Sovereignty is the state of being sovereign, which is to be “above or
superior to all others; chief; greatest; supreme.” We illustrate:
In all
the realm, the king was sovereign. There was no one holding greater
rank, with greater authority, or greater power. He willed that on a
certain day, from the rising of the sun until the setting of the same,
all who came before him and pledged their allegiance personally would
receive a special blessing from the king himself. The time was
sufficient to allow every subject to appear, and none would be turned
away. The day came and many made their appearance and pledged their
allegiance. However, the disgruntle and rebellious refused to humble
themselves before the king. True to his promise, the king graciously
bestowed great favor upon the humble, a reward far exceeding what any
had imagined.
Question: did the king surrender his sovereignty by stipulating
conditions in order to receive his blessings? Did He cease being supreme
in the kingdom when his subjects sought his favor and obeyed his orders?
Did he lose control of his power by fulfilling his promise? Was the
bestowal of blessings still within his power or had he thereby lost
control? Did he still have power over who were blessed when the number
was determined by the choice his subjects made? Did the action of his
subjects, in making a choice to submit or refuse, in any wise diminish
his authority and power? Who could rightly deny that the sovereign king
was still sovereign king after he blessed his subjects?
I
wouldn’t suppose anyone would have a problem with this scenario. Why is
it then, when it comes to the sovereignty of God, Calvinists tell us
that He cannot offer blessings to the obedient without losing that
sovereignty? When God sets forth conditions for man’s salvation,
allowing man the freedom to either humbly obey or obstinately refuse, He
is in complete control of whom He will bless and whom He will refuse.
His role and authority remain supreme. Whatever man does is without
effect upon God’s will; God is the ultimate determiner, who acts
according as He has promised. There is a body of the saved, those who
meet His requirements, and a body of the lost, who live and die in sin
alienated from Him. The body of the saved consists of those who receive
salvation which He offers “in Christ.” Those in Christ, who remain
faithful in Christ, constitute His elect. (Ezek. 18:26, Heb. 6:4-6, 1
Cor. 15:1-2) They are predestined to everlasting life. Predestined,
not as individuals without regard to character, but as those “in
Christ,” who love His appearing. (2 Tim. 4:8) Whether one is
among the saved or not depends upon His response to the grace of God,
which is extended to all men. (Titus 2:11-12, 1 John 2:2)
Therefore man has the free will to choose. (Josh. 24:15) In
either case, God is sovereign, fully in control.
Calvinists’ Spin
Calvinists put a spin on the word “sovereign” that assumes that He had
to pre-program and predetermine everything—every thought, every action,
every event, to the minutest detail. Of course, their theological
assumption is not inherent in the word. They use their contrived
definition to formulate doctrines, doctrines not set forth in Scripture
and will not stand the test of investigation standing alone. By using
“sovereignty” (their definition), they beg the question. This is a fact
they recognize. For example, they cannot reconcile their “sovereignty”
with “human responsibility.” How reasonable and just is it for God to
hold man responsible for what he thinks and does when God Himself
supposedly pre-programmed him to be as he is? Here is what Calvinists
admit:
“The one thing
that man cannot do is reconcile the responsibility of man and the
sovereignty of God.”
“Both of these
are equally true – they are both in the Bible – and we have no trouble
in our minds when we consider them separately, BUT, we cannot (in our
minds) put them together.”
Of errors to be
avoided, we are told: “probably the most common error is to try to
reconcile God’s Sovereignty and Man’s Responsibility.”
“They are both in
the Bible – both true – but humanly we cannot reconcile them with each
other.”
Can you
imagine that God gave us a revelation of His will which defies our
reason, that logically is contradictory! Au contraire! There is no
conflict between God’s sovereignty, when properly defined and as His
supremacy is used in Scripture, and man’s responsibility before God. It
is Calvinist theology that is contradictory, that defies reason.
Fixed, Unchangeable Intents
One
mistake Calvinists make about the sovereignty of God is to assume that
every decree of God is absolute and unchangeable, that there are no
contingencies with God. Man has no choice that affects God’s actions. In
contrast, observe the following:
Jeremiah 18:7-10: “At one moment I might speak concerning a nation
or concerning a kingdom to uproot, to pull down, or to destroy it; if
that nation against which I have spoken turns from its evil, I will
relent concerning the calamity I planned to bring on it. Or at another
moment I might speak concerning a nation or concerning a kingdom to
build up or to plant it; if it does evil in My sight by not obeying My
voice, then I will think better of the good with which I had promised to
bless it.” (NASB)
God may
plan to destroy a wicked nation, but if it turns God He will relent.
Either course is within His power and authority. His spoken will and
intention is not absolute and unchangeable. It is contingent upon man’s
behavior. Thus God “relents or changes his dealings with men according
to his sovereign purposes.” (TWOT, vol. II, p. 571.)
See
also Ezekiel 3:17-21 and 1 Sam. 23:11-13.
Consider the following passages where God decreed, but changed it.
2
Kings 20:1-6: God told Hezekiah to set his house in order because he
would not live; he would die. Hezekiah prayed to God. In response God
said, “I have heard thy prayer, I have seen thy tears: behold, I will
heal thee: on the third day thou shalt go up unto the house of the LORD.
And I will add unto thy days fifteen years…”
God’s
decree was not fixed, and as the situation changed, God’s will changed.
You see, it is as God says, “The effective prayer of a righteous man can
accomplish much.” (NASB)
See
also Jonah 3-4, 10.
Contingency is seen in many passages:
Revelation 22:17: “And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let
him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And
whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely.”
Whoever
wills (determines, chooses) to respond to God’s invitation may, or he
may choose not. God will respond accordingly. The Calvinist says, “No,
man’s will is not involved. When the Spirit and bride say, ‘come,’ only
those whom God has elected will come, not of their own will but as
predetermined; they are pre-programmed to come.”
Matthew 7:24: “Therefore whosoever heareth these sayings of mine,
and doeth them, I will liken him unto a wise man…”
The
Calvinist responds, “No, he that does as the Lord orders is not ‘wise’…
he is pre-programmed. He does what he must. In fact, one may be dull,
but if God has elected him he will do as programmed to do. On the other
hand, a non-elected wise man may turn away in spite of his wisdom simply
because it is God’s pleasure that he be eternally lost.”
In
writing this article, the only difficulty in refuting the Calvinist’s
theological bluster was in selecting passages from a wealth of Scripture
which expose its fallacy.
Our God is Sovereign
“The
LORD has established His throne in the heavens; And His sovereignty
rules over all.” (Psalm 103:19, NASB)
“He who
is the blessed and only Sovereign, the King of kings and Lord of lords;
who alone possesses immortality and dwells in unapproachable light; whom
no man has seen or can see. To Him be honor and eternal dominion! Amen.”
(1 Tim. 6:15-16, NASB)