Hereditary total depravity is the foundation-stone of all forms of
Calvinism. From this premise, the whole Calvinistic theological
system is fabricated. The classic statement of this doctrine is
found in the Confession of Faith of the ultra-Calvinistic
Presbyterian Church:
By this sin (eating of the forbidden fruit) they (our first parents)
fell from their original righteousness and communion with God, and
so became dead in sin, and wholly defiled in all the faculties and
parts of soul and body. They being the root of all mankind, the
guilt of this sin was imputed and the same death in sin and
corrupted nature conveyed to all their posterity descending from
them by ordinary generation. From this original corruption, whereby
they are utterly indisposed, disabled, and made opposite to all
good, and wholly inclined to all evil, do proceed all actual
transgressions.
Calvinism And History
Though the above is the classic statement of hereditary total
depravity, the concept did not originate with John Calvin (born
1509). This doctrine had already been explicated by the Fifth
Century monk known popularly as Augustine. But the doctrine had even
been promulgated before Augustine, by the Third Century "Church
Father" named Tertullian. Calvinism was the theological undergirding
of main-line Protestant Denominationalism that arose shortly after
the Middle Ages.
But today, various forms of Calvinism have seeped into the church of
the Lord through the efforts of misguided and misinformed young
preachers, many of whom have been nourished at the feet of
Calvinistic teachers in denominational seminaries, and have imbibed
the contents of commentaries and sermons compiled by Calvinistic
writers. In fact, many of these preachers' libraries are filled with
virtually nothing but the books of Calvinistic writers. This
partially is attributable to the fact that Calvinism has often
virtually been equated with Fundamentalism. But the damage has been
done none the less.
When I was just in my teens, the beloved Luther Blackmon took me
aside one Lord's Day evening and advised me: "When you go off to
college, be careful that you do not learn too many things that are
not so! " What a timely warning that was. This precisely is what has
happened to too many of our contemporary young preachers: They have
learned too many things that are not so . . . and even worse, they
now are teaching these denominational heresies to unsuspecting
brethren. These misguided young instructors are precisely the reason
why a series of articles such as are contained in this issue of
Guardian of Truth are so timely and needed.
Ashdodic Language
It was said of the early Christians that their vocabulary,
teachings, and practices were indicative of their having "been with
Jesus" (Acts 4:13). Peter's speech even betrayed him on one
occasion; it evidenced that he had "been with Jesus." During the Old
Testament days of Nehemiah, it was said that some of God's people
spoke "half in the speech of Ashdod" (Neh. 13:24). In like
manner, the vocabulary of many modern young preachers evidences that
they have been drinking deeply at denominational founts. One would
never conclude from their doctrinal speech that they "had been with
Jesus." They speak "half in the speech of Ashdod." While these
educated young men use the nomenclature of Calvinism, teach the
doctrines of Calvinism, make the arguments of Calvinism, and even
cite the "prooftexts" of Calvinism, they seem astounded when someone
attaches the label of "Calvinism" to them! The fact is, many of them
have not even explored Calvinism deeply enough to recognize that
what they are so widely spouting is nothing more or less than the
classic doctrines of deterministic Calvinism.
Imputed Righteousness
Be assured, brethren, the modern doctrine of "imputed righteousness"
is nothing more than the flip-side of the Calvinistic doctrine of
hereditary sin. One springs from the other. Calvinists teach that
the sin of Adam is imputed to all mankind, but that the perfect
righteousness of Christ is imputed to that portion of mankind whom
they denominate as the "elect."
Can sin, or righteousness, be transferred from one person to
another? This is the question we seek to answer in this article. The
transferral of sin, or imputed righteousness, precisely is what must
happen if hereditary sin, or imputed righteousness, is to be
accepted. One is as illogical and unscriptural as the other. The
principle reason why we must now re-examine hereditary sin, as in
this issue of Guardian of Truth, is because so many brethren are now
teaching its flip-side: the imputation of the perfect righteousness
of Christ.
Can one who has the perfect life of Christ credited to his account
possibly be lost? The implication of this question is the reason why
so many confused young preachers (and some others old enough to know
better) sound so much like they are inching toward acceptance of the
impossibility of apostasy doctrine. Calvinism is a doctrine that
proceeds logically from its premises. That is why it is so difficult
to imbibe just a little of Calvinism. Logic requires the acceptance
of all of Calvinism, or none of it. Accept this doctrine of
transferring sin, or righteousness, from one person to another, and
one logically then must accept the doctrine of election and
reprobation. If Adamic sin is transferred to one, then his salvation
is dependent upon the imputation of the perfect life of Jesus,
according to Calvinism.
If sin is inheritable, why is not righteousness also inheritable?
The doctrines of election and of the final perseverance of the
saints are logical concomitants inextricably connected to this
concept of transferring sin or righteousness from one person's
account to the account of another.
About fifteen years ago, I was holding a meeting in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana. Brother George Eldridge, who lived in Baton Rouge, showed
me a letter which brother Edward Fudge had written to someone in the
Baton Rouge church. Brother Fudge has since aligned himself with an
ultra-liberal church in Houston, where he now serves as an Elder. In
brother Fudge's letter, he recommended that the brethren in the
Baton Rouge church accept the proffered services of two liberal
preachers in their work. In justifying his recommendation, Brother
Fudge said something to this effect: "I do not have to live a
perfect life, because Jesus lived a perfect life for me." This
statement tremendously shocked me, for I readily recognized that
here was an educated preaching brother who did not even understand
the plan of salvation! He did not even understand that our salvation
was grounded in the sacrificial death of Christ, rather than in His
imputed perfect life. Christ's perfect life merely qualified Him to
be our perfect and atoning sacrifice. Since this shocking experience
in Baton Rouge fifteen years ago, a veritable host of other
preachers among us, both young and old, have espoused the
Calvinistic doctrine of the imputation of the perfect life of Christ
to sinning Christians.
But Albert Barnes, himself an ardent Calvinist, exposed the fallacy
of this imputation doctrine very succinctly. He said: "I have
examined all the passages (the so-called "prooftexts" - CW). . . .
There is not one in which the word (Greek logidzomai - impute - CW)
is used in the sense of reckoning or imputing to a man that which
does not strictly belong to him, or of charging on him that which
ought not to be charged on him as a matter of personal right. . . .
No doctrine of transferring, or setting over to a man what does not
property belong to him, be it sin or holiness, can be derived,
therefore from this word" (Commentary on Romans, p. 102). Do not
ever forget this very true statement from Barnes. It says all that
needs to be said about either inherited sin, or imputed
righteousness.
Definition of Sin
The fact is those who talk about imputing sin, or righteousness,
really do not understand the definition of sin and/or righteousness,
or else they deliberately misuse the terms in their preaching and
writing. Sin is not an object, like a bag of potatoes, that can be
transferred from one person to another, nor is righteousness a
transferrable object.
Sin by definition is an act! Consult any number of word study books
or religious encyclopedias on the Bible, and you will find sin again
and again referred to as an act. Note a few of the Bible words used
to describe or define sin. Hebrew Words. asham (guilt); hattah
(missing); pesha (transgression); awon (perversion); ra (evil in
disposition); chata (err, miss the mark); chet (error, failure);
avon (iniquity); resha (impiety). Now note these Greek Words.
harmartia (missing the mark); parabasis (transgression); adika
(unrighteousness); asebeia (impiety); anomia (contempt and violation
of law); poneria (depravity); epithumia (lust); paraptoma (offense,
trespass). A careful study of the hundreds of passages where these
terms are used to describe and define sin will evidence it is always
something an individual does.
Note in this connection the sins of Satan (Jn. 8:44). He is
said to be a "murderer," "standeth not in the truth," and "speaketh
a lie." Sin is not some ethereal object that floats around in the
air and lights upon this one or that one, and is therefore
transferrable from one being to another. Note also that the angels
who sinned "kept not their own principality, but left their proper
habitation" (Jude 6). These angels did something which was
wrong.
Merrell Tenny defined sin in these words: "an act of the free will
in which the creature deliberately, responsibly and with adequate
understanding of the issues, chose to corrupt the holy, godly
character with which God originally endowed His creation" (Pictorial
Bible Dictionary, p. 796). Tenny also said of the sins of Satan,
angels, and men: "Their sin was an act of a group of individuals as
individuals and does not involve the 'federal' or representative
principle . . . their sin was . . . a deliberate act."
The Westminster Shorter Catechism correctly defined sin in these
words: "Sin is any want of conformity unto, or transgression of, the
law of God" (cf. Lev. 19:2; Isa. 6:1-3; Rev. 4:7,8). Tenny
also said sin is the "violation of the expression of God's holy
character. . . . Sin may be defined ultimately as anything in the
creature which does not express, or which is contrary to, the holy
character of the Creator." W.E. Vine uses these terms in discussing
sin: "concrete wrong doing," "a course of sin characterized by
continuous acts" (1 Thess. 2:16; 1 Jn. 5:16); "a sinful deed,
an act of sin," 64an act of disobedience to Divine law."
The Zondervan Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible defines sin in
these words: "Sin is an essentially historical phenomenon. It has a
event-character. To become real, it must happen . . . sin . . . is
historical: . . . a happening or event." Now can one transfer an
historical event from one person to another? Even the thought of it
is preposterous. As previously said, sin is not like a bag of
potatoes which can be shifted from one person to another. Instead,
it is an event, an action of one individual, and cannot be
transferred to another individual. It is true, however, that the sin
of one person (such as Adolph Hitler's) may affect other people.
Other individuals may suffer as a consequence of another's sinful
act, but they do not bear the guilt of that person's sin.
Hereditary Sin and God's Nature
The Bible teaches that God is a Being of infinite justice and
righteousness (Psa. 18:30; Tit, 1:2; 2 Tim. 2:13; Rom. 3:3,4).
Scores of passages teach that judgment will be on an individual
basis, in which each person shall answer for his own sins only, and
for the sins of no others (see 2 Cor. 5: 10; Rom. 14:12; Mt.
12:36; Gal. 6:7-9; Col. 3:23-25; Rev. 3:4; 14:13; 20:12; Rom. 2:9,
and a host of other passages which substantiate this same point).
Conclusion
The very concept of transferral of sin, or righteousness, directly
contradicts God's Word. The clearest and most explicit passage on
this subject, at least in my estimation, is that of Ezekiel
18:14-20. Among Ezekiel's statements is his affirmation that the
person who "hath executed mine ordinances, hath walked in my
statutes; he shall not die for the iniquity of his father, he shall
surely live. As for his father, because he cruelly opposed, robbed
his brother, and did that which is not good among his people,
behold, he shall die in his iniquity. Yet ye say, Wherefore doth not
the son bear the iniquity of the father? When the son hath done that
which is lawful and right, and hath kept all my statutes, and hath
done them, he shall surely live. The soul that sinneth, it shall
die: the son shall not bear the iniquity of the father, neither
shall the father bear the iniquity of the son; the righteousness of
the righteous shall be upon him, and the wickedness of the wicked
shall be upon him. " If God's Word is to be accepted, this passage
forever shows the fallacy of hereditary sin, or transferrable
righteousness.
The very concept of transferrable sin is physically, logically,
philosophically, biblically, and therefore, actually impossible. The
concept of hereditary sin is therefore totally absurd. But look for
much more discussion among brethren of hereditary sin in years to
come, for too many preachers among us have drunk for too long from
the polluted wells of Calvinism. As they talk more and more about
"imputed righteousness," and Jesus' "doing and dying," you are going
to find their logic forcing them into an acceptance of an hereditary
sinful nature for man. And when they accept this premise, they then
are going to find it increasingly impossible to reject unconditional
election, limited atonement, irresistible grace, and the final
perseverance of the saints the other inextricably interwoven
doctrines of Calvinism.
Some brethren, with their doctrine of unconditional forgiveness for
the erring Christian, now are already on the doorstep of classical
Calvinism, and seemingly do not even know it.
And if such brethren persist in the leaching of the tenets of
Calvinism, in the very terminology of Calvinists, upheld by the
usage of Calvinistic arguments, and even use the Calvinistic
"proof-texts, " they certainly should not be surprised if they are
referred to as Calvinists, or Neo-Calvinists. Be advised, brethren,
it is now going to be increasingly necessary for us to fight again
the battle against Calvinism, even though some naively might think
that the war against Calvinism was finished in the Nineteenth
Century.
And while this battle is again being waged, some of these unusually
wise young preachers will pontificate: "They are answering questions
which no one is asking." I guess they think theirs is a cute little
saying that sounds so wise. But the false teaching of Calvinism
necessitates the answering of such false teaching.
It very well may turn out that the major battle of the late
Twentieth Century to be fought among brethren will center around
various forms of classical Calvinism. The earliest tips of the fatal
icebergs of Calvinism among us now are rising. Hence the need for a
special series of articles on Calvinism, such as you find in this
issue of Guardian of Truth.
Guardian of Truth - January 1, 1987