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Saturday, November 29, 2008

The Order of God's Eternal Elective Decrees, Part 1

Out of the north comes golden splendor;
God is clothed with awesome majesty.
The almighty—we cannot find him;
he is great in power;
justice and abundant righteousness he will not violate.
Therefore men fear him;
he does not regard any who are wise in their own conceit
- Job 37:22-24 (ESV)

While preparing my outline for the Advent service at our home fellowship next week, I embarked on some theological research regarding the order of God's elective decrees. As I wanted to retain more of a devotional stature for an Advent message on God's eternal sovereign plan, I will be posting three blogs on the subject the order of decrees, giving them only a brief mention at the home fellowship.

Throughout church history, we have seen the development of theological frameworks stated in such a way as they were not previously stated in reaction to false teaching. For example, the doctrine of the Trinity is clearly apparent in Scripture, though it was not stated the way we would say it in a creed or confession now. This is not to say that people did not believe in the Trinity prior to Constantine. Rather, it was the heresy of Arius that forced early church fathers at the Council of Nicæa to formulate what Christians had believed for three hundred years. Likewise, the Five Points of Calvinism are largely Augustinian, and exist in Calvin’s theology, though it was not until the Remonstrance that they were set forth in the Canons of Dort, in response to the Arminian heresy. Even heresies occur by the Providence of God, and they serve his ends because they refine his Church!

In the same way, the Infralapsarian view of God’s eternal decree, while dealing with a theoretical logical order of decrees in the mind of God (who can know it?), is a necessary formulation because it combats two errors: Supralapsarianism and Amyraldism.

According to the infralapsarian view the order of events was as follows: God proposed (1) to create; (2) to permit the fall; (3) to elect to eternal life and blessedness a great multitude out of this mass of fallen men, and to leave the others, as He left the Devil and the fallen angels, to suffer the just punishment of their sins; (4) to give His Son, Jesus Christ, for the redemption of the elect; and (5) to send the Holy Spirit to apply to the elect the redemption which was purchased by Christ. According to the supralapsarian view the order of events was: (1) to elect some creatable men (that is, men who were to be created) to life and to condemn others to destruction; (2) to create; (3) to permit the fall; (4) to send Christ to redeem the elect; and (5) to send the Holy Spirit to apply this redemption to the elect. (Loraine Boettner, The Reformed Doctrine of Predestination. 126-127)
Because Infralapsarian view combats Supralapsarianism and Amyraldism, it is the aspects that differentiate it from those two views that we need to concern ourselves with. In the argument with Supralapsarianism, the issue is whether election comes before or after the fall (from the Latin supra-, meaning above, and lapsus, meaning error, or the fall)

When thinking about these things, we must continually remind ourselves that we are not dealing with the order of events, but the order of God’s decree. Phil Johnson writes:

The distinction between infralapsarianism and supralapsarianism has to do with the logical order of God’s eternal decrees, not the timing of election. Neither side suggests that the elect were chosen after Adam sinned. God made His choice before the foundation of the world (Eph. 1:4)—long before Adam sinned. Both infras and supras (and even many Arminians) agree on this.
(Phil Johnson, Director of John MacArthur’s Grace to You radio ministry, operates the website spurgeon.org, and has a great article on four different soteriological views of God’s Eternal Decree. He labels the four views Supralapsarianism, Infralapsarianism, Amyraldism, and Arminianism.)

The Supralapsarian says God was thinking about man as unfallen when he chose to make some vessels of wrath fitted for destruction and others vessels of mercy. And then he pondered the means to make them judicially deserving of their reprobation and ordained the fall. So in the Supralapsarian view, God is looking at mankind as innocent before damning some to hell. In Infralapsarianism, God already expects the fall, and therefore his election of some is a divine act of mercy.

Supralapsarianism is more clearly contrary to human reason than the “moderate Calvinist” view, and therefore, Boettner explains that Arminians like to pick the Supralapsarian view when trying to persuade people that Calvinists are evil (p. 29).

What sets Supralapsarianism apart from Infralapsarianism is that it changes reprobation from a withholding of grace to something else entirely. The Canons of Dort, which were where the Dutch Reformed met to lay out their arguments against the Five Points of Arminianism, includes this in Article I, section 15:

Article 15: Reprobation

Moreover, Holy Scripture most especially highlights this eternal and undeserved grace of our election and brings it out more clearly for us, in that it further bears witness that not all people have been chosen but that some have not been chosen or have been passed by in God's eternal election—those, that is, concerning whom God, on the basis of his entirely free, most just, irreproachable, and unchangeable good pleasure, made the following decision: to leave them in the common misery into which, by their own fault, they have plunged themselves; not to grant them saving faith and the grace of conversion; but finally to condemn and eternally punish them (having been left in their own ways and under his just judgment), not only for their unbelief but also for all their other sins, in order to display his justice. And this is the decision of reprobation, which does not at all make God the author of sin (a blasphemous thought!) but rather its fearful, irreproachable, just judge and avenger. (Reformed.org)
So the definition of reprobation as God passing over sinners, leaving them to their own devices, is a critical tenet of Reformed Theology. It is true that “where there is no sin, there is no condemnation” (Boettner, 128). The wages of sin is death. And because death is the wages of sin, we cannot conceive of death without sin, much less eternal punishment.

Boettner 128: God’s sovereignty is “exercised in harmony with His other attributes, especially His justice, holiness, and wisdom. God cannot commit sin; and in that respect He is limited, although it would be more accurate to speak of His inability to commit sin as a perfection. There is, of course, mystery in connection with either system; but the supralapsarian system seems to pass beyond mystery and into contradiction.”

All of the decrees are eternal. God’s mind does not work like ours—or rather, our minds do not work like his—because his mind has pondered these things eternally, and he is the originator of all ideas or concepts entwined in these thoughts. He can perceive all things at once, but we can only think of things one at a time.

It is also true that there are some things here which cannot be put into the time mould, —that these events are not in the Divine mind as they are in ours, by a succession of acts, one after another, but that by one single act God has at once ordained all these things. In the Divine mind the plan is a unit, each part of which is designed with reference to a state of facts which God intended should result from the other parts. All of the decrees are eternal. They have a logical, but not a chronological, relationship. Yet in order for us to reason intelligently about them we must have a certain order of thought. We very naturally think of the gift of Christ in sanctification and glorification as following the decrees of the creation and the fall. (29)

“Oh, the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and how inscrutable his ways!” (Rom. 11:33, ESV)

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Thankful that we live in a universe where God knows what he's doing

For a special Thanksgiving treat, we're going to ponder a significant passage by Jonathan Edwards, from a book called Miscellaneous Observations on Important Theological Subjects. Original and Collected, ch. III, "Concerning the Divine Decrees, &c." (Works Banner of Truth edition, vol. 2, p. 528,):
§ 10. It is a proper and excellent thing for infinite glory to shine forth; and for the same reason, it is proper that the shining forth of God's glory should be complete; that is, that all parts of his glory should shine forth, that every beauty should be proportionably effulgent, that the beholder may have a proper notion of God. It is not proper that one glory should be exceedingly manifested, and another not at all; for then the effulgence would not answer the reality. For the same reason it is not proper that one should be manifested exceedingly, and another but very little. It is highly proper that the effulgent glory of God should answer his real excellency; that the splendour should be answerable to the real and essential glory, for the same reason that it is proper and excellent for God to glorify himself at all. Thus it is necessary, that God's awful majesty, his authority and dreadful greatness, justice, and holiness, should be manifested. But this could not be, unless sin and punishment had been decreed; so that the shining forth of God's glory would be very imperfect, both because these parts of divine glory would not shine forth as the others do, and also the glory of his goodness, love, and holiness would be faint without them; nay, they could scarcely shine forth at all. If it were not right that God should decree and permit and punish sin, there could be no manifestation of God's holiness in hatred of sin, or in showing any preference, in his providence, of godliness before it. There would be no manifestation of God's grace or true goodness, if there was no sin to be pardoned, no misery to be saved from. How much happiness soever he bestowed, his goodness would not be so much prized and admired, and the sense of it not so great, as we have elsewhere shown. We little consider how much the sense of good is heightened by the sense of evil, both moral and natural. And as it is necessary that there should be evil, because the display of the glory of God could not but be imperfect and incomplete without it, so evil is necessary, in order to the highest happiness of the creature, and the completeness of that communication of God, for which he made the world; because the creature's happiness consists in the knowledge of God, and sense of his love. And if the knowledge of him be imperfect, the happiness of the creature must be proportionably imperfect; and the happiness of the creature would be imperfect upon another account also; for, as we have said, the sense of good is comparatively dull and flat, without the knowledge of evil.

Friday, November 21, 2008

e"Homo"ny

Pointed out by Tim Challies today:

http://www.philly.com/philly/news/breaking/20081119_eHarmony_settles_with_N_J__over_same-sex_matches.html

It seems to me that if a company wants to make a website and charge
fees for using that website, they should have the right to limit their
target audience. The company I work for offers tools for the eBay
marketplace. We don't get sued for discrimination because we don't
cater to the Amazon.com community. And MySpace doesn't get sued by the
perverts for trying to implement stricter privacy controls for
children to protect them from the perverts. What's wrong with this
country? America is sick.

Sent from my iPhone

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Podcasts on the iPhone

You can now access Sovereign Joy Podcasts directly from your iPhone,
no syncing required! This is great if you're on the go and don't have
your computer with you. Just search for Sovereign Joy in the iTunes
application on your iPhone. (Note this requires the iPhone 2.2
software update that was just released.)

Monday, November 17, 2008

Have you seen this man?

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Sunday, November 16, 2008

Honeymoon pic


My wife is the hottest thing in the universe, and you can tell by my eyes I'll beat you up if you mess with her.
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Saturday, November 15, 2008

The Holy Grail of baby gifts

Ready

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January 12, 2008

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Baxter on Monergistic Soteriology

"No one can say that he is a Co-ordinate Con-cause with Christ in his Justification: or that he hath the least degree of a satisfactory or Meritorious Righteousness, which may bear any part in co-ordination with Christ's righteousness, for his justification or salvation." --Of Justification

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Monday, November 10, 2008

Cat on a guitar

Friday, November 7, 2008

Last picture of Finnegan

This is the last picture I took of our dearly departed cat, Finnegan.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Strains Between McCain and Palin

Something else to keep in mind in four years.

http://www.abcnews.go.com/GMA/Politics/story?id=6196407&page=1


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Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Why a Woman Shouldn't Run for Vice President, but Wise People May Still Vote for Her

This is an article John Piper recently posted.

"The Bible does not encourage us to think of nations as blessed when women hold the reins of national authority (Isaiah 3:12)."

"In my view, defending abortion is far worse sin for a man than serving as Vice President is for a woman."

http://www.desiringgod.org/Blog/1474_Why_a_Woman_Shouldnt_Run_for_Vice_President_but_Wise_People_May_Still_Vote_for_Her/

The election is over, but this is something we might have to think about again in another four years (or should I say 2 1/2, since we seem to have increased the campaign season a great deal).

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