Throughout
history man has sought to shift the blame for his sins onto someone
else's shoulders. The ancient Babylonians spoke of man being created
out of the blood of a rebel god named Kingu. Naturally such a race
could not help being rebellious itself. Even before the coming of
Christ the Jews were speaking of the yetser ha ra, or "evil
inclination" with which all men were born. It should not be
surprising, therefore, to find that people professing Christianity
have behaved pretty much like all other men in this respect. In the
history of "Christian theology" this tendency has manifested itself
in the development of the intertwined doctrines of original sin and
hereditary total depravity. The doctrine of original sin affirms
that all descendants of Adam inherit both the guilt and the
consequences of his sin. The doctrine of hereditary total depravity
follows with the declaration that all such descendants of Adam are
so completely corrupted and depraved by it that they cannot, of
their own free will, do any truly good work. They cannot, of their
own free will, even turn to God.
Now this
doctrine of total depravity is commonly thought of as a Calvinistic
doctrine, and is especially associated with the Presbyterian Church
here in this country. It is the purpose of this article to show that
the doctrine in fact pervades most of the denominational world.
Augustine
and Catholicism
The doctrine
had its beginning among Christians in the early Patristic period.
Tertullian, Cyprian, and Ambrose all taught the whole human race
somehow participated not only in the consequences of Adam's sin but
in the sin itself. Ambrosiaster claimed biblical support for the
doctrine by translating Romans 5:12 "in whom all sinned" in
reference to Adam. But it was Augustine of Hippo (commonly St.
Augustine) who integrated the doctrine into a fully developed system
of theology. And the writings of Augustine have shaped and
influenced the thinking of professing Christianity more than the
works of any other man since the time of the New Testament itself.
Augustine
taught that the whole human race was present in the first man Adam,
and thus, in his sin, we sinned. Each descendant of Adam and Eve is
born just as much a sinner as they were. Not only that, but the
impairment of their nature which God inflicted on Adam and Eve in
punishment for their sin "became a natural consequence in all their
descendants" (City of God, xiii. 3). Moreover, it is not just a
corrupted physical nature that we have inherited from Adam, but our
"human nature was so changed and vitiated that it suffers from the
recalcitrance of a rebellious concupiscence. . . " (Ibid.).
Augustine was
not exactly a Roman Catholic, but only because he lived around AD
400 and Catholicism was still in the formative stage. But Augustine
was very much a part of that formation, and his theology soon became
the dominant theology of Catholicism. The doctrines of original sin
and hereditary depravity were, therefore, deeply entrenched in
Catholicism from the very beginning. From the time of Augustine to
the Protestant Reformation, Catholic theologians debated the exact
nature of the original sin and its transmission and the degree of
totality in the inherited depravity. But these debates produced only
minor variations and left the basic doctrine more firmly established
than ever. In the meantime the doctrine had begun to generate such
secondary doctrines as infant baptism (to remove original sin) and
the immaculate conception of Mary (to protect her from contamination
with original sin). But these matters are discussed elsewhere in
this issue.
Total
Depravity Pervades.
That the
doctrines still remain as part of the theological foundation of
modem Catholicism can be seen by consulting any standard Catholic
reference work. In -The Teachings of the Catholic Church (1948),
George Smith devotes thirty pages to a defense of the doctrine in
even more rigorous terms than Augustine would ever have stated the
matter.
The
Protestant Reformation
The council
of Trent (1545-63) was convened as a Catholic response to the
spreading Protestant Reformation, and it pronounced an anathema on
any who denied the doctrine of original sin. But the doctrine was
hardly a bone of contention for the reformers. They considered
themselves just as much heirs of Augustine as the Catholics did.
Of course the
most rigorous statements of the doctrines of original sin and total
depravity were made by John Calvin in his Institutes of the
Christian Religion (1560). Yet it is crucial to see that the
doctrine was not limited to Calvin and his more direct spiritual
heirs, but that it permeated the thinking of almost all the
reformers and was enshrined in all the great creeds of the
Protestant Reformation, and thus has been passed down in some form
or other to almost every Protestant denomination in existence today.
Consider
Martin Luther. Original Sin and Total Depravity are especially
associated with Calvin while Luther is usually thought of as
preaching about faith and grace. But one of the most influential
works ever written by Luther was titled Bondage of the Will, the
title reflecting the thesis of the book that man's essential nature
has been so depraved by sin that his will is entirely in bondage to
sin and he is incapable of willing any good at all. Man is thus
entirely dependent on a gracious gift of faith from God in order to
be saved. Lutheranism no less than Presbyterianism is thus pervaded
by the doctrine. Indeed, the Augsburg Confession (1530), subscribed
to by virtually all Lutherans, declares that "all men begotten after
the common course of nature were born with sin. . . "; that "man's
powers, without the Holy Spirit, are full of wicked affections, and
are too weak to perform any good deed before God."
Identical
assertions are found in The Heidelberg Catechism (1563) of the
German Reformed churches, the Belgic Confession (1561) of the Dutch
Reformed churches, the Scotch Confession of Faith (1560) of the
Church of Scotland, and the Canons of the Synod of Dort (1618-19)
which are accepted by the Reformed (Dutch) Church in America.
Especially
important are The Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England
(1571 and 1801) which declare for the benefit of Anglicans and
Episcopalians that "Original sin standeth not in the following of
Adam (as the Pelagians so vainly talk); but it is the fault and
corruption of the Nature of every man, that naturally is engendered
of the offspring of Adam; whereby man is very far gone from original
righteousness, and is of his own nature inclined to evil. . . . "
These words have found their way into several subsequent creedal
statements including the Articles of Religion which are still being
printed in the Discipline of the Methodist Church. Similar
affirmations are found in the creeds of the Quakers and the
Congregationalists.
But the most
influential of all Protestant creeds, at least in the English
language, has surely been the Westminster Confession. Concerning the
sin of Adam and Eve, it declares that "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 we are utterly indisposed, disabled, and made wholly
inclined to all evil, do proceed all actual transgressions. " Now,
anything with the name Westminster is generally associated with
Presbyterianism today. And the Westminster Confession was actually
produced by the Church of England, and comes about as close as any
English-language creed can to being a universal Protestant Creed.
The universal
nature of the Westminster Confession can be illustrated by the
Baptists. Baptists often claim to have no creed but the Bible. But
the Baptist Confession of 1688 is basically just another edition of
the Westminister Confession, with significant changes made only in
the areas of church organization and subjects of baptism. Of course
Regular Baptists and Calvinistic Baptists accept the Westminster
confession also.
That Baptists
generally accept the doctrine of original sin is also illustrated by
The New Hampshire Baptist Confession (1833), which has been printed
in the Baptist Church Manual for American Baptists. It says that man
was created in holiness, but sinned and fell, "in consequence of
which all mankind are now sinners." The wording of this confession
is softer and more ambiguous than some creeds. But Baptist
theologian A.H. Strong is not ambiguous at all: "The Scritpures
represent every human nature as totally depraved" (Systematic
Theology, 1896, p. 341). Indeed, though Baptists don't advertise the
doctrine of original sin all that much, the strength which the
doctrine has in Baptist theology is clearly evidence by the very
popular doctrines of Justification by Faith Only and Once Saved,
Always Saved, which are derived from the doctrine of original sin.
Rumblings
of Discontent
There have,
of course, been periodic rumblings of discontent surrounding the
doctrine of original sin and total depravity in Protestantism. The
first major challenge came from the teachings of James Arminius
(1560-1609), the critical points of which are summed up in The Five
Arminian Articles prepared in 1610 as remonstrances to the various
Dutch confessions mentioned above. But it must be noted that
Arminius and his heirsnever denied ihe doctrine of inherited
original sin itself.
The principle
spiritual heirs of Arminius today are Wesleyan denominations such as
Methodists, Nazarenes, and Pentecostals. Their discontent with
Calvinism has centered around the exact extent of the consequences
of original sin. Most especially, they are anxious to deny the
related doctrines of absolute predestination and unconditional
election. They affirm that man does have free will, and that saving
grace can be resisted by the exercise of that free will. They
likewise debate about the nature of the transmission of original
sin. But the doctrine of original sin itself is never seriously
challenged.
Methodist
acceptance of the doctrine has been illustrated above by the fact
that the statement on original sin and total depravity which is
found in the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England has been
incorporated verbatim into the Articles of Religion published in the
Discipline of the Methodist Church. Acceptance of the doctrine among
Wesleyan groups is further illustrated by Nazarene theologian H.
Orton Wiley who says, "Not only are all men born under the penalty
of death, as a consequence of Adam's sin, but they are born with a
depraved nature also" (Christian Theology, Vol. 2, p. 98). A few
other groups, such as the Cumberland Presbyterians and the Free-Will
Baptists, have likewise rejected the predestinarian implications of
Calvin. But like the Wesleyans, they retain the doctrine of original
sin without question.
Likewise, it
may fairly be said that Arminians; do not really believe in total
hereditary depravity. They generally affirm that some truly good
works can be performed by unregenerate man. But in the long run that
turns out to be an inconsequential distinction because they continue
to affirm that man was sufficiently depraved for it to be impossible
for him to believe and respond to the gospel apart from the
assistance of a direct operation of the Holy Spirit.
Moreover, the
doctrine of original sin is intimately bound up in one of the most
distinctive doctrines of Wesleyan churches - entire sanctification.
According to their theology, the root of original sin remains in man
even after he has been converted. It can only be removed by a second
work of grace whereby man is thoroughly purged from every
inclination to sin, and entirely sanctified - able from that point
on to live without sin. But again, man can only achieve this state
by a miraculous intervention of the Holy Spirit to overcome the last
remnants of his depraved nature.
Several
Protestant groups have sought other means of mollifying the
consequences of the doctrines of original sin and total depravity.
For example, both the Methodists and the Church of the Brethren deny
that children are born in sin (though the Methodists used to affirm
this). But they do so without actually letting go of either original
sin or total depravity. They would say that every child conceived
does in fact inherit the original sin and depraved nature of Adam.
But, they say, that original sin is immediately forgiven by the
atoning act of Christ's sacrifice.
I do not know
of any major Evangelical Protestant body which unequivocally denies
either original sin or inherited depravity. Even neo-orthodox
theologians such as Karl Barth cling tenaciously to the doctrines.
They are as systemic to Protestantism as is the doctrine of
salvation by faith only. Of course we must remember that many of the
individual members of these denominations may not believe the
doctrines.
Modernism
And The Spirit Of The Age
There is,
however, an element of Protestantism which has rejected both
doctrines, but not for reasons that we would like to see. Modernism,
which has deep inroads into many Protestant bodies, and virtually
controls some denominations such as the United Methodist Church, the
United Presbyterian Church, and the United Church of Christ, denies
both original sin and inherited depravity. But this denial springs,
not from a respect for Scripture, but from a total disregard for
Scripture. They reject the biblical account of creation and they
believe the story of Adam and Eve is just a myth. As theistic
evolutionists they deny that there ever was an historical Adam. Thus
they cannot believe in either original sin or inherited depravity.
Indeed, many
such modernists deny, not just original sin, but virtually deny sin
itself. They believe man is really good at heart, and needs only to
be set free from oppressive and antiquated ideas of sin and guilt.
And this affords me an opportunity to bring this article to a close
with a warning. While it is surely good for us to probe the tragic
errors of the doctrines of original sin and inherited depravity, let
us not forget that the even more dangerous spirit of our age is to
deny sin and depravity altogether. While denying that we inherit
either the sin or the depraved nature of Adam, let us remember that
we are, of our own will, sinners. And without blaming anything on
Adam we must still confess that the heart of man is "deceitful above
all things, and exceedingly corrupt" (Jer. 17:9).
Guardian of Truth - January 1, 1987
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