| A Primer on Hyper-Calvinism |
"As I live, saith the Lord GOD, I have no
pleasure in the death of the wicked; but that the wicked turn from his
way and live: turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways; for why will ye die"
(Ezekiel 33:11). |
Copyright © 1998 by Phillip R. Johnson. All rights reserved.
I wrote and posted this
article because I am concerned about some subtle trends that seem to
signal a rising tide of hyper-Calvinism, especially within the ranks of
young Calvinists and the newly Reformed. I have seen these trends in
numerous Reformed theological forums on the Internet, including mailing
lists, Web sites, and Usenet forums.
Lest anyone wonder where my own convictions lie, I am a Calvinist. I am a five-point Calvinist, affirming without reservation the Canons of the Synod of Dordt. And when I speak of hyper-Calvinism, I am not using the term as a careless pejorative. I'm not an Arminian who labels all Calvinism "hyper." When I employ the term, I am using it in its historical sense.
History
teaches us that hyper-Calvinism is as much a threat to true Calvinism
as Arminianism is. Virtually every revival of true Calvinism since the
Puritan era has been hijacked, crippled, or ultimately killed by
hyper-Calvinist influences. Modern Calvinists would do well to be on
guard against the influence of these deadly trends.
Phil Johnson
|
yper-Calvinism, simply stated, is a doctrine that emphasizes divine sovereignty to the exclusion of human responsibility. To call it "hyper-
Calvinism" is something of a misnomer. It is actually a rejection of
historic
Calvinism. Hyper-Calvinism entails a denial of what is taught in both
Scripture and the major Calvinistic creeds, substituting instead an
imbalanced and unbiblical notion of divine sovereignty.
Hyper-Calvinism
comes in several flavors, so it admits no simple, pithy definition.
Here are a few definitions to consider. I'll comment briefly on these
and then propose a more comprehensive definition:
From a popular theological dictionary:
1.
[Hyper-Calvinism] is a system of theology framed to exalt the honour
and glory of God and does so by acutely minimizing the moral and
spiritual responsibility of sinners . . . It emphasizes irresistible
grace to such an extent that there appears to be no real need to
evangelize; furthermore, Christ may be offered only to the elect. . . .
2. It is that school of supralapsarian 'five-point' Calvinism [n.b.—a school
of supralapsarianism, not supralapsarianism in general] which so
stresses the sovereignty of God by over-emphasizing the secret over the
revealed will of God and eternity over time, that it minimizes the
responsibility of sinners, notably with respect to the denial of the use
of the word "offer" in relation to the preaching of the gospel; thus it
undermines the universal duty of sinners to believe savingly in the
Lord Jesus with the assurance that Christ actually died for them; and it
encourages introspection in the search to know whether or not one is
elect. [Peter Toon, "Hyper-Calvinism," New Dictionary of Theology (Leicester: IVP, 1988), 324.]
Notice three very crucial points in that definition:
First,
it correctly points out that hyper-Calvinists tend to stress the secret
(or decretive) will of God over His revealed (or preceptive) will.
Indeed, in all their discussion of "the will of God," hyper-Calvinists
routinely obscure any distinction between God's will as reflected in His
commands and His will as reflected in his eternal decrees. Yet that
distinction is an essential part of historic Reformed theology. (See
John Piper, "
Are There Two Wills in God? Divine Election and God's Desire for All To Be Saved" in Thomas R. Schreiner, ed.,
The Grace of God and the Bondage of the Will, 2 vols. Grand Rapids: Baker, 1995, 1:107-131.)
Second,
take note of the stress the above definition places on
hyper-Calvinists' "denial of the use of the word 'offer' in relation to
the preaching of the gospel." This is virtually the epitome of the
hyper-Calvinist spirit:
it is a denial that the gospel message includes any sincere proposal of divine mercy to sinners in general.
Third,
mark the fact that hyper-Calvinism "encourages introspection in the
search to know whether or not one is elect." Assurance tends to be
elusive for people under the influence of hyper-Calvinist teaching.
Therefore, hyper-Calvinism soon degenerates into a cold, lifeless dogma.
Hyper-Calvinist churches and denominations tend to become either barren
and inert, or militant and elitist (or all of the above).
Some common (but not quite precise) definitions:
Hyper-Calvinism is sometimes defined as the view that God will save the
elect apart from any means. Some, but very few, modern
hyper-Calvinists hold such an extreme view. Those who do hold this view
oppose all forms of evangelism and preaching to the unsaved, because
they believe God will save whomever He chooses, apart from human means.
The
most famous example of this kind of hyper-Calvinism was when John
Ryland heard William Carey talking about becoming a missionary to India,
and told him, "Sit down, young man. When God decides to save the
heathen, He will do it without your help."
Another
common but incorrect definition equates hyper-Calvinism with fatalism.
Fatalism is a mechanistic determinism, antithetical to the notion of a
personal God. While it is true that the most extreme varieties of
hyper-Calvinism tend to depersonalize God, it is not accurate to portray
all hyper-Calvinists as fatalists.
Hyper-Calvinism
is often equated with supralapsarianism and double-predestination. But
it is possible to be a supralapsarian, and to hold to a kind of
"double-predestination" without embracing hyper-Calvinism. (Virtually
all hyper-Calvinists are supralapsarians, but not all supralapsarians
are hyper-Calvinists. For more information about supralapsarianism, see
my
"Notes on Supralapsarianism & Infralapsarianism.")
Finally,
some critics unthinkingly slap the label "hyper" on any variety of
Calvinism that is higher than the view they hold to. Arminians like to
equate
all five-point Calvinism with hyper-Calvinism (as Calvary-Chapel author George Bryson does in his horrible little book,
The Five Points of Calvinism: "Weighed and Found Wanting" [Costa Mesa: Word for Today, 1996]). That approach lacks integrity and only serves to confuse people.
A fivefold definition:
The definition I am proposing outlines five varieties of
hyper-Calvinism, listed here in a declining order, from the worst kind
to a less extreme variety (which some might prefer to class as
"ultra-high Calvinism"):
A hyper-Calvinist is someone who either:
- Denies that the gospel call applies to all who hear, OR
- Denies that faith is the duty of every sinner, OR
- Denies that the gospel makes any "offer" of Christ, salvation,
or mercy to the non-elect (or denies that the offer of divine mercy is
free and universal), OR
- Denies that there is such a thing as "common grace," OR
- Denies that God has any sort of love for the non-elect.
|
All five varieties of hyper-Calvinism undermine evangelism or twist the gospel message.
Many
modern hyper-Calvinists salve themselves by thinking their view cannot
really be hyper-Calvinism because, after all, they believe in
proclaiming the gospel to all. However, the "gospel" they proclaim is a
truncated soteriology with an undue emphasis on God's decree as it
pertains to the reprobate. One hyper-Calvinist, reacting to my comments
about this subject on an e-mail list, declared, "The message of the
Gospel is that God saves those who are His own and damns those who are
not." Thus the good news about Christ's death and resurrection is
supplanted by a message about election and reprobation—usually with an
inordinate stress on reprobation. In practical terms, the
hyper-Calvinist "gospel" often reduces to the message that God simply
and single-mindedly hates those whom He has chosen to damn, and there is
nothing whatsoever they can do about it.
Deliberately
excluded from hyper-Calvinist "evangelism" is any pleading with the
sinner to be reconciled with God. Sinners are not told that God offers
them forgiveness or salvation. In fact, most hyper-Calvinists
categorically deny that God makes any
offer in the gospel whatsoever.
The hyper-Calvinist position at this point amounts to a repudiation of the very gist of 2 Corinthians 5:20:
"Now
then we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God did beseech you by
us: we pray you in Christ's stead, be ye reconciled to God." The whole thrust of the gospel, properly presented, is to convey an offer (in the sense of a
tender, a
proffer, or a
proposal)
of divine peace and mercy to all who come under its hearing. The
apostle's language is even stronger, suggesting the true gospel preacher
begs sinners to be reconciled to God—or rather he stands "in
Christ's stead," pleading thus with the sinner. Hyper-Calvinism in
essence denies the concept of human responsibility, and so it must
eliminate any such pleading, resulting in a skewed presentation of the
gospel.
Let's examine individually each of the five varieties of hyper-Calvinism.
1. The denial of the gospel call. This first and most extreme
type of hyper-Calvinism denies that the gospel calls all sinners to
repentance and faith. The gospel call (the invitation to come to Christ
for salvation—Rev. 22:17; Matt. 11:28-29; Isa. 45:22; 55:1-7) is denied
to all but the elect.
Historic Reformed theology notes that there are two different senses in which Scripture uses the word
"call." The apostle Paul usually employs the word to speak of the
effectual call,
whereby an elect sinner is sovereignly drawn by God unto salvation.
Obviously this "call" applies only to the elect alone (Rom. 8:28-30).
But Scripture also describes a
general call.
In Matthew 22:14, Jesus said, "Many are called, but few are chosen."
Here, those who are "called" are clearly more in number than the elect.
So our Lord is quite obviously using the word "call" in a different
sense from how Paul used it in Romans 8:30.
The general call, sometimes known as the
external
call, is the call to faith and repentance inherent in the gospel
message itself. When the gospel is preached, the general call goes out
indiscriminately to all who come under the preaching of the gospel. This
call is issued by the preacher as an ambassador of Christ.
The effectual call, sometimes known as the
internal
call, is the regenerating work of God in the hearts of His elect,
whereby He draws them to Christ and opens their hearts unto faith. This
call is for the elect alone and is issued by God alone.
This
first variety of hyper-Calvinism denies the general, external call, and
insists that the gospel should be preached in a way that proclaims the
facts about Christ's work and God's electing grace—without
calling for any kind of response.
This is the worst form of hyper-Calvinism in vogue today. I'd class it as an extremely serious error,
more
dangerous than the worst variety of Arminianism. At least the Arminian
preaches enough of the gospel for the elect to hear it and be saved. The
hyper-Calvinist who denies the gospel call doesn't even believe in
calling sinners to Christ. He almost fears to whisper the gospel summons
to other
believers, lest anyone accuse him of violating divine sovereignty.
English
hyper-Calvinists (most happen to be Baptists), American "Gospel
Standard" hypers, and Primitive Baptists have traditionally held to this
form of hyper-Calvinism. They generally oppose evangelism of any kind.
They would (usually) also embrace all five errors of hyper-Calvinism
listed above. Their rhetoric tends to be extremely arrogant and
elitist—the natural outgrowth of such theology. Normally they claim that
they alone are consistent and true to the doctrines of divine
sovereignty, and label every other view "Arminianism" or (lately)
"hypo-Calvinism."
An
early 18th-century British independent (baptistic) pastor named William
Huntington is the godfather of this position. This brand of
hyper-Calvinism often also has strong antinomian tendencies, traceable
back to Huntington, who denied that the moral law is binding as a rule
of life on the Christian. Such antinomianism harmonizes well with
hyper-Calvinism's denial of human responsibility. (It is also an
extension of the same wrong thinking that denies the preceptive will of
God.)
2. The denial of faith as a duty.
This variety of hyper-Calvinism ("type-2 hyper-Calvinism") suggests
that since unbelievers are incapable of faith apart from enabling grace,
believing in Christ must never be presented to them as a duty. (See
Arthur Pink's excellent article
"Duty-Faith," refuting this this erroneous notion.)
Those
holding this position go to great lengths to deny that faith is ever
presented in Scripture as the duty of the unregenerate. (Obviously, much
Scripture-twisting is necessary to justify such an opinion. See, for
example, Acts 17:30.) Instead, advocates of this position suggest that
each sinner must seek a warrant for his faith before presuming to
exercise faith in Christ. The sinner does this by looking for evidence
that he is elect (an utterly absurd notion, since faith
is the only real evidence of election).
Understandably,
this brand of hyper-Calvinism tends to make sinners obsessed with
conviction of sin and self-examination. Those who hold this position
rarely know true, settled assurance.
The
denial that faith is the sinner's duty illustrates how hyper-Calvinism
and Arminianism arise from the same false notion. The one fallacy that
lies at the heart of both Arminianism and hyper-Calvinism is the
erroneous assumption that human inability nullifies responsibility.
The Arminian reasons,
If
sinners are incapable of faith apart from God's enabling grace, then
the gospel would not call them to believe. Therefore sinners must not
really be in so helpless a state. And so the Arminian adjusts the message in a way that nullifies the doctrine of human inability.
The hyper-Calvinist, on the other hand, reasons thus:
If
sinners are incapable of faith apart from God's enabling grace, then
the gospel would not call them to faith. Therefore the gospel cannot
really mean that faith is the sinner's duty. And so the hyper-Calvinist adjusts the message in a way that nullifies the sinner's responsibility.
Scottish church historian John Macleod also noticed that Arminians and hyper-Calvinists err on the same point. He wrote,
When we look into it, we find [in hyper-Calvinism] the
common Arminian position that man's responsibility is limited by his
ability. . . . Each side takes up the principle from its own end. They
fail together to recognise that the sinner is responsible for his
spiritual impotence. It is the fruit of sin; and man's sin does not
destroy nor put out of court God's right to ask for . . . [obedience
and] service and repentance and faith [despite the fact that] that His
sinful creatures have disabled themselves from yielding to Him. His
title to make His demand is entirely and absolutely unimpaired. . . .
There is a glorious superiority to man's reasonings shown by Him who
bids the deaf hear and the blind look that they may see. They cannot do
what He bids them do. Yet He claims what is His own. . . . Do what we
may, we cannot get away from the obligation that binds us to be all that
God would have us to be, and to do all that He would have us to do.
Such is our sin and not only our misery that we cannot yield the return
of homage that our Maker and King calls for at our hand. [Scottish Theology (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 1974 reprint), 141-42.]
In other words, the sinner's inability to obey God does not nullify his
duty to do so. This is a crucial point—perhaps the most crucial point of
all—because it is the very point that ultimately distinguishes true
Calvinism from both Arminianism and hyper-Calvinism. Both Arminians and
hyper-Calvinists will protest that it is illogical or unjust to teach
that God demands what sin renders us incapable of doing.
But
it is neither illogical or unjust. Sin itself is a moral issue, and
since sin is the cause of our inability, it is, as Jonathan Edwards
said, a
moral inability, not a
natural one. The defect in
man is his own fault, not God's. Therefore man's own inability is
something he is guilty for, and that inability cannot therefore be seen
as something that relieves the sinner of responsibility.
On this point, type-2 hyper-Calvinism is no better than Arminianism; in fact, the two spring from the same polluted source.
3. The denial of the gospel offer.
Type-3 hyper-Calvinism is based on a denial that the gospel makes any
"offer" of Christ, salvation, or mercy to the non-elect. An alternative
of this view merely denies that the offer of divine mercy is free and
universal. For an excellent discussion of this issue, see
"The Free Offer of the Gospel," by John Murray and Ned B. Stonehouse (also available at
the Orthodox Presbyterian Church's Web site).
If
the hyper-Calvinists in England tend to be Baptists, in America the
Presbyterian variety seems more common. The best-known American
hyper-Calvinists are the Protestant Reformed Churches (PRC). They deny
that there is any sort of "offer" (in the sense of a proffer or tender
or proposal of mercy) in the gospel message. They also deny that they
are hyper-Calvinists, because they insist that the only variety of
hyper-Calvinism is that which denies the gospel call (Type-1 above).
The most articulate advocate of the PRC position is David Engelsma, whose book
Hyper-Calvinism and the Call of the Gospel
is an interesting but in my view terribly misleading study of the
question of whether PRC theology properly qualifies as hyper-Calvinism.
Engelsma does some selective quoting and interpretive gymnastics in
order to argue that his view is mainstream Reformed theology. But a
careful reading of his sources shows that he often quotes out of
context, or ends a quote just before a qualifying statement that would
totally negate the point he thinks he has made. Still, for those
interested in these issues, I recommend his book, with a caution to read
it very critically and with careful discernment.
4. The denial of common grace.
The Protestant Reformed Churches (see #3 above) grew out of a
controversy between Herman Hoeksema and the Christian Reformed Churches
over the issue of common grace. Hoeksema denied that there is any such
thing as common grace, and in the midst of the controversy, the PRC was
founded.
The
idea of common grace is implicit throughout Scripture. "The Lord is
good to all: and his tender mercies are over all his works" (Ps. 145:9).
"He doth execute the judgment of the fatherless and widow, and loveth
the stranger, in giving him food and raiment. Love ye therefore the
stranger: for ye were strangers in the land of Egypt" (Deut. 10:18-19).
"Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate
you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you;
that ye may be the children of your Father which is in heaven" (Matt.
5:44-45).
The
distinction between common grace and special grace closely parallels
the distinction between the general call and the effectual call. Common
grace is extended to everyone. It is God's goodness to humanity in
general whereby God graciously restrains the full expression of sin and
mitigates sin's destructive effects in human society. Common grace
imposes moral constraints on people's behavior, maintains a semblance of
order in human affairs, enforces a sense of right and wrong through
conscience and civil government, enables men and women to appreciate
beauty and goodness, and imparts blessings of all kinds to elect and
non-elect alike. God "causes His sun to rise on the evil and the good,
and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous" (Matt. 5:45). That
is common grace.
The
doctrine of common grace has a long history that goes all the way back
to Calvin and even Augustine. But type-4 hyper-Calvinism denies the
concept, insisting that God has no true goodwill toward the non-elect
and therefore shows them no favor or "grace" of any kind.
5. The denial of God's love toward the reprobate.
Type-5 hyper-Calvinism is closely related to type-4. To deny that God
in any sense loves the reprobate is to suggest that God holds us to a
higher standard than He himself follows, for he instructs us to love our
enemies—and Scripture teaches that when we love our enemies, we are
behaving like God, who shows lovingkindness even to the reprobate (Deut.
10:18; Matt. 5:44-45).
Furthermore,
to insist that God's demeanor toward the non-elect is always and only
hatred is a de facto denial of common grace—the same error of type-4
hyper-Calvinism.
There
are some who hold this view, yet manage (by being inconsistent) to
avoid other hyper-Calvinist opinions. The most influential advocate of
the type-5 position was Arthur Pink. I hesitate to label him a
hyper-Calvinist, frankly, because
he fought the stronger varieties of hyper-Calvinism in his later years.
A few other Puritan and mainstream Reformed theologians have also
denied the love of God to the reprobate. They are a distinct minority,
but they nonetheless have held this view. It's a hyper-Calvinistic
tendency, but not all who hold the view are hyper-Calvinists in any
other respect.
This error stems from a failure to differentiate between God's
redemptive love, which is reserved for the elect alone, and His
love of compassion,
which is expressed in the goodness He shows to all His creatures (cf.
Matt. 5:44-45; Acts 14:17). For an excellent antidote to the notion that
God loves no one but the elect, see R. L. Dabney's superb article,
"God's Indiscriminate Proposals of Mercy."
Our friends at monergism.com (Threshold) have posted an excellent collection of articles dealing with hyper-Calvinism. See Also: