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The Bible Doctrine of Election
including
Objections to
Unconditional Election:
Considered and Answered
by C. D. Cole
Part I - Bible Doctrine of Election
Introduction
Introduction to Election
General Remarks to Disarm Prejudice
Some False Views Examined and Refuted
The Doctrine Defined, Explained and
Proved Objections Considered and Answered
Part II - Questions & Answers on Election
Introduction
Letter 1 by Mrs. Marjorie Bond
Reply by Dr. C. D. Cole
Letter 2 by Mrs. Marjorie Bond
Letter 3 by Mrs. Marjorie Bond
Reply by Dr. C. D. Cole
INTRODUCTION
I have been richly blessed by the writings of Dr. C. D. Cole.
He was a great doctrinal preacher, with the gift of putting
his words into writings. Brother Cole has departed this life and is with the
Lord now. He lived to see his Second Volume published on Sin, Salvation,
Service. In fact he died reading the book.
The Bryan Station Baptist Church is printing his writings.
His son has given us permission to print them and this is the
next in a series of what we hope to print. Part I has been in print before and
we are just reprinting it as it was. Part II of this booklet will be dealt with
later on in this booklet in an introduction to the same.
May the Lord bless His word as it is read by those that
search these pages.
Alfred M Gormley
Pastor: Bryan Station Baptist Church
3175 Briar Hill Road
Lexington, Kentucky
Editors Note - Aug. 4, 1992
We wrote Rev. Gormley for and received permission to use this article on
election in our topics.
INTRODUCTION TO ELECTION
Election! -- What a blessed word! What a glorious doctrine! Who does not
rejoice to know that he has been chosen to some great blessing? Election is unto
salvation -- the greatest of all blessings. And strange to say, this is a
neglected truth even by many who profess to believe it, and others have a
feeling of repulsion at the very mention of this Bible-revealed, God-honouring,
and man humbling truth. Spurgeon said, "There seems to be an inveterate
prejudice in the human mind against this doctrine, and although most other
doctrines will be received by professing Christians, some with caution, others
with pleasure, yet this one seems to be most frequently disregarded and
discarded." If such were true in Spurgeon's day, how much more so in this
our day. Concerning this doctrine there is an alarming departure from the faith
of our Baptist fathers. Touching this article of our faith Baptists have come to
a day when they have a Calvinistic creed and an Arminian clergy.
But there are some who love the doctrine of Election. To
them, election is the foundation dug deep for the other doctrines of human
redemption to rest upon. They love it enough to preach it in the face of
criticism and persecution. They will surrender their pulpits rather than be
silenced on this precious tenet of the once delivered faith. But all who love
the doctrine were once haters of it, therefore, they have nothing in which to
take pride. Every man by nature is an Arminian. It takes the regenerating work
of the Holy Spirit and the Word of God, taught by the Holy Spirit, to cause a
man to love the doctrine of election. How deeply important that believers should
be learners. To do this we must acknowledge the superior wisdom of God whose
thoughts are not as our thoughts. The Bible was given to correct our thinking.
Repentance is a change of mind resulting in a change of thinking. We are not to
come to the Bible as critics; the Bible is to criticize us. We cannot come to
the Bible infallibly, but by grace we can come humbly. May grace be given to
every writer and reader that we may have the right attitude of heart before God.
The surest evidence of a saved state is to have the right attitude towards the
Word of God. Dear reader, let the writer warn you against "poking fun"
at any doctrine of the Bible.
The doctrines of grace have found expression in two systems
of theology commonly known as Calvinism and Arminianism. These two systems were
not named for their founders, but for the men who popularised them. The system
of truth known as Calvinism was preached by Augustine at an earlier date, and
before Augustine by Christ and the Apostles, being especially emphasized by the
Apostle Paul. The system of error, known as Arminianism, was proclaimed by
Pelagius in the fifth century. Between these two there is no middle position;
every man is either one or the other in his religious thinking. Some try to mix
the two but this is not straight thinking. To say that we are neither
Calvinistic nor Arminian is to evade the issue. Paulinism is represented by
either Calvinism or Arminianism. The true system is based upon the truth of
man's inherent and total depravity; the false system is based upon the Romish
dogma of free-will.
GENERAL REMARKS TO DISARM
PREJUDICE
There is no doctrine so grossly misrepresented. Brother A. S. Pettie's
complaint against the enemies of total depravity is equally applicable here,
when he says, "From hostile lips a fair and correct statement of the
doctrine is never heard". The treatment, that, the doctrine of election
receives from the hands of its enemies is very much like that received by the
primitive Christians from pagan Roman Emperors. The ancient Christians were
often clothed in the skins of slain animals and then subjected to attack by
ferocious wild beasts. So the doctrine of election is clothed in an ugly garb
and held up to ridicule and sport. We will now try to strip this glorious truth
of its false and vicious garment with which enemy hands have robed it, and put
upon it the garments of holiness and wisdom.
1. Election is not salvation but is unto salvation.
"What then? Israel hath not obtained that which he seeketh for; but the
election (elect) hath obtained it, and the rest were blinded". Rom
11:7. "God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation" 2Th
2:13. Now then, if the elect obtain salvation, and if election is to
salvation, election must precede salvation. Men are saved when they believe on
Christ not when they are elected. Roosevelt was not president when he was
elected, but when he was inaugurated. There was not only an election to, but an
induction into the office. God's elect are inducted into the position of
saintship by the effectual call, (the quickening work of the Holy Spirit)
through which they become believers in the Gospel. See: 1Co
1:29: 2Th
2:13,14.
2. Election is not the cause of anybody going to hell,
for election is unto salvation. Neither is non-election responsible for the
damnation of sinners. SIN is the thing that sends men to hell, and all men are
sinners by nature and practice -- sinners altogether apart from election and
non-election. It does not follow that because election is unto salvation that
non-election is unto damnation. SIN is them damning element in human life.
ELECTION HARMS NOBODY.
3. Election belongs to the system of grace. In Paul's day
there was a remnant among the Jews who were saved according to the election of
grace Rom 11:5.
The attitude of men towards election is the acid test of their belief in grace.
Those who oppose election cannot consistently claim to believe in salvation by
grace. This is seen in the creeds of Christendom. Those denominations that
believe in salvation by works have no place for the doctrine of election in
their confessions of faith; those that believe in salvation by grace, apart from
human merit, have not failed to include election in their written creed. One
group is headed by the Roman Catholics, the other group is headed by the
Baptists.
4. Election does not prevent the salvation of anybody who
wants to be saved. But the distinction needs to be made between a mere desire to
escape hell and the desire to be saved from sin. The desire to be saved from
hell is a natural desire -- nobody wants to burn. The desire to be saved from
sin is a spiritual desire resulting from the convicting work of the Holy Spirit,
and God's electing grace is the very mother of this desire. To represent
election by saying that God has spread the Gospel feast, and a man comes to the
table hungering for the bread of life; but God says "No, this is not for
you, you are not one of my elect", is to misrepresent the Holy Doctrine.
Here is the truth -- God has spread the feast but the fact is nobody wants to
come to the table. "They all with one consent began to make excuse".
God knew just how fallen nature would act, and He took no chance on His table
being filled, so, He tells His servant to go out and compel them to come (Luke
14:23). Were it not for the redemptive work of Christ there would be no
Gospel feast; were it not for the compelling work of the Holy Spirit there would
be no guests at the table. A mere invitation brings nobody to the table.
5. Election means that the destiny of men is in the hands
of God. Many of us have regarded as an axiom the statement that every man's
destiny is in his own hands. But this is to deny the whole tenor of Scripture.
At no time is the destiny of the saint in his own hands, either before or after
he is saved. Was my destiny in my own hands before I was saved? If so, I
regenerated myself; I resurrected, by my own power, myself out of a state of sin
and death; I am my own benefactor and have nobody to thank but myself for being
alive and saved. Perish such a thought! By the grace of God I am what I am: Joh
1:13; Eph
2:1-10; 2Ti
1:9; Jam 1:18.
Is my destiny in my own hands now? Then I will either keep
myself saved or I will lose my salvation. The Bible says we are kept by the
power of God through Faith.
1Pe
1:15; Psa
37:28; Joh
10:27-29; Phi
1:6; Heb 13:5
If my destiny is not safe in my own hands after I am saved then how could it be
thought to be safe in my own hands before my conversion?
The saint dies, his body is consigned to the grave and
becomes a dust-heap. Is his destiny in his own hands then? If so, what hope has
he of ever coming out of the grave with an immortal and incorruptible body? None
at all if his destiny is in his own hands.
Such a theory, that the destiny of the saint is or ever has
been in his own hands, reverses the very laws of nature and implies that water
can rise above the level of its source; that man can lift himself into the attic
by his boot-straps; that the Ethiopian can change his colour, and the leopard
can remove his spots; that death can beget life; that evolution is true and God
is a liar. The theory that one's destiny is in his own hands begets
self-confidence and self-righteousness; the belief that destiny is in the hands
of God begets SELF-ABNEGATION AND FAITH IN GOD.
6. Election stands or falls with the doctrine of God’s
sovereignty and man's depravity. If God is sovereign and man is depraved, then
it follows as a natural consequence that some will be saved, none will be saved
or, all will be saved. The practical results of election are that some, yea
many, will be saved. Election is not a plan to save a mere handful of folk.
Christ gave Himself a ransom for many: Mat
20:28; Rev
5:9
God's sovereignty involves His pleasure: Joh
5:21; Mat
11:25-27
His power: Job
23:13; Jer
32:17; Mat
19:26 and
His mercy: Rom
9:18
7. The elect are manifested in repentance and faith and good
works. These graces, being God-wrought in man, are not the cause but the
evidences of election: 1Th
1:3-10; 2Pe
1:5-10; Phi
2:12,13; Luk
18:7
The man who doesn't pray, who has not repented of his sins
and trusted Christ, and who does not engage in good works has no right to claim
that he is one of God's elect.
SOME FALSE VIEWS EXAMINED AND
REFUTED
Many professing Christians really have no view of election. They have not
given it enough thought and study to even have any opinion about it. Many have
erroneous views. We shall notice some of them.
1. The view that men are elected when they believe -- This
view is easily refuted for it is contrary to both common sense and Scripture.
Election is to salvation, and therefore, must precede salvation. It is nonsense
to talk about electing a man to something he already has. The man has salvation
when he believes and hence election at that point would not be necessary.
ELECTION TOOK PLACE IN ETERNITY; SALVATION TAKES PLACE WHEN THE SINNER BELIEVES.
2. The view that election pertains only to the Jews -- This
view robs Gentiles of the comfort of Rom
8:28-39: Rom
8:28-29
Moreover, Paul, who was an apostle to the Gentiles, says that
he endured all things for the elect's sakes that they might obtain salvation: 2Ti
2:10
3. The view that election took place in eternity, but that it
was in view of foreseen repentance and faith. According to this view, God, in
eternity, looked down through the ages and saw who would repent and believe and
those who He foresaw would repent and believe were elected to salvation. This
view incorrect in only one point, namely, that election took place in eternity.
It is wrong in that it makes the ground of election to be something in the
sinner rather than something in God. Read Eph
1:4-6 where election and predestination are said to be" According to
the good pleasure of His will" and "To the praise of the glory of His
grace": Eph
1:4-6
This view thought the popular one with the majority of
Baptists today, is open to many objections.
(i) It denies what the Bible says about man's condition by
nature. The Bible does not describe the natural man as having faith: Eph
1:4-6
Both repentance and faith are gifts of God, and God did not
see these graces in any sinner apart from His purpose to give them. "Him
hath God exalted with His right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour, for to give
repentance to Israel, and forgiveness of sins", Acts
5:31 "When they heard these things they held their peace, and
glorified God, saying, `Then hath God also to the Gentiles granted repentance
unto life'", Acts
11:18. "In meekness instructing those that oppose themselves; if God
peradventure will give them repentance to the acknowledgement of the
truth". 2Ti
2:25. See also: Eph
2:8-10; 1Co
3:5
Election was not because of foreseen faith, but because of
foreseen unbelief. It is not the election of God's faithful ones, but the
faith of God's elect, if we are to keep Scriptural words: Tit
1:1.
(ii) It makes the human race differ by nature, whereas, the
Bible says, we are all by nature the children of wrath and all clay of the
same lump: Eph
2:3; Rom
9:21.
Men are made to differ in the new birth: Joh
3:6.
(iii) It perverts the Scriptural meaning of the word
"foreknowledge". The word as used in the Bible means more than
foreknowledge about persons, it is the foreknowledge of persons. In Rom
8:29,30, the foreknown are predestined to the image of Christ, and are
called, justified and glorified. In 1Pe
1:2, the word for "foreknowledge" is the same as
"foreordain" in the twentieth verse of the same chapter, where the
meaning cannot be "foreknowledge" about Christ. God's foreknowledge
about persons is without limitations; whereas, His foreknowledge of persons is
limited to those who are actually saved and glorified.
(iv) It is open to the strongest objection that can be made
against the Bible view. It is often asked, "If certain men are elected
and saved, then what is the use to preach to those who are not elected?"
With equal propriety we might ask, "If God knows who is going to repent
and believe, then why preach to those who according to His foreknowledge, will
not repent and believe?" Will some repent and believe whom He foreknew
would not repent and believe? If so, He foreknew a lie.
Right here is the weakness of much of modern missions. It is
based upon sympathy for the lost rather than obedience to God’s command. The
inspiration of missions is made to rest upon the practical results of missionary
endeavour rather than upon the delight of doing God's will. It is the principle
of doing a thing because the results are satisfactory to us.
If we are faithful, God is as pleased with our efforts as
when there are no results.
Ponder: 2Co
2:15,16.
The elect, prior to their conversion, are known only to God.
We are to preach the gospel to every creature because He has commanded it. He
will take care of the results.
Compare with: Isa
55:11; 1Co
3:5,6; Joh
6:37-45.
It is ours to witness; it is His to make our witnessing
effective.
THE DOCTRINE
DEFINED, EXPLAINED AND PROVED
What is election as the term is used in the Bible? Election means a choice
-- to select from among - to single out - to take one and leave another. If
there are a dozen apples in a basket and I take all of them there has been no
choice; but if I take seven and leave five there has been a choice. Election, as
taught in the Bible, means that God has made a choice from among the children of
men. In the beginning God set His choice upon certain individuals, whom He gave
to His Son, and for whom Christ died as their substitute, who in time hear the
Gospel and believe in Christ to life everlasting. Let us amplify by raising
three very pertinent questions.
1. Who Does The Electing? Who chooses the persons
to be saved? If men are chosen to salvation, as the Scriptures affirm, who does
the choosing? There must be a selection or universalism. The language of
Scripture seems peculiarly definite in reply to this question. Mark
13:20 speaks of the ELECT, whom He ELECTED, rendered in our version,
"The elect’s sake whom He hath chosen". The word election is
associated with God not with man. God is the CHOOSER, His people are the CHOSEN,
and grace is the source. The theology, that God votes for us, the Devil votes
against us, and that we cast the deciding ballot is entirely outside the pale of
Scripture teaching, and is almost too ridiculous to notice: Joh
15:16; 2Th
2:13; Eph
1:4.
2. When Was The Electing Done? For the answer we
are shut up to the Scriptures. But the BIBLE answers with sunlight clearness. In
Eph 1:4 we
read that "He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world". The
expression, "before the foundation of the world is found in Joh
17:24, where it speaks of the Father's eternal love for the Son, and in 1Pe
1:20, where it refers to the eternal determination of the Divine mind
concerning the death of Christ. There are many similar expressions. ELECTION IS
ETERNAL! Rev
13:8; 2Th
2:13; 2Ti
1:9.
3. Why Was The Electing Done? Was it on the ground
of something good in the sinner? Then nobody would have been elected for there
is none good. Holiness is not the cause but the effect of election. We are
chosen that we should be holy not because we are holy (Eph
1:4). Nor, as we have already seen, is election in view of foreseen
repentance and faith. Election is the cause of repentance and faith and not the
effect of these graces. To say that God chose men to salvation because He
foresaw that they would repent and believe and be saved is to attribute
foolishness to the infinitely wise God. It is as if the president should issue a
decree that the sun must rise tomorrow because he foresees that it will rise; or
as if a sculptor should choose a certain piece of marble because he foresaw that
it would make itself into the image he wanted. We challenge any Arminian to
raise these questions and get his answers from the Scriptures.
OBJECTIONS CONSIDERED AND
ANSWERED
Many are the objections brought against this doctrine. Sometimes the
objectors are loud and furious. Alas! that so many of these objectors are in
Baptist ranks. To preach this old-fashioned doctrine of our faith as did Bunyan,
Fuller, Gill, Spurgeon, Boyce, Broadus, Pendleton, Graves, Jarrell, Carroll,
Jeter, Boyce Taylor and a host of other representative men of our denomination
is to court the bitterest kind of opposition. John Wesley himself never said
harsher words against this blessed tenet of our faith than do some so-called
Baptists of today. Arminianism that offspring of popery, has had an abnormal
growth in the last decade or two as the adopted child of a large group of
Baptists.
1. It Is Objected That Our View Of Election Limits
God's Mercy. Right here we criticize the critic, for he who makes this
objection limits both God's mercy and power. He admits that God's mercy is
limited to the believer, and to this we agree; but he denies that God can cause
a man to believe without doing violence to the man's will, and thus he limits
God's power. We believe that God is able to give a man a sound mind 2Ti
1:7 and make him willing in the day of His power. Psa
110:2 At this point we must face two self-evident propositions. First, if
God is trying to save every member of Adam's fallen race, and does not succeed,
then His power is limited and He is not the Lord God Almighty. Second, if He is
not trying to save every member of the fallen face, then His mercy is limited.
We must of necessity limit His mercy or His power, or go over boots and baggage
to the Universalist's position. But before we do that, let us go "to the
law and to the testimony", which says, "I will have mercy on whom I
will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I will have
compassion...Therefore hath He mercy on whom He will have mercy and whom He will
He hardeneth" Rom
9:15-18. It needs to be said for the comfort and hope of great sinners, that
God's mercy is not limited by the natural condition of the sinner. All sinners
are dead until God makes them alive. He is able to take away the heart of stone.
No man is too great a sinner to be saved. We can pray for the salvation of the
chief of sinners with the assurance that God can save them if He will. "The
King's heart is in the hands of the Lord as the river of water; He turneth it
whithersoever He will" Pro
21:1. We rejoice to say with Jeremiah that there is nothing too hard for
God. We can pray for the salvation of our loved ones with the feeling of the
leper, when he said, "Lord, if thou wilt thou canst make me clean" Mat
8:2. When Robert Morrison was about to go to China, he was asked by an
incredulous American if he thought he could make any impression on those
Chinese. His curt reply was, "No, but I think God can." This should
ever be our confidence and hope when we stand before sinners and preach to them
"CHRIST AND HIM CRUCIFIED".
2. Another Objection To Election Is That It Makes God
Unjust. This objection betrays a bad heart. It would obligate the CREATOR to
the CREATURE. It makes salvation a divine obligation. It denies the right of the
potter over the clay of the same lump to make one vessel to honour and another
to dishonour. By the same parity of reasoning it makes the governor of a
sovereign state unjust when he pardons one or more men, unless he empties the
prison and turns all the prisoners loose. Our view of election is in harmony
with what even the Arminians allow to be proper and just for a human governor.
All can see that a governor, by pardoning some men, does not harm others, who
are not pardoned. Those who are not pardoned are not in prison because the
governor refused them a pardon but because they were guilty of a crime against
the state. Isn't God to be allowed as much sovereignty as the governor of a
state? Salvation, like a pardon, is something that is not deserved. If it were
deserved, then God would be unjust if He did not bestow it upon all men.
Salvation is not a matter of justice but of mercy. It wasn't
the attribute of justice that led God to provide salvation but the attribute of
mercy. Justice is simply each man getting what he deserves. Those who go to hell
will have nobody to blame but themselves, while those who go to heaven will have
nobody to praise but God: Rom
9:22,23
3. It Is Again Objected That Our View Of Election Is
Against The Doctrine Of Whosoever Will. But the objector is wrong again. Our
view explains and supports the doctrine of "WHOSOEVER WILL". Without
election the invitation to "WHOSOEVER WILL" would go unheeded. The
Bible doctrine of "WHOSOEVER WILL" does not imply the freedom or
ability of the human will to do good. The human will is free, but its freedom is
within the limits of fallen human nature. It is free like water; water is free
to run down hill. It is free like the vulture; the vulture is free to eat
carrion, for that is its nature, but it would starve to death in a wheat field.
It is not the buzzard's nature to eat clean food; it feeds upon the carcasses of
the dead. So sinners starve to death in the presence of the bread of life. Our
Lord said to some sinners, who were in His very presence "Ye will not come
unto me that ye might have life" Joh
5:40. It is not natural for a sinner to trust in Christ. Salvation through
trust in a crucified Christ is a stumbling block to the Jew and foolishness to
the Greek; it is only the called, both Jews and Greeks, who trust it as the
wisdom and power of God: 1Co
1:23,24.
Here is a physical corpse. Is it free to get up and walk
around? In one sense, yes. It is not bound by fetters. There is no external
restraint. But, in another sense, that corpse is not free. It is hindered by its
natural condition. It is its nature to decompose and go back to dust. It is not
the nature of death to stir about. Here is a spiritual corpse -- a man dead in
trespasses and sins. Is the man free to repent and believe and do good works?
Yes, in one sense. There are no external restraints. God does not prevent but
offers inducements through His Holy Word. But the corpse is hindered by its own
nature. There must be the miracle of the new birth, for except a man be born
from above he cannot see or enter into the Kingdom of God: Joh
3:3 - 3:5.
It is painful to some of us to see our brethren forsake the
faith of our Baptist forbears at this point and join the ranks of the Roman
Catholics and other Arminians. If anyone doubts this charge let him read the
article of faith adopted by the Catholics at the council of Trent (1563). I
quote their statement on the freedom of the human will -- "If anyone shall
affirm that since the fall of Adam man's free-will is lost, let him be
accursed." But alas, in this day, such a spirit is not confined to the
Roman Catholics. Horatius Bonar makes the following quotation from John Calvin:
"The Papist theologians have a distinction current among themselves that
God does not elect men according to their works which are in them but that He
chooses them that He foresees will be believers."
Ah, the real trouble with the objector is not election; it is
something else. His real objection is to total depravity or human inability to
do good. I can do no better here than to quote from Percy W. Heward of London,
England. He says, "It seems to me that the majority of objections to God's
sovereign grace, to God's electing love, are actually objections to something
else, namely objections to the fact that man is ruined. If you probe beneath the
surface you will find that very few object to election. Why should they?
Election harms no one. How can the picking of a man out of doom harm anyone
else? The real objection at the present day is not to election, though that word
is made the catchword of sad controversy -- the real objection is to that fact
which is revealed in Psalms
51, that we are shapen in iniquity, that we are born sinners by nature, dead
in sins, until, as we read concerning Paul in Galatians
1, "It pleased God, who separated me from my mother's womb and called
me by His grace to reveal His Son in me..." Ah, beloved friends, we deserve
nothing but doom. Acknowledge this and election is the only hope. Acknowledge
that we are poor lost sinners, dead in trespasses and sins, only evil
continually; acknowledge that there is in man no natural spark to be fanned into
a flame but that believers are born again of incorruptible seed which the Lord
places; acknowledge that if anyone is in Christ that there is a new creation,
for we are His workmanship, having been created in Christ Jesus; - and election
must be at once recognized."
Every real believer on his knees subscribes to our view of
election. You cannot pray ascribing some credit to self. Sovereign grace will
come out in prayer though it may be left off the platform. No saved man will get
down on his knees before God and claim that he made himself to differ from
others who are not saved, but with Paul he says, "By the grace of God I am
what I am." And in praying for the lost we supplicate God to convict and
convert them. We do not depend upon the freedom of their wills but beg God to
make them willing to come to Christ, knowing that when they come to Christ He
will not cast them out: Joh
6:37.
A Methodist minister once went to hear a Presbyterian
minister preach. After the sermon, the Methodist said to the Presbyterian,
"That was a pretty good Arminian sermon you preached today."
"Yes," replied the Presbyterian, "We Presbyterians are pretty
good Arminians when we preach and you Methodists are pretty good Calvinists when
you pray." MORE TRUTH THAN POETRY HERE!!
4. It Is Also Objected That Our View Of Election Is A New
Doctrine Among Missionary Baptists. The fact is that it is so old-fashioned
that it has about gone out of fashion . The ignorance betrayed in such a claim
is indeed pitiable. In refutation we resort to two sources of information
(a) Confessions of faith; (b) Statements of representative preachers and
writers.
(a) Confessions Of Faith
The Waldenses declare themselves as follows: "God saves
from corruption and damnation those whom He has chosen from the foundation of
the world, not from any disposition, faith or holiness that He foresaw in them,
but His mere mercy in Christ Jesus His Son, passing by all the rest according to
the irreprehensible reason of His own free-will and justice." THE DATE OF
THIS CONFESSION WAS 1120!!!
The London Confession (1689) and the Philadelphia Confession
(1742) read as follows: "By the decree of God, for the manifestation of His
glory, some men and angels are predestined or foreordained to ETERNAL LIFE
through Jesus Christ, to the praise of His glorious grace; others being left to
act in their sins to their just condemnation, to the praise of His glorious
justice."
The New Hampshire Confession (Article 9): "We believe
that election is the eternal purpose of God according to which He graciously
regenerates, sanctifies and saves sinners; that being perfectly consistent with
the free-agency of man, it comprehends all the means in connection with the end;
that it is a most glorious display of God's sovereign goodness, being infinitely
free, wise holy and unchangeable; that it utterly excludes boasting and promotes
humility, love, prayer, praise, trust in God, and active imitation of His free
mercy; that it encourages the use of means in the highest degree; that it maybe
ascertained by its effects in all who truly believe the Gospel; that it is the
foundation of Christian assurance; and that to ascertain it with regard to
ourselves demands and deserves the utmost diligence."
(b) Representative Preachers And Writers!
John A. Broadus, former president of the Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary: "From the divine side, we see that the Scriptures
teach an eternal election of men to eternal life simply out of God's good
pleasure."
A.H. Strong, former president of Rochester Theological
Seminary: "Election is the eternal act of God, by which in His sovereign
pleasure, and on account of no foreseen merit in them, He chooses certain of the
number of sinful men to be recipients of the special grace of His Spirit and so
to be made voluntary partakers of Christ's salvation."
B.H. Carroll, founder and first president of the
South-western Baptist Seminary: "Every one that God chose in Christ is
drawn by the Spirit to Christ. Every one predestined is called by the Spirit in
time and justified in time, and will be glorified when the Lord comes."
Commentary on Romans, page 192.
J.P. Boyce, founder and first president of Southern Baptist
Seminary: "God, of His own purpose, has from eternity determined to save a
definite number of mankind as individuals, not for or because of any merit or
works of theirs, nor of any value of them to Him; but of His own good
pleasure."
W.T. Conner, professor of theology, South-western Baptist
Seminary, Fort Worth, Texas: "The doctrine of election means that God saves
in pursuance of an eternal purpose. This includes all the gospel influences,
work of the Spirit and so on, that leads a man to repent of his sins and accept
Christ. So far as man's freedom is concerned, the doctrine of election does not
mean that God decrees to save a man irrespective of his will. It rather means
that God purposes to lead a man in such a way that he will freely accept the
gospel and be saved."
Pastor J.W. Lee, of Batesville, Miss.: "I believe that
God has foreordained before the foundation of the world that He would save
certain individuals and that He ordained all the means to bring about their
salvation on His terms. Men and women are not elected because they repent and
believe, but they repent and believe because they are elected."
To the above list of well known and honoured Baptists we
could add quotations from Gill, Fuller, Spurgeon, Bunyan, Pendleton, Mullins,
Dargan, Jeter, Eaton, Graves, and others too numerous to mention. It is sadly
true that many of our pastors hold election as a private opinion and never
preach it. We personally know a number of brethren who say that election is
clearly taught in the Bible, but that we cannot afford to preach it, because it
will cause trouble in churches. This is worse than compromise: it is surrender
of the truth. It is a spirit that leads preachers to displease God in order to
please men. The writer believes that silence upon this subject has wrought more
harm than open opposition to it. Those who openly oppose election will, sooner
or later, make themselves ridiculous in the eyes of all Bible loving Baptists.
5. It Is Further Objected That Our View Of Election Makes Men
Careless In Their Living. It is said that belief in the doctrine leads men
to say, "If I am elect, I will be saved; if I am a non-elect I will be
lost, therefore, it matters not what I believe or do." The same objection
has been persistently made against the doctrine of the preservation of the
saints. This is bald rationalism. It is the setting of human reason against
divine revelation. It takes no account of the operation of the grace of God in
the human heart. If Baptists surrender election on such a ground, to be
consistent, they will have to surrender the doctrine of preservation on the same
ground. Election does not mean that the elect will be saved whether they believe
on not, nor does it mean that the non-elect will be damned regardless of how
much they may repent and believe. The elect will be saved through repentance and
faith, and both are gifts from God as already shown; the non-elect do not repent
and believe.
The objection we are now considering is simply not true to
fact. Believers in election have been and still are among the most godly.
Augustus Toplady challenged the world to produce a martyr from among the deniers
of election. The Puritans, who were so named because of the great purity of
their lives, with few exception (if any), were believers in personal, eternal,
unconditional election, and of course, in the security of the believer.
Modernism, that spawn of the pit, is rapidly adding to the number of its
adherents, but they are coming from the ranks of Arminianism. Others have
challenged the world to find a single Higher Critic, or a single Spiritualist,
or a single Russellite, or a single Christian Scientist, who believes in the
absolute sovereignty of God and the doctrine of election. Without an exception
these awful heretics are Arminians to a man. This is a significant fact that is
not to be winked at.
6. Objectors Claim That Our View Of Election Destroys The
Spirit Of Missions. They boldly assert that if unconditional election should
find universal acceptance among us that we would cease to be a missionary
people. There is an abundance of historical evidence with which to refute this
claim. Under God, the father of modern missions was William Carey, a staunch
Calvinist. Andrew Fuller, first secretary of the society that sent Carey to
India, held tenaciously to our view of election. It did not destroy the
missionary spirit of these men. "The proof of the pudding is in the
eating." Belief in election did not destroy the missionary spirit in
Judson, Spurgeon, Boyce, Eaton, Graves, Carroll and a host of other Baptist
leaders. The Murray church, which Dr. J.F. Love called the greatest missionary
church on earth, heard election preached by Boyce Taylor for nearly forty years.
The greatest missionary churches among us today are those that have been purged
from the heresies of James Arminius.
Election is the very foundation of hope in missionary
endeavour. If we had to depend upon the natural disposition or will of a dead
sinner, who hates God, to respond to our gospel, we might well despair. But when
we realize that it is the Spirit that quickened, we can go forth with the gospel
of the grace of God in the hope that God will cause some, by nature turned away,
to be turned unto Him and to believe to the saving of the soul. Election does
not determine the extent of missions but the results of it. We are to preach to
every creature because God has commanded, and because it pleases Him to save
sinners by the foolishness of preaching. We believe more in election than the
Anti-mission Baptists. We believe that God elected means of salvation as well as
persons to salvation. He did not choose to save sinners apart from the gospel
ministry: Rom 1:16.
Election gives a saneness to evangelism that is greatly
needed today. It recognizes that sinners "believe through grace" (Acts
18:27) and that while Paul may plant and Apollo may water, God gives the
increase. Arminianism has had its day among Baptists and what has it done? It
has given us man-power, but robbed us of God's power. It has increased machinery
but has decreased spirituality. It has filled our churches with Ishmaels instead
of Isaacs by its ministry of "sob stuff" and with the methods of the
"counting house".
If this little tract need further Scriptural support, the
following Scriptures will give it: Psa
65:4; Act 13:48;
Joh 6:37,44,45
17:1,2; Mat
11:25,26; 1Co
12:3; 2Co
10:4.
PART 2
INTRODUCTION
Part two of this booklet on the Bible doctrine of Election consists of a
correspondence between Mrs. Marjorie Bond (widow - now Mrs. Milton Moorhouse),
and Dr. Cole. The letters are self-explanatory. I have written to Mrs. Moorhouse
and she has graciously given me permission to use the letters to be put into
this booklet. Since the thoughts of Mrs. Moorhouse run in the same channels as
the rest of the people that question the doctrine of election I have decided to
leave it as near as it was written in their correspondence. I have taken some of
the remarks out that do not pertain to this doctrine and have tried to leave it
so that it would be instructive and interesting.
Dr. Cole is now with the Lord. Before he departed this life
he sent me this material to see if it could be printed. I believe that this
booklet will be a great help to those that are honestly desiring to know the
true teaching on this doctrine. God richly blessed Bro. Cole in that he was able
to put his thoughts into easy to be understood language. It is our privilege to
be able to print Dr. C.D. Cole's writings.
To the persons that read this booklet, our prayer is that you
might see the greatness of our Lord, and that you might see as James declared in
Acts 15:18
"Known unto God are all His works from the beginning of the world".
Also as Paul says in Eph
1:11 "Who worketh all things after the council of His own will."
Our heart is made glad and to rejoice in the fact that God chose me to
salvation. If it were not for the doctrine of election, Baptists would have used
worldly means to bring men to Christ. But Baptists, down through the ages, have
been mission-minded, knowing all the while that all are responsible to come to
Jesus when the gospel is preached and yet knowing that no one would be saved but
God's elect John
6:37. Jesus said in John
10:27, "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them and they follow
me". The doctrine of election will make us mission-minded because we know
that our preaching is not in vain in the Lord but will prosper wherein it was
sent. Paul said, "I endure all things for the elects sake" 1Ti
2:10.
May the Lord bless this booklet and cause many that
heretofore have not understood this glorious doctrine to see that our salvation
from beginning to the end is of the Lord, and that all that know Him would
praise Him for His abundant mercy shown toward His people.
Alfred M. Gormley Pastor: Bryan Station Baptist Church
Lexington, Kentucky June 26, 1968
LETTER ONE BY MRS. MARJORIE
BOND
1505 Scotland Street Calgary,
Alberta
October 5, 1959
Dr. C.D. Cole 746 W. Noel Rt. 2 Madisonville, Kentucky
My Dear Dr. Cole:
Although I am a total stranger to you, my parents have known
Dr. Shields over the years and take "The Witness" regularly. As a
result of an article of yours which I read therein several years ago, I feel
that I must write you to seek further light on this matter of Election.
Your article opened up a completely new line of thought for
me; like most people, I did not subscribe to it at all (at first) but was
challenged by it, even though much disturbed. Since then, I have reverted to it
time and again and finally this autumn got down to studying it in dead earnest!
I read what I could of Spurgeon on the subject, Dr. Shields, and also borrowed a
copy of Strong's Theology, which I found rather heavy going! All in all, I have
become so obsessed with this doctrine that I can scarcely think of anything
else. And yet there is so much that I do not understand. I know that the
"heart is deceitful above all things" and perhaps mine is deceiving me
when I say that I really think the questions that arise in my mind do not stem
so much from a reluctance to admit total depravity as they do from my inability
to reconcile the doctrine with other passages of Scripture.
I had always thought that election and predestination was
something that the Presbyterians were a little "off" on (excuse the
bad grammar!). It never occurred to me that there was so much Scriptural
evidence for it, or that Baptists believe it! However, I did feel that if this
doctrine was taught in the Scripture, as it seemed to be, than I should know
more about it and should believe it, whether I liked it or not and whether I
fully understood it or not.
My mind goes round and round like a squirrel in a cage, until
I am really exhausted. About the time I think I understand it and accept it,
Satan seems to raise fresh doubts to plague me. It leaves one almost breathless.
As after a close brush with death, to think that one might \\not\\ have been
elected! Truly, as never before, I can see that our salvation is all of grace. I
always thought, when we spoke of salvation as being wholly of God's grace, that
it meant that His plan or idea to save us was unmerited favour, since nothing in
us merited His ever desiring to save us; and also, that it was a \\gift\\ for
which we could never possibly work or acquire sufficient righteousness to merit.
But obviously grace embodies more even than this. When you realize that a person
wouldn't even \\want\\ salvation unless he were elected, then you realize how
tremendously indebted we are to grace -- for it is grace through and through.
I have wondered sometimes if the objections, which we feel
towards Election, are directed more towards the idea of God's complete
sovereignty than towards total depravity. It seems to go against human nature to
think that God can do what He likes with us and we are powerless to do anything
about it.
I almost hesitate to put into words some of the objections,
which have come to my mind lest I should be guilty of blasphemy or sacrilege;
for I have always been taught that it is a very serious thing to criticize God.
And yet, in the interests of clarifying my thinking, I feel that I must confess
to you some of the points about election that are troubling me and which seem to
contradict other Scriptures and other doctrines.
Also, I teach a Young Women's Bible Class and we have been
studying this subject (the blind leading the blind, I am afraid). We are to have
an evening discussion of it on November 5th so I should like to clear up some
points in my own mind before that time.
Perhaps the easiest way for you to answer would be for me to
put my questions in point form:
1. Most people feel right away that Election is unjust. I
realize, from your pamphlet, as well as from Scripture, that God doesn't owe it
to us to save anyone and further, that He has a right to bestow the gift of
salvation on whom He will. But somehow the feeling persists that if a person
doesn't even get a \\chance\\ to accept or reject salvation, he "goes to
bat with two strikes against him" so to speak.
Before studying Election, I always thought that if anyone
were even remotely interested in being saved, then, in response to prayer by
interested relatives or friends, the Holy Spirit would operate on that person's
heart and bring him under conviction to the place where he would decide for or
against Christ.
But, \\if\\ the only people who are going to accept Christ
are those who have been "ear-marked" for salvation ahead of time,
then, one feels that the rest of the race haven't had a chance, even of
refusing. To what extent are they responsible for being lost?
One woman in my class, from the southern states as a matter
of fact, said to me afterwards, "If this teaching is right, it makes
everything seem so hopeless. I thought \\anyone\\ could be saved; that the
decision was theirs. But if God has decided ahead of time, they haven't a
chance, no matter how much we pray for them".
I tried to point out that the whole race was lost anyway,
regardless of Election. That Election of some did not mean that the others were
any worse off than they would have been without Election. And yet -- with a part
of me -- I know how she feels, because periodically, in spite of all my praying
for light, I have the same feeling...that if you are not elected, you just don't
stand a chance. You feel as if the whole matter has been taken out of your hands
and you aren't given an equal chance with others.
I understand all the argument about the governor of a prison,
too, and agree with it with my head! But my heart keeps saying that while it is
true a man is not in prison because the governor hasn't pardoned him, but rather
because of his own wrongdoing, nevertheless, the lack of a pardon \\keeps\\ him
there!
Is there Scripture to support the interpretation that if we
were not elected, we would never have the faintest interest in salvation? I know
from Romans 8:7,8
as well as other passages, that in our natural state we are at enmity with God.
But I always thought that if the Holy Spirit operated on a human heart, say of
someone who was showing interest in becoming a Christian, that that person then
had a chance to decide whether or not to be saved. But evidently, the Holy
Spirit doesn't even work on the heart of anyone who has not been elected ahead
of time. Is there Scripture for that?
2. If God chooses only certain people for salvation, or
enables only certain people to avail themselves of salvation, then what do you
do with verses like John
3:16? I thought Christ died "for the sins of the whole world" 1
John 2:2 not just for the elect. Spurgeon seem to think that He died only
for the elect.
And what about such verses as "He is not willing that
any should perish but that all should come to repentance" and again
"but now commandeth all men everywhere to repent". If man is powerless
to repent unless he is elected, and God does not elect him, how is man
responsible for not obeying God's command to repent; and, furthermore, how can
it be said that God is not willing for \\any\\ to perish if He doesn't enable
\\all\\ to be saved?
3. How do you explain the fact that sometimes a person is
under great conviction but decides against salvation? Were they or were they not
elected? My father, who passed away in July, was a great Christian layman and
doctor and led many souls to Christ in his offices and through lay preaching. He
told me a story which he either read or witnessed himself -- I have forgotten
which. But a young woman attended some revival meetings night after night and
appeared to be deeply moved. In fact, it was apparent to the preacher that she
was under deep conviction. The last night, when the call was given, she slipped
from her place and left the building. A worker followed her and heard her say,
looking up to the stars, "I do not want to be a Christian. Why can't You
leave me alone? I am enjoying life and my good times and I am not prepared to
change my way of living. Holy Spirit, please leave me alone and don't bother me
again". And, with a chilling laugh, she walked off into the night. She was
killed in an accident a few hours later, if I remember rightly.
Now, what I want to know is this: was she elected, and if she
were not, how did she get under conviction in the first place? Would the Holy
Spirit waste time, so to speak, convicting someone of sin whom God had not even
elected? If she were elected, why didn't she come? I thought election meant that
you had to come whether you realized it or not. Is it possible for certain
people to be chosen for salvation but for them, in the exercise of their free
wills, to reject it?
4. Also, please explain the verse "many are called,
but few are chosen". If that verse said "many are called but few
accept" I could understand it. But I do not distinguish between
"calling" and "choosing". I would have thought they were the
same.
5. Finally, in spite of all the arguments to the
contrary, I find myself caught up in a sort of fatalistic attitude -- that what
is to be will be. Perhaps this stems more from my reading on the sovereignty of
God than from Election.
But I find myself arguing thus, "If God has a plan for
every individual and every nation, if He ordains the powers that be, and sets up
kings and disposes of them, etc., if He is completely sovereign, then He is
going to work out His will regardless of Satan's efforts to thwart Him or man's
failure to his part".
You say that because Election is a secret matter, we must
witness anyway and leave the results to God. True. But on the other hand, I
can't see that it matters whether we know or whether we don't since God knows
who is elected and will save a person whether we do our bit or not. Just because
I fail to witness, God is not going to be thwarted in His design to save certain
people. The very fact that God has chosen them is sufficient to ensure that they
will be saved whether we witness or not, for the simple reason that God is
sovereign and has already elected them for salvation. I agree that I don't know
who is elected and who is not. But I don't have to. They are going to be saved
anyway if God wills it.
I read in Strong's Theology that our prayers never change
God’s mind, the idea being that as we grow in our Christian experience and
live closer to God, we shall learn to pray for those things that are according
to God's purpose for us; therefore He can answer our prayer.
But again -- if He has plans for individuals or nations, they
will be brought to fruition \\without\\ our prayers. If this is so, then, what
we think have been answers to prayers are only the fulfilment of a divine plan
that would have been accomplished quite as well without our prayer. But, because
we cannot see the future, we think we have prevailed with God and so we say He
has answered our prayer. But, since He planned a certain course for us, it would
have come about that way in any event. Do you see what I am trying to say?
I always thought that, to a certain extent, we did prevail
with God providing we were not asking for something outside of His will -- by
that I mean His pleasure or permissive will rather than a fixed, premeditated
plan. I guess I thought, for instance, that if a loved one were sick and the
Lord didn’t have any actual decision made that that was the time they were to
die, He would spare their life in answer to prayer. But according to
sovereignty, the reason He spared it was simply because He wasn't ready for them
to die yet, therefore my prayer had nothing to do with it. They would have
recovered in any event. If that were His foreordained plan, or died if that were
His plan.
If prayer doesn't change God's mind, then what use was
therein Abraham interceding for Sodom and Gomorrah? God would have saved 50 or
40 or 10 in any event if they had been found. Or Moses interceding for Israel.
God had a plan for Israel that He would carry out regardless of Moses' prayer so
that Moses and the rest of us just pray for something that is bound to happen
whether or not we pray! To me that defeats the whole purpose of prayer. It
almost makes one feel that we are deluded into thinking we are accomplishing
something by prayer, whereas in reality it has all been decided upon ahead of
time.
Now, for instance, in the case of Mueller's Orphanage, God
had a plan for that work which would be carried to fruition since He is
sovereign. If prayer doesn't carry any weight with God, so to speak insofar as
influencing Him, then would that milk truck have broken down in front of the
Orphanage (thereby supplying milk for all those children) whether Mueller had
spent the night on his knees or not? According to theologians, it was not
Mueller's prayers that resulted in the seemingly miraculous supply of milk for
the orphanage, but just part of a plan that would have come to pass anyway.
Mueller might just as well have spent the night in bed as on his knees. I don't
understand it. To me, such reasoning contradicts James
5:16 and others which teach importunate prayer. I wonder sometimes if the
trouble is not with men's interpretations of Scripture rather than with
Scripture itself.
This is a terribly long letter and I do apologize for being
so wordy. But this subject is too vast, I guess, to be covered by
correspondence. How I wish I could sit down and talk with you.
I am keeping a copy of this letter so that I can refer to it
when your answer comes. I do hope you will not think I am imposing on you; but
your pamphlet has really stirred me up. I can see where election is indeed a
wonderful doctrine if only it didn't seem to contradict other Scriptures.
I hope and pray that you can give me more light and that you
won't be offended with such a long letter from a stranger.
With heartfelt thanks in anticipation of your reply, I am
Yours sincerely,
Signed: Marjorie Bond (Mrs. Marjorie Bond)
REPLY BY DR. C.D. COLE
746 West Noel
Madisonville, Kentucky
October 20, 1959
Mrs. Marjorie Bond 1505 Scotland Street Calgary,
Alberta Canada
My Dear Mrs. Bond:
Greetings in the Name of His whose Name is above every name!
Your good letter under date of the 5th, was duly received.
And it could not have reached me at a busier time, which accounts for my delay
in making reply. I am a clerk of Little Bethel Association, and your letter came
the first day of our annual meeting. There was a lot of work in preparing for
the meeting, and much more work in getting the material in the hands of the
printer. At first, I thought I would write briefly, stating my situation, and
promising to get to it as soon as possible. And then it occurred to me that I
might save this time in the hope of getting to the matter before the time you
mentioned ran out. I trust you will not take my delay as evidence of
indifference on my part. Moreover, due to infirmities of age, I do not have the
capacity for work I once enjoyed.
First of all, let me commend you for your honest attitude
towards the doctrine of ELECTION and related subjects; and may I also
congratulate you on your grasp of these doctrines. I rarely receive such a
well-written letter on any subject. You put your problems in a clear
perspective, which makes it easier to deal with them. And I can answer
sympathetically because your problems are also my own problems. Much as I would
like to solve them for you, I fear my efforts will be disappointing.
I believe you are unduly disturbed over your inability to
harmonize all that is in the Bible. This Book is the revelation of the Infinite
and the finite mind cannot understand to perfection all that God has revealed.
To be able to do so would be an argument against the Bible as God-breathed, and
reduce it to a mere human production. Moreover, the \\determination\\ to
harmonize apparent contradictions is sure to result in one of three things,
found in actual life. One will either ignore Sovereignty on the one hand, or
human responsibility on the other hand, or else be plagued with a disturbed mind
as you confess to having. On the one side are the so-called Primitive Baptist (Hardshells),
who cannot reconcile human inability with responsibility in the matter of
repentance and faith. And so they emphasize the doctrines of sovereignty, the
Divine decrees, and human inability, and ignore the Scriptures which command
sinners to repent and believe the gospel, hence they have no gospel for the
lost. On the other hand there are those who preach the doctrines of human
responsibility and the command to repent and believe, and have nothing to say
about human inability, the Divine decrees, and sovereignty. Here in my own
church and association, as well as throughout the South generally, there is
little heard of Election, Depravity, and Sovereignty in salvation. It is because
the brethren feel they cannot preach both; that the two are beyond
reconciliation -- the one being true, the other must be false. Now, in your case
there is both the determination to accept all Scripture and to harmonize them,
resulting in a confused and disturbed mind. Let us, at the risk of being called
inconsistent, take all the Scriptures whether we can harmonize them or not. Dr.
J.B. Moody (one of my fathers in the faith) used to say, that if one waited to
accept the doctrines until he could harmonize them, he would never accept them;
the way to harmonize them is to receive them without question, and they will
harmonize on the inside of the soul. This may not be exactly true, but it will
be of help. I am not saying that we should make no effort to harmonize seeming
contradictory doctrines, but I do warn against a persistent determination to do
so. With this introduction, I will now take up your questions in their order.
1. It is true that most (I would say all) people feel
that election is unjust. This is not strange since the carnal mind is enmity
against God. People may love a god of their own invention, but only born-again
believers can love a Sovereign God who does what He will with His own (1
John 4:7). God's rights with the sinful human race are the rights of a
potter over the clay. We can readily see that the criminal has no claims upon
the human court, and it is just as true that the sinner has no claims upon an
offended God. Moreover, to say that election is unjust is to put salvation on
the basis of justice, thus robbing every sinner of any hope.
When we find people who seem to be interested in salvation,
we are encouraged to think they are of the elect, for the elect are not saved
without becoming interested in salvation. When we pray for their salvation, we
are not asking the Holy Spirit to put them on the fence where they may fall off
on either side. They are already on the wrong side -- the attitude of ignorant
rejection of Christ -- and we pray that He may translate them from the Kingdom
of darkness into the Kingdom of His dear Son (Col
1:13). We pray for their conversion to faith in Christ, that they may not be
left to the choice of a depraved nature. Why He does not convict and convert
everybody we preach to and pray for is due to His sovereignty and not to His
weakness. We do not pray to a weak God. However, we must distinguish between the
desire to be saved from sin and the desire to be saved from Hell. Nobody wants
to burn, but the desire to be saved from sin is a holy desire created by the
Holy Spirit. When He creates such a desire His further work of conversion will
follow, but we cannot assuredly determine the motive of the desire.
You ask to what extent are they (the non-elect) responsible
for being lost? They are responsible for all the sins they commit and for their
sinful nature also. What one does is a revelation of what he is. This is not
apparent to our sense of justice. I cannot see how God can justly hold me
responsible for the exercise of a sinful nature inherited --for a nature I had
nothing to do with acquiring -- for a nature I was born with. If I were to sit
in judgment on God (perish the thought) I would say that it is not right to
punish me for an inherited sinful nature. I accept my responsibility for sin
even though I cannot understand the justice of it. Those who have not been
"ear-marked" for salvation fall into two groups -- those who have the
gospel preached to them, and those who never hear of Christ as Saviour. Those
who have the gospel preached to them are responsible for all their sins,
including the sin of rejecting Christ, while those who never hear of Him are
free from the sin of rejecting Him, although they are guilty of other sins for
which they are held responsible. The heathen who have never heard the gospel
will not have to answer for the sin of unbelief. Whether we can understand it or
not, the sinner in all his depravity and helplessness is accountable to God.
The woman in your class who remarked that the doctrine of
election makes everything so hopeless, adding that she thought anyone could be
saved; that the decision was "theirs", might be answered this way.
Anyone can be saved who is willing to be saved God's way through faith in
Christ, but nobody, left to himself, wants to be saved this way. God's way is
foolishness to him: 1Co
2:14; 2Co
4:3-6; Rom
10:1-3.
The decision is "theirs" but the decision to trust
Christ is the result of a renewed mind -- the result of grace in the soul. Paul
speaks of the time when he thought he ought to do many things contrary to the
name of Jesus of Nazareth Acts
26:9. In the telling of his conversion he ascribes it to the grace of God: 1Co
15:10; Gal
1:14-16.
There is no self-salvation, either in providing it or
applying it. The work of the Spirit in us is as essential as the work of Christ
for us. Paul says that the Jews were asking for a sign (they wanted him to
perform a miracle) and that the Greeks were clamouring for wisdom (they wanted
him to philosophise), but without catering to the wishes of either, he preached
Christ crucified. Salvation through faith in a crucified Christ was to the
natural Jew a scandal, and to the Greek it was foolishness. Those effectually
called by the Holy Spirit were able to see the power and wisdom of God in such a
plan of salvation; 1Co
1:22-31
Why God does not effectually call more than He does is not
due to inability but to sovereignty. As I say in my article on election, we must
either limit God's power or His mercy, or go over boots and baggage to
universalism. If God is trying to save everybody and does not succeed, He is not
almighty; if He is not trying to save everybody His mercy is not universal. Romans
9:18 makes it clear that His mercy is limited and is sovereignly bestowed.
Deserving mercy is a contradiction of terms. The flesh in us -- remnants of
depravity -- rebels at this aspect of Divine sovereignty. The writer is aware of
this, just as you seem to be.
2. There are passages like John
3:16 and 1 John
2:2 which seem to teach that Christ died for every individual. However, the
word "world" rarely ever means every individual of the human race. The
word "world" is sometimes used to distinguish between the saved and
the lost 1 John
5:19; between the Jew and the Gentile Rom
11:11-15 and between the few and the many Joh
12:19. I believe John
3:16 and 1 John
2:2 teach that Christ died for Gentiles as well as Jews. He died for men as
sinners and not as any class or kind of sinners. The Jews thought their Messiah,
when He came, would deliver them and destroy the Gentiles. John says that He is
the propitiation or Mercy-seat for all believers regardless of class or colour.
In other words, Christ is no tribal Saviour. If we think of Christ's death as
substitutionary, then I agree with Spurgeon, that He died for the elect only. If
he died as the substitute for every individual, then every individual would be
saved, else His death was in vain. Now I believe there is a sense in which
Christ's death affects every person. By His death He bought the human race, not
to save every individual, but in order to dispose of every individual. The right
to judge this world is Christ's reward for His suffering. All judgment has been
committed unto the Son, John
5:22. In the parable of the hid treasure, Christ is the man who bought the
field (world) for the sake of the treasure (the elect) for the sake of those
given Him by the Father, Mat
13:44. See also John
17:6-11 and 2
Peter 2:1. Incidentally, the word for Lord in 2
Peter 2:1 is Despot (Gk. despotes), and indicates more authority than Kurios
(Lord).
In 2
Peter 3:9, the apostle is explaining why the Lord has not returned to this
earth, the reason being, that He is not willing that any should perish, but that
all should come to repentance. This refers to His will of purpose. It is God's
purpose that all should come to repentance and be saved. In longsuffering He
waits until all the "us-ward" have been brought to repentance. The
"us-ward" are described as those who had obtained the like precious
faith (1:2); who had been given all things that pertain to life and godliness
(1:3); and who had escaped the corruption that is in the world (1:4). In 2
Peter 3:15, the apostle tells the same "us-ward", that they are to
account the longsuffering of the Lord as salvation. Christ's longsuffering
towards the elect keeps Him on His mediatorial throne until all have been saved.
Had He come sooner than planned, many of the elect would not have been saved. I
have been a Christian for 51 years, and if He had come before my conversion, I
would have perished in my sins. It is not His will of purpose that any of those
given to Him by the Father shall perish. The words "all" and
"every" are hardly ever used in the absolute sense: Mat
3:5-7; 1Co
4:5.
The "all" of 2
Peter 3:9 are all of the "us-ward" who shall be brought to
repentance. This is not good grammar, but it is good theology and necessary to
plainness. Christ will not come in judgment until all those given Him by the
Father have come to repentance. When He comes He will usher in the new era of
the "New heavens and a new earth", wherein dwelleth righteousness.
3. The story told you by your dear father has been
duplicated in many cases of people who seem to be under deep conviction, and yet
oppose those who try to lead them to Christ. Such conviction is not of the Holy
Spirit, who convicts of the sin of unbelief and leads to faith in Christ. Such
cases do reveal the fact of the enmity of the carnal mind towards God, and not a
mind wrought upon by the Holy Spirit. A case in point is that of Felix who
trembled at the preaching of Paul and then dismissed him until a more convenient
season, Acts 24:25.
There is a natural conviction of sin, which may be felt by
everybody when confronted by his sin (John
8:9), and there is evangelical conviction by the Holy Spirit, and leading to
repentance and faith. God never abandons the good work He begins in the soul, Phi
1:6. The Holy Spirit, in my judgment, never tries to regenerate one of the
non-elect. There is much Scripture for this. The New Testament speaks often of
those given to the Son by the Father and their salvation is assured. These are
called "sheep" and "elect" before they come to Christ: Joh
6:37-44; 10:14-16,25-28; 2Ti
2:10.
You ask whether or not the woman referred to was an
"elect"? I do not know. I can only say that at the time she gave no
evidence of being an elect. However, later she may have been convicted by the
Holy Spirit of the sin of unbelief and brought to repentance. We can only judge
whether a person is an elect or not by his attitude toward the gospel of Christ.
If she were a sheep of Christ, she did come to His at some later date, for
Christ says, "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow
me".
4. "Many are called, but few are chosen" (Mat
20:16; 22:14). Calling in the New Testament usually means the effectual call
to salvation -- saints are made by a Divine call, but it cannot mean that many
hear the invitation to accept Christ who have not been chosen by God to
salvation (1Th
1:4-7; 2Th
2:13). Calling and choosing are not the same. The choosing or electing took
place in eternity past; calling takes place in time and brings about conversion
to faith in Christ. There is a general call given to every sinner in gospel
preaching, and there is the special call of the Holy Spirit, inducing acceptance
of the general call. The general call in gospel preaching is to men as sinners;
the special call by the Holy Spirit is to the elect and results in salvation. Romans
8:28 refers to this effectual call: 1Co
1:26; Gal
1:15,16.
5. You complain of being "caught up in a sort of
fatalistic attitude -- that what is to be will be". There is a vast
difference between cold, impersonal something called "fate", and the
providential workings of a great and wise God. Things do not come to pass by
cold fate, but by God, "Who worketh all things after the counsel of His own
will" (Ephesians
1:11). Dr. Charles Hodge was once asked if he believed what is to be, will
be. He replies, "Why yes I do; would you have me believe that what is to
be, won't be?" Prophecy is the Divine prediction of many things which are
to be, and these predictions have been or will yet come to pass.
The second paragraph of your letter on this subject expresses
a glorious truth. God is ruling this world, making even the wrath of man to
praise Him; the remainder of wrath men might do, He restrains: Psa
76:10.
Referring to the 1st paragraph of your letter on page 27 it
is true that the elect will be saved, and that my failure to witness will not
thwart God's purpose to save them. God uses me, but He is not dependent upon me.
I dare not think that God is helpless without me; if I fail He can use someone
else. I am not to witness because of any assured results, but in obedience to
His will of command. I cannot know His will of purpose concerning those to whom
I bear testimony. We are to witness to people as sinners and not as elect
sinners. Election has nothing to do with our obligation to witness. Isaiah
preached when he was told there would be no good results in the way of response
from the people: Isa
6:8-13.
Your letter closes with questions concerning prayer. I have
no hope of giving much help here, but will make some observations. Prayer is one
of the means by which God brings to pass what He has decreed. Answered prayer is
indited by the Holy Spirit. He knows the mind and will (purpose of God) and
makes intercession for us according to the will of God (Romans
8:26,27). How one may know that his prayer is indited by the Holy Spirit, I
cannot tell. But the Holy Spirit leads us to pray for that which is within the
circle of the Divine will, and if we ask anything according to His will He
heareth us (1 John
5:14). We are taught to pray for His will to be done. This shows we are not
to try to change His will by our praying. This would take control out of His
hands and put us in charge.
Whether we can harmonize our praying with His decrees or not;
It is our duty to pray because He commands it (Luk
18:1).Prayer implies two things: our inability and His ability. Prayer is an
act of dependence upon God who is "able to do exceeding abundantly above
all that we ask or think" Eph
3:20.
I do not presume to be able to reconcile the doctrine of
Divine decrees with such passages as James
4:2,3 and 5:16. But I can see how prayer can prevail without changing God,
when I think of it as one of the means by which His will of purpose is effected.
In Mueller's case, I can think that he was led by the Holy Spirit to spend the
night on his knees as the means of getting milk for the children. We have the
same difficulty in the case of Paul's ship-wreck as recorded in Acts
27. When all hope of being saved was gone (27:20), the angel of God told
Paul there would be no loss of life. He then comforts the despairing sailors,
soldiers, and prisoners, saying, Be of good cheer; for I believe God, that it
shall be even as it was told me (27:25). Then later when the sailors were about
to abandon the ship, Paul said to the centurion and soldiers "Except these
abide in the ship, ye cannot be saved" (27:31). God had declared there
would be no loss of life, and Paul believed Him, and yet he believed their
safety depended upon the sailors staying with the ship. We might charge Paul
with inconsistency but there it is.
As to praying for the sick, we must always pray without
knowing what the Divine will is in every particular case. It is appointed unto
men once to die, and when the appointed time comes our praying will not cancel
the Divine will. David recognized this in praying for his sick child. He fasted
and prayed while the child was alive, but when the child died, he bowed to the
manifest will of God and said, "While the child was yet alive, I fasted and
wept; for I said, Who can tell whether God will be gracious to me that the child
may live?" 2Sa
12:22. Paul's prayer for the thorn to be removed is another case of asking
for something outside the circle of God's will of purpose. Paul prayed without
knowing the will of God, and when it was made known to him, that sustaining
grace would be given rather than the removal of the thorn, he bowed in sweet
submission and said, "Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my
infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me" (2Co
12:9).
My mind often reverts to the terrible war between our North
and our South -- the so-called "Civil War". There were men of God on
both sides -- men of piety and prayer -- who pleaded with God for victory. I
believe it is conceded that the most outstanding men of God belonged to the
Southern Army – such men as Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson, and Robert E.
Johnston. And now all of us rejoice that it was God's will for the Union to be
saved.
It is becoming in all of us to seek our Father's face and
pray for His blessings, and then bow in reconciliation to His mysterious
providence in our lives.
"God holds the key of all unknown, and I am Glad; If other hands should hold the key, Or if He trusted it to me, I might be sad
"What if tomorrow's cares were here Without its rest! I'd rather He unlocked the day; And as the hours swing open, say, 'My will is best.'
"The very dimness of my sight Makes me secure; For groping in my misty way, I feel His hand; I hear Him say 'My help is sure.'
I cannot read his future plans; But this I know; I have the smiling of His face, And all the refuge of His grace, While here below.
"Enough! this covers all my wants, And so I rest! For where I cannot He can see, And in His care I safe shall be, Forever blest."
We are all poor sinners in the need of an adequate Saviour.
This Saviour is the Lord Jesus Christ Who says, "Him that cometh to Me I
will in no wise cast out". If Christ is the Saviour of sinners, this poor
sinner can qualify for salvation. I praise Him for dying for me, and I praise
the Holy Spirit for making me to realize my helplessness and for taking the
things of Christ and showing them to me (John
16:14,15).
May the Lord bless you in the coming discussion on Nov. 5th,
and make you a blessing to others! I wish I might have been of more help in this
reply to your questions. Let me exhort you not to worry over failure to be able
to reconcile doctrines, which seem to our finite minds to be contradictory.
With heartfelt thanks for this opportunity to discuss with
you some of the deep things of God, I am,
Yours in gospel bonds,
C.D. Cole
LETTER TWO BY MRS. MARJORIE
BOND
1505 Scotland Street
Calgary, Alberta
November 6, 1959
Dear Dr. Cole:
Do you think you can stand another letter from me? I shall
try not to be so verbose this time!
Your wonderful and most helpful letter came two weeks ago
tomorrow, so you can see it was in plenty of time for our meeting last night. I
was going to acknowledge it immediately; then it occurred to me that if I waited
till after the meeting, I could "kill two birds with one stone", so to
speak -- thank you for the letter and report on the meeting as well.
I cannot begin to tell you how much I appreciate the time and
trouble you have taken to help a complete stranger -- and yet, perhaps, we are
not such strangers after all, as we are related through the bonds of the gospel.
But you went to a great deal of work, I am afraid, to answer my letter at such
length and in such detail and I appreciate it more than I can say. But above
all, I feel I owe you a debt of boundless gratitude for your article on Election
which sparked off my interest in it and subsequent study of it. I feel as if a
completely new world has opened up to me; I get almost excited over it all, Dr.
Cole. I do hope it is not wrong to attach so much importance to it, but somehow,
I feel as if it is the most significant and \\personal\\ doctrine in the whole
Bible. Nothing should eclipse the Atonement I know; but I feel that even my
conversion, somehow, never made the impression on me that Election has. When you
have been brought up in a Christian family, heard the Scriptures from childhood
and been active in the Church, there isn't the marked cleavage, somehow, when
one becomes a Christian that there is if you have been turned from a life of
vice. Is it because we don't feel, in the innermost recesses of our being, that
we need Christ as badly as the other type does?
I don't know; but I have often felt that I didn't have the
\\joy\\ in my Christian life that I should. It seemed stale and flat, so often;
one did things for the Lord from a sense of duty. Sometimes I have even wondered
if I were saved at all. Now all that is changed. The very fact that my salvation
is all of grace -- in the application of it as well as the provision of it --
has transformed everything for me. And I have you to thank for it. Oh, how
wonderful it must be to a minister to be so used of God.
When I first read your pamphlet, in addition to all my other
objections to Election, I didn't like the idea that (in a sense) I had nothing
to do with becoming a Christian. I had always supposed that, with the Spirit's
help, I had had sense enough and intelligence enough to recognize something
worthwhile and take it! It didn't appeal to me \\at all\\ to think that if I had
been elected, I really had nothing to do with my salvation at all -- even in the
accepting of it. But \\now\\ that is almost the best part of it! It is humbling
and breath-taking and frightening and thrilling all at once. I just can't get
over it, Dr. Cole. To think that all these years (I am 41), I have missed this
tremendous teaching and the thrill and joy of it.
It has made my salvation and conversion much more real and
personal. I have always envied people who spoke with such joy of their
conversion and felt that something had happened, I never could. I couldn't
remember a time when I didn't believe, if you know what I mean. And it has
worried me; I've had a sneaking fear that maybe all I had was a head or credal
belief because I was brought up in a Christian home and accepted that as I did
other patterns of behaviour and thought. I have prayed off and on for months
that if I were saved the Lord would make me realize it beyond all shadow of
doubt and give me "the joy of His salvation". Not just a barren
orthodoxy.
Never did I dream of getting the "witness of the
spirit" through the doctrine of Election. I wouldn't want the Lord to think
I'm not grateful for salvation. I am; but right now, I feel as if I'm more
grateful for Election. Is that wrong?
Over and over I keep saying to myself, like someone rescued
from a sinking vessel, when others are lost, "Why me? Why me?" When I
wake up in the morning, I used to feel tired and exhausted and wish I didn't
have to go to work (I am a war widow); now, almost as soon as I am conscious, I
have the feeling that something new and exciting has happened -- and then it
flashes across my mind in a wave of remembrance -- "you are elected"
and I get so excited I am wide awake instantly and ready to be up and doing.
I cannot explain it -- but somehow as long as you feel that
you had the least little bit to do with your own conversion, it takes away some
of the thrill and bloom of it. But when the full impact of the thought and
realization hits you -- that not only the \\provision\\ of salvation is due to
God's grace but also His choice of \\you\\ as recipient, one can only stand back
and marvel -- lost in wonder, love and praise.
Now, I must tell you about last night. There were nearly 30
women out. \\Nothing\\ that we have studied in the 7 or 8 years that I have
taught that class has so stirred them as this Doctrine! They came with Bibles
and pens...and objections! I went all over it again very carefully, reminding
them first that:
(a) The depravity of man \\required\\ it (election)
elaborating on your point that we are just deceiving ourselves if we think
\\any\\ of us would ever want or seek God in our unregenerate state apart from
the Holy Spirit and election.(Gen
6:5; Psa
14:3; Isa
64:3; Rom
3:10 and Eph
2:1 -- I had them look up and read aloud these references).
(b) The sovereignty of God justifies it -- He has the same
rights over us as the potter with the clay, etc., emphasising such qualities
of God as His absolute Righteousness, Holiness, Omniscience, Self-Existence,
etc. which entitles Him to act in a sovereign way.
(c) The righteousness and Holiness of God safe-guards it;
it cannot be unjust for it is absolutely impossible for God to do anything
wrong, be unfair, unjust, unfaithful..."He cannot deny Himself".
Regardless of how it may appear to us we have this knowledge and comfort that
the Judge of all the earth will do righteously.
Well, after I had made my points, the members asked
questions. I felt really sorry for one woman in my class. She has come to our
church from the United Church. I \\think\\ she is saved -- but periodically one
detects in her thinking and from her remarks, a throwback to the United Church
doctrine of salvation through works! Evidently she has been really wrought up
over this subject -- which I consider a good sign. I told her she couldn't have
been any more disturbed than I was at first. She cannot see that it is not
unjust of God. I thought your illustration of being on the fence and God pushing
them to one side or the other excellent, so I elaborated on that. I think, with
most of them, they finally began to see a glimmer of light that if God hadn't
elected some, none would be saved.
We all seem to have the same reaction -- that if the decision
had been left to us, we had a better chance of getting saved than by having God
settle it all in Eternity; because we don't or won't accept that teaching that
of ourselves we are incapable of reaching out for God. I told them that in our
natural state, we are dead in trespasses and sins and a corpse just cannot
flicker even an eyelash! So they were just deceiving themselves if they thought
for one minute that they would \\ever\\ accept Christ, apart from God taking
certain measures to make them.
Well, our discussion went on for about 1 1/2 hours! This
woman also thought as did others that Scriptures elsewhere we contradicted by
Election -- such as John
3:16 and 1 John
2:2. I was glad to have your explanation of "all" and
"world" rarely being used in the absolute sense.
Also, John
6:37..."Him that cometh unto Me I will in no wise cast out"...I
told them to look up the first part of that verse and they would get a shock! I
had! "All that the \\Father\\\\hath given unto me\\ shall come unto
me...etc." Of course Christ wouldn't cast out any who came because any who
came would be those whom the Father had given! They were simply stunned! But
seemed to react more as if it made sense and were opening up new worlds of
thought.
Afterwards, while we were waiting for tea, this one
particular woman came to me. I did feel so sorry for her; she was flushed and
almost tearful and I said, "Edythe, is it any clearer?" She hesitated
and said, "Yes, in some respects. But there are other things that I just
feel I can't reconcile with my ideas of God and the Bible". I said,
"Don't try, Edythe, Dr. Cole told me not to attempt to reconcile all points
of this teaching with other passages of Scripture because I would only confuse
myself, and I believe he is right". By the way, that was a wonderful help
to me, personally, what you told me about just getting a confused mind. I just
let go all the arguments, after reading your letter, and told the Lord that I
guessed I had struggled long enough trying to crowd the ocean of His theology
into the teacup of my mind and I wasn't going to fuss anymore about the points I
didn't understand. He understood them and that was good enough for me. And it is
since then that I have had such peace.
I tried to tell something of this to Edythe; she said,
"Marjorie, I have nearly gone out of my mind this week". And her voice
broke. She said, "I can't think of anything else and I go over and over it
until I am nearly crazy". I just ached with pity for her because I had been
through the same thing until I got your letter back.
It flashed across my mind that perhaps your letter would help
her too. So I asked her if she would like a copy of my questions to you and your
reply. She was terribly grateful. I had them with me so was able to let her have
them right away. Would you pray with me that she will get peace and learn, by
the help of the Holy Spirit to love this doctrine as we do?
One other member, a new-comer to my class although she has
been in our church several years, said to me with the sweetest smile afterwards,
"I am like you; I know now I have been elected and it is simply thrilling.
I wish you could have seen my husband, though. He wanted to come so badly
tonight -- he asked me if I thought you would mind if he slipped into a back
seat"! It seems her husband took her pamphlet and read it; was so thrilled
and worked up over it, he read it again and said that never in all his life had
he heard anything like it -- why don't we hear about it? And do you know, Dr.
Cole, person after person has said that to me; "Why don't our ministers
preach it??"
One girl, also from the southern states (Texas -- but not the
one I mentioned in my first letter; \\she\\ wasn't out last night) has been very
keen on this, but admitted to me on different occasions that it simply upset a
lot of her ideas and understandings! However, last night, as I closed she said,
in front of all the others, almost with a blissful sigh, "Well, it
certainly takes the fear out of dying, doesn't it"? And you know, that is
what I have felt so \\strongly\\. I just stared at her for a minute when she
said it -- it was the echo of my own heart. Sometimes I feel I can't wait to get
to heaven and learn more about Election and all the rest of the Bible.
A third woman, mother of a 6 year old boy, said to me,
"Marjorie, I don't know. It is wonderful. I feel that since this study and
the thought I have given to Election that everything has cleared up in my mind.
And so many passages of Scripture fit in and make sense now when they didn't
before".
Yet another girl has talked to me different times and said
that at first she felt (when I taught my first lesson in Sept.)that she was
opposed to it. But the more she read your pamphlet and thought about it, the
more she thought the doctrine really was taught in the Bible and therefore she
should be willing to believe it and leave the parts she didn't understand until
she got to heaven! Last night, after we were finished, she whispered to me
across the table, "Well, I'm happy too, tonight Marjorie. But I'm afraid
some aren't. But it's more a case of \\won't\\ with them.
However, I am praying that the Holy Spirit will do His work
in the hearts of those that are confused or resisting. I feel their very
interest is encouraging and, as you so truly put it, none of us likes this
doctrine; it takes the Holy Spirit to teach a person to love it.
Now, I promised you I wouldn't write such a long letter and I
have. I do hope you aren't bored. But I am so full of it all and so indebted to
you that I felt I had to overflow to you. Have you, by any chance, had any of
your other teachings put up in pamphlet form? I was looking over some old
Witnesses the other day and saw several of yours in serial form, on Sin,
Salvation, etc. I should love to have them complete. I sent away for 40 copies
of your ELECTION pamphlet and distributed them to my class in Sept., so they
have had them to study and mull over ever since! I can never thank you enough
for your article. Certainly God must have led you to have it printed.
It would be so wonderful to sit under that kind of preaching
today. Why don't ministers preach doctrinal sermons anymore -- instead of this
milky, pre digested, topical preaching that so many give? No wonder Christians
today aren't strong and virile and know what they stand for -- they have never
got off the milk of the Word onto the strong meat. I heard one Baptist minister
say that we are "snack bar" Christians today when we should be
dining-room Christians. And I think he had something.
Now, I must go. Again, my heartfelt thanks for all you have
done for me. I pray God's richest blessings upon you and yours and your ministry
for Him which will be fruitful, I am sure, beyond your deepest imaginings and
hopes.
Yours in Him,
(Mrs.) Marjorie Bond
LETTER THREE BY MRS.
MARJORIE BOND
1505 Scotland Street Calgary, Alberta
December 7, 1959
Dear Dr. Cole:
Since writing my Christmas card to you, I have received your
books, "The Heavenly Hope" and "Divine Doctrines". Thank you
very much indeed. I am thoroughly enjoying the magnificent study on the doctrine
of God. How it magnifies and exalts Him and restores Him to His rightful
position of King of kings and Lord of lords. I have felt for a long time that
the Christian church needs a fresh vision of the holiness and majesty of God,
and to realize that He is "the high and lofty one that inhabiteth
eternity". There is entirely too much spirit of camaraderie in our attitude
toward God today.
I wish more of our present-day ministers preached doctrine.
It seems to me that church members would be more firmly rooted and grounded in
their faith if we had more doctrinal teaching and less "snack bar"
preaching!
Apropos of our study on Election, I am still getting
repercussions from it from some of my class members. \\Nothing\\ that I have
ever taught has stirred up such interest. I also gave a copy of your pamphlet to
our minister; am awaiting his reaction!
We were visiting with some friends from another Baptist
church a few weeks ago and something came up about my Bible Class and this
teaching on election. Would you believe it --not one person in that room, apart
from the members of my own immediate family who were present, had even \\heard\\
about Election, let alone understood it? And yet they are all good Christian
people -- not just nominal church members.
We only got into a preliminary discussion of it when we were
interrupted. But I could see that it was not at all favourably received! (As you
say, we are all Arminians by nature!) One woman and her aged father who had
moved away to Arizona about two years ago, are back in Calgary and were present
that night. About a week ago, I ran into this woman at the post office in one of
our local department stores. She is working there temporarily and as there were
people waiting to be served she didn't have too much time to talk to me. But as
I was leaving the wicket, she said, "Oh, Marjorie; I want to have a talk
with you some time on that matter that we were discussing at Thelma's the other
night." For a minute or two, my mind was a complete blank -- I couldn't
remember what she was referring to. She smiled and said, "You know, we
started a discussion about it". Suddenly light dawned and I said, eagerly,
(this is my favourite subject now) "Oh yes, of course. I'll be glad to any
time you are free." She nodded and said, "Well, it has set me
thinking. I don't understand it and don't say that I agree but I want to learn
more about it". So there is another ripple from the stone you cast into the
pool!
Dr. Cole, when you are so busy, I do hate to bother you with
my questions but I feel that you are so learned in this subject that you are in
a better position to help me than anyone else. May I trouble you with one or two
further questions?
(a) What is meant by making "your calling and election
sure"? At first when I was reading 2
Peter 1:5-10, in the light of my new knowledge on Election, it seemed to me
that Peter spoke as if it were possible to lose one's salvation. And yet,
because I believe in the eternal security of the believer (even more so since I
understood Election) I didn't see how this could be. As I prayed about it, it
seemed to me that perhaps what is meant is rather that a person who does what
Peter admonishes is less likely to \\backslide\\ rather than be lost? Do you
think that is the meaning of it?
(b) Is the "all" of Romans
11:32 another example of "all" not being used in the absolute? I
mean the part where it says "that He might have mercy upon \\all\\".
Some people argue that verse as being opposed to Election, saying that if God
wanted to have mercy on all, He would not pick and choose people for salvation
as the doctrine of election teaches.
(c) Also, while we are still in Romans, is it true that even
Christians will be judged for everything they have done since they were saved?
Not in the sense of punishment for their sins, because Judgment on sin was
passed at Calvary. But when the Bible says, "So then we must every one give
an account of ourselves to God;" and again, Romans
2:6..."who will render to every man according to his deeds"; and 1
Corinthians 4:5.
I don't know why it is, but the thought of having all my sins
exposed to view, even though I am not going to be punished for them, robs heaven
of considerable joy. I backslid very badly some years ago, and although the Lord
is dearer to me now than He ever was before. I sometimes feel that \\nothing\\
can undo the sins of those years. God knows all about them and has forgiven me;
why must they be published for all the world to see when I get to heaven?
I thought the passages in Psalms that "as far as the
east is from the west so far have I removed thy transgression from thee",
meant that once we were saved God really blotted out our sins and we never had
to hear about them again. But there seems to be several passages in the epistles
which would lead one to think that, although we will not be punished for our
sins in the sense of going to hell, we shall certainly have to account for them.
If this is so, it seems to me that no Christian could die really at peace,
knowing you had that ahead of you. (Why are we more afraid of man's opinion than
God's?)
(d) My last question has to do with pages 7-9 of your
pamphlet "The Heavenly Hope". I had always understood (prior to my
study of Election), both from Scripture and various hymns and sermons that I had
heard, that there is danger in delaying salvation; that a person could be cut
off from this life before they had accepted Christ and be hurled into a
Christless eternity.
But according to the doctrine of Election, \\no one\\ who is
elected for salvation can possibly die without being saved? Isn't that true?
("All that the Father hath given to me, will come unto me...")
Therefore, anyone whom God has intended to save will be saved and cannot
possibly be lost so there is no danger in delaying for them; and the non-elect
will not be saved anyway. Isn't that so?
It seems to me I just get things sorted out in my mind to
where I understand them, when I read something that puts me off again!
As I say, I used to believe too that there was danger in
delay. All the hymn-writers speak of it etc. But since studying Election, I
concluded that I must have been wrong. There is no real urgency, in the sense of
it being a life and death matter, because no one can die before he is saved, if
God intends him to be saved. Therefore, why do ministers (even those like
yourself who believe in Election) urge people to make haste and accept Christ
before it is too late? It can \\never\\ be too late for an elected person, can
it? I should appreciate being straightened out on this point.
You will get so you dread to see a letter from me if I always
write at such length. But there is so much I need to ask you about and modern
ministers, like doctors, are so busy they haven't time for people any more.
Thank you again for all your help and may God richly bless
you in the year ahead.
Sincerely,
Marjorie Bond
REPLY BY DR. C.D. COLE
746 West Noel Madisonville, Kentucky
December 17th, 1959
My Dear Marjorie:
Greetings and best wishes for a happy holiday season! When I
mailed you the books, I intended to follow at once with a letter explaining that
you would be under no obligation to pay for them, since you had not ordered
them. But other things took precedence, and I was still planning to write when
your letter arrived with enclosure. Perhaps I should return part of the money,
as it was more than enough to pay for what I sent. The supply of books and
tracts I have written is almost exhausted, and this is one reason why I sent you
what I did. The series of SIN and SALVATION have not been put in book form. I
have two or three large scrapbooks containing articles published in various
magazines. At my age (now in my 75th year), I do not expect to publish any more
books. However, I have many dear friends among young ministers and some of them
may want to publish some of my writings after I am gone.
With this brief introduction, I will now attend to your
questions in the hope I may be of some help.
(a) Peter's exhortation to "make your calling and
election sure", is a warning against presumption. One must not take his
salvation for granted without proper evidence of it. Of course he means to make
it sure to ourselves, for we can make nothing sure to God. His words have to do
with assurance and not to the fact of salvation. He starts with the grace of
faith as God's gift, and urges us to build upon that faith so that our lives may
not be barren and unfruitful. No unfruitful believer can have assurance of
salvation as a subjective experience. Apropos of your own experience, while a
backslider.
(b) I believe "all" in Romans
11:32 is used only in a relative and not absolute sense, else we have
universal salvation. Moreover, Romans
9:18 teaches that God is sovereign in bestowal of mercy. This does not mean
that He refuses mercy to any who trust Christ for it, but that He does not cause
all to look to Him for mercy -- some are left to their own carnal will.
(c) The Christian will be judged for his works and not for
his sins. His sins have been judged in Christ and will not appear against him in
the day of Judgment. Salvation is of grace; reward is for work. There will be
degrees both in heaven and in hell, for both the saved and lost will be judged
for their deeds -- the lost will receive the degree of punishment commensurate
with their evil deeds, and the saved will receive glory according to their
works. I do not expect the reward of Paul, for my works have not equalled his.
Romans
2 is dealing with principles of judgment under law: (1) It is to be
according to truth (vs. 2), that is according to facts; (2) It is to be
according to deeds (vs. 6); (3) It is to be without respect of persons (vs. 11
and 12). The chapter is not showing how to be saved, but what one may expect
from the law, whether he be Jew or Gentile.
Romans
14 warns believers against judging one another for various scruples in
regard to eating and observing days on the ground that we shall all stand before
the judgment seat of Christ (vs. 10). We shall give account of ourselves to God
and not to one another.
1
Corinthians 4 deals with the judgment of the Christian as a steward of God.
We cannot judge or appraise the works of one another here and now, for there is
much we cannot know, such as motives and hidden things, but when Christ comes He
will know everything about us, and "then shall every man have praise of
God" (1
Corinthians 4:5). We are not qualified to judge so as to determine the place
one shall have in glory -- God will look after that.
(d) We are to address the lost as sinners, and not as elect
sinners. We do not know who the elect are until they manifest it in faith and
good works. And we are to address them as in need of salvation, and urge them to
trust the one and only Saviour - and to trust Him now. Shall we tell them to
trust Him at once or wait until some other time?
It is true that "no one who is elected for salvation can
possibly die without being saved". But this does not mean that they will be
saved apart from faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. And the means of salvation are
as truly elected as are the persons: 2Th
2:13,14.
Paul knew more about the doctrine of election than any other
man, and yet he persuaded people concerning Jesus (Acts
28:23). He knew the elect would be saved, and yet he prayed and worked for
the salvation of Israel: Rom
9:1-3; 10:1-4; 11:14; 1Co
9:19-22.
We must not allow the doctrine of election to rob us of
compassion for the lost, nor close our eyes to the urgency of salvation: Heb
2:3 2Co
6:2.
There will be things we cannot understand and doctrines we
shall not be able to harmonize, but it is plainly His commanding will for us to
witness to all people concerning Christ Jesus. Secret things belong to God, but
the revealed things fix our duty: Deu
29:29.
With Christian love,
C.D. Cole
This article was originally posted at: http://www.albatrus.org
For further Scriptural support of the doctrine of Election,
please see the Election Collection consisting of over
100 topically categorized verses concerning God’s sovereign, elective program
of salvation.
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