Importance of Studying Total Depravity-Doctrines of Grace, Part 1

INTRODUCTION – The Importance of Studying Total Depravity

1.) We cannot know God’s purposes in His grace unless we know how far we have fallen. It is essential to know the Scriptural truth about our deadness, helplessness and rebellion if we are to understand how and why He saves us.

2.) The Scriptures affirm authoritatively that nothing can reverse the human condition save the crucifixion of God in our nature. The cure reveals the seriousness of the “disease.”

3.) Man is not fit to judge and diagnose his own case. Left to his own reasoning, man will fail to assess his condition and ill desert correctly.

4.) Without an accurate diagnosis, men will settle for an ineffective cure.

5.) By nature man believes that there is something he can do to recover himself.

6.) Grace is not grace unless it is sovereign and free. God has used the “bulldozer” of His law to remove the possibility of human merit from the face of the planet.

7.) The message of man’s moral inability is actually conducive to a sense of urgency in seeking God.

8.) One’s view of man’s depravity is inseparable from one’s view of God’s grace.

THE MEANING OF TOTAL DEPRAVITY

Total depravity entails man’s complete lack of merit before God due to original sin. “Depravity”concerns man’s inability to achieve saving favor before God. “Total” means that the defilement extends to all aspects of man’s nature (every faculty and capacity).

WHAT IS THE ORIGIN OF HUMAN SIN?

Adam was the representative of us all. (1 Cor. 15:21,22)

Through Adam we die, through Christ we gain life. Both Adam and Christ stand as representatives. Adam was placed in unique position to be representative of the human race. His actions directly affected all of humanity.

Adam’s fall was the fall of us all. (Rom. 5:12, 18a)

Adam was placed in the garden not only to act for himself, but also for all future generations. When he was tested, he was also being tested for all mankind. When he fell, we fell with him.

WHAT IS THE EXTENT OF HUMAN SIN?

We are not as sinful as we could be. (Matt. 5:43-47)

Though fallen, it does not mean that all men indulge in every conceivable sin. Even the lost show considerations toward each other. (Jesus stated that Gentiles and tax-gatherers love and bless their friends.) Unsaved people have a conscience. They can distinguish between forms of good and evil (Rom. 2:14,15).

We are sinful by nature. (Jer. 17:9,10)

All people are born with a fallen, sin-sick heart. Jesus argued that sin has its source in the very center of a person’s being, his heart (Matt. 15:19). The lost person’s bad heart or sin nature is compared to a fruit-producing tree. The fruit of the tree is determined by the nature of the tree (Matt. 7:17-20).

People sometimes imagine that their faculties function with complete independence and objectivity. The Word tells us that behind a person’s willing, acting, speaking, choosing and desiring is the inner man. Behind our capacities is the heart or nature.

 

We are sinful in all of our capacities. (Ps. 53:2,3)

Mind, affections and will are influenced by our fallen natures. Man thinks with a darkened mind (Eph. 4:17-19). Man’s feelings and affections are corrupted, he loves darkness (Jn. 3:19). The fallen nature so influences the faculties that everything men do is tainted with sin, none are righteous (Rom. 3:9-12). Even our best works are unrighteous before God (Is. 64:6).

We are spiritually dead. (Eph. 2:1-3)

God’s testimony of our spiritual condition is not an injury report, it is a coroner’s report. The language is that of finality with no hope of recovery or revivification. The natural man’s spiritual death is manifested in his unresponsiveness to God. He is cut off from the life of God and dead to the things of God (Eph. 4:18).

“Dead in transgressions and sin,” describes a state of having no power to obey God or show devotion to Him. (An example that describes both state and place would be as follows. Picture a corpse face down in a reservoir. He does not conspire how he might return to physical life, neither does the natural man chart how he might love and know God.)

IN WHAT WAYS ARE SINNERS IN BONDAGE?

We are in bondage to our sinful natures. (Job 14:4; Prov. 20:9)

No man can cleanse or change his own heart (Jer. 13:23). Jeremiah’s point is that there is afixedness to the sinful heart of man that renders it completely unable to make itself good. Apart from a mighty work of God, the spiritual state of the heart is immutable.

We are in bondage to sinful deeds. (Jn. 8:34)

God’s testimony is that lost people are slaves to sin. When confronted with the choice between holiness and sin, the natural man always chooses sin (Rom. 6:17,19,20).

The lost man is not free to escape from sin. True freedom entails the gracious divine bestowal of soul-life that rests upon the truth in Christ (Jn. 8:32-36).

We are in bondage to Satan. (2 Tim. 2:24-26)

Those in bondage to Satan are unaware of their plight. A merciful work of God is needed in order for them to “come to their senses.” The word “perhaps” affirms that it is a sovereign act of God (2 Tim. 2:25).

To be in bondage to Satan is to be under the “authority” of darkness (Col. 1:13). If the lost man is ever to repent, God must move his heart and awaken him from his stupor (Eph. 2:1-3; Jn. 8:44; 1 Jn. 5:19).

IS THE SINNER’S CONDITION BEFORE GOD ONE OF INABILITY?

We cannot understand the Lord. (Jn. 8:43)

Perhaps the most difficult concept to grasp concerning the fall is that of inability. The Lord calls all persons to believe upon Christ and to repent, but the majority do not respond to that summons.

When Jesus said “cannot,” He affirmed that the misunderstanding of His hearers was not just a matter of bad choice, it was a matter of inability (Jn. 8:43).

In 1 Corinthians 1:26-31, God sovereignly saves primarily the foolish and the weak people of this world. This proves that salvation is something that neither wise people can figure out nor strong people achieve.

Romans 3:11 stresses that without exception, “There is none who understands.” 1 Corinthians 2:14 tells us what makes the difference between those who understand and those who don’t. One must possess the Spirit of God in order to be capable of understanding the things of God.

Unregenerate man “moralizes” the gospel into a work. (Matt. 19:16 ff.)

When the natural man hears the gospel of God’s free grace, he immediately reinterprets it into a work that lies within his capacity. “Is it self-reformation? I will do it. Is it religious requirements? I will vow to do them. Is it a decision? I will make it. Are there conditions to meet? I will comply with them.”

Man cannot bear the admittance of the thought that he is too far gone to be a spiritual resource at all in his own salvation. It is absolutely essential that an unregenerate man be convinced of his inability. Otherwise, he will not see his absolute need of Christ and the power of His grace (Rom. 5:6). To be brought to the end of self is to be an absolute debtor to Christ. It is to fall at His feet, totally obligated to Him forever.

We cannot desire the Lord. (Rom. 5:10)

The natural man maintains an active enmity toward God. The unsaved man is not just alienated from the life of God, but has a positive real hostility in his carnal heart against God.

Romans 8:7 reveals the central source of that enmity. It is rebellion against God’s moral authority. God’s moral reign is manifested in His law. Men despise God’s kingly authority. They resent the fact that their Creator should have an absolute claim upon their lives that governs thoughts, words and deeds.

The natural man’s heart is set upon the flesh. He possesses a bias in favor of sin. John 3:19 tells us that unbelievers love darkness with an agape (self-sacrificing love). They lack affection for God. When confronted with the true living God, man does not want Him (Rom. 3:11; 8:6-8).

We cannot come to the Lord. (Jn. 6:44; Rom. 8:8)

Not only is the natural man unable to understand and desire the Lord, he cannot even will to choose Him.

After the feeding of the 5000, Jesus found unbelief instead of faith. Jesus indicated to His listeners why they did not believe. 1.) They won’t come because they cannot come. Their wills have a bias fixed against God. By nature, people cannot choose God of their own volition. 2.) This inability is universal to all persons. Without exception, all individuals lack the ability to come to Christ and be saved (Jn. 6:65).

This is a most humbling truth that man (by nature), has nothing in himself for his own recovery. ( NOTE: The inability of man is voluntary. There is no such thing as a sinner desiring to come to Christ and be saved the gospel way -- but barred by inability.)

CONCLUSION

God commands men to do what they will not do.

Repent (Acts 2:38); Be reconciled (2 Cor. 5:20); Seek the Lord (Is. 55:1-7); Come to Christ (Matt. 11:28,29).

The refusal to come involves an habitual, active, exercise of the heart and will in desiring not to come (Rom. 1:18-23; Acts 7:51; Jn. 5:40).

God sent His Son to do what we could not do.

There is sovereign help for those who cannot help themselves. He became sin for us, that sinners in Him by union with Him, might have the righteousness of God. Christ sovereignly raises sinners out of the grave of their spiritual deadness (Eph. 2:4-6). The ability to understand and receive the gospel is pure revelation. We are not the authors of our own spiritual life (Gal. 1:15,16; Matt. 11:25).

 

 

The Doctrines of Grace, Part 2

INTRODUCTION – The Arminian interprets “whosoever will” to mean that anyone can get saved at any time. Arminianism presupposes that it is within the power of a person to savingly believe if he will only use that power. But, the Scriptural study of depravity reveals that what man does, wills, desires and understands is inseparable from what he is. One cannot separate a man’s decision from all else he is and does. There is no such thing as an isolated act of God-pleasing faith rising up out of the quagmire of corruption, darkness and enmity.

This all leads to a key question. “ Must a person believe in order to be born again, or must he be born again in order to believe?” “Does faith precede or follow regeneration?” The answer to that question affects one’s whole understanding of the Gospel message. What do the Scriptures teach?

THERE ARE BUT TWO KINDS OF PEOPLE

  • There are those born of the flesh (lost) and those born of the Spirit (saved) John 3:3-8.
  • The natural man (lost) and the spiritual man (saved) 1 Cor. 2:14-15.
  • People are either like an evil tree (lost) or like a good tree (saved) Luke 6:43-45.
  • There are people who walk according to the flesh (lost) or who walk according to the Spirit (saved) Romans 8:5-8.

THERE ARE BUT TWO KINDS OF FRUIT

  • A person’s nature determines what kind of fruit he will produce (Lu. 6:43-44).
  • A person must become a “good tree” before he can believe and obey the Lord.
  • Those in the flesh are totally incapable of pleasing the Lord (Rom. 8:5).

QUESTION: “If a natural man cannot even exercise faith and repentance in order to change into a spiritual man, how can he ever be changed? How is one born again?”

THE NEW BIRTH IS FROM GOD

Scripture does not attribute the cause of the new birth to us, the Bible unequivocally assigns it to God (John 5:21).

THE SCRIPTURES SUPPLY THREE ANALOGIES FOR REGENERATION

  • Resurrection – John 5:21; Eph. 2:1-6
  • Birth – John 3:1-9; 1 Pet. 1:23
  • Creation – 2 Cor. 4:6; 5:17; Eph. 2:10

In each case, the object is passive – dead body, babe and the thing created.

 

IT IS THE NEW BIRTH THAT PRODUCES FAITH AND REPENTANCE

If indeed the new birth comes before faith, then a Christian’s faith and repentance are ultimately produced by the Lord. (If faith precedes the new birth, then ultimately faith and repentance rise out of the natural man). What do the Scriptures say?

  • The new birth precedes a person’s entering into the kingdom of God (Jn. 3:3-5).
  • The source of the new birth is “from above” (Greek), not from within man (Jn. 3:7).
  • Only those born of the Spirit can respond to God. Jesus likens the operation of the Spirit (in regeneration) to the wind. The wind is sovereign, it goes where it wills, we do not control it. The wind is invisible, and we only see its effects (so also the work of the Spirit in regeneration).

Jesus admonished Nicodemus, a teacher of Israel, who should have known of the New Covenant promise found in Ezekiel 36:25-27. Jesus came to fulfill the New Covenant.

CONTRARY TO ALL OTHER RELIGIONS, THE GOSPEL IS OF GRACE

  • The gospel of grace is characterized by a free offer (whosoever thirsts, is guilt-laden, is weary etc.).
  • Come obtain salvation without money and without cost (Is. 55:1).
  • The gospel of grace is characterized by the universality of the offer (not restricted to an ethnic group or to a sacred geographical region). “The gospel is to be preached to every creature.”
  • The gospel of grace is an offering of eternal salvation conditioned upon faith and repentance(not upon human merit, works, alms or reformation). Romans 10:13; Hebrews 11:6; John 3;16; Revelation 22:17

THE SCRIPTURES TEACH THAT THE OFFER IS UNIVERSAL AND THAT HUMAN INABILITY IS UNIVERSAL

  • The most common error concerning the gospel is to assume that the freeness of the offer is meant to be a measure of human ability.
  • “Whosoever will” is not intended to teach universal ability.
  • The 14 point universal indictment of Romans 3:10-18 dispels the notion of ability.

THE SON OF GOD GIVES THE ABILITY TO RESPOND TO THE GOSPEL

  • The gospel of sovereign grace is to be preached to the dead wills of sinful men. Human depravity cannot frustrate God’s gracious purposes.
  • The exalted Son of God lives and He gives life to whom He wishes. He gives the ability to respond to the gospel (Matt. 11:27; John 17:2).
  • Jesus has been given the authority to save everyone that the Father has given Him (John 6:39; 17:2).

THERE ARE TWO KINDS OF CALLS, OUTWARD AND INWARD

  • The outward or external call is God’s summons to all unbelievers to come to Christ. This outward call is what Jesus had in mind when He said, “many are called.” Matthew 22:14.
  • Paul also gave this outward call when he preached on Mars Hill (Acts 17:30).
  • The outward call can be rejected and is frequently rejected (Acts 17:32).
  • The inward call describes the inward drawing of the unbeliever to Christ. It is effectual and is carried out by the Holy Spirit (Heb. 3:1).
  • The inward call is only directed to some non-Christians (“but few are chosen.” Matthew 22:14).
  • Paul testifies that he experienced this inward call (see Galatians 1:15,16).
  • Every person who is saved experiences this inward holy calling (2 Timothy 1:9; Jude 1). The inward call is not an outward, verbal call but is an inner spiritual call. It is the work of God’s Spirit in the hearts of people.

THE INWARD CALL IS GOD’S IRRESISTIBLE DRAWING OF A LOST PERSON TO CHRIST

  • Jesus testified that those who come, do so because they are drawn (John 6:44,65).
  • No one is able to resist this drawing. Every N.T. use of this Greek word for draw (helkuo), refers to an irresistible drawing or dragging (John 21:6,11; 18:10; James 2;6; Acts 16:19,21).
  • The hearing of Scripture is necessary in order for the inward call to be given (Rom. 10:14; James 1:18).

EVERYONE WHO IS INWARDLY CALLED BY GOD’S SPIRIT COMES TO JESUS AND IS JUSTIFIED

  • No one wants to come (the gospel way, by faith and repentance) unless he is drawn!
  • When God’s Spirit works in a person’s heart, He opens the heart so that the person naturally wants to come (note Lydia, the seller of purple, Acts 16:14). The inward call did not force her to believe against her will. “The Lord opened her heart to respond to the things spoken by Paul.” She was freed from her bondage to sin so that she could believe. Her response was a work of God. Her heart was closed to the gospel prior to God’s opening of her heart.

THE SCRIPTURES DISTINGUISH BETWEEN A SPURIOUS FAITH AND A FAITH PRODUCED BY THE POWER OF GOD

  • Scripture speaks of a kind of faith that cannot save (John 2:23-25; James 2:14-20,26;Matt. 7:21-23). Those with a spurious faith may assent to the facts of the gospel, but not demonstrate the changed life that accompanies repentance.
  • When the gospel is believed unto salvation, it is because of the Holy Spirit’s power (1 Thess. 1:5, James 1:17,18; Eph. 1:19-21; Col. 2:13).

SAVING FAITH IS A GRACE GIFT FROM THE LORD

  • It is God’s gift to us, not our gift to Him (Phil. 1:29).
  • It is not our faith that raised us spiritually, it the spiritual resurrection of the new birth that caused our faith! (See Ephesians 2:1-3; 8-10).
  • God’s gift is faith. The gospel of grace comes bringing the very divine power we lack (Romans 5:6; Ps. 110:3).
  • The gift of faith is a sovereign grant (Acts 13:44-48).
  • The gift of repentance is always given with the gift of faith (Acts 11:18; 2 Tim. 2:24-26).

FOR REVIEW AND DISCUSSION

Regeneration (the new birth) cannot be commanded or caused by man. Name some common religious errors that depict the church acting as it has the power to produce the new birth. In what way do these errors resemble the error of the Galatian church?

The new birth is not a process, it is instantaneous (note the conversion of the Apostle Paul on the road to Damascus) (Jonathan Edwards, The Rational Biblical Theology of J.E., vol. 3, by John H. Gerstner).

God grants the new birth only in connection with powerful conviction of sin (John 16:8-11; Acts 2:37; Luke 18:13).

Union with God can only be effected by God Himself. Only God can unite Himself to man (Gerstner, vol. 3, p. 160).

The Holy Spirit produces the change of regeneration. His indwelling and operations and life-giving work are the sum of the blessings Christ purchased for His people (Ibid., p. 163).

Natural man is destitute of spiritual sense and of spiritual perception. He has no concept of the excellency of divine truth and he has no heart affection for God. An entirely new principle must be planted in him in order for him to choose God. For depravity, guilt, moral defilement and inability cannot will the improvement of its own depravity! (Ibid., p. 188).

Before man chooses God, there must be the implanting of a nature that loves the divine and supernatural light.

The new birth produces faith in Christ alone. There must be a reception of Christ with the faculties of the soul. True salvation is never a hope that is distributed over personal reform and religious acts.

In the Scriptures, the same things are represented from God as from us. God is said to convert, men are said to convert or turn. God makes a new heart, we are commanded to make a new heart. God circumcises the heart, we are commanded to circumcise our hearts (Ibid., p. 178).

The moral inability of man is not an excuse to avoid seeking God in His Word. Scripture declares that these are the terms of God bestowing mercy. The command is to seek with all the heart. Don’t expect to obtain salvation without seeking it! (Is. 55; Luke 16:16) (Ibid., p. 122ff.).