Thursday, July 26, 2007

The Nature of Saving Faith

The subject of this post is to define faith from an Arminian perspective and demonstrate that the Calvinist charge that faith within the Arminian system would promote boasting, is inaccurate.

Saving faith, when Biblically understood, is the means by which we receive God's gracious gift of salvation (Eph. 2:8, 9; Rom. 4:16; 5:1, 2). It is the way in which we come to be in union with Christ (Eph. 1:13; 2:17). It is a complete trust and reliance upon the merits of Christ's blood (Rom. 3:25). It is a looking away from self [and self effort] to the person and sacrifice of Jesus Christ (Jn. 3:14, 15; 6:40).

Calvinists want us to believe that faith can only be gracious and non-meritorious if it is irresistibly caused by God. When we understand faith, as defined above, we see that there is no grounds for boasting because of the very nature of saving faith itself. Since faith is a turning away from self effort and a complete trust and submission to God, "boasting", as the Apostle says, "is excluded".

"Where then is boasting? It is excluded. By what kind of law? Of works? No, but by a law of faith. For we maintain that a man is justified by faith apart from works of the law." Rom. 3:27, 28. See also 4:1-16.

Faith is the antithesis of works, not because God makes us believe, but because saving faith is itself, "...giving up on one's works and submitting to the working of God." [Robert Picirilli, Grace, Faith, Free Will, pg. 162].

Robert Shank, in his book Elect in The Son, quotes Berkouwer's objection to synergistic faith, that "it results in a certain amount of human self conceit", and "self-esteem" Shank's response is right on the money,

"Conceit and self-esteem for what, Professor Berkouwer? For totally renouncing all claim to self righteousness? For completely repudiating all dependence on good works? For renouncing all claim to personal merit? For abjectly humbling oneself before God as a broken sinner, deserving of death, helpless, unable to save himself? For casting oneself on the mercies of God and hoping only on the merits and grace of Jesus Christ? These are the elements that are of the essence of saving faith, and where true faith exists, there can be no pride or self-esteem. Pride and faith are mutually exclusive." [pg. 144 emphasis mine]

There is no better Biblical illustration of this truth than Christ's parable of the Pharisee and the publican (Luke 18:9-14). Unfortunately, this parable has been increasingly abused by Calvinists seeking to establish some Biblical support for their insistence that unless God causes saving faith in us, then we can boast in our own salvation. It has been said that if faith is not entirely monergistic, then we can "boast with the Pharisee, and thank God that we are not like other men (who did not exercise saving faith)". The problem with this argument is that it does not rightly understand what Christ was teaching in Luke 18. The Pharisee was not boasting in his faith. He was boasting in his good works, and believing that God had to favor him based on the merit of those works, "I fast twice a week; I pay tithes of all that I get."

If the Pharisee truly had faith, he would not be able to boast, and would like the publican say, "God be merciful to me, the sinner". Jesus concludes his parable with these words, "I tell you, this man [the publican] went to his house justified rather than the other; for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but he who humbles himself will be exalted." [18:14]. Since we are justified by faith, we can safely conclude that the Pharisee had no faith in which to boast. If he did then Jesus could not have said that only the publican went away justified. Jesus correlates humility with saving faith in this parable. For this reason, to say that faith gives cause for boasting is oxymoronic. Faith and boasting are excluded not because faith is monergistic, but because of the very nature of saving faith itself.

Calvinists claim that Arminians obscure God's grace by denying that saving faith is an irresistible work of God upon passive creatures. "Quite to the contrary, Paul did not assume that faith as a condition 'limits and obscures' grace or takes anything away from the initiative of God's grace: '[justification] depends on faith in order that it may rest on grace' (Rom. 4:16). Faith as condition is the way of grace and in no sense an antithesis." [Shank, Elect in The Son, pg. 130]

While salvation conditioned on faith leaves no room for boasting, such would not necessarily be the case if our faith rested on an unconditional decree. Shank again astutely observes,

"In the case of the assumption of unconditional election, it is quite otherwise. It was precisely the fact of election and the assumption of its irrevocability that fostered such smugness, self-conceit, and reprehesible pride in Israel and encouraged presumptious indifference toward God. And where could one find a more flagrant example of obvious pride than Calvin himself, with his assumption that he was 'endowed with an incomparable benefit' so that he was not at all 'on equal terms with him who has received hardly a hundredth part' as much grace? No countenance can be given to any equation of synergism with pride, which is simply another theological humbug with which Calvinists for generations have shamelessly begged the question." [ibid. 145]

In my next post we will begin to examine the Calvinists doctrine of irresistible grace to see if there is any support for the doctrine in the pages of Scripture.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

W O W ! Right on. You hit the nail on the head. As a matter of fact, when I was in the Presbyterian Church (PCA), I encountered such a smug attitude from many of those people -- I wonder if it stemmed from being God's "elect"? Calvinism seems to breed self-righteousness rather than humility! Certainly, there are exceptions, and there are proud Arminians in the world as well; however, I know of nothing more that could lead someone to become arrogant as the idea that God chose ME for salvation over so many others!

Election, for Calvinists, is not supposed to find its expression in pride and arrogance, but many, many times it does.

Billy

Anonymous said...

I think wow as well. Particularly liked the citation,
Conceit and self-esteem for what...For totally renouncing all claim to self righteousness? For completely repudiating all dependence on good works? For renouncing all claim to personal merit? For abjectly humbling oneself before God as a broken sinner, deserving of death, helpless, unable to save himself? For casting oneself on the mercies of God and hoping only on the merits and grace of Jesus Christ? These are the elements that are of the essence of saving faith, and where true faith exists, there can be no pride or self-esteem. Pride and faith are mutually exclusive.

I find it very difficult myself to conceive that in the midst of putting faith in Christ as saviour; confessing I am a sinner (Rom.3:23) worthy of the fires of hell, asking for a forgiveness I do not deserve, with gratitude trusting in a gift I did not earn (Rom. 3:24), trusting in God to wash me in the blood of an innocent man, the Son of God..

-that somehow in all this; a turning form dead works of your own to trusting in the work of Christ (Hebrews 6:1), I find it just unimaginable to conceive that in this kind of Christian faith one would even suggest boasting; that the law governing the nature of this faith does not indeed exclude boasting as Paul would say (Rom. 3:27).

I would sum up all these things in the cross, the King of Calvary. When one contemplates the cross alone, not just His scars but the wrath of God poured upon Jesus, brethren it ought to be more than sufficient to humble the heart and exclude any and all thought of boasting, save in the Lord.

Perhaps it would do well to ask those who say that 'the nature of faith in Jesus is not enough to exclude boasting, it must be also too be of our particular theological system's irresistibly caused kind or else", to ask, "is not the cross of Christ all sufficient in this matter".

I respect that there were and are men of differing theological understandings on soteriology and it is good to discuss the topic while living harmoniously as brethren. But their is neither side who has the honest right to level a charge of boasting so long as the cross of Christ is still taught.

Despite whatever ever differences or interpretations or speculations are made about additional reasons to turn our boasting from ourselves toward the Lord, there is none who will convince my heart that the cross of Christ is not already all sufficient.

May His grace be with you always

Anonymous said...

When I survey the Wondrous Cross (Hymn Link)