which was salvation by justification plus contemplative repentance in sanctification. The specific criticism was against a gospel that perceived justification as being a finished work. Throughout the years, due to a misunderstanding of Reformed epistemology, those who fancied themselves as being of the Reformed camp gravitated to a separation of justification and sanctification, and justification being a finished work, and sanctification a progressive work by the believer and the Holy Spirit.

It has often been said, especially in the Reformed stream of thought, that justification is a once-and-for-all, nonrepeatable act… What inevitably happens in this way of viewing things is that justification becomes static. It becomes relegated (as far as the believing community is concerned) to a thing of the past. There is a tendency for it to become a warm memory (Ibid).

This has led to many contemporary quarrels between “Old” Calvinists and “New” Calvinists due to the fact that New Calvinism is a return to the authentic article. Most notably, the “Sonship” debate within Presbyterian circles and the New Covenant Theology debate within Reformed Baptist circles. This misunderstanding also led to debate in the contemporary biblical counseling movement where some Calvinists heavily emphasized obedience to the word of God, while Calvinists being influenced by the Resurgence called such emphasis in sanctification, “Phariseeism.”

Does the new birth make Christians righteous? Is the Holy Spirit’s power displayed in sanctification through our cooperative obedience and following? Is justification finished or not? Does sanctification have any connection to justification? And if it does, what? These questions, and the answers should be a line in the sand between the two gospels in our day.

In the summation of this point, what Calvin wrote specifically at times is very telling. Emphasis by underline added:

“…by new sins we continually separate ourselves, as far as we can, from the grace of God… Thus it is, that all the saints have need of the daily forgiveness of sins; for this alone keeps us in the family of God” (John Calvin: Commentaries on the Catholic Epistles; The Calvin Translation Society 1855. Editor: John Owen, p. 165 ¶4).

Nor by remission of sins does the Lord only once for all elect and admit us into the Church, but by the same means he preserves and defends us in it. For what would it avail us to receive a pardon of which we were afterwards to have no use? That the mercy of the Lord would be vain and delusive if only granted once, all the godly can bear witness; for there is none who is not conscious, during his whole life, of many infirmities which stand in need of divine mercy. And truly it is not without cause that the Lord promises this gift specially to his own household, nor in vain that he orders the same message of reconciliation to be daily delivered to them” (The Calvin Institutes: 4.1.21).

Calvin plainly states that “reconciliation” must be continually applied to cover new sins. Therefore, justification must be progressive; reconciliation IS justification—there is no justification without it. Instead of making peace with God once and entering into His family, reconciliation must be perpetual. At any given time that you think justification is a onetime event, you separate yourself from the “vital union” with Christ.

However, the Reformed end around on that is the idea that justification is a onetime event because it is both a declaration and a process. In one regard, it happened once, but in another regard, it keeps happening: “it’s a basis.” So, progressive justification is deceptively called “progressive sanctification.” Or, “Justification is the ground (basis) of our sanctification.” Right, because as stated also, “Sanctification is the fruit of justification.” This is deliberate deception. Certain words are used to mask the real Protestant gospel: salvation must be earned and maintained by a continual return to the same gospel that originally saved you.

The following chart published by those of Reformed thought illustrates how contemplative repentance works:

Cross Chart

Notice the emphasis on merely seeing (i.e., contemplationism).  Furthermore, it’s antithetical to the biblical putting off and putting on prescribed by the Scriptures.

Catholicism is little different, it also fuses justification and sanctification together; justification is not a finished work. The following are excerpts from Catechism of the Catholic Church | Part 3, Life in Christ | Section 1, Man’s Vocation Life in the Spirit | Chapter 3, God’s Salvation: Law and Grace | Article 2, Grace and Justification: section…

1987: The grace of the Holy Spirit has the power to justify us, that is, to cleanse us from our sins and to communicate to us “the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ” and through Baptism.

Notice that there is an ongoing communication of righteousness to the believer which is Protestantesque. This is a perpetual imputation of justification. In theology, “righteousness” and “justification” are used interchangeably.

1988: Through the power of the Holy Spirit we take part in Christ’s Passion by dying to sin, and in his Resurrection by being born to a new life; we are members of his Body which is the Church, branches grafted onto the vine which is himself.

This is nothing more or less than the Protestant doctrine of mortification and vivification (see CI 3.3.2,9). Through confession, (mortification/repentance), we partake again in Christ’s passion resulting in a perpetual new birth experience symbolized/imputed initially by water baptism.

1989: The first work of the grace of the Holy Spirit is conversion, effecting justification in accordance with Jesus’ proclamation at the beginning of the Gospel: “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” Moved by grace, man turns toward God and away from sin, thus accepting forgiveness and righteousness from on high. Justification is not only the remission of sins, but also the sanctification and renewal of the interior man.

There is little ambiguity here; in Catholicism, like Protestantism, you are sanctified by justification…

1995: The Holy Spirit is the master of the interior life. By giving birth to the “inner man,” justification entails the sanctification of his whole being.

So, why the major beef between Catholicism and Protestantism? It boils down to “infused righteousness.” Romanism holds to the idea that the believer is enabled to participate in his/her final justification via confession and ritual. In the minds of Protestant theologians, that makes man a participant in justification. However, if all righteousness is outside of the believer and remains so, he/she is not a participant in the justification process. The same means, through contemplative repentance to communicate justification as an ongoing process is ok, but not the idea that the righteousness of God indwells the believer. It must be Luther’s alien righteousness.  This is the way Calvinist John Piper presents the argument:

This meant the reversal of the relationship of sanctification to justification. Infused grace, beginning with baptismal regeneration, internalized the Gospel and made sanctification the basis of justification. This is an upside down Gospel (Desiring God blog: June 25, 2009; Goldsworthy on Why the Reformation Was Necessary).

When the ground of justification moves from Christ outside of us to the work of Christ inside of us, the gospel (and the human soul) is imperiled. It is an upside down gospel (Ibid).

In it [Goldsworthy’s lecture at Southern] it gave one of the clearest statements of why the Reformation was needed and what the problem was in the way the Roman Catholic church had conceived of the gospel….I would add that this ‘upside down’ gospel has not gone away—neither from Catholicism nor from Protestants (Ibid).

Romanism believes in an infused grace that enables the believer to partake in the justification process which is condoned because the beginning of justification is purely of God. The beginning of justification is pure grace, but sanctification is a “help”:

2025: We can have merit in God’s sight only because of God’s free plan to associate man with the work of his grace. Merit is to be ascribed in the first place to the grace of God, and secondly to man’s collaboration. Man’s merit is due to God.

2027: No one can merit the initial grace which is at the origin of conversion. Moved by the Holy Spirit, we can merit for ourselves and for others all the graces needed to attain eternal life, as well as necessary temporal goods.

This drove the Reformers berserk. In their construct, man, saved or otherwise, can have NO merit. It is fair to say that the main contention between the Reformers and Rome was metaphysical in nature. The crux of the contention was/is: How can man be found righteous at the end of his/her salvation journey?  

This paper contends that there is NO salvation journey in regard to justification; it is a finished work. Only our lives as God’s children progress; the fact that we are part of God’s family is a complete, and settled issue. A person is born into a family once, and their growth does not increase their status as a family member; that was settled the day they were born.

Any gospel that posits justification as part of the sanctification process must necessarily involve man in the justification process, and the exclusion of works salvation is impossible. Everything becomes a work or doing something to MAINTAIN our justification. Even doing something passive that is not considered a work like thinking has a purpose, and that purpose can never be to complete a work that Christ has completed.

This is why Protestantism and Catholicism are both false gospels. It is a return to the Galatian error. Protestantism relaxes the law in sanctification to finish the finished work of justification by saying Christ obeys the law for us in sanctification if we live by faith alone in sanctification. Catholicism does its part in relaxing the law of love by replacing it with rituals in sanctification. Different means with the same purpose: to cooperate in the finishing of a finished work. That’s a false gospel.

Are Christians Losing Their Voice in the World Because They are Just Plain Stupid?

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on December 30, 2013

ppt-jpeg4I was born again in 1983, but being saved by God does not automatically fix stupid in the here and now. The first stupid thing I did was to join a Baptist church because, by golly, I was saved and I was going to do this Christian thing the right way. Though a selfish sinner ruled by lust, like all of humanity, I had some good God-given qualities; i.e., I took satisfaction in doing a quality job. I brought that quality with me into my Christian life.

To some degree I am not at fault. How was I to know that Baptists are Protestants? How was I to know that Baptists would teach me the ways of Protestant orthodoxy? How was I to know that the fathers of Protestantism despised reason?

Are Protestants stupid? Sure they are. What other breed of homosapien would invest thousands of dollars to learn extensive knowledge about a religion founded by men who believed mankind to be totally depraved and unable to properly understand reality? Stupid? Maybe “sane” is the better question; who endeavors to earn a PhD in total depravity? Moreover, consider the fact that men who earn these nomenclatures of knowledge that plunges the depths of man’s incompetence are themselves men of renown and respected as knowledgeable about knowing nothing.

Yes, supposedly, according to Calvin and Luther, when Paul told the Corinthians that he knew nothing but Christ and Him crucified, he wasn’t talking about knowledge of other gospels, he was talking about the “foolishness of the cross.” Hence, the world rejects the cross because they believe man can know something of value other than the salvific work of Christ. They therefore see the cross as “foolishness.” Calvin and Luther mocked the thinkers of their day and ridiculed those who proposed that the Earth was round and the solar system was in motion. Their serial killing children, the Puritans, attributed the exploits of Benjamin Franklin to demonic powers. Any knowledge other than the cross is not the “cross story,” it is the “glory story.” The glory of man rather than the glory of God.

The fruit doesn’t fall far from the tree. As a pastor, I saw no need whatsoever to learn any “vain philosophy,” and certainly didn’t learn any in high school or seminary. In both cases, Plato is a touchy subject. The Colonial Puritans were ridiculed for being Platonists by their Aristocratic detractors who were children of the same Enlightenment movement that clearly saved Europe from being a third world country shrouded in superstition. The Puritans founded our public school system. They also founded the Ivy League schools from which all of our seminaries came. These were prodigies of Socrates and Plato who defined true wisdom as knowing nothing.

From that gene pool came the Gnostics who defined the “secret knowledge” in the same way. Basically, they were peddlers of happiness in the midst of knowing nothing: “Eat and drink, for tomorrow we die.” And if you messed up the unity and happiness of the communal group led by those with the gnosis, you died a lot sooner.

So, what in the world philosophy inspired this rant? Some time ago, it came to my attention that an atheist website reposted one of my articles in a favorable light. Even after being awakened to the importance of world philosophy and ideas by church historian John Immel, I was horrified. Certainly, I had to then consider that what Calvinists say about me may be true; am I really an “enemy of the cross”? Worse yet, this is a website that has a global rating of 609 with Alexa, that’s #609 worldwide (Google is #1). This multiplied the horror of my evil deed even more. Certainly, if these atheists liked what I wrote, it was pure evil!

Fearfully, I reread the post in order to come to grips with my horrific folly. Soon the fear turned to utter disbelief. The post pointed to the authoritative wisdom of God in the Scriptures. Huh? I reread it again; why would they promote these ideas on their blog? The post, at least in my estimation, assumed metaphysical interpretation via the Bible. So, I stuck around and read some other articles on the website. Clearly, I perceived more of a problem with stupidity than with God. In fact, I couldn’t find any article that had a problem with God in particular; the consistent theme seemed to be that Christians are anti-reason, and my friends, it is no less a fact that Luther called reason a filthy whore that should have dung rubbed in her face to make her ugly.

Now enter what I perceive going on among contemporary Christian youth in our day, especially after our mission to the Cross Conference in Louisville this past weekend. The youth that were attracted to that conference are thinkers. Granted, they are hindered by Churchianity, but the desire is to be thinkers well equipped for battle in the arena of ideas. That is what draws them to this vein of Calvinism from the T4G camp—it is perceived as being an intellectual Christianity. It’s bogus, but nevertheless, T4G does a good job of selling themselves that way, compliments of hard cash from the working class laity. Hence, this particular group of youth are ripe unto harvest if you make your case. My friends, this is good news.

Now consider the Passion variety of youth (Louie Giglio versus Al Mohler et al). They are where the Louisville group will eventually end up if something isn’t done. The Passion group is quintessential Gnosticism. Louisville really hatched a vision for us, but we are researching in order to ascertain whether or not the Passion crowd is too far gone at this point. Furthermore, the youth we encountered in Louisville are more likely to be heard by those beckoning for Christianity to show itself reasonable. By the way, John Piper is the bridge between the two movements. But with both movements, a transition from less teaching to more experience orientation can be clearly seen.

When it gets right down to it, Western religion and culture is predicated on the debate between Plato and Aristotle. How ironic that the contemporary Calvinists of our day maximize the use of the very technology that their mentors despised. Though they hate Aristotle and the children he bore like Ayn Rand, without them, Al Mohler would be just another Hindu priest adding to the pollution of the Ganges River with cremation grounds. In the same way that those priests proclaim that horribly polluted river a place of purifying, Al Mohler and company are living contradictions.

At any rate, ignorance of these matters has not served Christianity or our society well. Christians do error if they think that they do not have to choose the reality that they will function in. Until Christians can define their reality, they will look stupid and act stupid. The Neo-Calvinist leaders of our day do not want our youth to know that they must make that choice, for if they do not understand the reality that they live in and how it functions intellectually…complete control is imminent.

Our ignorance of these matters is evident because we don’t understand why 900 people would voluntarily stand in line before a giant vat full of flavored poison. This is not complicated: those who interpret realty for others dictate perception. Why was I so horrified that atheists posted my article? Why was I so horrified that they listened?

I still have a lot to learn about how the world works.

paul

The Truth About New Calvinism: Volume 2

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on November 16, 2013

Volume 2 coverLet There be no doubt about it: the Reformers demanded that anyone naming the name of Christ must take a vow of knowing nothing but Christ and Him crucified. This meant a vow of celibacy in regard to knowledge, truth, goodness, and reason. This was Plato’s definition of the just artisan. For Luther and Calvin, those who fornicate with reason see the cross as “foolishness.”  

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Does the Law Really Lead People to Christ by Revealing Sin Only?

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on October 14, 2013

ppt-jpeg4The insanely celebrated return to our Reformed roots teaches the following about the law:

We are unable to keep the law perfectly. And since a perfect keeping of the law is the standard for righteousness required to live with God forever, our inability to keep the law perfectly leads us to Christ who must keep/fulfill it for us. As Christians, we continue to use the law in this way to “preach the gospel to ourselves.” The more we use the law to show our innate sinfulness, the more we experience “vivification” (a joyful, perpetual rebirth).

The bogus idea that perfect law-keeping is justification’s standard aside, the most popular text that supposedly supports this idea is Galatians 3:24 –

So then, the law was our guardian until Christ came, in order that we might be justified by faith.

To make that verse work, “guardian” (paidagōgos) is often translated as “tutor.” That’s a stretch. The word is better translated “protector”:

Among the Greeks and the Romans the name was applied to trustworthy slaves who were charged with the duty of supervising the life and morals of boys belonging to the better class. The boys were not allowed so much as to step out of the house without them before arriving at the age of manhood (Strong’s Dictionary).

Furthermore, the Reformed gospel teaches that the law is used by the Christian for this same purpose in our Christian walk—to continually lead us closer and closer to Christ by showing forth sin. This blatantly contradicts the context of the passage:

Galatians 3:25 – But now that faith has come, we are no longer [added] under a guardian,

Reformed doctrine clearly teaches that Christians are still under the law’s purpose to show us a deeper and deeper need for Christ and His grace as we see our own sinfulness in a deeper and deeper way. In other words, for Christians, God’s word still has a redemptive purpose. This is the basis for Historic Redemptive hermeneutics. However, even in regard to the lost, the showing forth of sin is only one purpose for the law, but far from being the only one.

Primarily, the law shows forth life. This is by far the primary theme of law throughout the Scriptures. The law shows forth the wisdom of God, and the wellbeing (blessings) of those who follow it. The law is also framed in the context of promise much more than it is judgment.

This gets into the major crux of the Reformed false gospel; the fusion of justification and sanctification concepts. The blessings of law-keeping can be experienced by unbelievers and believers alike, but such cannot obtain eternal life. The point is that the law shows forth life as much as it does death. It shows both. Again, this is a constant theme throughout the Scriptures. Who will deny that unbelievers will have a higher quality of life to the degree that they follow God’s law? No, it can’t gain salvation for them, but the law brings horizontal blessings by virtue of its wisdom.

Point in case:

1Peter 3:1 – Likewise, wives, be subject to your own husbands, so that even if some do not obey the word, they may be won without a word by the conduct of their wives, 2 when they see your respectful and pure conduct.

In this passage, the husband is not won over by the wife demonstrating how sinful we are and our subsequent need for Christ; she is showing forth the blessings of being a believer. These are blessings that he is also experiencing because the home is sanctified by her presence:

1Corinthians 7:14 – For the unbelieving husband is made holy because of his wife, and the unbelieving wife is made holy because of her husband. Otherwise your children would be unclean, but as it is, they are holy. 15 But if the unbelieving partner separates, let it be so. In such cases the brother or sister is not enslaved. God has called you to peace. 16 For how do you know, wife, whether you will save your husband? Or how do you know, husband, whether you will save your wife?

So, there is a sense in which the unbelieving spouse is blessed by the believing one. The law not only shows forth sin, but also shows forth life. The latter is the way the law leads people to Christ just as much as the former.

paul

Susan Dohse on Plato, Augustine, Calvin, and the Reformation

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on August 13, 2013

SusanTANC 2013 Conference on Gospel Discernment and Spiritual Tyranny

Transcript: Susan D. Dohse MEd.  

Plato

I’m Susan Dohse. I’m married to Paul Dohse for two years, and it has been an adventure. My role in this year’s conference has changed. This year I became Paul’s research assistant. The pay stinks, but the fringe benefits are really nice. Unlike last year when I spoke from personal experience, which though difficult and emotional at times, was easier than this year’s assignment. This year I was asked to step outside my preschool box and share what I’ve learned through not personal experience but personal study and research. And I am thankful for the World Wide Web, computers, and the Internet even though I fuss and say unkind things to the computer, I am thankful that the Lord created those on the eighth day. If I had to find answers to the questions that I had in the old-fashioned way, by using the card catalog and the Dewey Decimal system, I wouldn’t be here this morning. I would still be at the library roaming the stacks. My role in this year’s conference is to share my research. My goal though is to provoke you to think. What I want to share is only an introduction. It’s not even a scratch on the surface of what there is to know about these historical figures. It’s up to you though to continue the research project. So you do have an assignment. I want you to think of me as just a grain of sand, an irritant in the oyster that over time though yields a pearl.

Matthew 7:24-27, Jesus is speaking here. “Therefore, whosoever hears these sayings of mine and does them, I will liken him unto a wise man who built his house upon a rock. And when the rains descended and the floods came and the winds blew and beat upon that house, it fell not, for it was founded upon a rock. And everyone that hears these sayings of mine and does them not shall be likened then to a foolish man who built his house upon the sand, and the rains descended and the floods came and the winds blew and beat upon that house, and great was the fall of it.”

The foundation of thought that I want to illustrate is built upon a historical figure that I just knew initially in a Jeopardy quiz show fashion, you know. Student of Socrates, Greek philosopher, The Republic. Who is Plato? Well, if I were to ask you to tell me something that you know or you’ve been taught about this man, I’m certain I would get classic textbook answers. Greek philosopher, student of Socrates, established the first university called The Academy, wrote The Republic, I would give you credit for being correct. For over 2,500 years, Plato has been studied, admired, modified, personalized, and deified. He has been described as a great thinker, lover of wisdom, a crusader against error, and an enemy of falsehood. Well, after reading hundreds of pages about him, I cannot help but agree that he was a man of great intelligence. He was a mathematical genius, an advocate of education. In your list of trivia facts, would you also include pagan, polytheist, crusader against individuality, founder of communistic, socialistic, and Darwinian evolutionary thought, enemy of God, hero of the reformers?

Born in 427 BC, the son of noble and wealthy Athenian parents with the blood of ancient kings of Attica flowing through his veins. It was this status in life that gave him the way and the means to pursue his quests. Unlike others of his day, he didn’t have to earn a living and go to school at night or hold two jobs to pay for his education. He was of the ruling class of Athens, a privileged elite.

At the age of 20, Plato came to Socrates and asked to be his pupil. And Socrates saw before him a handsome youth, broad shoulders of an athlete, a noble brow of a philosopher, the limpid eyes of a poet. Those aren’t my descriptive terms. This is how Socrates described him. Socrates accepted him as a student, and this became the beginning of a tender and an intimate relationship that lasted until Socrates’ death. The respect and admiration of the student for his teacher was profound and lasting.

Well, after Socrates was executed, Plato and the other disciples of Socrates took to the world, and they traveled the ancient world. Now whether of fear that they would be arrested and also executed because of their association with Socrates or because they wanted to be foreign exchange students is not really well documented. Plato went to Cyrene where Theodorus instructed him in mathematics. He went to southern Italy where he studied the science of numbers under three of the most learned doctors of the Pythagorean mathematical system of his day, went to Egypt to receive instruction from those learned doctors and priests of that ancient land. Some records say he visited Persia, Babylonia, and even India. So he returns to Athens and establishes his Academy, the first university in Europe where he taught until the age of 81.

So up until his return to Athens, we can say letter P for professional student, P for pagan polytheist. Plato regarded the sun, moon, stars, and planets as the visible gods. These heavenly bodies do not come into beings and then pass away. Plato attributed divine souls to the sun, moon, stars, and planets because they followed that intelligible course through the sky. He also held [SOUNDS LIKE] the invisible gods, the gods of the civilized life where the king was Zeus. These gods care about humans. They’re aware of whether we are good or evil. Though invisible, they can reveal them themselves when they want to. They are not standards of justice, beauty, truth, and goodness, but they were living beings who have the perfect knowledge of those standards. Plato wrote, “I do believe that there are gods, and that in a far higher sense than that which any of my accusers believe in them.”

P for platonic wisdom which unites with methodology. P for philosopher ruler. Plato referred to himself as a philosopher ruler. He stressed the importance of living the life of a philosopher by worshipping ideas. The search of ideas, the appreciation of ideas, the participation of the ideas—that’s the life of a philosopher, and that’s what he taught, and that’s what he believed. So the life of Plato was a tireless quest for those ideas. His life is a sustained effort to live by those ideas and to teach others to do so.

P, political scientist, his political philosophy was explained in his writing The Republic. The ideal state, he says, should be divided into three classes of citizens, and each class has its own particular duty to be performed and a special virtue to be developed. The lower class, the laborers and the artisans, their immediate task, acquire skill. The second class, that’s the warriors, and they’re given the opportunity to develop courage and fortitude at their stage of evolution. And the ruling class, those are those men who have learned how to govern themselves and are therefore fit to govern others. I quote from Plato, “Unless philosophers become rulers or rulers become true and thorough students of philosophy, there will be no end to the troubles of the state and humanity.” When each state concentrates upon its own duty and virtue, there will be a well-balanced and harmonious state in which all of the citizens will work, but not for the interest of self but for the common good of the whole. The state will be in charge of production and that sphere of physical goods and life.

And according to Plato, the state would regulate marriages and the breeding of children. In his Republic, we have a foreshadowing of the modern theory of eugenics. There will be selective breeding as with animals. Bad specimens of humanity will be ruthlessly destroyed. There will be no individual families because there’s only one family, and that’s the state. The state will control mating among the sexes. And when children are born, they will be brought up by the state. Thus both breeding and rearing of children will be in the hands of the community. The community of wives and children is part of more ambitious program, however. And that is the abolishment of self. Plato’s ideal is that we shall cease to use a pronoun: mine. These are the foundational ideas as you study history of Nazism, communism, socialism.

Plato was a mystic pagan. He respected and defended Greek mythology even though he recognized that mythology was a myth. He referred to it as a belief, not reason. His metaphysics is confined to the existence of eternal ideas of which the supreme eternal idea is that of the good, the true, the beautiful. Plato, pagan, polytheistic, philosopher ruler, political scientist.

So do we build a biblical doctrine upon his philosophical recommendations? Well, one block does not a foundation make, and one letter doesn’t spell the name. So let’s go to L, link. To understand the place of Plato in Greek civilization, you have to have a snapshot of what Athens was like in his time. Before Athens had produced any great figure of thought, the Greek colonies had a full quota of poets and philosophers and mathematicians. But when the Persians and the Lydians began their advance westward, the Ionian colonists were compelled to return to the mainland. Pericles, the leader of Athens, offered them protection and liberty of expression. So what was created in Athens was a cultural babble [SOUNDS LIKE]. So the significance of Plato lies in the fact that he took this cultural babble and converted it into his beloved city. And he welded it into a system of thought. So in his philosophy these miscellaneous cults and doctrines from all over the known world were fused into a whole new concept of the universe.

Plato claimed no originality for his ideas. He was the world’s interpreter. By giving unity to scattered ancient truisms, Plato’s word took on the appearance of a string, a string which tied together a bundle of ideas that he had gone to this garden of the world’s best thinkers and plucked them and tied them together. With Plato, the Socratic method of education would have been unknown. The abstruse [SOUNDS LIKE] numerical system of Pythagoras would have remained unintelligible to the average mind. Without Plato, the philosophical and psychological systems of the Hindu sages, the Laws of Manu and Buddhist doctrines would have remained hidden from the Western world. Plato was the link between the East and the West. As Emerson wrote, “The excellence of Europe is in its brain.” So his philosophies then were the links between paganism and Western Christian thought.

A, atheist. Plato was a worshipper of many gods. So why do I refer to him as an atheist? Well, he didn’t believe in Yahweh, Jehovah, the God of the Christians. There’s none of it in Plato. The God of the Bible did not exist in Plato or in any ancient Greek literature. Plato writes of the gods, and in some cases he does write a god or god, but he does so in the same way we would talk of man, in a generic name. Contrary to what some scholars write, including Saint Augustine, Plato’s The Good was not a reference to God. It’s a reference to Plato’s perfect idea of good. In another of Plato’s writings, he says that love is divine. When Plato referred to the craftsmen or the artisan of the universe who formed sensible things by using the forms as blueprint, he was speaking metaphorically. According to Plato, there was no creator of the universe. There were principles and according to how things emanate from the One. Now be careful, the word “one” used by Plato is not a reference to the one true God. You can click on my third slide.

The One refers to the forms of the true, the good, and the beautiful. The One does not pay any attention to the universe, but it simply emanates, okay? Do you like that word, “emanate”? There it is. You see it? You have the forms. Does not pay any attention to the universe but simply emanates a lower being that emanates a lower being that emanates a lower being, so on and so forth, oh like a ladder, until the lowest of all matter that comes to be.

Our foundation now is taking shape, isn’t it? The foundation of Christian doctrine is going to be built on a pagan polytheistic philosopher’s ideas created from links made from welding miscellaneous cults and doctrines all emanating from an atheistic belief system.

T, I’m doing the sign language for Heather. T for theory. Plato had a trinity. Huh, he had a trinity. But it is not to be equated with God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, although there are some writers who try to make that assumption because they want to make Platonic ideas palatable to Christian students. His trinity were the forms: the good, the true, and the beautiful. Now these forms are not spirit as God is spirit and they that worship him does worship him in spirit and in truth. These forms are ideals. Humans have access to them through the mind, through reason. Forms are ultimate reality. They are the causes of all knowledge. And they’re interconnected. Plato felt that they were one. Truth is good and beautiful, and good is true and beautiful. And the beautiful is true and good. So how do we know them? Well, Plato thought that we know these pure, perfect forms intuitively. It is only through intuition that fundamental truth can be known. There are some scholars that say Plato’s theory of the forms has the greatest influence in the philosophy of religion. This exaltation of the spiritual over the physical in Platonism carried over into Judaism, and the writings of Philo influenced the Neo-Platonists, astounded the apologists, and the early Christian fathers.

O for ontology. Now that’s a fifty-cent word. It means the philosophy of existence, being. To Plato, true reality was the world of being. We don’t live in this word; we live in an approximation or a shadow of this world. True reality can only be discovered by the mind. Ideas are the patterns that participate in the shadows of our everyday world. So what we have is Plato’s ontological impact on other important Christian doctrines. What we have is an oxymoron, you know, like white chocolate, jumbo shrimp. Christian Platonism, that’s the oxymoron. It’s a philosophy that has blended Platonism with Christianity. Author Randy Alcorn describes what Christian Platonism has done. He says it’s a poison that has caused many Christians to resist other biblical truths—the bodily resurrection of the dead, life on the new earth, specific activities we will engage in heaven such as eating and drinking, walking and talking, living in dwelling places, traveling down the streets, going through gates from one place to another, ruling, working, playing, engaging in earthly culture and that new heaven and new earth.

Okay, so what? So what? I talked for 20 minutes. So what? What do you need to take from this essay that I read to you on Plato? See the sand? The foundation of Reformed doctrine is built on the ideas of a pagan, polytheist who linked other pagan ideas into an atheistic framework that he called his Theory of Forms, and by doing so has ontologically affected the way Christians understand truth, and it robs them of hope. Jesus said, “Everyone that hears these sayings of mine and does them not shall be likened into a foolish man who builds his house upon the sand.”

Augustine

This morning I talked about our dear friend Plato, and John gave more embellishment upon the man. I was looking through the lens of the foundation of Christian doctrine and what contributions that Plato made to what we’re hearing and seeing and being forced to believe in our Christian churches. Just a quick overview for Pastor Robert there, I made a way for me to get a handle on what this man believed in the most concise way that I could. I said that he was a pagan polytheist, philosopher ruler, political scientist. That’s the letter P that linked other philosophies and cults together and welded them into an understandable way of thinking. He was an atheist because he did not believe in the Christian God and the God that we believe in. His T for theory was the forms, the universal, good, true, and the beautiful. And then his ontology was his philosophy of existence or being that there was the reality, the real world and then the world of shadows that we live in.

Now I’m going to talk about Augustine. If you look, he has lots of letters in his name, so I have lots of things to say about him. You can tell my sixth grade teacherhood is coming out here. The letter A is for accolades for Augustine. Aurelius Augustine, or we know him lovingly as Augustine. He was born in November 13, 354 in a small town near the eastern border of what is now Algeria, Thagaste. He is so venerated. He has his own day. His birthday is celebrated in the Roman Catholic Church. His father was a Roman official. His father was a Roman pagan, but his mother, Monica, was a Catholic Christian. In 386 after studying law and philosophy and the classics and a year of teaching grammar and a brief career as a rhetorician—I don’t know if I pronounced that right, in rhetoric—he embraced Christianity. His known writings, the Confessions, part of it autobiographical, part of it not, is a collection of articles, letters that he wrote that talk about his conversion.

He entered what was essentially the Roman Catholic Church of his day. He established the monastery when he moved to Hippo, North Africa after being appointed its bishop. He actually created the monastic lifestyle when he created or established his monastery. Wearing the dark black robes, the celibate lifestyle, the whole monastic bearing came from Augustine and passed down then to other monastic sects of the Roman Catholic Church. His Catholic epitaph would read, “Great Sinner, Great Saint,” North African bishop, father of the Roman Catholic doctrine, his teachings heavily influenced later philosophers, and his teachings have a great influence even among evangelicals today. We could add a second line to that plaque [SOUNDS LIKE]: Father of the Inquisition, Father of the Reformation, Christian Neo-Platonist, teacher of heresy. And both of those epitaphs would be true.

His life was marked by passion, sexual passion in his early life which was encouraged by his pagan father, educational passion which was encouraged by his mother, and a pursuit for wisdom. That pursuit for wisdom blurred the boundaries between philosophy, religion, and psychology. And then upon his conversion he had a passion for the Roman Catholic Church. Like his hero, Plato, he was intelligent, and he pursued with a focused-purpose philosophy as Plato did. His enamorment with the Latin classics led him to Cicero’s Hortensius, which was the catalyst for that passion for philosophy. That passion for philosophy centered on coming up with the answer to the problem of evil or how we make sense of and live within a world that seems so adversarial and dangerous, a world which matters much and everything we love is easily lost. And he expresses those ideas in Book 4 of his Confessions.

Now nine years he spent with, and I’m going to mispronounce this group, the Manicheans, M-A-N-I-C-H-E-A-N-S. He was with that particular group for nine years and really thought that he had found the truth, but then he became disenchanted with them particularly because of their beliefs in astrology. He became acquainted with Ambrose of Milan, a bishop of the Roman Catholic Church who introduced him to the books of the Platonists. While in Milan, his encounter with Platonism provided the major turning point which reoriented his thought among the basic things that were consistent till his death. Augustine himself makes it clear the that it was his encounter with the books of the Platonists that made it possible for him to view both the church and its scriptural tradition—the key word there is tradition—as having an intellectually satisfying and indeed resourceful content.

He was one of the four doctors of the Roman Catholic Church, Jerome, Ambrose, Gregory the Great being the other three. Pope John II called Augustine the common father of the Christian civilization, and some even place him in this little T trinity—Jesus, Paul and Augustine—as being the most influential figure in the history of Christianity. The Catholic Encyclopedia calls Augustine the founder of Western Christianity and the first real Roman Catholic. So accolades to Augustine: thinker, theologian, prolific writer. However, conversion to Christianity and writing volumes of material does not guarantee that the doctrines generated will be correct. Now remember this when you read and study prolific Christian writers of our day such as John Piper and MacArthur. Just be careful.

U, unity. One of the decisive developments in the Western philosophical tradition that was widespread during his day was the merging of Greek philosophy and Greek philosophical tradition and the Judeo-Christian religious and scriptural tradition, and I want to emphasize that word “tradition.” Augustine is one of the main figures through and by whom this merging was accomplished. “Never did man unite in one and the same soul such stern rigor of logic with such tenderness of heart.” That’s the opinion of the research scholar Harnack and other scholars. Great intellectuality admirably fused with enlightened mysticism, that’s Augustine distinguishing characteristics.

Augustine is referred to as one of the great Christian Platonists. And there’s that oxymoron again. In particular, Augustine’s interpretation of Plato dominated Christian thought for the next thousand years after his death in the 5th century. In his Confessions, Augustine openly describes the help he received from the Platonists. Platonism colored the whole future thought of Augustine, and thus this gift of Plato’s writing set a current in the thought of Western Christendom. Augustine believed that Plato lifted him to a true and almost worthy knowledge of God. And early in his Christian career he declared, “I am convinced that I shall discover among the Platonists nothing repugnant to our religion.” The Platonists are therefore the only serious antagonists just because they need so slight a change to make them Christians. Augustine’s physical, logical and moral philosophy, all this learned first and most thoroughly from Plato, and many a formula of Platonic ethics have been passed down through Augustine and Christian literature.

What happens when this unity of thought occurs? You have pagan philosophy and Christian doctrine. Pagan philosophy becomes Christianized, and Christian doctrine becomes paganized. And that is what Augustine did. He took pagan philosophy, changed some terminology, definitions, tweaked the vocabulary so that it took on an acceptable Christian format that was palatable to the church. And in doing so, he paganized Christian doctrine. If paganism was conquered by Christianity, it is equally true that Christianity was corrupted by paganism. Many of the pagan tenets invented by the Egyptians and idealized by Plato were retained and held worthy of belief by Augustine.

In the Catholic Encyclopedia I quote: “The great majority of the Christian philosophers down to Saint Augustine were Platonists. They appreciated the uplifting influence of Plato’s psychology and metaphysics and recognized in that influence a powerful ally of Christianity in the warfare against materialism and naturalism.” I’m going to quote Augustine in one of his books called Retractions, book 1 part 12. “That which is known as the Christian religion existed among the ancients, and never did not exist from the beginning of the human race until the time when Christ came in the flesh, at which time the true religion, which already existed, began to be called Christianity.” In this statement Augustine that Christianity existed before Christ’s sojourn on the earth, and Saint Augustine not only was a student of both Plato and Plotinus, but he also read and studied some ancient Egyptian hermetic writings. He obviously had read the hermetic text because he quotes one extensively in his own work called The City of God.

So the unifying of Plato’s philosophies and Christian thought was foundational to Augustine’s teachings and from his Confessions to his later works. So should a believer, such as we are, study Augustine? Absolutely. But alongside his writings, the Word of God needs to be opened. Over time the Catholic Church has given his writings powerful authority, even making his writings equal in authority as Scripture, and in doing so gives church authority to the pagan philosophy of Plato and other Neo-Platonists Augustine credits as the source of his knowledge.

I’m going to quote Augustine from his writing on Christian doctrine. “If those who are called philosophers, and especially the Platonists, have said aught that is true and in harmony with our faith, we are not to shrink from it. We are to claim it for our own use from those who have unlawful possession of it.” Now I want you to know that that looks good on the surface. You find something true, and you claim it. But I want you to note his phrase, “harmony with our faith,” the faith in the Roman Catholic Church, not in harmony with Scripture but harmony in the faith that he found in the Roman Catholic Church.

G, genius. Augustine, he was a genius. He was not simple-minded, and he was not an idiot. He loved logic. He loved rhetoric and philosophy. He was not a simple-minded man. His genius made it possible to unify and combine the powerful and penetrating logic of Plato. His intellectual genius took the deep scientific concepts of Aristotle, the knowledge and intellectual suppleness of Origen, the grace and eloquence of Basil and then meld them into Christianized acceptable belief systems. And it’s because of his genius that he is considered a philosopher, theologian, and an exegetist. He is given the name Master of all the centuries. He’s admired above all for giving the church a rare union of the speculative talent of the Greek and practical spirit of a Latin church. Great intellectuality, enlightened mysticism. You fuse them together and you have the characteristics of Augustine’s genius. This is why people do not have a problem describing him and using the term Christian Platonist.

Hegel, the modern day philosopher, believed that Christian theology was significantly influenced by Neo-Platonism. The German philosopher Martin Heidegger agreed with Nietzsche that Christianity is Platonism for the people. Friedrich Nietzsche, if I’m saying his name right, and Martin Heidegger, they were raised as Christians. Nietzsche was raised Lutheran, Heidegger Catholic, and both concluded that Christianity was basically, and I’m quoting, a dumbed down, simplified version of Platonism altered to make it understandable and popular with the uneducated masses. That’s their words, not mine. Augustine was a genius.

Oh, we have two U’s in his name. The second, unity. And that was Augustine’s unity of church and state. Please bear with me because what happens here and how he worked for this unity of church and state to me was just baffling as to the spiritual tyranny and control that the church wants to have today. Based upon what John has already said, you will see some of this Greek philosophy coming through Augustine’s. Number one, he felt the human will was weak and subject to all sorts of temptations and had no external support, so the individual was helpless in his battle against Satan. So because his world was in crisis at the time and the Christian-hating bands of robbers were constantly raping, pillaging, and burning Catholics and their property, he felt that compulsory measures on behalf of Christian ideals was called for, and so the right thing to do to help bring order to the Roman Empire was to use the wrong reason, take the civil government as an extension of the church to accomplish this.

Now you have to understand Augustine’s thinking here and what his teaching was about the Holy Roman Empire and the perilous time in which he lived. Augustine thought that the Roman Empire had been prophesied in the Old Testament and was a fulfillment of Old Testament prophecies. The Church’s unity and authority reveals who the true church is. It affirms that the unity of the church, its expansion and recognition throughout the empire, was fulfillment of Old Testament prophecy. So since the churches spread, according to prophecy, the true church then is the Catholic Church. Now Augustine claimed that the empire that’s now Christian by God’s providence and its emperor who is divinely appointed has full rights or authority to correct those who opposed the unity and authority of the church.

Secondly, unity achieved by forced conversion through the authority that the church has according to Scripture [UNINTELLIGIBLE] from Augustine’s unity, seemed to be more important than sincere conversion. He believed if you forced them to convert that they would be sitting among true believers and perhaps eventually get truly converted. But he did have a proof text for forced conversion, and that was Paul’s conversion on the road to Damascus. Christ used violence against Paul, Augustine said. I can’t help but laugh that he was a teacher of logic and this is so illogical, okay? Christ used violence against Paul, and Augustine said that the church is just following Christ in coercing the heretics. By using force, Augustine argues, Christ made Paul a far better disciple than the others who came to Christ by their own wills, so Augustine expected the same in cases of forced conversion in order to keep the unity of the church. He felt that the church should have the authority to enforce unity with the help of the civil government which he always referred to civil government as the Christian state. And I quote, “And these times when the whole world became a choir praising Christ is different from the time of the early church when the Christians were being persecuted by the state.” These Christian times gave him support and encouragement to assert that Christian unity should be imposed through the authority of the church because to do so was fulfilling Scripture. Scripture prophesied what the emperor’s duties were as the head of the empire and as a Christian because he had been baptized in the Catholic Church. So as a Christian, the emperor was divinely appointed to defend the church and oppose heresy.

So the Catholic Church looked to Augustine for help with this whole idea of the church really being disunified because of different heresies being promoted, so he took the attitude that if verbal persuasion didn’t work, then force might be necessary to combat heresy and bring unity back to the church. His political and social views flowed directly from his theology. As a philosopher, he states his arguments using Platonic traditions that he learned probably from the Neo-Platonists at Alexandria. As a citizen of the city of Rome, he states that the Roman Empire is a divine origin through which the truths of the Catholic Church are to be safeguarded and spread.

Augustine believed that the state is a divinely ordained punishment for fallen men with its armies, its power to command, coerce, punish and even put to death as well as its institutions of slavery and private property. God shapes the ultimate ends of man’s existence through the divinely appointed government. Although he did oppose the death penalty for heresy, he provided all of the rationale for the Spanish Inquisition. His rationale came from the parable of Christ, the Great Banquet. Augustine used this parable because it contains the line “compel them to come” to justify using force to bring the unconverted into the church. So by taking Scripture out of context and using it to justify his philosophical and political justification to yoke together church and state, Augustine’s unity was a political unity. It depended upon human resources. But when the Apostle Paul talked of church unity in Ephesians 4:3, he speaks of spiritual fellowship, and Jesus explicitly commands his followers not to use force in the conversion process, Mark 10, and Paul’s call to universalism is not an invocation to the church to conquer more territory, Ephesians 4.

In Sermon 46 Augustine commented to his parishioners that while in the beginning the apostles were fishers of men, now Christians must be hunters, [UNINTELLIGIBLE] beating the thickets and driving – this is crucial. Beating the thickets and driving the wandering sheep into the nest that will save them. He believed that identifying the civil authorities as the servants who were sent out by the Lord of the banquet to gather the recalcitrant guests was also suggested in Psalm 81:11. The historian J. A. Neander accurately perceived that Augustine’s heresy contains the germ of the whole system of spiritual despotism, intolerance, persecution even to the court of the Inquisition. The fact that Augustine was doctrinally incorrect on so many things even to the point of persecuting those who disagreed with him should be cause for alarm. For if he was so wrong on so much, why would anyone think he would be correct on other doctrines particularly predestination?

Take a breath. We’re in the middle of his name. S, soteriology. For Augustine, Matthew 24:13 becomes the sine qua non of eternal salvation, without which it could not be. One can genuinely believe but cannot be elect. It is indeed to be wondered at and greatly to be wondered at that to some of his own children whom he has regenerated in Christ, to whom he has given faith, hope, and love God does not give the perseverance also. One can be regenerated but not elect. “Some are regenerated but not elect since they do not persevere,” direct quotation from Augustine.

The only way, according to Augustine, to validate one’s election was to persevere until the end of his physical life on earth. And if you did, this was the ultimate sign that you were elected. However, Augustine did not think anyone could know that he was elected until he died and stood before the Lord. So no matter how righteous, pious, good a life the believer might be living, he could always fall away from the faith before he died, and such a falling away would prove that this former believer was never elect to begin with. It would also prove that any assurance derived from the righteousness of his former life was false assurance. Augustine believes that no one could be certain that he was saved until death.

So with this understanding of Matthew 24:13 as the driving force behind his doctrine of salvation, Augustine had to also reason that justification was a lifelong process. No one could know if you were justified until his physical death since no one could know if he would persevere in the Christian faith and practice until his physical death. Thus, members of the Roman Catholic Church have no assurance if their life of perseverance is actually good enough to be accepted by God.

One consequence to this approach to soteriology is a life of self-denial and asceticism so as to help ensure that the believer is not seduced from the straight and narrow by the sirens of this world, Augustine said. Self-denial then becomes a requirement for eternal salvation. Augustine, I quote, “Self-denial of all sorts, if one perseveres to the end of his life, will bring salvation.” This is a works-based salvation.

Augustine could not explain how God can graciously give some baptized, regenerate believers the gift of eternal life, perseverance to the end but doesn’t give it to others. He always had a fallback position. I quote, “If you could not explain something from Scripture,” he said, “it’s a mystery.” When the theologian can transform obvious contradictions into mysteries, one can easily explain the unexplainable, solve the insoluble and unscrew the inscrutable. The soteriology of Augustine is gloomy, full of contradictions, and was used by Calvin as a framework for his systematic theology.

T, we’re getting to the end, theology. Converting to Christianity, I’m going to repeat this because it’s important, writing volumes of material does not guarantee that a person’s theology is correct. Augustine is called the Father of Orthodox Theology—and John talked about that word “orthodox”—yet many of his theological premises depart from Scripture, but they’re accepted by the Roman Catholic Church as being biblical, and even Protestants, accept some of his doctrines as biblically acceptable. On baptism, he not only departed from the Bible but became an innovator of this doctrine, came the infant baptism. Infants dying without baptism are consigned to limbus infantium, limbo. An infant who is not baptized into the Roman Catholic Church and dies will be resigned to the outskirts of hell, Augustine believed and taught, and there they receive a lighter punishment. “It may therefore be correctly affirmed that such infant that’s quit the body without being baptized will be involved in the mildest condemnation of all.” The only thing that Augustine said that can take the place of baptism is martyrdom. This is why he was hesitant about the death penalty for heresy because the Donatists who were his conflict for years, he did not want them to be executed because he was afraid they would gain heaven through martyrdom. This is why he was very reluctant to use the death penalty for heretics because you could stand before God as somebody who had been executed and God may say, “Hark, you receive salvation because I claim you are a martyr,” so Augustine was reluctant. But then he did concede in the end that there were certain times when off with the head or burning at the stake was appropriate.

Augustine is regarded in a true sense as the founder of Roman Catholicism. There are other theological heresies that he claimed were biblical. Mary was sinless. He promoted her worship. He allowed for the intercession of saints, the adoration of relics. He was the first to ascribe that the so-called sacraments were visible sign of invisible grace, and he adds confirmation, marriage, and ordination to the Lord’s Supper and baptism. He believed in the apostolic succession of bishops starting with Peter as being one of the marks of the true church, and his doctrine on the church leads on to the papal supremacy over secular governments. Augustine was the one who gave the doctrine of purgatory its first definite form. The most relevant aspect of Augustine’s theology is his belief in the predestination of the elect and the related doctrines that accompany it. He asserted that the number of the elect was fixed. Predestination was synonymous with foreknowledge, and no one can be sure of his predestination or salvation.

There are those of us sitting here at the Protestant ilk, we sit and nod at the ridiculous notion of some of Augustine’s theology. We shake our heads and tsk, tsk, tsk, tsk, tsk and, because these doctrines are foundational to the Roman Catholic Church. We wipe our Baptist brows and thank the Lord that we don’t believe or practice those heresies. But I do have a Baptist friend who brags that her husband who when they first got married was not a Calvinist, but now she has set him straight. Where did Calvin get his theology? From our dear little friend Augustine. Christ said a little leaven leavens the whole lump. So how much false doctrine do we allow in a systematic theology before the whole of one’s theology is affected?

I, interpretation. And I do apologize, but it’s not my fault that he has a long name. Since the Scripture are the final authority for Christians, since the Scripture is the final authority, it’s important to discuss Augustine’s view of the Bible. On the surface his view on inspiration and authority seems quite satisfactory. Regarding the New Testament, he accepted the 27 books as being part of the canon of Scripture, but when it came to the Old Testament, which was settled long before the time of Christ, he accepted the apocrypha which he admitted as being inspired Scripture that even the Jews reject it as being a part of the canon of Scripture. Augustine quoted from the apocryphal books of Baruch, Bel and the Dragon, Susanna and the Song of Three Children, and he believed the Septuagint, the Greek translation of the Pentateuch, that it was the Septuagint that was divinely inspired, and he wrote to Jerome and told him to translate the Old Testament from it instead of from the Hebrew. Augustine confessed that he didn’t know Hebrew, and he was pretty weak on the Greek. So on the testimony of Augustine’s work, he had a limited knowledge of biblical Greek, a very slight knowledge of patristic Greek, and no working knowledge of classical Greek. So although he professed orthodoxy on the inspiration of Scripture, his acceptance of apocrypha as authoritative and coupled with his faulty hermeneutics should make him suspect.

He had a broad and flexible view of interpretation of the Bible, and he based it on the allegorical method. And I want you to perk up your ears here because this is part of this hermeneutics that New Calvinists use as, what is it, honey?

PAUL:  Christocentric.

Christocentric, you know, you have to find Jesus in every verse. He was so intent on drawing spiritual lessons out of every single word in the Bible that he resembled a magician pulling rabbits out of a hat. He produced the Gospel message from the unlikeliest passages of Scripture. I’ll give you some examples. The five porches at the pool of Bethesda, those were the five books of Moses according to Augustine. The water in that pool represented the Jews, and when the water was troubled, that was the suffering of Christ. That’s how he taught that passage of Scripture from an allegorical point of view. Nathaniel’s victory stood for his sins because the leaves reminded him of Adam and Eve, you know, when God made clothes out of the leaves. Zacchaeus’ sycamore tree is the cross of Jesus because if you climb the tree or the cross, you will see Jesus. In the psalms the expression sons of Korah meant Christian because Korah means baldness, and Jesus was crucified at the place of the skull. You see the ridiculousness of some of his allegorical method of trying to find a gospel message in every passage of Scripture. You could get dizzy following his logic on interpreting the significance of the 153 fish in John 21 or the 40 days Jesus, Moses, and Elijah fasted in the wilderness. He went so far as to interpret Noah’s drunkenness as a symbol of Christ’s passion. Noah and Jesus both suffered. They both drank the cup, Noah literally, Jesus figuratively. The ark and the cross were both made of wood.

So the bishop of Hippo believed that the Bible is so far above and beyond human minds that if it is to be made available to us all, it has to be done in a series of signs and allegory. Figurative language sometimes difficult to comprehend, according to Augustine, is the way God communicates with his children.

N, narrow. Augustine held to a very narrow view of the church. In my research I studied article after article on Augustine and his views on the church, and I deleted many lines that I had taken from selected articles because he has a long name and I’ve talked a lot about him. How was I to support my statement that Augustine had a narrow view of the church when he had such a broad and flexible view on interpreting Scripture? So I’m going to just let Augustine speak for himself. I quote, “No man can find salvation except in the Catholic Church. Outside the Catholic Church one can have everything except salvation. One can have honor. One can have sacraments. One can sing hallelujah. One can answer amen. Once have faith in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, and preach it too. But never can one find salvation except in the Catholic Church.” Ah, that’s narrow.

In another one of his writings, Saint Augustine and the Council of Cirta, he said, “He who is separated from the body of the Catholic Church, however laudable his conduct may seem, will never enjoy eternal life, and the anger of God remains on him by reason of the crime of which he is guilty in living separated from Christ because he was separated from the Catholic Church.” Another one, “He who does not have the church as his mother does not have God as his father.” Augustine held to a narrow, exclusive Roman Catholic view of the church and how important the church was to salvation.

We’re to the last letter, E, eschatology. Augustine claimed to have once adhered to premillennialism, that he taught from a millennialist [SOUNDS LIKE] framework. He reinterpreted the millennial, the thousand-year reign of Christ, to refer to the church, and he equated the thousand-year reign of Christ and his saints with the whole duration of this world. So this is how he interpreted Revelation 20. Jesus has bound Satan and restrained him from seducing the nations at Calvary. Don’t listen to the news tonight because there’s still a lot of evil out there in the world that I personally believe Satan is responsible for, but Augustine believed that Jesus bound Satan at Calvary. The saints are currently reigning with Christ in the millennial kingdom which presently exists. So we are living in the millennial kingdom. Satan will be loosed for a three-and-a-half-year period of time during which the church will be severely persecuted, and then after this Christ will return. He also equated the church with the kingdom and had the church reigning now. I quote from him, “Therefore the church even now is the kingdom of God and the kingdom of heaven, accordingly, even now, his saints praying with him.” Augustine stated that the literal view of the scope of the millennium would not be objectionable. If the nature of the millennial kingdom was a spiritual one rather than a physical, that was okay. Augustine’s doctrine, his dominant eschatology here has been dominant for centuries. Premillennialism, with a few exceptions, soon became the view of the outcasts and heretics.

In summary, we have Augustine who created his own doctrines, misinterpreted God’s Word, holds church authority in equality with God’s Word, built his framework of theology upon a Greek philosopher’s belief system, taught eschatology with those Platonist ideas as his foundation. The interpretive errors of the early Christian fathers, Augustine as well as others, were made because of the circumstances in which these men found themselves. So they were living in hard times. The church was, it was in uproar. The Roman Empire was falling apart. Evil men were invading. It was a horrible time. It was actually a precursor to the Dark Ages. But unfortunately, Augustine took the circumstances in which he found himself and interpreted the Bible according to current events, and you can’t do that. We have to continually go back to the Scripture as our source for doing theology. As much as we may respect and admire the early church fathers or the Reformers or the Puritans or a particular modern spiritual leader, we must always remember to be Bereans, checking their conclusions and reasoning against the plumb line of God’s word. In closing, I’m going to use Matthew 7 again. And Jesus said, “Whosoever hears my words and does them not shall be likened to a man who built his house upon sand.”

Calvin

I have to really confess that Plato, Augustine, and Calvin, I had rudimentary knowledge of them. You know, I have a master’s degree. I graduated from Cedarville University, and I only had the jeopardy answers for this man, you know, just little Greek philosopher, saint in the Catholic Church. TULIP is all I knew about John Calvin, didn’t know what TULIP meant, but I knew his acronym TULIP.

Okay, building up on Augustine, we have our friend, Calvin. C for character. Does character mean anything to you when you choose a pastor for your church? In the interview process and candidating that occurs in our churches today, does not the character of the man matter? You know, your church committee gathers character references, recommendations, qualifications, and they ask the men to present themselves through the congregation, you know, this pastoral candidate, right? Does character matter? Or just credentials? Calvin was abusive, derisive, contentious, insulting, disparaging, harsh, and sarcastic in his writings and in his opinions expressed of others, not only in his language but frequently in how he actually treated people who dared to disagree with him. Calvin lived in Geneva and he envisioned his city as a model Christian community that would be based on the Bible, patterned after the early church, and it got lots of nicknames. Geneva was to be a theocracy, a bibliocracy, a clericocracy [SOUNDS LIKE] or the Christocracy, whichever one you want to peg on to the town’s son [SOUNDS LIKE].

From the very beginning of his ministry in Geneva, Calvin was intimately involved in both church and state. Ahhh! I wonder where that idea came from. Well, you know, John Calvin was baptizing the Roman Catholic Church, okay? So he was well aware of Saint Augustine’s teachings on church and state. So he accounted among the duties of civil government to cherish and protect the outward worship of God. “The civil government was to defend its sound doctrine of piety and the position of the church. The civil government was to adjust our life to the society of men, to form our social behavior to civil righteousness, to reconcile us one with another, and to promote general peace and tranquility,” quote from John Calvin. The civil government was also to prevent idolatry, sacrilege using God’s name, blasphemies against his truth, and other public offenses against religion. The rules and regulations introduced in Geneva during Calvin’s ministry left no area of life untouched. And this is why Calvin has been called the Genevese Dictator. He would tolerate in Geneva the opinions of only one person: his own.

So here’s some examples of his regulations. Besides the usual laws against dancing, profanity, gambling, and immodesty, the never [UNINTELLIGIBLE] eating of a meal was regulated. Attendance at public worship was made mandatory, and watchmen were directed to see that people went to church. He had his own church police to make sure that you were in church. Press censorship was instituted. Any book judged to be heretical or immoral was burned. The naming of children was regulated. If you were named after a saint, you had a penal offense, a fine, or imprisonment. During the plague, over 20 people were burned alive for witchcraft, and Calvin was involved in all 20 of those prosecutions. He was involved in every conceivable aspect of city life, and he was particularly severe with adulterers. And for that sin, he favored the death penalty. Those found guilty of adultery though were fined or/and imprisoned. The civil government did disagree with his harsh rule there. Well, these laws obviously didn’t stamp out adultery for Calvin’s own sister-in-law and stepdaughter were found guilty of adultery. Calvin virtually made every sin a crime and did not hesitate to make use of the civil power for the execution of church discipline. His view of the subordination of the civil power to the ecclesiastical is no different than what the papal authority was in the church.

Sadly, here is a man who put into effect in Geneva the very principles of punishment, coercion, and death that Augustine advocated and the Roman Catholic Church followed consistently for centuries. Augustinianism was worked into a still more rigid and uncompromising system by the severe intellect of John Calvin. And Calvin justified himself by the same erroneous interpretation of Luke 14 as Augustine did: “Compel them to come.” He took that word out of that verse to give legitimacy for his severe laws.

So here is a man standing before your church for the position of pastor, and his character references reveal that he’s a tyrant. He has vindictive tendencies. He’s abusive in word and deed, judgmental and opinionated. So you want to vote him in?

MAN:  Sure.

Sure. Well, there are a lot of Calvinist-believing pastors that are voted in, and we all know by personal experience that punishment, coercion, and threats were used against us by those Calvinist pastors because they felt they had the authority to do so. So one cannot separate character from doctrinal beliefs. Doesn’t God’s words say in Proverbs, as a man thinks in his heart so is he?

A, Augustinian. Here’s that man’s name again. The main features of Calvin’s theology are found in the writings of Saint Augustine to such an extent that many theologians regard Calvinism as just a more fully developed form of Augustinianism.

MAN:  A more violent form.

So as not to be accused of being biased or selective in my research, because you know you can be that way. You can only pick research that supports your point of view and just not quote people that don’t support your – letter A, okay? So I’m going to quote Calvin in regard to his connection to Augustine. “Augustine is so holy with me that if I wish to write a confession of my faith, I could do so with all fullness and satisfaction to myself out of his writing.” That’s from John Calvin.

Confirmed by the authority of Augustine, Calvin often credits Augustine with having formulated his key concepts. Calvin called himself an Augustinian theologian. Of Augustine, Calvin said, “And we quote frequently as being the best and most faithful witness of all Antiquity.” “We have all come into this way of faith,” says Augustine. And then Calvin says, Let us continually constantly adhere to it.” John Calvin: “I say with Augustine that the Lord has created those who,” as he certainly foreknew, “were to go to destruction.” And he did so because he so willed. “I say with Augustine that the Lord created those to go to destruction.” “If your mind is troubled, decline not to embrace the counsel of Augustine.” Those are quotes from John Calvin.

There are many other examples of Augustine’s influence upon Calvin from the scores of times that Calvin quotes Augustine in his writings. Leading Calvinists admit that Calvin’s basic beliefs were formed when he was still a devout Roman Catholic. Calvinists praise Augustine and claimed that he is one of the greatest theological and philosophical minds that God has ever seen fit to give his church. The greatest Christian since New Testament times, greatest man who ever wrote Latin. His labors and writings more than those of any other man in the age of which he lived contributed to the promotion of sound doctrine and the revival of true religion. These aren’t my words. These are quotes taken from scholars and other people who research Augustine. This is what they say. “Did not these men forget that Augustine believed that grace came through the Roman Catholic Church? Calvinists shower such praise upon Augustine it becomes easier to understand why they heap the same praise upon Calvin. If Calvin heaped all of these praise on Augustine, can you not understand why the Calvinists heap all this praise upon these men?

Calvin drew from a polluted stream when he embraced the teachings of Augustine. But this speculation and formative Roman Catholicism has acknowledged to be the source of Calvinism and is praised by the evangelicals.

I don’t have time, but I have lots of quotes from people who hate him. I’ll leave you with one. Those who hate him say this about him. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church: “Calvin was the unopposed dictator of Geneva.” I have to share this one. The Yale professor of history, Roland Bainton: “If Calvin ever wrote anything in favor of religious liberty, it was a typographical error.”

L, legacy. Calvin left behind a global legacy, and it was due to his missionary work in France, his program of reform eventually reached out to the French-speaking provinces of The Netherlands. Calvin was adopted under Frederick III, which led to the Heidelberg Catechism in 1563, leading [UNINTELLIGIBLE] sympathetic to Calvinism, settled in England and Scotland. And during the English Civil War the Calvinistic Puritans produced the Westminster Confession, which became the confessional standard for the Presbyterians in the English-speaking world. Now having established itself in Europe, the movement continued to spread to other parts of the world including North America, South Africa, and Korea. Calvin did not live to see the foundation of his work grow into this international movement, but his death allowed his ideas to break out of Geneva and succeed far beyond their borders. Calvinists recognized as a renewer of the Church, that’s what the Lutheran churches call Calvin, Renewer of the Church. And then the Church of England, he is a saint. Saint John Calvin.

V, who’s going to guess what V is? Villain? No. Vigilante? No. Roman numeral 5, V, for the five points of Calvinism. The acronym TULIP, T-U-L-I-P is used to summarize the five points of Calvinism. To the uninformed, when you say TULIP, you think of this beautiful flower growing out in your garden. But in religious circles, you say TULIP and you know what it refers to: Total depravity, Unconditional election, Limited atonement, Irresistible grace and Perseverance of the saints. Now Calvinists are adamant in their insistence of these five points. TULIP is the Gospel according to Calvinists. These five doctrines form the basic framework of God’s plan for saving  sinners. I quote, “God’s plan of salvation, rebuilding the scriptures consists of what is popularly known as the five points of Calvinism.” I didn’t make that up. These are quotes from Calvinistic authors. Of the ten words that make up that acronym, four of them are not even found in the Bible. Total, depravity, unconditional, and irresistible, you won’t find those words in God’s Word. Two were only found once—limited and perseverance. And as for the phrases that are expressed by each of these letters—total depravity, unconditional election, limited atonement, irresistible grace, and perseverance of the saints—none of them appear anywhere from the beginning of Genesis to the end of Revelation. So we need to be cautious in approaching these key Calvinistic concepts. The burden is upon them to show that these ideas in spite of their absence from Scripture are indeed taught in Scripture. It’s not our burden to disprove them; it’s their burden to prove them. I’ll give you an example. Scripture does not use the word “trinity” in there. But Trinity is taught, the Trinity is taught in the Bible. It’s clearly taught. The word “trinity” is not there, but it is clearly taught in God’s Word. So it’s up to the Calvinists to take these five points that they claim is the gospel in God’s plan for saving sinners and prove to us that that is true.

Calvinism has a special definition of total depravity. It’s called inability. This definition of inability necessitates both unconditional election and irresistible grace. But this declaration of inability expresses human opinion, and it’s never stated in the Bible. Calvinism insists that all, being totally depraved, are unable to repent. But they also teach that man is a cannibal for failing to repent. So how can a person be unwilling to do what he is unable to do? So there is no way to prove or disprove this statement of total depravity through Scripture.

The heart of Calvinism is unconditional election. That’s another phrase that’s not found in the Bible. Limited atonement is a Reformed Calvinistic doctrine and should not be equated with biblical Christianity. How does one know if one is saved or not? It is difficult to understand and defend that many Calvinists reject this point of the five points, the limited atonement. Although salvation is unquestionably we would say by grace, irresistible grace is salvation by another gospel. Perseverance of the saints is at enmity [SOUNDS LIKE] with the eternal security of the believer. Thousands of pages have been written about these five points of Calvinism. I have read about these five points. And I read about those who only hold four-point Calvinism and three-point Calvinism. And so we could spend the rest of our conference debating these doctrinal points, but we won’t.

I, we’re getting to the end, Institutes. The importance of Calvin’s Institutes to the development of the Reformed faith is monumental. The Institutes have been translated into other languages and made the name Calvin a household word among Protestants. It’s called the masterpiece of Protestant theology, one of the ten or twenty books in the world of which we may say without exaggeration that they have determined the course of history and have changed the face of the earth. The best and most reliable witness to Calvin’s Institutes is none other than Augustine. Calvin and Augustine are inseparable. They are inseparably conjoined because Augustine was so strongly Calvinistic and John Calvin refer to himself as an Augustinian theologian. One cannot read five pages in the Calvin Institutes without seeing the name Augustine. Calvin quotes him over 400 times. He even called Augustine holy father and holy man. And he closes his introduction to the Institutes with a quote from Augustine. So when you study the Institutes, Augustine’s philosophies, and the Word of God, you need to be utilizing, again open up God’s Word, one to compare the philosophies and the other to determine truth.

N, not know nothing. 1 Corinthians 1, I’m going to read two portions of Scripture here. “Now this I say that every one of you saith, I’m of Paul and I’m of Apollos or I am of Cephas and I of Christ. Is Christ divided? Was Paul crucified for you? Or were you baptized in the name of Paul?” I am of John Calvin. I am of John Wesley. I am of Martin Luther. I am of John Piper. “I thank God that I baptized but Crispus and Gaius lest any should say that I had baptized in the name of Paul. For Christ sent me not to baptize but to preach the Gospel, not with wisdom of words lest the Cross of Christ be made of no effect. For the preaching of the Cross is to them that perish foolishness, but unto us who are saved it is the power of God. For it is written, I will destroy the wisdom of the wise and bring to nothing the understanding of the prudent.” I’m going to go down some verses. “Because the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men.” The preaching of the Cross, the philosophies of Plato, Augustine, the theology of Calvin, not with man’s wisdom, lest the cross be of no effect. “For it is written, I will destroy the wisdom of the wise and bring to nothing the understanding of the prudent.”

If you could go to my last slide. If we return to Matthew 7, do you see that? Plato, Augustine, Calvin, the Reformation Church. Matthew 7, Jesus said, “Any man who hears my words and does them not shall be likened to a man who builds his house upon sand and the rains came down and the floods came up, the rains came down and floods came up, and the house on the sand went splat. This is a structure built on the sand of man’s wisdom. Pagan philosophies melded with Christian ideas and honored as biblical truth.

My question for us one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, and whoever is on the Internet watching, my question for us, where’s the storm? Where’s the flood? We can be the storm. We can be the flood. And we have a promise. Great will be the fall thereof.

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