____________________________________________________ THE GOSPEL OBSERVER ____________________________________________________ "Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations...teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age" (Matthew 28:19,20). ____________________________________________________ July 22, 2007 ____________________________________________________ Contents: 1) "Having Predestinated Us" (Donnie V. Rader) 2) The Divine Perspective (Dan S. Shipley) 3) News & Notes ____________________________________________________ -1- "Having Predestinated Us" by Donnie V. Rader Ephesians 1:5 teaches predestination. That is undeniable. The text says, "having predestined us to adoption as sons by Jesus Christ to Himself, according to the good pleasure of His will." Just what does that mean? This passage has been greatly perverted by those who have bought John Calvin's thoughts on salvation. Misunderstanding and Abuse of the Text Calvinism teaches an unconditional and individual predestination. This is necessary in view of their doctrine of total depravity. This says that man is born in sin and is completely depraved. He is unable to do any good. He cannot believe unless God causes him to believe. Thus, any election (chosen to be saved) would have to be unconditional. Consider how the Calvinists use Ephesians 1:5. In The Doctrines Of Grace, Lasserre Bradley, Jr. (speaker for Baptist Bible Hour) has a chapter on each of the major points of Calvinism. In his chapter on unconditional election he says, "election is a sovereign act of God whereby He chooses certain individuals from the fallen race to eternal life for the glory of His name.... One of the clearest definitions of the doctrine of election is found in the first chapter of Ephesians" (p. 14). He then quotes verses 3-5 and applies them to his chapter heading: "Unconditional Election." He adds, "By unconditional election, we mean that the choice of God was not conditional on anything within man" (p. 16). Notice two things in the above quotes. Mr. Bradley says that Ephesians 1:5 teaches an election or predestination that is (1) unconditional and (2) individual. Thus, Calvinists wrest this text to say that before creation God arbitrarily and unconditionally selected certain individuals to be saved and certain individuals to be lost. The Context of Ephesians 1:5 The book of Ephesians is about God's eternal purpose in Christ Jesus (cf. Eph. 1:9-10 and 3:10-11). Chapter one describes the blessings we have in Christ through God's eternal purpose. Chapter two describes the object of God's eternal purpose: salvation. Chapter three tells of the revelation of God's eternal purpose. Back to chapter one. Verses 3-14 tell of the blessings that we have in Christ: (1) All spiritual blessings -- v. 3, (2) We were chosen before the foundation of the world -- v. 4, (3) We were predestinated -- v. 5, (4) We receive God's grace -- v. 6, (5) We have redemption through the blood of Christ -- v. 7, (6) God has made known to us the mystery of his will -- v. 9, (7) We have an inheritance -- v. 11, (8) We receive the Holy Spirit -- v. 13. The point I want us to see is that the context is dealing with God's eternal plan. The Meaning of the Text 1. Predestinated defined. The word "predestinated" means to "mark out beforehand, to determine before, foreordain" (W.E. Vine, I:305). Darby's translation says "having marked us out beforehand" in Ephesians 1:5. Both the ASV and Young's Literal Translation render this phrase, "having foreordained us." 2. Two questions. No one can or should deny that our text teaches that God marked out our salvation beforehand. However, we must ask: (a) Is the predestination conditional or unconditional? (b) Did God select particular individuals or did he select salvation in Christ and all in him are chosen? 3. Conditional. Receiving salvation (being chosen or elected) is conditional upon our obedience to the gospel. Consider these simple texts. "And having been perfected, He became the author of eternal salvation to all who obey Him" (Heb. 5:9). "Blessed are those who do His commandments, that they may have the right to the tree of life, and may enter through the gates into the city" (Rev. 22:14). "Not everyone who says to Me, 'Lord, Lord,' shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven" (Matt. 7:21). "Therefore it is of faith that it might be according to grace..." (Rom 4:16). If predestination is conditional, then the Calvinist concept of the text is wrong. 4. The selection is not particular individuals but choosing that those who are obedient will be saved. "God foreordained that all those who voluntarily choose to walk by faith in Christ shall be added to his family by adoption. God willed in his love that those in Christ should be his sons with the full benefit of inheritance" (C.G. "Colly" Caldwell, Truth Commentaries: Ephesians, 21). "God foreordained the provisions of salvation, the characters that should be saved, and the conditions and tests by which they would be saved. He left every man free to choose or reject the terms and provisions of salvation and in so doing to refuse to form the character God has foreordained to be his children and so predestined to everlasting life" (David Lipscomb, Gospel Advocate Commentaries: Ephesians, Philippians and Colossians, 19-20). B.W. Johnson said, "The whole line of argument is general instead of particular" (Peoples' NT Commentary; On-line edition). This is much like a man predestinating (marking out beforehand) a secretary. His choosing is not unconditional nor is it a "marking out" of a particular individual. Before he hires anyone he marks out the qualifications. She must take shorthand, do word processing on the computer, have some knowledge of his type of business, have at least two years of college, and be in good health. She must meet these conditions. He did predestinate her. No, he did not arbitrarily choose Sally Jane. But he chose the qualities of the person who would be hired. Sally Jane meets those and is hired. We can easily see how that works with God's eternal plan. -- Via Guardian of Truth XLI: 4 p. 20-21, February 20, 1997 ____________________________________________________ -2- The Divine Perspective by Dan S. Shipley God's thoughts and ways are not ours, we can still become partakers of the divine nature (2 Pet. 1:4). In fact, an important part of our growing-up in Christ (Eph. 4:13) lies in the development of our ability to see and evaluate things from God's point of view; to acquire the Divine perspective. That means the capacity to view things in their true relations and according to their relative importance. And that, in turn, requires a recognition of an ultimate and unchanging standard of right beyond which there is no appeal. The word of God is that standard; it is the revelation of the Divine viewpoint (2 Tim. 3:16; Rom. 1:16,17) and the means whereby we acquire it. Consequently, as we hear, learn, and accept gospel truth we come to faith (Rom. 10:17) and, thus, to the Saviour (Jn. 6:45) and salvation. To walk by faith (2 Cor. 5:7) is to live with the Divine perspective; to allow Truth to flavor every facet of life. It is not the Bible in the hand or on the shelf that counts, but the Bible in the heart and mind (Heb. 10:16). That's the only thing that can produce within us the mind of Christ (Phil. 2:5); it's the only way we can become spiritually minded (Rom. 8:6). Otherwise, we remain without faith, carnally minded, making our judgments and evaluations from the human viewpoint, and, like the Gentiles of old, walk in the vanity of the mind, darkened in understanding, and alienated from the life of God (Eph. 4:17, 18). This is the problem afflicting our world today and if such sinners are changed, it will be a change that begins from within; in the mind. Therefore, in vain do sinners wait for God to favor them with a "Holy Ghost experience"; in vain do they appeal to their feelings as evidence of salvation; and in vain do we imagine that a few external changes indicate true conversion. In vain do we devise ways and means to convert sinners and edify saints by appealing to their carnal nature. The human viewpoint conceives of building up the church through bus ministries, "fellowship" halls, "Family Life Centers," and social activities. Every such effort is a reflection on the sufficiency of the gospel of Christ -- if not an outright apology for it. The gospel is still powerful enough to save every sinner in this world; it is still able to build us up into what God wants us to be and to give us that eternal inheritance! The desperate need of our day is for men of conviction; men who will place their faith in God and His word and quit looking to the devices and innovations of "Egypt" for their help (2 Kgs. 18:21). Even from the beginning, many did not see Jesus' teaching as making much sense. "Blessed are the poor in spirit"? Blessed are the meek, the mourners, the persecuted?? How ridiculous! -- from the human point of view. So is going the second mile, loving your enemies, and turning the other cheek. No wonder they were "astonished at his teaching" (Matt. 7:28). Some still are. They are the ones who say, "I don't see why...", or, "What difference does it make...?" By such reasoning do men walk in the vanity of their minds. Such minds need transforming (Rom. 12:2); we all need the divine perspective. -- Via Plain Talk, January 1984 ____________________________________________________ -3- News & Notes James and Ann Webb (former members of the Park Forest church of Christ in Baton Rouge) were in a serious car accident Thursday, while on their way to Utah to see their new grandbaby. James is okay, but Ann sustained various injuries. Let those of us who are Christians be remembering them in prayer. The church at Park Forest will begin meeting this week on Tuesdays -- instead of Wednesdays -- for their midweek service. This is so Jeff Carr (who preaches for the Northshore church of Christ in Mandeville) will be able to teach their adult class. It will begin at 7 PM. ____________________________________________________ MYRTLE STREET CHURCH OF CHRIST 1022 Myrtle Street Denham Springs, LA 70726 (225) 664-8208 Sunday: 9:15 AM, 10:00 AM, 4:00 PM Wednesday: 7:00 PM evangelist/editor: Tom Edwards (225) 667-4520 e-mail: tedwards@onemain.com web site: http://home.onemain.com/~tedwards/go ____________________________________________________