The Problem of Day-to-Day Sin (1)

By Mike Willis

The problem of sin will always remain with us so long as we are abiding in the flesh. None of us will reach a state of perfection; we can never live absolutely without and above sin. John stated, “If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us . . . . If we say that we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us” (1 Jn. 1:8, 10).

In our systems of thought, each of us must come to grips with this problem of sin. I think that it might be useful to our study to analyze some of the methods which people have used in dealing with the problem of daily sins. Perhaps this will help us to deal with the problem among ourselves. Certainly it is true that some erring brethren are appealing to the problem of sin in every Christian’s day-today life to justify fellowshipping those who have departed from the faith with reference to using mechanical instruments of music, church support of human institutions, and church sponsored recreation, among other things. These brethren argue that because we are not perfect, we should not expect our brethren to be perfect. Therefore, since we have sins and maintain fellowship with God, we should be willing to admit the same with these brethren.

Obvious from this argument is the problem of dealing with day-to-day sin in formulating some system of thought relevant to the subject of fellowship. Hence, I will mention the alternatives for dealing with day-to-day sin so far as I am aware of them and let us see their respective weak and strong points.

The Calvinists’ Method of Handling Daily Sin

One method of handling day-to-day sins known to be preached among denominationalists is that of the Calvinist.- The Calvinist believes in the perseverance of the saints (once saved, always saved). Hence, he does not believe that the sins which an individual commits on a day-to-day basis in any way separate that man from God. Rather, he believes that because a man is one of God’s elect, he can never fall from grace. Here is how the Philadelphia Confession of Faith (1742), one of the most popular confessions adopted by Baptists, expressed this belief:

XVII. OF THE PERSEVERANCE OF THE SAINTS – I. Those whom God hash accepted in the Beloved, effectually called and sanctified by his Spirit, and given the precious faith of his elect unto, can neither totally nor finally fall from the state of grace, but shall certainly persevere therein to the end and be eternally saved, seeing the gifts and callings of God are without repentance (whence he still begets and nourisheth in them faith, repentance, love, joy, hope, and all the graces of the spirits to immortality), and, though many storms and floods arise and beat against them, yet they shall never be able to take them off that foundation and rock which by faith they are fastened upon, notwithstanding, through unbelief and the temptations of Satan, the sensible sight of the light and love of God may, for a time, be clouded and obscured from them, yet it is still the same, and they shall be sure to be kept by the power of God unto salvation, where they shall enjoy their purchased possession, they being engraven upon his hands, and their names having been written in the book of Life from all eternity.

2. This perseverance of the saints depends not upon their own free will, but upon the immutability of the decree of election, flowing from the free and unchangeable love of God, and Father, upon the efficacy of the merit and intercession of Jesus Christ and union with him, the oath of God, the abiding of his Spirit, and seed of God within them, and the nature of the covenant of grace; from all which ariseth also the certainty and infallibility thereof.

The theological justification for believing that God will save the believer in spite of his sins is the doctrine of the imputation of the perfect obedience of Jesus Christ to the believer’s account. Here is how Calvinists express this relationship:

I reply that `accepting grace,’ as they call it, is nothing else than his free goodness, with which the Father embraces us in Christ when he clothes us with the innocence of Christ and accepts it as ours that by the benefit of it he may hold us as holy, pure, and innocent. For Christ’s righteousness, which as it alone is perfect alone can bear the sight of God, must appear in court on our behalf, and stand surety in judgement. Furnished with this righteousness, we obtain continual forgiveness of sins in faith. Covered with this purity, the sordidness and uncleanness of our imperfection are not ascribed to us but are hidden as if buried that they may not come into God’s judgment, until the hour arrives when, the old man slain and clearly destroyed in us, the divine goodness will receive us into blessed peace with the new Adam (John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, Book III, Chapter XIV, No. 12).

Notice that Calvin argues just exactly as I stated. He stated that the imputation of the perfect obedience of Christ was the reason why saints do not fall from grace. As a matter of fact, his statement resembles that which some of my brethren are writing today. Let us consider other statements from the Institutes.

Therefore, we explain justification simply as the acceptance with which God receives us into his favor as righteous men. And we say that it consists in the remission of sins and the imputation of Christ’s righteousness (Book III, Chapter XI, No. 2).

. . . It is quite clear that Paul means exactly the same thing in another statement, which he had put a little before: `As we were made sinners by one man’s disobedience, so we have been justified by one man obedience’ (Rom. 5:19p.). To declare that by him alone we are accounted righteous, what else is this but to lodge our righteousness in Christ’s obedience, because the obedience of Christ is reckoned to us as if it were our own? (Book III, Chapter XI, No. 23).

Imputed Righteousness. For Christ took upon himself and bore the sins of the world, and satisfied divine justice. Therefore, solely on account of Christ’s sufferings and resurrection God is propitious with respect to our sins and does not impute them to us, but imputes Christ’s righteousness to us as our own (II Cor. 5:19ff; Rom. 4:25), so that now we are not only cleansed and purged from sins or are holy, but also, granted the righteousness of Christ, and so absolved from sin, death and condemnation, are at last righteous and heirs of eternal life. Properly speaking, therefore, God alone justifies, and justifies only on account of Christ, not imputing sins to us but imputing his righteousness to us (5.108).

1. Those whom God effectually calleth, he also freely justified: not by infusing righteousness into them, but by pardoning their sins, and by accounting and accepting their persons as righteousness; not for any things wrought in them, or done by them, but for Christ’s sake alone; not by imputing faith itself, the act of believing, or any other evangelical obedience to them, as their righteousness, but by imputing the obedience and satisfaction of Christ unto them, they receiving and resting on him and his righteousness by faith; which faith they have not of themselves: it is the gift of God (6.060).

This, my brethren, is one method which has been used to deal with the problem of one’s sins which he commits day by day. Let us consider its relative advantages and disadvantages:

1. Advantages: It gives a man a sense of security. I say this with some reservation; in order to be one of the persons who persevere unto the end, whose sins are automatically covered by the perfect obedience of Jesus Christ. a person must be one of God’s elect. No one can state assuredly that he is one of God’s elect individuals. Hence, an assurance would be present, provided that one were guaranteed that he was one of God’s elect.

Indeed, the whole system of Calvinism is designed for making man in no way involved in his own salvation; they make salvation totally the work of God. Hence, the elect are in no way responsible for meeting any conditions in order to be or stay saved.

2. Disadvantages: (a) Sin is overlooked by God. This whole concept of God’s attitude toward sin is devastating to a proper doctrine of God; it destroys His holiness. It affirms that God has absolutely willed to save certain individuals without having regard to righteousness and obedience. Hence, God loves such men far more than righteousness because He will save them while they are yet refusing to obey Him. Arminius recognized this weakness in Calvinism; he wrote as follows:

The great influence and potency which this consideration possesses in subverting the foundation of religion, may be appropriately described by the following simile: Suppose a son to say, “My father is such a great lover of righteousness and equity, that, notwithstanding I am his beloved son, he would disinherit me if I were found disobedient to him. Obedience, therefore, is a duty which I must sedulously cultivate, and which is highly incumbent upon me, if I wish to be his heir.” Suppose another son to say: “My father’s love for me is so great, that he is absolutely resolved to make me his heir. There is, therefore, no necessity for my earnestly striving to yield him obedience; for; according to his unchangeable will, t shall become his heir. Nay, he will be an irresistible force draw me to obey him, rather than no; suffer me to be made his heir (James Nichols and W.R. Bagnatl, The Writings of James Arminius, Volume One, p. 233).

Hence, this system is weak because it makes God guilty of overlooking sin in His saints which is contrary to His holiness.

To illustrate the extent to which this doctrine goes in overlooking sin, as the legitimate conclusion of the premises of Calvinism, consider this statement by Sam Morris:

We take the position that a Christian’s sins do not damn his soul. The way a Christian lives, what he says, his character, his conduct, or his attitude toward other people have nothing whatever to do with the salvation of his soul . . .

. . . All the prayers a man may pray, all the Bibles he may read, all the churches he may belong to, all the services he may attend, all the sermons he may practice, all the debts he may pay, all the ordinances he may observe, all the laws he may keep, all the benevolent acts he may perform will not make his soul one whit safer; and all the sins he may commit from idolatry to murder will not make his soul in any more danger (Rev. Sam Morris, “Do A Christian’s Sins Damn His Soul?”).

This position of unconditional forgiveness, if it were true, would indeed grant a man a certain amount of assurance of salvation which is not available to a person who believes what I believe. However, it taints the fountainhead of all religious dogma – the idea that God is holy.

(b) Destroys a need for repentance. The second disadvantage of this system of handling one’s day-to-day sins is that it destroys any basis for admonishing a brother to repent. When I approach a man who is involved in sin, I admonish him to repent lest he perish in eternal Hell for his wickedness. The man who accepts Calvinism is not able to do so; he cannot explain to the erring child of God that his sins will damn his soul because, according to him, they will not.

(c) It is contrary to everything the Bible teaches regarding conditional salvation. God’s grace in the Bible, is extended to man conditionally. The alien sinner and the child of God receive the benefits of God’s grace upon their obedience to the commandments of God. However, in the system known as Calvinism, this is not so. The man is saved unconditionally. This is contrary to hundreds of Scriptures in the Bible.

Summary

I am saddened by the news that several brethren among us have decided to accept the Calvinist doctrine of the imputation of the perfect obedience of Christ to the believer’s account as a means of dealing with the day-to-day sins which we commit. Their doctrine will logically lead them to the Calvinistic doctrine of “once saved, always saved.” None of my brethren are willing to state that categorically. However, they are willing to state that a child of God who, in a moment of weakness, becomes involved in adultery and dies in the act of committing adultery could still go to heaven. There is not a hair’s breath between the Calvinistic doctrine and the perseverance of the saints and what is expressed by these brethren.

Yet, one must admit that this is one of the theological methods which men have used to deal with the problem of day-to-day sin. I personally reject it anal call it damnable heresy, although some among us state chat it is the very essence of Christianity. (Continued next week).

Truth Magazine XXIII: 32, pp. 515-517
August 16, 1979

When The Mormons Call (2)

By Johnie Edwards

The Two Sticks Argument

One of the Mormon films teach that the book of Ezekiel prophesied of the book of Mormon. A careful reading of Ezekiel 37:16-24 will show that Ezekiel had no such thing in mind.

(1) The Mormons say that the stick of Judah in Ezekiel refers to the Bible and the stick of Ephraim refers to the Book of Mormon. Neither application is correct.

(2) The Mormons have at least three books, The Book of Mormons, Doctrine and Covenants, and the Pearl of Great Price. They say all three of these are from God. It looks like Ezekiel would have mentioned four sticks instead of two had he had Mormonism in mind.

(3) A background study of Ezekiel 37 will shed some light on the subject. When God led the twelve tribes out of Egypt into Canaan, He made them one nation. Israel became dissatisfied with God’s way of ruling the land by Judges and desired a king to be like the nations about them. God gave them a king in the person of Saul. Saul disobeyed God and was rejected from being king. After Saul came David and then Solomon. Because of the sins of Solomon, God decided to remove the people from Him, yet not all, for the sake of David. Therefore, when his son Rehoboam came to the throne, the people rebelled, all except Benjamin and Judah. These that continued allegiance to Rehoboam were called after “Judah” and the remaining tribes who turned to Jeroboam were called “Ephraim” (Isa. 7:8-9; 9:8-9; Hos. 4:16-17; 5:3; 9:3).

Ezekiel is not referring to two books, but rather, two nations of people as he explains in the context. He said one stick was for Judah and one was for Joseph. He then said, “And join them one to another into one stick; and they shall become one in thine hand” (Ezek. 37:17). He tells us that they would become one nation again. “And I will make them one nation in the land upon the mountains of Israel. And one king shall be king to them all: and they shall be no more two nations, neither shall they be divided into two kingdoms any more at all” (Ezek. 37:22).

(4) There is no command in Ezekial to write a book. It is assumed that the word stick as used in this passage means book. In fact, book or books is not even mentioned in this passage. The word stick is from the Hebrew word `ets’ and means, “wood, especially of a wooden post, stake, gibbett.” This Hebrew word is used. many .times in –the :Scriptures. It is translated a number of times “tree” and several ..times “wood” – but is , never translated book! .For the life of me, I cannot understand how the Mormons get the writing of a book out of this passage. There is no command to write a book or even a volume of words. He was to write on one stick for Judah and on the other for Joseph. Thus, the joining of the two sticks, signified that Judah and Ephraim,, in returning from captivity, would not be two nations, but should become one again. This is exactly what Ezekiel said.

Truth Magazine XXIII: 32, p. 514
August 16, 1979

Bible Basics: Christ and the Church

By Earl Robertson

Christ and the church of Christ are inseparable in that He is “the head of the church” (Eph. 1:22, 23). Jesus loved the church and gave Himself for it (Eph. 5:25). The church has tremendous value as far as the Lord is concerned. Though men belittle it, ridicule it, and lie against, it is still the body of the Lord and He loves it. There are many ways men hurt it, even while thinking they are loving it. When the church cannot be just the church, and the Lord the absolute head -though men are using it, allegedly doing the Lord’s work – it is suffering hurt at their hands. This is done many times by attempting to make the church do a work which the Lord, the head, never authorized. But to get some brethren to see that there must be divine authority for the work any congregation may ever engage in is indeed a problem. Sectarian dodges and quibbles are used to justify these iniquities.

Ours is a time of social reform and some brethren feel this is the work God has given to the church. Expensive programs of a social nature have been created within many churches. Often times, these programs were (and are) mutual efforts with various denominations. But does this practice make such work scriptural and right before the Lord? Answer this question, brethren, before ridiculing it. Is such scriptural? Must the actions of a church be circumscribed by Scripture? On this same problem, Brother N. B. Hardeman said in 1922, “The Bible is as silent as the stars about any kind of slumming work characteristic of the church of God.” Further, he said, “The city of Corinth; with its four hundred thousand people, contained its poor; and yet no apostle ever left the word of God and became engaged in slumming or `social uplift.’ Why, the church today in the eyes of the populace is reduced to about a paralled with the Red Cross. I have nothing unkind to say of the Red Cross, but its function is administering purely to men’s temporal and temporary necessities. All ought to be interested in lifting man’s burdens and making life more pleasant; but the `Good Fellows,’ even the best fellows’ organization, is about on a parallel with the idea that many people have of the church; and hence, it is reduced to a kind of social organization for social betterment and for temporal advancement.”

In these social efforts brethren have forgotten the spiritual work to be done. When men “make” the church perform social work, it is a prostitution of the Lord’s way, and men are enemies of the Lord and His church when they so act!

Truth Magazine XXIII: 31, p. 509
August 9, 1979

They Became Fools

By Johnny Stringer

In describing man’s descent into the gross wickedness that characterized the world of his day, Paul says that when they turned from God, their thinking became vain and they became fools (Rom. 1:21-22). In their foolishness, they turned to idolatry (vv. 23-25). Few today would deny the foolishness of the idolatry practiced by the heathen, but it should be recognized that foolishness is the inevitable result of rejecting God. As rejection of God led to the foolishness of idolatry among the heathen, today it leads to philosophies that are equally foolish.

For example, the rejection of God has led to the exceedingly foolish philosophy of evolution, as men have sought to explain the universe apart from God. Nothing could be more outlandish and far-fetched than that theory. To say this is not to reflect on the intelligence of its defenders, for many of them are highly educated and intelligent people. The reason they hold to a foolish philosophy is that they have accepted the basic premise that there is no God, and apart from God there can be no sensible explanation as to our origin. Consequently, no matter how intelligent and educated a man may be, if he leaves God out of his thinking, any explanation he devises will of necessity be a foolish one.

The foolishness of the evolutionary theory led Malcolm Muggeridge, well-known British intellectual, to say, “I boldly say it won’t be even a joke in the history books. People would laugh their heads off to think that people of an educated generation could take so very literally a notion so silly.” I have long said that if the world stands long enough, the theory of evolution will be discarded as so many other human theories have been. The fad will have passed, having had its heyday, and future generations will look back and smugly chuckle at the foolish notion held by people back in the unenlightened twentieth century. Unbelievers of that future day, however, will have replaced the evolutionary philosophy with one which is just as foolish; for, apart from God, there can be no sensible explanation for our origin, and any theory they devise will of necessity be foolish.

Truth Magazine XXIII: 31, p. 508
August 9, 1979