Mailbag

The Mail Room
Letters from Volume 28 part 1 and Volume 28 part 2



W
elcome to the Mail Room for Present Truth Magazine! This is where we post some of the interesting letters which we receive from our viewers. All of our viewers are invited to E-mail us your comments and views and we will post these views for all to consider!  

Letters in Covenant part 1

Rocks and Bouquets

Mr. Kidman, a great Australian cattleman, was asleep. Someone was trying to arouse him, calling, "Mr. Kidman, Mr. Kidman." No response. Whereupon an acquaintance of Kidman said, "If you want to wake him up, just call out, 'Bullocks.'" That did it!

When Calvinists are asleep, just call out, "Election," and they're up and ready to fight. That's great! As we said in our September issue on "Election," our columns are open for Reformed comments -for rocks as well as bouquets. -Ed.

Yea and Nay

I have received your recent issue of Present Truth Magazine. As always, I find your lead article ("The Legal and Moral Aspects of Salvation," Part 3) challenging. I have not seen a more lucid exposition of the doctrine of election properly understood than in this article. I see no point (although I may after I reread and more carefully analyze some of your statements) on which we differ, although I subscribe to the "five points" of the Synod of Dort, which you apparently do not.

I do not share your view on "regeneration." I do believe that this must be first in the ordo salutis, although I concur with you that this is not the born-again experience as some teach. I see regeneration as a divine work of the Holy Spirit to give seeing eyes and a believing heart by a sovereign act of grace that men might hear and believe the gospel and be justified and born anew. I see the new birth as belonging to the doctrine of sanctification (correct me if I'm wrong).

You continue to bless me by your ministry. I shall ever be grateful to God for using your publication to help in crystallizing my final deliverance from the subjective trap of the Pentecostal and holiness movement.

C. Robert Bateman
Presbyterian Pastor
California


Sir: I regret that it is necessary to write in the tone I must. I retract what I said in my last letter. I have taken time to read what you said on election, and I must state that I totally deplore what you are now revealing your stand to be.

I will not go out of my way to "fight" you. However, in conscience I must oppose you to all who inquire of me, and I feel it my duty before the Lord to issue warning to the Reformed community of believers.

C. Robert Bateman

/ hope you have not jumped out of the Pentecostal fire into the refrigerator of a closed system. The truly Reformed are not only reformed but always reforming. -Ed.

Too Far

Up until now I have almost unreservedly endorsed Present Truth Magazine. Although you have made mistakes in the past (your views of repetitious justifications, your ordo salutis, and your ecumenical ideas on fellowship in the church, for three examples), I have been able to justify my support by the overwhelming correctness of your views on justification, sanctification, hermeneutics and eschatology. Now, however, you have gone too far. Not only do you misunderstand election in Christ, but you attack logic, reprove Peter De Jong for saying that "God clearly foreordains evil" (Cf. Isaiah, who said that "I am the Lord, and there is none else, there is no God beside Me. . . . I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the Lord do all these things," (Isa. 45:5, 7), tout Barth and Richardson, and generally confuse the doctrine of election with something completely foreign to Scripture.

From now on when I distribute any of your literature (I will not be distributing the Election issue), I will caution the recipients to be on their guard against certain unscriptural and illogical positions that you take. I suggest that you devote the entire next issue of Present Truth Magazine to corrections of your heterodox opinions presented in the Election issue.

John W. Robbins
Virginia

Heresy!

Sir: It is incomprehensible to me that the same magazine which gave us "Nothing But the Gospel" in May could give us nothing but heresy in September. I lavished praise upon your magazine only five months ago when you gave the clearest presentation of the gospel I have read in a long while, but now I am shocked at how unscholarly you are in your handling of Calvinism's doctrine of election. You are so bold as to offer Present Truth Magazine as an alternative to Arminianism, yet the distinguishing features you present are only cosmetic. Arminianism all decked out in your polemical and condescending style, then wrapped in a pretty pastel green cover, is still only Arminianism.

You charge that election is unpreachable and that it is not preached from Reformed pulpits, yet here in the heart of Arminian territory are four churches where not only election but all five points of TULIP are freely and unapologetically preached. Only a few years ago there was just one Calvinistic voice in this area. Calvinism is experiencing a revival.

In answer to your charge that Reformed leaders go about like an "orthodoxy patrol" searching out Arminianism and attacking it wherever it is found, let me just ask Present Truth Magazine this question: What are you doing with your many and frequent assaults on all that smacks of Romanism, subjectivism, neo-Pentecostalism and dispensationalism?

Throughout your issue ("secretion" would be a better word) on "Election" you criticize the Calvinist's reliance upon logic. Would you have us believe that we cannot expect Scripture to be logical? Are the mystics correct? Are the holiest doctrines those which are least logical? Try to prove the doctrine of the Trinity without applying logic. Try formulating an eschatology without applying logic.

I could go through September's Present Truth and find many places where you have so totally misrepresented the Calvinism I know that I can only conclude that your Calvinistic acquaintances are imposters. The very fact that you believe Reformed preachers are not preaching election is proof that the Reformed preachers you know are Reformed in name only. When a man believes something, he will preach it.

Finally, I would be interested to know why your publication has found it expedient to lean so heavily upon Martin Luther in past issues, and yet in this issue you have attributed TULIP to only Augustine, Calvin and a few others, neglecting the fact that Luther too was highly predestinarian. To those who would affirm "free will" and deny election, Luther had this to say:

"Eventually, we will come to this: that men may be saved and damned without God's knowledge! For He will not have marked out by sure election those that should be saved and those that should be damned; He will merely have set before all men His general longsuffering, which forbears and hardens, together with His chastening and punishing mercy, and left it to them to choose whether they would be saved or damned, while He Himself, perchance, goes off, as Homer says, to an Ethiopian banquet! - The Bondage of the Will.

Joe Higginbotham
West Virginia
New Insight


The September issue on "Election" was excellent! My eyes have been opened, and I've been freed from the bonds of Calvinism. Robert Brinsmead's article on "The Legal and Moral Aspects of Salvation" (Part 3) gave me a new insight into the doctrine of atonement and reopened my desire in evangelism.

David Meyers
California

Present Truth Magazine is certainly not anti-Calvin. It is the ism on the end of Calvin that has sometimes brought about a closed system which has made further progress difficult. We salute the many great Calvinist scholars and confess our indebtedness to them. —Ed.

One-sided Bungling

I have been getting Present Truth Magazine for a number of years now and have received a great deal of good information from it. The articles on justification and sanctification have been super.

Whenever you get off these subjects, your errors are pathetic to say the least. Your articles against dispensationalism and millennialism are something else.

One case in point is the September issue on "Election." Since my background has been somewhat in the Reformed tradition, my interest in this subject has caused me to study it in depth. I do not propose to have all the answers, but I have never read such one-sided bungling of the subject in my life. The last article by Alan Richardson is chief of the bunglers. When he must quote from Esdras and use scriptures that have nothing to do with the point, he is indeed hard up for proof of his point of view.

Since it takes "a book to answer a book," I do not have the time nor the inclination to answer all the errors in this issue. I am just writing you to let you know that here is one reader who cannot swallow all you teach. Sorry about that!

Peter Nieuwkoop
Baptist Pastor
Michigan

Candid Approach

Robert Brinsmead's series on "The Legal and Moral Aspects of Salvation" was one of your best efforts to date. Part 3 on election was a clear presentation of a doctrine that is oftentimes most difficult. Mr. Brinsmead displayed an uncanny ability to cut across denominational lines to arrive at the truth.

I do not always agree with your material, but I do appreciate your candid approach. Do keep up the good work.

David McDougal
Baptist Pastor
Oklahoma

Stimulating

As many are saying, I too express appreciation for the stimulating nature of your magazine.

The "redemption of human nature" doctrine expounded in Brinsmead's article in the September issue of Present Truth is pure universalism and denies John 6:39, John 17:9, and many other scriptures which show Christ's effective and definite atonement. He died and arose to accomplish salvation for those given to Him by the Father, not to merely make it available.

The word which to me sums up all the arguments in the "Election" issue is initiative. Brinsmead, Runia, Kuitert and Richardson, as all the king's men, can't put it all together. They will not swallow a holy, sovereign, deterministic God, but they opt, with the humanists, for a deterministic man.

"But our God is in the heavens: He hath done whatsoever He hath pleased" (Ps. 115:3).

"And all the inhabitants of the earth are reputed as nothing: and He doeth according to His will in the army of heaven, and among the inhabitants of the earth: and none can stay His hand, or say unto Him, What doest Thou?" (Dan. 4:35).

With all of your elegance of language, you have only managed to reproduce a refined version of free-willism. Someone has to be God. To be God is to be the Determiner. Truly Reformed men see God's unstayed hand on every page of Scripture and rejoice in it.

If genuinely Reformed scholars wanted to gather a series of articles setting forth true Lutheranism, would you be pleased if they were all drawn from a body such as the Lutheran Church in America ? You have chosen writers who, at best, are on the periphery of the Reformed community.

Dale K. Dykema
Reformed Minister
Michigan

Far Short

I was not surprised to read the recent articles in your September issue on the subject of "Election." But I was disappointed to see how far short the message of your magazine falls from a "restoration of New Testament Christianity in this generation." Your Barthian view of election is not the view of the Reformation in general nor that of Luther in particular. I'm sure that many semi-Pelagians of our day will have their error fortified and continue to reject the clear teaching of the Word of God. Election is with reference to Christ, but it is still an election of individuals in Christ. Ephesians 1:4 says, " . . . according as He hath chosen us in Him..." Even that text, as well as many others, points to the election of individuals.

Since you agree with Barth's view of election, it makes me even more suspicious than before whether you do not also agree with his view of universalism. Why not give us a clear answer on this?

Randy Pizzino
Baptist Pastor
Virginia

Please look again at my qualifying remarks on Barth in the "Editorial Introduction" to the September issue of Present Truth Magazine. I'm not Barthian. But often those who criticize Barth most have never really read what he said but have only read someone else who read what someone else said he said. Barth was not a universalist. I certainly am not. All articles in Present Truth Magazine do not necessarily reflect the view of the editor. We were simply wanting to inform our readers of different efforts to rework the doctrine of election. If we are committed to a closed system of theology, it makes it difficult to dispassionately consider any point of view which differs from our own. —Ed.

Troubled

Sir: I have appreciated your articles in Present Truth Magazine for quite some time. However, I am greatly troubled by Part 3 of "The Legal and Moral As­pects of Salvation," which appeared in the September issue.

On page 14 you write, "In Christ humanity is already justified and freed (Rom. 5:18 ; 6:7)." If all humanity is already justified, then it must rightly follow that all humanity shall like­wise be sanctified and glorified, for the Scriptures do not separate these elements one from another (see Rom. 8:30 ; 1 Cor. 1:30 ).

If all mankind are justified in Christ, why then do some fail to believe and therefore are not saved, not sanctified and not glorified? The only way that you may come to this conclusion is by redefining what it means to be justified. Justification means "to be declared legally righteous." But your position would cause you to define justification as "to provide us an opportunity to become legally righteous." Yet such doctrine is not taught in the Scriptures. Nor has it ever, to my knowledge, been adopted by the Reformers.

Donald Weilersbacher
Reformed Presbyterian Pastor

California

I did not say "all humanity" but simply "humanity." Christ assumed human nature (humanity), and in Him that human nature (humanity) is justified and glorified. All individuals are now invited to believe this and share its benefits.

The biblical expression "in Christ" is used in two ways: (1) what God did in Christ (i.e., in His Person) before we came to faith; (2) individual faith-union with Christ. —Ed.

His and Hers

Sir: Please permit me to make a comment on your magazine. I have appreciated many of your articles and gleaned many helpful ideas to balance my thinking on justification. However, a statement made in your September issue on "Election" sets very sour with your previous teaching on justification. That statement reads, "In Christ humanity is already justified and freed."

Romans 5:18 is a scripture that speaks of the modus operandi of justification. Its meaning is clear. All that are in Adam are condemned, and all that are in Christ are justified. Moreover, these two groups (in Adam, in Christ) are not identical. One group is spiritually dead (those in the flesh or Adam), and one is spiritually alive (those in Christ) (Rom. 5:12 ; 1 Cor. 15:22 ; Eph. 2:1-5). These two groups coexist in the world (John 17:6, 9; 1 John 5:19 ; Rom. 8:7-9; 1 Cor. 2:14 ).

If you mean by your interpretation of Romans 5:18 that humanity now shares in Christ's nature by virtue of His incarnation and that this incarnation abrogates its previous link to Adam by nature, you are badly mistaken. If you mean that the elect share in Christ's nature by virtue of justification, then you must admit to spiritual life in all those who are justified (2 Peter 1:3, 4). This is because justification brings (is unto) a new nature (life), adoption into the family of God, and consequently the elect begin to call upon the Lord as Abba, Father. Humanity's unbelief and unholiness is symptomatic of the fact that it is not freed from its sinful nature inherited from Adam and therefore is not justified. Since you believe that justification results in rebirth and consequently freedom, you are inconsistent by teaching, "In Christ all humanity is already justified and freed." You are also inconsistent with the Reformed teaching of justification. May I remind you of your often-quoted statement from a Reformer of the past, "Christ justifies no one whom He does not at the same time sanctify" (Rom. 6:22 ; 1 Cor. 1:30 ).


Sir: On the one hand I am already persuaded that we should "prove all things and hold to that which is good" (1 Thess. 5:21 ; Acts 17:11 ). On the other hand I am also persuaded that we should defend the faith which was once delivered to the saints.

Bennett Broadway
California

My article did not say "all humanity" as if justification and freedom were the personal possession of each individual. What it says is this: Christ assumed the human nature common to all men. In Him that human nature or humanity is justified and freed—and glorified as well. The atonement and its individual application by the work of the Holy Spirit and Christ's intercession are separate events.—Ed.


Sir: I wish to protest against the idea of election you present in your September issue of Present Truth. In particular I would cite Mr. H. M. Kuitert's article. Mr. Kuitert's article, entitled "Election Means Preference," seeks to justify God's preference by the worthy objects of His choice. Mr. Kuitert says: "He prefers the lost, the publicans and sinners, the sick and rejected. In a word He prefers all those in need of His saving hand."

Mr. Kuitert's attempt to explain away "the most offensive word [election] in the vocabulary of the Church" shows that he himself does not trust in the mercy of God (Rom. 9:15-16); neither is he tolerant of God's sovereign counsel and the good pleasure or kind intention of His will (Eph. 1:1-14; 2 Tim. 1:9; Rom. 9:20-24; 11:33-36). Let God be God!

Any time you place God's preference in the creature or a quality in the creature (humility, downtrodden, outcast), you are doing the equivalent of the Arminians, who place God's preference in the foreseen faith in the creature. Maybe we should take Mr. M. Luther seriously when he warns us of the legalism in our bones!

Judy Broadway
California

Timely

Sir: What a timely issue on "Election"! You should have greater readership because you really are spear­heading "the truth" of the Reformation. Your September issue is just the thing for us to celebrate the "festival of the Reformation."

According to Romans 8:24 "we are saved by hope." So why not "out-Luther" Luther and go beyond the Reformation to a "theology of hope" based solely on the "holy Word of God"? Are you going to discuss hope in any upcoming issue? I hope so!

Lyndall D. Logee
Washington

Thoughtful Letter

Sir: Having been forewarned by the editorial comment, "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good," in the August issue of Present Truth Magazine, I read Prof. Mueller's article on "The Meaning of Grace" with care. Unfortunately, Prof. Mueller is not as well acquainted with Calvinism as he is with the Latin language. Prof. Mueller's views are incorrect. The Synod of Dort did not deny the true universality of the gospel offer but rather strongly affirmed it. I quote Article 18 of the Third and Fourth Heads of Doctrine:

"As many as are called by the Gospel are unfeignedly called; for God hath most earnestly and truly declared in His Word what will be acceptable to Him, namely, that all who are called should comply with His invitation. He, moreover, seriously promises eternal life and rest to as many as shall come to Him and believe on Him."

Moreover, the Synod of Dort never declared that God's grace is "irresistible" but rather that God's calling of men to repentance and faith is "effectual." In affirming this, Dort uses almost the same language as the Lutheran Confessions. Dort says,". . . by the efficacy of the same regenerating Spirit, He pervades the inmost recesses of the heart; He opens the closed and softens the hardened heart, and circumcises that which was uncircumcised The Lutheran Augsburg Confession, in Article V, states, " . . . For by the Word and Sacraments, as by instruments, the Holy Spirit is given; who worketh faith, where and when it pleaseth God, in those that hear the Gospel. The Formula of Concord agrees with Dort when it denies that grace is given to unwilling men, "For God in conversion of unwilling men makes willing men, and dwells with the willing, as Augustine is wont to speak."

What Prof. Mueller does not realize is that "particularism" is not something that John Calvin or the Synod of Dort or the Westminster Assembly invented. It is found in Scripture. It is true that it does not appear in the apostolic proclamation of the gospel to the unsaved (euangellid­zein), but it is frequently found in the teaching (didaskein) of the gospel to the church. It is a definite part of the kerygma. At Pentecost, Peter called upon the multitude to "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house." But as Luke sums up the work of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost: ". . . and the Lord added to the church daily, such as should be saved" (literal translation from the Greek, " ... and the Lord added those being saved according to the day upon the same"). When the Gentiles responded to the gospel, Luke reports, ". . . and as many as were ordained to eternal life believed" (Acts 13:48 ). Particularism is an inseparable part of Paul's salu­tation in Ephesians 1:4, 5: "... according as He hath chosen us in Him before the foundation of the world . . . having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ." As one of my professors at Western Theological Seminary used to say, "Virtually every reference to predestination in the New Testament is a doxology." Particularism is part of the praise of the church. There are, of course, alternatives to particularism; they are Arminianism and Pelagianism. Either God is in total charge of His plan of salvation or God is not in charge at all.

I must confess that in the hands of some men particularism became something quite different from what it is from the pen and lips of our Saviour and His apostles. The "hyper-Calvin­ist" does indeed distort the gospel, and from sad experience I know how gross that distortion can become. It is not just, however, to attribute this distortion to Calvin. He says in his Treatise on Election, "I would by no means drive you to the secret election of God, to seek your salvation from thence, as it were, with open mouths, but I would exhort you to flee directly to Christ, in whom salvation is laid before our eyes."

As a Calvinist and an "Infralapsarian," I heartily regret the excesses of some of my Christian brethren who call themselves Calvinists, but I regret even more the singular ineptness with which otherwise competent theologians speak about Calvin and Calvinism. As one of my professors at Hope College once remarked, "Most of the people who talk about John Calvin heard about him from somebody else who never got around to reading Calvin either."

Both Calvinism and Lutheranism are Augustinian theologies, and Calvin and Calvinism owes much to Martin Luther and is not ashamed to acknowledge this debt. I hope the day may soon come when the polemical attitude of Lutheran theologians may be replaced by a sincere effort to see and understand the basic unity of Calvin and Luther in their mutual insistence that justification by faith must be justification only by God's grace in Jesus Christ, plus nothing.

Arie Blok
Minister
Iowa

A good, thoughtful letter, sir! Mueller's criticism of Calvinism was a remark on the side which I was tempted to edit out, but that too would have invited criticism. Mueller's definition of grace as being something outside of the believer entirely is the main thrust of his article and is beautifully presented. —Ed.

Caution

Sir: I have read every issue of your magazine and heard you speak many times. I distribute Present Truth Magazine with every issue. You and Present Truth Magazine are truly raised up for this day. May you long continue your ministry. And I trust you will use some caution regarding the printing of certain articles which tend to confuse rather than enlighten. These are written by others, not yourselves. Allow me to refer to two that appeared in two recent issues, and the only two such articles I have noticed.

In your July issue I refer to the article by Jon Zens, "Why Existential Theology Is Bankrupt." Zens has something to say, but he confuses the reader with what he thinks is scholarship. By that I mean his use of every philosophical and theological word he learned in seminary. This is characteristic of his seminary, Westminster of Philadelphia. I can only excuse him because he seems to be a relatively young man. You should have known better than to publish such obfuscation.

The second article I refer to is in your August issue. It is "The Meaning of Grace," by John T. Mueller. I could have guessed he was a Lutheran by his attempt at scholarship through the overly abundant use of the Latin. Obviously, communication was not his goal. It is really a bit ostentatious to use Latin in a day when even proper English is on the decline. Mueller does put his finger on a critical problem, but he avoids facing it. He recognizes that unbelief is at the root of the mystery of saved or not saved. But he fails to indicate how one comes to belief. The Scriptures seem to be clear enough on this count: when the Holy Spirit accompanies the preaching of the gospel, then faith ensues, resulting in salvation, and never otherwise. Ephesians 2:8 seems crystal clear on this point: faith is the gift of God.

In conclusion, let me say that Zens, a Baptist, and Mueller, a Lutheran, hail from traditions that have held the truth of justification by faith from the days of the Reformation. But as you see, they becloud the grand doctrine rather than clarify and communicate it. I advise my friends to be careful of their articles for this reason. I encourage you to pursue the truth in the excellent way you have done, without their kind of "help."

James Miller
Minister
Colorado

Dr. Hodge uses some Latin too in his Systematic Theology.—Ed.

Mueller Versus God

Sir: I am surprised (to say the least!) that you chose to print Mr. Mueller's article, "The Meaning of Grace," in your August issue. He tosses the term "efficacious grace" around as if it were a newborn baby crying out to be embraced but only being received by a concerned nurse once in a while.

Mueller said that the favor of God in Christ, our Mediator, extends to all men without exception (p. 18).

God says that Christ entreated God's favor only upon the "given ones," those who will believe (John 17:9-10, 20-21).

Mueller said that God earnestly wills every individual to be saved (p. 18).

God says that He only wills those who wilt believe to be saved (John 6:38 -40). "For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on Him [not "that every individual"] should not perish, but have eternal life" (John 3:16 ).

Mueller said that God's pleasure is that every man be saved (pp. 18-19), and thus man can cause God 's pleasure not to be accomplished.

God says: "I am God and there is none else. I am God and there are none like Me. declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient times the things that are not yet done, saying, My counsel shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure" (Isa. 46:9, 10).

Baron Eickhoff
Pennsylvania

More on Mueller

Sir: The article, "The Meaning of Grace" in the August Issue of Present Truth Magazine , was very much confused. The author never did explain or give a biblical answer to his topic. He quoted Luther often but obviously does not agree with him. It is obvious that the author does not believe in faith alone for salvation because he states that there is the means of grace (the Word and the sacraments). Therefore he seems to say (if I can weed it out from the wordy mass) that salvation is by faith, plus baptism, plus communion. I'm convinced that this man is confused on the basis of salvation.

Alston Rasmussen
Baptist Minister
Nebraska

Try not to let a person's criticism of your own position make you so defensive that you miss what is really worthwhile in what he is saying. —Ed.

John Mueller to the Lions

Sir: You say repeatedly, "Let us reason together." In my opinion that is very necessary with regard to what John T. Mueller writes in your issue of August, pages 18-19. I have never read such a superficial "attack" on the Reformed position. It is an attack that is in many respects incorrect and flagrantly contradicts the Conclusion of the Canons of Dort, which, for example, "detest with their whole soul" the idea that "in the same manner in which the election is the fountain and cause of faith and good works, reprobation is the cause of unbelief and impiety."

Much more could be mentioned. It just doesn't do to hide in "an unsolvable mystery" (p. 19) while the Scriptures speak so clearly about faith as a gift of God ("it is given to you to believe") and call the believers "the elect." If Mueller would place this "elect" after a person has believed, he would find himself in the camp of the Arminians!

Because you want to reason together, you should invite a Reformed theologian to write his answer to Mueller. I would suggest Prof. Dr. J. Faber of the Canadian Reformed Theological Seminary.

G. Van Dooren
Reformed Pastor
Canada

A response from Professor Faber is very welcome. -Ed.

Comments from Wm. C. Robinson

Sir: Regarding Dr. Mueller's article, "The Meaning of Grace," in your August issue: I am more interested in what I agree with in Dr. Mueller than wherein I differ. My Robinson grandparents were members of Daniel's Lutheran Church a few miles north of Lincolnton , North Carolina . Their pastor baptized me. I graduated from Roanoke (a Lutheran college) and attended classes in Gettysburg Seminary (Pennsylvania ) but have been in the Presbyterian Church all my life.

Dr. Robinson, a renowned Reformed scholar and author, exhibits the grace of a big man. He obviously differs with Dr. Mueller on the side point but does not allow the objectionable atom to hide the mountain.

We did not print Mueller's article because of his criticism on the side against particularism. In fact, we were tempted to edit it out because of the danger of its being distracting. Mueller's insight into the extrinsic nature of saving grace and its distinction from the gifts of grace was, in our opinion, beautifully presented. We wish some could quit fussing over the bones and enjoy the repast. —Ed.

* * * * *

As one who has been blessed by your writings and who holds to the Westminster Standards, may I suggest that your difference with Dr. Gordon Clark (see Sept. issue, pp. 15-17) is at least in part a matter of terminology.

In John 3 our Lord says one must be born of the Spirit in order to see the things of the kingdom. This evidently means that the Spirit works in him to believe in the Son of God freely offered in John 3:16. Now Paul seems to mean the same thing with his term "called" (1 Cor. 1:26f.; 2 Tim. 1:9-10; Rom. 8:30 ). According to the last reference, this call precedes justification. It seemed to the Westminster divines that what Calvin sets forth in his Institutes , Book 3, chapter 1 (the illumination of the Holy Spirit) and chapter 2 (faith), was what was meant by being born of the Spirit (John 3) and being "called" in Paul's letters. Therefore they called it "effectual calling."

This means that the illumination of the Spirit which we call faith precedes justification. In the same Westminster Confession justification is treated prior to sanctification.

Calvin puts justification and sanctification as coterminous in his Institutes , Book 3, chapter 16, section 1; chapter 14, section 9; and chapter 11, section 11. In the first of these (chap. 16, sec. 1) he seems to put justification logically prior to sanctification but both of them after "illumination by His wisdom" —which is what Westminster meant by effectual calling (cf. 1 Cor. 1:30 , where Christ as our wisdom from God precedes both righteousness and sanctification). The other two references from the Institutes , Book 3, also keep together justification and regeneration or sanctification or reformation into newness of life. Thus it seems to me that Calvin uses regeneration in the Institutes , Book 3, chapter 16, section 1; chapter 14, section 9; and chapter 11, section 11, in the sense of sanctification. Thus he puts sanctification logically after justification as does the Westminster Confession.

I do not insist that this solves the difference but suggest that it ameliorates it. As by fraternal discussion we shake the lamp of truth, may it shine the brighter! [ Beautiful! -Ed. ]

In Principal John Macleod's Scottish Theology in Connection with Church History there is a discussion of the ordo salutis as set forth by two different Reformed theologians- one saying that justification precedes regeneration, and the other vice versa. I no longer have this fine book in my retirement. Your own scholarship is magnificent!

* * * * *

Regarding "The Order of Justification and Regeneration" in your September issue: May I suggest that your criticism of seventeenth-century Calvinism is more applicable to the Canons of Dort, while Dr. Gordon Clark's reply is a defense of the Westminster Standards.

Dort has a number of references to regeneration but no chapter on justification. Westminster makes only one reference to regeneration, and that in its chapter on sanctification. It does not state whether regeneration is prior to or later than justification, which is treated two chapters earlier. On the other hand, Westminster has a strong chapter on justification and six catechetical questions thereon. According to Westminster , God justifies sinners "not for anything wrought in them or done by them but only for the perfect obedience and full satisfaction of Christ by God imputed to them and received by faith alone." —L.C. 70.

Where Calvin treats of regeneration and justification ( Institutes , Bk. 3, chap. 11, secs. 6, 11; chap. 14, sec. 9; chap 16, sec. 1), he uses regeneration in the sense of sanctification, that is, reformation into newness of life by gradual progression, bestowing the Spirit of adoption, by whose power He remakes us into His own image, so that by His power the lusts of the flesh are more and more mortified and we are sanctified. Now this is what Westminster means by sanctification, and its chapter thereon follows that on justification.

Westminster regularly calls the initial step "effectual calling." This term evidently comes from Paul's frequent use of "called" and takes up Calvin's illumination of the Spirit (Institutes, Bk. 3, chap. 1) and faith (chap. 2). God works it "by His Word and Spirit." According to Romans 8:30, "Those whom God calls He also justifies," and this seems to be the order in 1 Corinthians 1:26 , 30 and Titus 3:5-7. Let's not push our logic so far as to condemn those who seriously think they are following the Word.

William C. Robinson
Professor Emeritus
California

Satisfied Readers

Sir: Present Truth Magazine is one of the most stimulating and informative theological magazines that I am receiving. It reminds me of the seminary days (Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, '38) when many of the subjects you discuss were touched in our Dogmatics classes under Drs. J. T. Mueller and Engelder. I was happy to see a chapter of Dr. Mueller's book, Christian Dogmatics, included in your August issue.

Walter A. Haag
Lutheran Pastor
Florida


Sir: I recently lost (temporarily) a close spiritual friend. He as well as I had been Present Truth Magazine readers for some time. The confidence of his legal standing before a righteous and just God gave him the assurance to face death boldly and openly. He was able to encourage those who came to encourage him during the six weeks he lived after his tumor was discovered. He would have said a loud "Amen" to the fact that "Happy is the man who in the hour of test and trial has something better than his own fickle experience upon which to rest!". God bless you in your presentation of the legal and moral aspects of salvation.

William J. Gray, D.D.S.
California


Sir: Your Present Truth Magazine , and occasional pamphlets are truly magnificent. The emphasis on the objective work of Christ is a healthy balance to today's subjectivism. Your enthusiasm and clear presentations of objective salvation fire me with new enthusiasm and inspire me to preach the great Reformation truths. May God bless you and keep you at this ministry.

Robert S. Williamson
Presbyterian Pastor
Pennsylvania


Sir: Although I can't say I am in agreement with you in every area, it is thrilling to realize that we can fellowship around the Bible truth of justification by faith. It is very refreshing to know that every time I sit down to read anything you publish, it always brings me back to the central fact of the death, burial and resurrection of our Lord. Please keep your emphasis there, where it rightfully belongs.

Karcie E. Crum
Minister
Georgia


Sir: Really, words can't express my appreciation for your publication of Present Truth Magazine . You are indeed a "voice in the wilderness" for this our present "bewildered" generation.

Henry Werner
Minister
Canada


Sir: Your publication is both inspiring and thought-provoking. Keep up the good work.

Charles F. Simmons
Anglican Seminary Dean
North Carolina


Sir: I must congratulate you for your outstanding magazine. Every time that a new issue arrives I set aside what I have been doing and read it cover to cover. I don't agree with 100% of what you have to say, but I've given it careful consideration.

James Hallberg
Congregational Pastor
Minnesota


Sir: It is with great joy that I receive Present Truth Magazine . The challenges you have brought to my theology have been marvelous. I sincerely desire that "my theology" not be simply what I was told as I was growing up or taking my ministerial training, but that it be what has been found in the Word of God through my own studies. Thank you for your help.

Joseph E. Gillespie
Minister
Minnesota

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Letters from Covenant part 2

Letter from Markus Barth

Though in matters of style and taste there may be some different opinions on your and my side, the theological insights and assertions found not only in the magazine but also in the flyer, "The Gospel and Christian Behavior," have my full approval. By pointing to the fulfillment of the law by Christ you avoid the creeping antinomianism which is characteristic of much so-called New Testament theology. I assume you realize that a different attitude to (as yet unbaptized) Jews is a direct consequence of what you write.

Do you know my booklet on Justification (Eerdmans, 1971), in which I attempt—in a narrative way—to show why Christology (cross and resurrection), not just a (correct!) doctrine of grace and sin and new life, is the basis of justification?

Markus Barth, Professor of New Testament
Switzerland


Suggestion

You have done an excellent job in giving Christ honor in the first three of your sola's in your masthead on page 2 of Present Truth. May I have the temerity to suggest that you please consider whether you should not go a step further and show that Scripture points to Christ—that is, is the only God-ordained account of and witness of Him and all that He did. I agree with everything you say under the fourth sola in your masthead—sola Scriptura. But I suggest that you consider making a succinct statement under this sola, showing that Scripture is the way God has ordained to testify to Jesus Christ.

William C. Robinson, Professor Emeritus
California


Manipulative Preachers

Let me thank you for the article in your August issue, "The Gospel as the Power of God." How sorely needed is this great truth! I will say that even when it is integrated thoroughly in every sermon, we are indeed in a time "when they will not endure sound doctrine; but wanting to have their ears tickled [with bizarre and novel "experiences" of men], they will accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance with their own desires" (2 Tim. 4:3).

I will testify that every person whom I have seen "drawn" to Christ by the power of the gospel is still growing for the Lord, and every person I have seen tricked into a decision by manipulative preachers has gone back into the world without compunction.

James A. DeWeerd, Baptist Pastor
Texas


Grave Responsibility

As you know, the church has a grave responsibility to educate, correct misgivings, and direct emotion to the benefit of the congregation. The pulpit should never be used to fire the emotion of the congregation in order to inflate the flagging ego of the speaker. Perhaps like others, over the past forty years I have heard many sermons but usually walked away unfulfilled because the message central to Jesus on the cross was all too seldom mentioned. The answers to my questions were found in Present Truth; and now I have a clearer perspective of who I am, where I am, and what I am in relation to Jesus.

Lewis Bailey
Maryland


No Thanks!

Please don't send me your magazine any more. Our Lord told us to preach the gospel to every creature, not to criticize each other.

Mrs. Lynn Karatz
New Jersey


Gospel Preaching

Present Truth has been a blessing and has encouraged me to "prove all things" (1 Thess. 5:21), especially as to the manner in which the gospel is preached these days. The magazine has also been a help to me personally in that I do some informal ministry of the Word among believers and on occasion am invited to speak in public meetings.

Among believers we need to learn more fully (we who preach the Word, whether occasionally or part time or full time) what it is to "preach the gospel" for purposes of edification of believers. Your publication is a help to that end. May the Lord encourage you as you labor for the Lord until the day of His return.

Herbert Carpenter
New York


Christ Our Righteousness

Over a period of about one and one-half years I have been reading your magazine. Present Truth has given me a desire to dig deeper in the Scriptures to see if these things be. Indeed they are. Jesus Christ is our only righteousness. My preaching has taken on a "gospel color" rather than a "sanctificationism color." The dynamic truth of justification by faith alone has changed and is changing me—giving me a desire to live in accordance with God's law.

Quite frankly, many pastors are caught up in the "deeper life" movement, but some of their members are disillusioned.

Bruce Mercer, Minister
Alabama


One-sided

I appreciate your firm hold on "justification by faith (alone)" as being a judicial declaration. However, I sense a lack of warmth in this one sided approach. Justification by faith is fine, but it is only half the picture. Sanctification by the Holy Spirit is the other half. I do not believe in the "primacy of justification."

Philip Stel
Canada


Eye-opener

I appreciate your objective stand taken in connection with your dissemination of "the Truth of God as it is in Christ Jesus our Lord according to the Holy Scriptures (both Testaments)." Your faithful propagation of propositional biblical truth as conceived and circulated by the Protestant Reformers has proven to be a real eye-opener and a tremendous blessing to my own mind and heart. The enrichment received with regard to my doctrinal knowledge and its practical outworking in my Christian life places me in a grateful indebtedness to the editorial staff of Present Truth.

Merle P. Estabrooks, Minister
Canada


"How to Live the Victorious Life"

I have been on your mailing list for several months, my pastor having recommended Present Truth to me. The articles contained in your magazine have been a constant source of enlightenment and guidance to me. I was particularly impressed with your brochure, "How to Live the Victorious Life," which I have shown to a number of our Youth Fellowship.

M. Shellard
South Africa



"How to Live the Victorious Life" was absolutely the best thing I have ever read!

Jerold Gliege, Minister
Canada


Whacking Away

I don't care to read Present Truth any more. A sister in the Lord said a while back that it is like dropping back from the eighth grade to kindergarten. After one has been justified by faith, he doesn't turn around and begin examining this. Faith in our God and His Christ presses on to glory and the victor's crown.

Those who keep on whacking away with the Word start to doubt it themselves; and we who read their articles see the error involved, but they don't know it. They know theology, but do they know the Saviour? Those who know Jesus are talking of His soon return and the rapture, and they are not of the holiness movement either.

Clarence Nagel
Oregon


Wasted Space

There is so much good about Present Truth, and yet it is so unbalanced. The Reformers I truly admire, and yet they were mainly very unclear concerning Israel's future and the glorious and enlightening dispensational truths of the Word. All your wasted space on the content of the gospel makes me feel very sorry for you.

S. Mountstevens
Canada


Not in Vain

I praise God for groups like yourselves that are dedicated to the preservation of the truth as God has proclaimed it in His Holy Word. May His blessings rest upon your labors. I am confident of soul that they are not in vain.

Ronald A. Litke, Lutheran Pastor
Florida


Rotten Theology

Sir:  May I commend you for your excellent and outstanding magazine. It has changed a lot of my rotten theology. What a blessing! Keep on speaking for the truth.

Sam R. Baniqued, Presbyterian Minister
Illinois


Divisive Spirit

Thank you for the work that you are doing in helping to clarify issues. Much of what you are writing I have been saying for years, but you are saying it more precisely. With the charismatic movement dividing unrightly the Word of truth, it is refreshing to see your stand. Also, with the charismatics dividing our Protestant churches and sometimes taking over traditional non-Pentecostal churches with a divisive spirit, I am glad to see your magazine.

I think that once in a while you overstate. The Pentecostals who are personal friends of mine seem to have a strong understanding of the doctrine of justification by faith in regards to salvation. It is from that point on where I have my disagreements with them; and let us not forget that the different Pentecostal churches have their different understandings of all these teachings which they generally accept.

Richard A. Uzzel, Baptist Pastor
California


Profound Differences

I am an "ex-Pentecostal" and very interested in what you have to say about that movement and its relation to the type of justification advocated by Luther. I am doing a study of Romans, using F. F. Bruce's commentary on the book, and am realizing profound differences in "justification doctrine" between Pentecostals and non-Pentecostals.

I had a very profound conversion and a year later got involved in a Pentecostal church and stayed there for about two and one-half years. Then (I believe) God began drawing me back to a noncharismatic faith. There are too many deep differences between the two for me to be satisfied that we are indeed "one in the Spirit."

I have been "baptized in the Holy Spirit" and have spoken in "tongues" but am energetically re-evaluating the experience in light of Scripture.

Stan Lucas
New Jersey


Negative Attitude

Your negative attitude toward Roman Catholics and charismatics has always disturbed me. Jesus Christ loves Catholics and charismatics as much as He loves you and me. Why do you waste time, effort, money and talent on negative ideas?

Mrs. Ray Pult
Wisconsin


A New Reformation

I have been a Christian for about four years now, an offspring of the "Jesus Revolution." For the major part of those four years I have been seeking one experience after another in order to keep a spiritual "high." In living like this I had become very frustrated.

Not too long ago I was introduced to your magazine. The truth of the gospel (Christ's life, death, resurrection and ascension) was presented by you in a way I had never heard before. My focus of attention has now gone from myself to Christ.

I thank God for your magazine. It has given me an objective view of Christ—something I had never even considered a year ago. I join you in the hope of a New Reformation which, by the grace of God, will unite believers without compromising on the clear teachings of Scripture.

Jeffrey Bynum
California



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