 "Blessed is the man to 
		whom the Lord shall not impute sin" (Rom. 
		4.8).
"Blessed is the man to 
		whom the Lord shall not impute sin" (Rom. 
		4.8).
		
		I am amazed at how freely 
		Calvinists and some brethren, who say they are not Calvinists, use this 
		passage. To the Calvinist it proves his brand of the security of the 
		saints. To such brethren it proves their brand of continuous cleansing 
		of the saints. In either case it is used to prove that a Christian's 
		sins, at least some of them, are not held against him by the Lord.
		
		The main difference, the 
		best I can determine from their writings, between Calvinists and the 
		"continuous cleansing" brethren is that Calvinists believe that no sins 
		are charged to the Christian's account while the brethren believe that 
		only some sins are charged to his account - mainly those high-handedly 
		committed.
		
		If the Lord does not 
		impute sin, in the sense of never charging it to our accounts, then 
		there is no need to talk about "continuous cleansing." One does not 
		cleanse that which is not soiled. If sin is not imputed, in the sense of 
		not being charged to him, he is not soiled by the sin. He needs no 
		cleansing - continuous or otherwise.
		
		The popular illustration 
		of the windshield wiper effect does apply here - even though this is one 
		of the proof texts usually used in connection with it. The most recent 
		usage that I have seen is in a sermon by Guy N. Woods being distributed 
		in tract form by Britnell Publications of Little Rock, Arkansas. For the 
		reader who may not be familiar with the windshield wiper illustration, 
		it goes something like this: When one becomes a Christian his 
		"windshield wiper" is turned on. Rain drops (sins) will continue to fall 
		on his windshield (soul) but they are immediately wiped off by the wiper 
		(blood of Christ). So, they say, a Christian's sins are taken care of 
		without his having to reach and turn the wiper on each time a drop hits 
		his windshield - it is automatically wiped off. They may deny (as they 
		do) that they are teaching "automatic continuous cleansing" rather than 
		mere "continuous cleansing" - the windshield wiper illustrates automatic 
		cleansing or it is a pointless illustration. The difference between hard 
		core Calvinists and the brethren that use the illustration, as I see it, 
		is that once the Calvinist's wiper is turned on there is no way he can 
		turn it off; while brethren leave us with the option of turning it off 
		through high handed or willful sin.
		
		Anyway, if the sins are 
		not charged to our account then what is produced is not a windshield 
		wiper effect, but an umbrella effect. One is covered by an umbrella when 
		he becomes a Christian. Though sin may fall all around him, in the case 
		of the Calvinist, even soaking his flesh, it is not allowed to get to 
		his soul because the Lord will not impute it to him, holding an umbrella 
		over his head.
		
		Really now, who is this 
		man to whom the Lord will not impute sin in 
		Romans 
		4? Anything more 
		than a superficial reading of this statement in context should make it 
		clear. It is the man whom God has forgiven after he has confessed his 
		sin. It is not the man whose sins are never imputed to him. It is not 
		the man whose sins are forgiven without their being confessed. 
		Verses 
		7 and 8, of 
		Romans 
		4, should be taken 
		together. They form a quote from 
		Psalms 
		32:1,2.
		
		It seems to me that these 
		two verses alone identify the kind of person contemplated as a forgiven 
		man. If he is forgiven, the sin was at one time imputed to him or there 
		would have been no need for forgiveness. Once forgiven, he is a blessed 
		man to whom the Lord no longer imputes the sin because it has been 
		forgiven.
		
		When one takes the first 
		5 verses of Psalms 32 together it becomes abundantly clear that the sin 
		that is not imputed is confessed sin.
		
		In the first two verses, 
		those quoted in 
		Romans 
		4, David tells of 
		the blessedness (for any man) of being forgiven - of not having sin 
		imputed to him. He then turns to a practical application of the 
		principle in his own life.
		
		Verses 
		3 and 
		4 tells of his own 
		lack of blessedness as long as he did not confess - i.e., "kept silent":
		
		1. "My bones grew old 
		through my groaning all the day long"
		
		2. "Day and night Your 
		(the Lord's - EOB) hand was heavy upon me"
		
		3. "My vitality was 
		turned into the drought of summer"
		
		In 
		verse 
		5, he gives the 
		basis upon which he now enjoyed the blessedness of "the man to whom the 
		Lord does not impute iniquity":
		
		1. "I acknowledged my sin 
		to You"
		
		2. "My iniquity I have 
		not hidden"
		
		3. "I said, 'I will 
		confess my transgression to the Lord,"'
		
		4. "And you forgave the 
		iniquity of my sin."
		
		So, if one is going to 
		find any basis for some kind of cleansing of unconfessed sins, he will 
		have to find it in some other passage. It looks to me like David had to 
		consciously "turn the wipers on" when he said, "I will confess my 
		transgressions."
		
		1 John 
		1:7-9 does teach 
		continuous cleansing for the Christian as long as he confesses his sins 
		(not merely acknowledging his sinfulness). "If we keep on confessing our 
		sins, God 'is faithful and righteous to forgive our sins, and to cleanse 
		us from all unrighteousness.' 'Faithfulness' and 'righteousness' are 
		attributes of the great Jehovah; and when we confess our sins before 
		him, we enter into and partake of the blessings which result from them. 
		He has promised to forgive us on condition that we confess our sins. . . 
		" (A Commentary on the New Testament Epistles, pp. 219 220, by Guy N. 
		Woods). All emphasis in the preceding quotation are mine and I couldn't 
		have said it better myself.
		 
		
		
		
		What Saith the Authorities
		
		Differences in Bible Miracles and Modern 
		Miracles