What’s Wrong with Calvinism? - Roger Olson
This
is a talk I gave recently at City on a Hill Church in Seattle, Washington.
(City on a Hill is a mostly Russian evangelical church. It’s leaders are
concerned about infiltration of aggressive Calvinism into their and other
Russian evangelical churches whose tradition is Arminianism. I want to thank
Russell Korets and the other leaders of the church for inviting me to speak and
I want to thank the many leaders of other Russian evangelical churches who came
to the events.)
What’s
Wrong with Calvinism?
A
few years ago I came to the conclusion, led by God, I believe, that someone
needs to speak out about the problems of Calvinism and defend Arminianism. Many
Calvinists, I believe, unfairly misrepresent Arminianism as a form of
human-centered, self-salvation. I kept hearing, and still hear, that Arminians,
allegedly, do not believe in a God who saves but in a God who only gives us the
opportunity to save ourselves. Also, few of the leading Calvinists admit the
problems within Calvinism and most of its young adherents seem blissfully
unaware of where it leads—to thinking of God as the author of sin and evil and
therefore not perfectly loving or good.
So,
what exactly is “Calvinism?” It’s a theological belief system named after John
Calvin, the Protestant reformer of Switzerland in the sixteenth century.
However, it’s doubtful that Calvin himself believed everything that goes under
the label “Calvinism.” And Calvinism holds many beliefs that pre-date Calvin.
The early church father St. Augustine wrote “On the Predestination of the
Saints” back in the early fifth century.
Sometime
in the early twentieth century a teacher of theology came up with the acronym
“T.U.L.I.P.” to summarize the “five main points” of Calvinism. Calvinism is
bigger than that flower, but Holland, famous for its fields of tulips, has been
a hotbed of Calvinism. And not all Calvinists agree with all five points.
Nevertheless, we can safely say that, for the most part, the “five points of
TULIP” summarize the Calvinism of John Piper and the “young, restless,
Reformed” movement that is making inroads into churches where Calvinism has
never before existed (such as Pentecostalism).
The
first point is “total depravity.” What does that mean? Calvinism teaches that
human beings are all born so corrupted and depraved by original sin that they,
we, are incapable of even exercising a good will toward God. As Scripture says
“There is none that does good, no not one” (Romans 3:12) and “There is no one
who seeks after God” (Romans 3:11). Total depravity does not mean that every
person is as evil as it is possible to be. Rather, it means that every part of
us, including our reasoning ability, is so damaged by inherited Adamic
corruption, original sin, that we cannot do what is truly good apart from
grace.
The
second point is “unconditional election.” It means, according to Calvinists,
that if a person comes to Christ and is saved it is because he or she was
chosen by God to be saved. God selects some people out of the “mass of
perdition” that humanity is, to be saved. Others are left to their deserved
damnation. This is also known as “double predestination”—that God sovereignly
chooses some to save and others to damn—unconditionally. In other words, God’s
decision has nothing to do with any good he sees in the elect. There is nothing
about a saved person that made him or her chosen by God.
The
third point is “limited atonement.” Most Calvinists prefer to call it
“particular atonement” because it says that Christ died only for particular
people. It does not mean that the value of Christ’s death was limited. Rather,
according to five point Calvinism, Christ bore the punishment only for the
elect and not for those God decided not to save. This is the point some
Calvinists reject, calling themselves “four point Calvinists.” Five point
Calvinists say the scheme is a “package deal;” it is simply inconsistent to
hold less than all five of the points. Why would Christ suffer the punishment
for the sins of those God chose not to save? If he suffered their punishment,
the argument goes, then God would be unjust to send them to hell. In that case,
the same sins would be punished twice. This is the point I cannot find in
Calvin; I believe it was added to Calvinism after Calvin by some of his more
extreme followers.
The
fourth point is “irresistible grace.” Most Calvinists prefer to call it
“effectual grace.” The meaning is that saving grace extended by God to the
elect cannot be resisted by them. It is always effectual. Part and parcel of
this is the idea that regeneration, being “born again,” happens before
conversion. An elect person, predestined by God for salvation, will freely
choose to repent and believe because he or she has already, perhaps
unconsciously, been regenerated by the Spirit of God. The person is a “new
creation in Christ Jesus” first and only then converted. Regeneration precedes
faith.
The
fifth point is “perseverance of the saints.” It means simply that a truly saved
person cannot fall away and be forever lost. That is because he or she is one
of God’s elect and God would not elect a person and then allow him or her to
fall from grace. This is sometimes called “once saved, always saved” and “eternal
security.” Many non-Calvinists believe this doctrine also, but not because they
believe the eternally secure person is sovereignty predestined by God. Rather,
many Baptists, for example, simply believe God will not allow one of his
children to fall forever away from his grace. Calvinists insist that’s
inconsistent with free will, so perseverance of the saints belongs logically
with the other points of TULIP.
That
is a very quick summary of “five-point Calvinism.” It is what is commonly
called Calvinism today by adherents of the “young, restless, Reformed” movement
and their leaders. Behind the scenes, so to speak, these people carry on some
debates among themselves about some of the finer details of the scheme, but
they are agreed that these are all necessary beliefs for a holistic, robust,
intellectually respectable, evangelical Christian faith.
However,
TULIP does not exhaust Calvinism which his more than just a view of salvation.
Calvinism also includes a broader and deeper “background” view of God’s
sovereignty; it is not only about “predestination” but also about “providence”
which has to do, of course, with God’s governance of creation.
Now
let’s be clear about something. All Christians believe in God’s sovereignty,
providence, and predestination. These are not concepts unique to Calvinism.
Calvinism is a particular interpretation of them. There are other
interpretations. Arminians, for example, also believe in God’s sovereignty,
providence and predestination. But we have a different interpretation of these
good biblical concepts than Calvinism’s.
Calvinism’s
doctrine of God’s sovereignty in providence includes its doctrine of
predestination. According to it, absolutely nothing ever happens or can happen
that God did not decree and render certain. Even sin and evil are part of God’s
plan; he planned them, ordained them, and governs them. He doesn’t cause them,
but he does render them certain. As Sproul says “If there is one maverick
molecule in the universe, God is not God.” Calvinist theologian Paul Helm says
“Not only is every atom and molecule, every thought and desire, kept in being
by God, but every twist and turn of each of these is under the direct control
of God.” One can find similar sayings in virtually every Calvinist theologian’s
writings.
Calvin
himself spilled much ink discussing this very strong, high view of God’s
providential sovereignty—even over evil. In his Institutes of the Christian
Religion Calvin used the illustration of a merchant who foolishly wanders away
from his companions on a trip through a forest. He is set upon by thieves and
murdered. Calvin asks how a Christian should regard this event—an all others
like it. First, he admits, most Christians will think of it as accidental—not
planned but fortuitous—bad luck. Second, however, he says that for the Christian
nothing is ever merely accidental. The merchant’s death was not only foreseen
by God, he says, but planned and rendered certain by God. Even the reprobate,
sinners, he says, are compelled by God’s power to obey his plans.
What
does this mean? Few consistent Calvinists hesitate to admit that they believe
even the fall of Adam and Eve and all its consequences, all the sin, evil and
agony of the world, are decreed and rendered certain by God. Otherwise, they
argue, there would be powers and forces in control of God; God would not be
omnipotent and sovereign.
I
call the Calvinist view of God’s sovereignty “divine determinism.” Many
Calvinists are uncomfortable with that term, but I cannot think of a better,
more correctly descriptive phrase for it. God determines everything—even sin,
evil and innocent suffering. It is all part of a divine blueprint and
everything on it is willed by God. History and our lives unfold according to
the blueprint. And nothing can change it. So, Piper preaches a sermon entitled
“Don’t Waste Your Cancer.” If you have cancer, it is from God and has a good
purpose. Many people hearing that sermon or reading one of Piper’s books such
as The Pleasures of God say “Yes, God is in control and knows what he is
doing.” But they fail to consider that this also means that sin and hell are
also planned, willed, designed and rendered certain by God—for a good purpose.
What good purpose? God’s glory.
The
great Puritan preacher and theologian Jonathan Edwards wrote a treatise
entitled “The End [Purpose] for Which God Created the World.” Piper considers
it one of the greatest Christian essays ever written and simply translates its
main points into contemporary English. According to Edwards, Piper and most
conservative, classical Calvinists, God created the world as what Calvin called
“the theater of God’s glory.” Everything that happens is predetermined and
rendered certain by God for his glory. Even sin, evil and hell glorify God.
How? By manifesting his justice. Without hell, for example, God’s attribute of
justice could not be fully revealed.
Although
not all Calvinists are consistent, Calvinism itself is meant to be a consistent
system of doctrinal beliefs. It begins with a certain “picture” of God believed
to be biblical: God as absolutely glorious, powerful and sovereign. A bedrock
Scripture for Calvinism is Isaiah 45:7: “I form the light and create darkness,
I bring prosperity and create disaster; I, the LORD, do all these things.” Many
other verses in Isaiah point in this same general direction and are interpreted
by Calvinists as meaning that God rules over every detail of history and
individual lives such that whatever happens is ordained and rendered certain by
him for a purpose. Turning to the New Testament, Romans 9 is the bedrock text for
Calvinism. There Paul the Apostle says “God has mercy on whom he wants to have
mercy, and he hardens whom he wants to harden” (verse 19)
Of
course, not all Christians interpret these and passages like them as Calvinists
do. For example, Arminians and other non-Calvinist Christians point to God’s
permission. To be sure, nothing can happen that God does not permit, but that
is not the same as saying he causes or renders certain everything and certainly
not evil, sin or innocent suffering. If those passages are to be interpreted as
Calvinists interpret them, how are we to understand God’s grief over unbelief?
Jesus wept over Jerusalem because they rejected him and stoned the prophets. He
cried “How I would have gathered you but you would not” (Mathew 23:37). Also,
according to 2 Peter 3:9 and 1 Timothy 2:4, God wants all people to be saved
and no one to perish. Yet we know that is not what happens. So how can it be
that everything is predestined by God, in the Calvinist sense? Arminianism uses
the concept of God’s permission to explain these otherwise biblical
contradictions.
What
is the Arminian alternative to Calvinism? First, let me say that Arminianism
and Calvinism do not conflict at every point. We agree about many things. We
are all evangelicals and believe in biblical inspiration, the Trinity, the
deity and humanity of Jesus, salvation by grace through faith and numerous
other basic biblical beliefs. The point of disagreement is God’s sovereignty—is
it all-determining or not?
Basic
to Arminianism is God’s love. The fundamental conflict between Calvinism and
Arminianism is not sovereignty but God’s character. If Calvinism is true, God
is the author of sin, evil, innocent suffering and hell. That is to say, if
Calvinism is true God is not all-loving and perfectly good. John 3:16 says “For
God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whoever believes
in him shall not perish but have everlasting life.” “God so loved the world.”
Calvinists must explain this as meaning that God loves “all kinds of people,”
not everyone. Or that “God loves all people in some ways but only some people
[the elect] in all ways.” Arminians believe these interpretations distort the
clear message of the Bible about God’s love. If Calvinism is true, John Wesley
said, God’s love is “such a love as makes the blood run cold.” It is
indistinguishable from hate—for a large portion of humanity created in his own
likeness and image.
Let
me repeat. The most basic issue is not providence or predestination or the
sovereignty of God. The most basic issue is God’s character.
Calvinists
commonly argue that God’s love and goodness are somehow “different” than ours.
How different can they be and still be meaningful concepts? If God’s love and
goodness are compatible with predestining people to hell, then the words mean
something other than they say. And if God is not perfectly good, then he is not
trustworthy. If he can hate, then he can lie. Why trust Scripture to be a true
revelation and guide if God is not good in some way analogous to our best ideas
of goodness? If God’s goodness is consistent with predetermining large portions
of people to hell, then why might it not be consistent with deceiving us? Our
very trust in the Bible as God’s true revelation depends on God being good,
trustworthy, one who cannot deceive.
The
Calvinist, like the Arminian, approaches Scripture with the assumption that God
cannot lie. He or she can trust the Bible to be a true revelation of God if it
is inspired by God. The moment the Calvinist says “But God’s goodness is
different from ours,” he or she undermines reason to trust the Bible. Of course
God’s goodness is different from ours in that it is greater, but that’s not
what Calvinists faced with passages such as John 3:16 mean. They mean that God’s
goodness, God’s love, is wholly different from our highest and best concepts of
them—even as revealed through Jesus Christ.
If
strong, five-point Calvinism is true, then God is monstrous and barely
distinguishable from the devil. The only difference in character is that the
devil wants everyone to go to hell and God only wants some, many, to go to
hell.
Another
difference between Calvinism and Arminianism lies in Arminians’ view of God’s
sovereignty in providence. According to Arminianism, God is now, before the
coming of his Kingdom of perfect righteousness, sovereign de jure but not de
facto. Jesus and Paul both referred to Satan as the “prince” of this world.
According to Calvinism, Satan is God’s instrument; according to Arminianism he
is a true enemy of God and presently resisting God’s will. Why God is allowing
that is not revealed to us; we are only told that God is being patient. So,
according to Arminianism, God limits himself, restrains his power, holds back
from controlling everything. Why? For the sake of free will. God wants our
freely offered and given love, not love that he has instilled in us without our
consent. If Calvinism is true, salvation is a condition, not a relationship. A
relationship requires free consent. So, in the interim, between the fall in the
garden and the return of Christ in judgment, God is sovereign by right but not
exercising that sovereignty over everything. He could but he doesn’t. Thus,
sin, evil and innocent suffering, and especially hell, are not God’s antecedent
will but God’s consequent will. God’s antecedent will is what he perfectly
wanted to happen—including our willing obedience out of love and everlasting
fellowship with us. God’s consequent will is what God permits to happen that is
contrary to his perfect will. It is consequent to our free choice to rebel
against God and push him out of our lives and our world. It is consequent to
our free choice to obey Satan and make him “god of this world” rather than obey
God.
So,
according to Arminianism, God is in charge but not yet in control. God is like
the king of an enemy occupied territory and we Christians are like resistance
fighters who look forward to the day when our hero, God, will return and take
back his full sovereignty over our country. Of course, this is only an analogy.
Our God is not banished from this world, but neither is he controlling
everything that happens, rendering it certain according to his blueprint. If
that were the case, our prayers could make no real difference. If Calvinism is
true, God’s will is already being done “on earth” and yet Jesus taught us to
pray “Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” Calvinism flatly
contradicts that prayer.
Of
course, Calvinists have their answers to all these objections, but I do not
find any of them convincing. They sound forced to me. They say, for example,
that our prayers for God’s will to be done are God’s “foreordained means to a
foreordained end.” In other words, our prayers are also foreordained and
rendered certain by God as a means of having his will done on earth as in
heaven. But, at the end of the day, that means our prayers never really change
anything.
Calvinists
also say that not everything is “God’s will” in the same way. For example, they
say that God wishes none had to perish in hell. That’s their interpretation of
the verses cited earlier that God is not willing that any should perish but
that everyone be saved. God wishes hell were not necessary, but it is—for his
full glory. God wills what he wishes he did not have to will.
Perhaps
the most troubling answer of Calvinists is the two wills of God—not
“antecedent” and “consequent” but “prescriptive” and “decretive.” If Calvinism
is true, God decrees that people do what he forbids. God decrees things that
violate his prescriptions—commands. God commands “Thou shalt not murder,” but
decrees “Thou shalt murder.” Calvin explained in Institutes, and most Calvinists
agree, that God does not sin in decreeing that someone sin because God’s
intention is good whereas the murderer’s intention is evil. God intends the
murder he decrees and renders certain for his glory. The murderer, who could
not do otherwise than God decrees, is guilty because his intention is hateful.
Not only is this hairsplitting; it also raises the question of the origin of
the murderer’s evil intention. If every twist and turn of every thought and
intention is under the direct control of God, then even the murderer’s
intention cannot escape the all-determining sovereignty of Calvinism’s God.
This is why Arminius stated that if Calvinism is true, not only is sin not
really sin, but God is the only sinner.
Now
let’s turn to Arminianism’s alternative view of God’s predestination. Here I
return to the TULIP scheme. Arminians agree that fallen humans are totally
depraved in the sense Calvinism means—helpless to do anything truly good,
pleasing to God, apart from grace. Arminians, however, believe in prevenient
grace—that grace of God that heals the deadly wound of sin and frees the fallen
sinner from the bondage of the will to sin and gives him or her ability to
exercise a good will toward God. We do not know all the means of prevenient
grace, but the preaching of the gospel is one. “Faith comes by hearing and
hearing by the Word of God.” The gospel read or heard imparts prevenient grace
so that the person is for the first time freed to repent and trust in God. In
other words, Arminians do not believe in
“free will” but in “freed will.”
Where
is prevenient grace in the Bible? Where is it not in the Bible? It is
everywhere assumed, taken for granted, presupposed by Scripture. No one seeks
after God and yet many do seek after God. That pattern of “don’t” but “do” is
found everywhere in Scripture. It is explained by the concept of prevenient
grace. Left to ourselves, apart from a special impartation of grace that
convicts and calls, illumines and enables, we would never exercise a good will
toward God. But with prevenient grace, we can and some of us do.
Arminians
also believe in unconditional election, but we believe it is corporate
election—God’s unconditional plan to have a people for himself: Israel and the
church. Individual election is conditional. It requires faith which is both a
gift of God and a response of the individual. Philippians 2:12-13: “Work out
your own salvation with fear and trembling for God is at work in you….” (The
text and subject of my sermon tomorrow morning) God provides all the ability,
the seed of faith, and we freely accept it and use it to repent and trust in
God alone. But once we do repent and trust, we see that it was God who made it
possible in every way, so we cannot boast. And God foreknew that we would (or
wouldn’t) repent and believe. That’s another dimension of God’s election in
Arminian theology. Individual election, predestination, is conditional in that
we must accept it. If we do, it turns out that God foreknew that we would
(Romans 8:29: “Those whom he foreknew he did predestine….”)
One
of Calvinism’s main arguments against Arminianism is that if Arminianism is
true, God’s salvation is not all of grace. We earn it. Only if election to
salvation is absolutely unconditional and grace irresistible, they argue, can
it truly be the case that “by grace we are saved through faith.” Only then is
salvation a sheer gift. This is, of course, untrue. Think of this analogy. If
someone gives you a check for a thousand dollars that saves you from
bankruptcy, and all you have to do is endorse the check and deposit it, did you
earn part of the money? Was it any less a gift? Absolutely not. What if someone
who received such a check that saved him or her from bankruptcy then boasted of
having earned part of the gift? People would think him mad or ungrateful or
both! A gift that must be freely received is no less a gift.
Now
let’s look at Calvinism’s idea of unconditional election. If God is good and
could save everyone because election to salvation is absolutely unconditional,
why doesn’t he? How can he be truly good if he could but doesn’t? Again, we are
back at the fundamental conflict between Calvinism and Arminianism—God’s
character.
Arminianism
believes that the atonement of Jesus Christ is unlimited in every way. Christ
died for everyone; he took the punishment for the sins of all. Does Scripture
teach it? Absolutely. 1 Timothy 2:6 says that Christ gave himself as a ransom
for everyone. The Greek is clear: it says “all people.” There is no room to
interpret this as meaning “all kinds of people.” John Piper, noting the
conflict between this verse and limited atonement, which he espouses, claims
that Christ did die for even the non-elect. His death affords them many
blessings in this life even if not escape from hell in the next. Christ did not
die to save them but only to offer them
temporal blessings. This is the same as saying he gives the non-elect a little
bit of heaven to go to hell in. Piper’s “explanation” is clearly contrary to the
plain sense of this Scripture passage which is why many Calvinists cannot
accept limited atonement. And yet they cannot explain why Christ would die for
those God planned not to save.
But
there are other passages that completely undermine limited atonement: Romans
14:15 and 1 Corinthians 8:11. Both passages warn believers against flaunting
their freedom in Christ in front of brothers and sisters of weaker conscience
because this might cause one for whom Christ died to be “destroyed.” The Greek
word translated “destroyed” always only means utterly destroyed; it cannot mean
“damaged.” But if Calvinism is correct, a person for whom Christ died cannot be
“destroyed” because he or she is one of the elect.
Calvinists
argue that Arminianism falls into inconsistency in this matter of universal
atonement. The Arminian belief, so it is said, leads inexorably to universal
salvation because if Christ dies for a sinner, his or her sins are already
punished; they are put on Christ. So for God to send a person for whom Christ
died to hell would be unjust—it would be to punish the same sins twice. That is
simply nonsense. A person can refuse to accept another’s vicarious payment of
his or her punishment. That’s what hell is—sinners’ refusal to accept Christ’s
vicarious sacrifice on their behalf. That’s what makes hell so tragic; it is
absolutely unnecessary. A blanket amnesty does not require its acceptance.
President Jimmy Carter declared a blanket amnesty for all Vietnam War resisters
who had fled to other countries such as Canada. They could come home without
fear of punishment. And yet many stayed away.
Finally,
Arminianism has its own interpretation of irresistible grace. Prevenient grace
comes to a person through the gospel. That’s not a choice. What to do with it
is a choice. So saving grace is resistible. Everywhere the Bible represents
grace as resistible. Acts 7:51 accuses the Jewish people who crucified Jesus of
always “resisting the Holy Spirit.” Of course, the Calvinist will simply say
that whoever is said to resist the Holy Spirit or grace is not elect. In other
words, the Calvinist simply defines election as including “not resisting the
Holy Spirit,” so it’s impossible to come up with an example of resisting grace
as they mean it. It’s a matter of definition. In other words, the saying has to
be true that “Those who do not resist grace do not resist grace.” Calvinists
define “election” and “resisting grace” as mutually exclusive. That makes
“irresistible grace” a tautology.
Arminians
believe Scripture warns even believers, the elect, against resisting saving
grace. What else can Paul mean in Galatians when he tells those who turn from
the gospel to works righteousness that they have “fallen from grace.” And what
else is Hebrew 6 all about? Clearly these passages are warning against
resisting saving grace. Why would they if that is impossible for the elect, for
true Christians?
People
often think this disagreement between Calvinism and Arminianism can be settled
by simply listing Bible passages in two columns—one under “Calvinism” and one
under “Arminianism.” Whichever column is longest, that view wins. It doesn’t
work that way.
In
my opinion, strongly biblical cases can be made for both views. Of course, I
happen to think the stronger case is in favor of Arminianism. Otherwise I would
be a Calvinist! However, I will concede, at least for the sake of generosity,
that very strong cases can be made from Scripture for both views. How then
should one settle on one view over the other one?
First,
ask yourself which view is most consistent overall with the portrait of God
given in Jesus Christ, God’s self-revelation, and in Scripture as a whole?
Second,
ask yourself which view is internally consistent? Both have some problems, but
which one has the problems you can live with? Which one has problems you cannot
live with? I know that I cannot live with Calvinism’s view of God’s goodness,
or lack of it. Also, if Calvinism is true, then nothing can be truly evil
because God decreed it and rendered it certain for his glory. If everything is
predestined by God for his glory then nothing can offend the glory of God. That
is a problem inherent in Calvinism that defies logic.
Third,
ask yourself why Calvinism was literally unheard of before Augustine in the
fifth century? That view of God’s sovereignty is completely absent in the
earlier, Greek-speaking church fathers. The earliest church fathers rejected
determinism and affirmed free will. How could someone like Irenaeus, late
second century church father, have gotten it so wrong when he was trained in
the Christian faith by Polycarp who was a disciple of John, the youngest
disciple of Jesus?
Let
me conclude with a ringing, resounding affirmation of God’s sovereignty! God is
sovereign—even over his own sovereignty! Saying we have free will to resist and
even thwart the will of God does not diminish the greatness of God’s
sovereignty and power because our ability to resist and thwart God’s perfect
will is given us by God for the sake of having real relationships with us, not
artificial ones. Yes, of course, God could control us. But he doesn’t. Not
because we have some power over him but because he wants us to love him and
obey him freely and not by compulsion.
And
let me conclude with a ringing, resounding affirmation of the gift nature of
God’s saving grace! We do not earn any of it. But we can reject it and God will
not impose it on us against our wills.
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