Friday, October 31, 2008

October 31st look at the Presidential Election


The presidential election is only 4 days away and I have a mixed bag of emotions coming in to the election. Number one, I am a political junkie and am excited about November 4th. Being the nerd that I am, I have taken off a half day from work on November 4th in order to watch the election coverage from 1:00pm until I get tired of watching it (which will probably be in the wee hours of the morning of November 5th). I enjoy watching elections because it is democracy in action. On the other hand, by this time in October during general elections, I get campaign fatigue and am tired of all the "back and forth". I have already voted in the election, so I am somewhat relieved that my decision has already been made (although I will not make it public).
In an attempt to be non-partisan and have some pre-election analysis (as if anybody is going to care what I think...), here are some trends that I can see happening in this election:
1. Obama is the projected winner going into election day: although anything can happen in 4 days, the electoral map is largely favoring the Democrat candidate. Although there is significant tightening going on over the past couple of days, the electoral math is pointing to a significant victory for Obama.
2. Electoral Map: All the states that are considered "swing states" are states that George W. Bush carried in 2004. Barack Obama is currently leading in most of those. The only toss ups at the moment are Missouri, North Carolina, Indiana, Florida that could be considered swing states. The shocking thing is that not only are these states close, but also Montana, Georgia, and North Dakota. If Obama wins any of these swing states, McCain is in serious trouble. If McCain loses Florida (where Obama is currently leading and turn out is heavily Democrat in early voting), its over. McCain's only path to victory is centered on Pennsylvania. If McCain loses PA, there is litle or no chance that he can get to 270. Obama has been in double digit leads for weeks now, but Mason-Dixon released a poll yesterday showing that Obama only had a 4% lead. This can either be an outlier or the beginning of a surge for McCain in this state. It will be interesting to see the polling over the weekend and on Monday in this all important state. Really, if you want to look at it, you don't even need to worry about national polling numbers or electoral map coverage. All you really need to do is focus on Pennsylvania. If Obama wins this state, he basically only has to win one other swing state to win the election. If McCain wins PA, he doesn't win the election by default, but at least this would give him a "path" to 270. If McCain can win PA and sweep the swing states, he is our next President. This, "my friends", is a difficult proposition.
3. What can turn this election around for McCain?: well, not much. Wednesday, Barack Obama had a 30 minute informercial that attracted 33 MILLION viewers nationwide. It will be interesting to see what the polling will indicate of the effect of that media buy once Thursday is included in the mix. I would have to say that Obama gets some positive bump from it. This means that John McCain needs to do something to shake things up. With only 4 days to go, there is not much that he can do. Most of the polling is stabilizing and the early voting numbers are already getting locked in while Barack Obama is leading nationally. I read today that John McCain is going to be on Saturday Night Live. I don't know if this will provide the needed jolt. Sarah Palin showed up a week or so ago, and it did very little to help the numbers. The only thing that can happen to move this election to McCain is some sort of national security event that will focus the nation's attention away from the economy. In 2004 (on October 31st I believe), an Osama Bin Laden video was posted on national television declaring certain attacks on U.S. soil. Most political pundits would say that this video was one of the main reasons why Bush won re-election. I am afraid that something like that would have to happen in order to turn things around. McCain has tried the last couple of days to move the focus to national security by simply talking about it from the stump. That is not going to help much.
4. What about the Bradley effect? The Bradley effect is where African Americans in politics seem to poll better in the days leading up the election and then perform much more poorly than the polling indicated. In other words, voters would tell a pollster that they would be voting for the African American and then not do so in the voting booth. Even though it seemed that Bradley was at work in New Hampshire in the primaries, where Hillary Clinton came back from the dead, it does not seem that the general election will have the same effect. Number one, political historians say that the California election where Bradley lost, had polling that was not accurate. The polls did not track the significant tightening that was going on in the days leading up to the election. In New Hampshire, many political junkies site polling mistakes instead of change of hearts by the voters. Whatever the case, we all should want the election to be fair and we also hope that the polling is accurate one way or another. James Carville said on CNN a month ago after one of the debates in reference to the Bradley Effect that if Obama is consistently leading nationally by 5% or better going into election day, and then loses the election, it will be a bad day for American politics. Everyone can imagine what could happen. Let's hope that November 4th has a clear winner without any talk of the Bradley Effect. Unfortunately, if McCain wins, it will be considered the greatest comeback in political history AND EVERYONE will be talking about the Bradley Effect, which will be renamed the Obama Effect.
I am looking forward to November 4th, and I am sure you are too!

Thursday, October 30, 2008

The Holy Spirit and Inclusivism

The following was a forum question in my Systematic Theology class at Southern Seminary and my response to the question. Feel free to comment and add to the discussion!

Since the Holy Spirit “blows where he wills” (John 3.8) discuss the implications of his work among non-Christian communities.

The idea that other people groups can encounter salvation apart from the Christian model through Jesus Christ is a very controversial issue. I would highly recommend the book 4 Views on Salvation in a Pluralistic World edited by Stan Gundry. In that work, the pluralist, inclusivist, and particularist views are laid out with the particularist view being represented by a moderate and conservative branch. I tend to (at this point) side with Alister McGrath in this work as a Particularist / Agnostic. The theme of Scripture from beginning to end is found in the person and work of Christ and the sovereignty of God. I cannot see through the biblical evidence a way to salvation except through the blood of Christ and His grace through faith. The Holy Spirit is the agency by which that salvation process is worked out in each believer. I enjoyed reading the specifics of this process in Ferguson's book and was enlightened as to the implications of the biblical record on the Spirit's work in salvation. It made me have a fresh look at the entire doctrine and the Spirit's work in my own life! With regards to the question posed here, Ferguson points out in his work that the role of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit in the Trinity are to glorify the other members of the Trinity. Therefore, the Spirit's work is found within the parameters of the glory of the Son and of the Father. The Spirit will not do anything that does not glorify the Son and the Father and vice versa. John Piper in his excellent book Desiring God says that the chief end of God is to Glorify God and enjoy himself forever. The Triune God's main task throughout eternity has been His glory for His name sake. That means that the Holy Spirit will work and act in concert with the Son and the Father. I don't see how salvation or a working of the Spirit can occur outside the preaching of Christ crucified and resurrected and of God the Father and His providential plan for humanity. Nonetheless, I am not God nor will ever consider myself knowledgable to understand the fullness of His mysteries - and the question of the eternal destiny of those who are "moral pagans" of this era or of antiquity is definitely a mystery! Therefore, I must claim that I am agnostic in that regard and defer to the sovereignty of God and his perfect plan for all the universe.

Nonetheless, I must say that Jesus did say that "I am the way, the truth, and the life and no one comes to the Father except through me" (John 14:6). That passage (in the midst of Jesus' discussion of the Holy Spirit who was to come) along with the witness of scripture points on a Christocentric salvation experience. Anyone who feels that they can come to a salvation experience outside of Christ is "playing with fire". Although I am saying that I cannot be one hundred percent sure that moral individuals of other faiths will be condemned, I certainly would not want to "test" the Lord on that issue. I would much rather now "fall on my knees and confess Jesus as Lord and Savior" (Philippians 2:5-11) than as to wait until the day of Judgement and be forced to do it and then hope for an exception to the rule.

The Sufficiency of the Atonement

The following post is a forum contribution that I made in my Systematic Theology III course this semester on the sufficiency of the atonement. Enjoy and comment at your leisure!

From your notes, explain and evaluate James P. Boyce's statement, “The atoning work of Christ was not sufficient for the salvation of man.” [James P. Boyce, Abstract of Systematic Theology, 367-68.]

The Atoning Work of Christ is not sufficient for the Salvation of Man

Taken at face value and out of context, this is a startling comment by J.P. Boyce, the founder of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.[1] The atoning work of Christ was effectual in that it, as Boyce puts it, “removed…all the obstacles in the way of God’s pardon of the sinner”. Without the atonement, salvation could not take place. In other words, the atonement was a work of Christ to God so that the righteous judgment of God could be atoned for at the cross instead of on the souls of humanity as a whole. The atonement declares the righteousness of God and the holiness of God. The atonement makes it possible for God to save the elect for the sake of His own glory and righteousness. As Boyce puts it, it is a “Godward” act. The atonement places humanity in a position to where they can now have a relationship with God. The atonement along with the resurrection of Christ is the Gospel’s power.
Nonetheless, even if the atonement is essential for salvation, it is not completely sufficient for the salvation of the sinner. Individually and positionally speaking the sinner as a human being is still at enmity with God. If the atonement was all that was sufficient for the salvation of the unbeliever, then the atonement would have resulted in a universal salvation for all of humanity. Maybe this is what liberal theological thought would like to be the case, but it is simply not biblical. The atonement crashes down the barriers, tears the veil in two, grants access to God in a personal relationship, but it does not justify the sinner. The sinner is still a sinner. The sinner needs to hear the gospel, but because of the sinful nature in the unbeliever, that Gospel falls on deaf ears. This is the case, even though, as Boyce points out, the Gospel “has all the elements which should secure its acceptance.” This passage from Boyce’s Abstract of Systematic Theology is focused on the effectual calling of the elect, whereby God gives to those who are to be saved “such influences of the Spirit as will lead to their acceptance of the call.” However, as Dr. Moore mentioned in the lecture on this topic, even the effectual calling itself also does not save anyone. It is by the grace of God, through faith, that one is saved. This faith involves a knowledge of the Gospel truth, an assent that the gospel is the truth, and a trust in the person of Christ for salvation. As George E. Ladd questions, “Is the Kingdom of heaven to be entered merely by taking the name of Jesus upon one’s lips and making a verbal confession?”[2] Ladd answers that question by saying, “In Christ, the Kingdom now confronts us. The life of the Age to Come now stands before us. The One who shall tomorrow be the Judge of all men has already come into history. He faces us with one demand: decision.”[3] The Kingdom of God makes a demand for a decision. Yes, the atonement was necessary for salvation, but it is not sufficient. This decision is to be resolute, urgent, radical, costly, and eternal.[4] The decision points to all the work of God in the salvation experience, including Christ’s atonement over two millennia ago, but it is a crucial ingredient. The salvation experience is a glorious and mysterious working of God in the life of the believer. One must not over emphasize the importance of one particular aspect. Each phase of salvation has its place and its effect. When one experiences this phenomenon, the believer can only say, “Amazing Grace!”
[1] All quotations of James P. Boyce come from Abstract of Systematic Theology, p. 367-68 as referenced in the class lecture outline notes.
[2] George E. Ladd, The Gospel of the Kingdom: Scriptural Studies in the Kingdom of God (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans), 96.
[3] Ibid
[4] Ibid, 98-106.

New Poll - Mars Hill Election

Please see the new poll that I have posted to the left. Please vote to see who you will be voting for November 4th, 2008.

Thanks!

Josh

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Back in the Saddle with a Question

After another month long absence since my "sorry for the absence" post (ironic isn't it), I am ready to ruminate further. My schooling is now in full swing and I am getting into the reading. As my inquisitive mind thinks upon the books I am reading, I will post questions on the blog for your consideration.

First off is this: John Piper in his books Desiring God and Brother, We are NOT Professionals mentions an idea called "Christian Hedonism", in which he makes this statement:

"God's chief end is to glorify God and enjoy His glory forever." and "God loves His glory more than He loves us, and this is the foundation of His love for us."

What do you think of these statements? Do they comfort you or infuriate you? I will discuss this more deeply in the comments as I get the responses.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Sorry for the absence

I apologize for the recent absence from Mars Hill. Of course, this is a very introductory blog, so I will see what I can do to get this going to the point that it is useable by other people. I will be starting seminary in August and will most definitely have many things to discuss on the blog at that time. I am also considering opening a more personal blog about myself soon. I may or may not do that. In the meantime, please be patient with me as I think on where to go on this site.

Thanks!

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Human Freedom Within the Providence of God by Gaius Tertullian

The providence of God has become a controversial issue in modern Christian theological thought. Since the dawning of the Enlightenment in the 18th century, secular humanists and liberal theologians have been questioning classical views regarding the relationship between divine sovereignty and human freedom. Although the providence of God is shrouded in mystery and is difficult to comprehend, this doctrine has serious implications in a Christian’s view of God, His eternal plan, His omnipotence and omniscience, and His care for His creation. This paper seeks to answer the main question if God controls all things, then how can human actions have real meaning? What is the meaning of human freedom? Does God will or direct people to sin? Are human beings truly accountable for their actions? How does the doctrine of providence impact how Christians are to view their relationship to God and their service for His Kingdom? These are serious questions that must be answered prayerfully and with great consideration. What is providence? Simply put, providence means the “continuing action of God by which he preserves in existence the creation which he has brought into being, and guides it to his intended purposes for it.”[1] Although the doctrine of providence also covers the concepts of God’s preservation of His creation and God’s government over His creation so that it fulfills His plans, this paper focuses on the concept of providential concurrence. Concurrence describes how God “cooperates with created things in every action, directing their distinctive properties to cause them to act as they do.”[2] It is this concept that causes most of the divergence between theological and philosophical systems.
Most of the more popular providence models offered in modern theological debate are considered general providence models with an emphasis on the libertarian freedom of humanity as the basis of each doctrinal belief. A majority of these models lie on the fringes of orthodox Christian belief. The main perspectives that fall within this group are deism, process theology, and open theology. Deism, a model developed at the height of the Enlightenment, upholds that God has created a world governed by laws of physical and moral order. This view allows for total free will and random chance, but sacrifices divine sovereignty to the extreme, along with a list of other important Christian doctrines, such as special revelation and miracle. From the Deist perspective, God created the universe in accordance to natural laws He developed and ordained. Also, through this powerful creative act, those physical laws then behave in a regular, law-like way. Thus, God leaves these ordained laws alone and does nothing but preserves them in their motions and actions.[3] The same approach is applied to humanity, where God expects humans to “act wisely, in accordance with the rules of the established order,” but will not step in to impose his will on people and keep them from either their own improper behavior or from that of others. Random chance is considered to be the more logical explanation to human freedom.[4]
Process and Open theism have become popular alternatives to the traditional Christian beliefs regarding divine providence. According to process theism, God is a being that is not fully actualized, but becoming. Process theists identify God with the world and its natural processes. God has a plan for his creation, but his objectives are subject to influences outside of himself, mainly human activity. He takes these influences into himself and responds accordingly, so that he is in constant interaction with everything in creation, which places Him in a mutual, give-and-take relationship with them. In terms of God’s providential action in the world, this means God is continually at work in every situation, but is limited in his ability to achieve this because other beings have the ability to oppose his influences.[5] Open theism gets its name from the view that God is open to humanity, to whom he has given libertarian freedom, and that the future is open “because it will be brought about to a large degree by the decisions those creatures make.” God is omnipotent, but He has freely restricted His own power to control every event within creation by giving absolute free will to moral creatures. Due to the personal nature of God’s relationship with these spiritual and human moral creatures, he is influenced by them through their free activity as he impacts history through divine intervention, if needed. In God’s eternal plan, the open theist would argue that God willfully took a risk, deciding it was better to have a world with totally free creatures than to have a world that guaranteed his predetermined plan would always be done. Instead, He is working out all the details of that plan in the time and space that he created responding to the free actions of man in the process.[6]
Within traditional Christian thought, two theological systems have provided the basis of most of the theological conversation regarding providence. These two competing views are the Arminian position and Calvinism. The Calvinist view of providence was developed mainly out of the beliefs of Saint Augustine. According to Calvinist thought, God is totally in control of all aspects of his creation, including the action of human beings. Nothing occurs on earth that is apart from God’s eternal plan and is not fulfilling His will for His creation. This includes seemingly random or chance events and all aspects of our lives. Not only does God have the omnipotence to rule over the creation, but He also has the “choice and determination” over the world, that “nothing at all in the world is undertaken without his determination.”[7] Not only does Calvin assert that all things are controlled by the eternal decrees of God, but that God has the best reasons for his plan and that “however hidden and fugitive from our point of view” those reasons may be, “we must hold that they are surely laid up with him.”[8] Calvin, therefore, rejects the idea of an absolute, unrestrained, and libertarian free will. Reformed theologians assert this, mainly because Scripture “contains no hint that God has limited his sovereignty in any degree” regarding human freedom.[9]
Arminian thought, developed by the Dutch theologian Jacobus Arminius in the late 1500’s, is a reaction against the Calvinist model. Those who hold to an Arminian position maintain that in order to preserve the real human freedom and choices necessary for genuine human personhood, God cannot cause or plan our voluntary actions. Therefore, Arminian theologians conclude that God’s providential control of history must not include every specific detail of every event that happens, but that God simply reacts to human actions as they occur. God does this in such a way that his eternal objectives are ultimately achieved in his creation.[10] Against Calvinism, those who hold to the Arminian position assert that the verses in Scripture describing God’s providential control are “exceptions and do not describe the way that God ordinarily works.”[11] They also claim the Calvinist view makes God responsible for sin, and that human choices predetermined by God are coercive and cannot be truly authentic. Arminian theologians would maintain that their position encourages Christian accountability and devotion, while the Calvinist framework sets up a dangerous determinism. Thus, the difference even between the two most prominent evangelical Christian positions on providence is one not merely of terminology, but of genuine substance that must be biblically and theologically considered.
In light of these competing views, the basic concept that must be answered prior to formulating any model of providence is to determine what must be upheld as the highest priority in one’s theories. What is the theologian to start with? Is libertarian freedom the necessary starting place with regards to providence, or is it the sovereignty of God? Is one to begin with Scripture, or experiential logic? The answer to these questions determines the path one is to choose in the providence puzzle. Since theology at its core is the application of God’s Word to all areas of human life, then it is of extreme importance to start with the biblical data available and put together a theological model that best reflects the intent of Scripture.
A study of God’s Word will illustrate that Scripture clearly teaches that God is sovereign and man is responsible. These teachings are not simply exceptional descriptions of God’s divine action, but are a comprehensive catalog of passages that overwhelmingly illustrate God’s ordinary work in and through His creation, especially human beings. Therefore, if one removes absolute sovereignty from God, then he has lost the God of Scripture. The Psalmist states that “whatever the Lord pleases, He does, in heaven and in earth, in the seas and in all deeps.”[12] Paul writes in Ephesians that God “works all things after the counsel of His will.”[13] Even the most seemingly mundane processes in nature are to be attributed to God, where he providentially causes the grass to grow for the cattle and the vegetation for mankind,[14] and also feeding the birds of the air.[15] He also sends fire, hail, snow, clouds, and wind to fulfill His Word.[16]
But God is not only sovereign over the acts the natural order and the animal kingdom, but also over the free actions of humans. Even though the mind of man may plan his ways, “the Lord directs his steps.”[17] Even sinful actions are a part of God’s providential workings. Peter preached at Pentecost that Jesus was “delivered up by the predetermined plan and foreknowledge of God” and was “nailed to a cross by the hands of godless men.”[18] At one point in David’s reign, the Lord is said to have incited David to number the people, and thus sin.[19] At another point in David’s life, a rebel curses the king publicly, yet David realizes that the Lord is behind this and says, “Let him alone and let him curse, for the Lord has told him.”[20]
Not only does Scripture assert that God is absolutely sovereign, but the Bible also establishes that human beings are morally responsible creatures, who choose to make decisions that have real consequences and that they are truly accountable for their actions. Nonetheless, the biblical data never makes God’s decrees contingent upon the actions of humanity. Scripture teaches “that if you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you shall be saved.”[21] God also tests humanity to find out the intentions of our hearts, such as the time when God tested Abraham to see if he truly feared the Lord.[22] At the end of days, God will also judge humanity “according to their deeds.”[23]
Any theological model that upholds libertarian freedom as the inalienable right of humanity at the expense of restricting the total sovereignty of God does not hold a high view of Scripture as a whole. In light of the Scripture references listed above and the recognition that there a scores more found in the Bible, one should clearly see that the popularity of certain general providence models, such as openness and process theism, “undermines the very basis for an authoritative and inerrant Bible.”[24] It is therefore, in the light of Scripture, that the compatibilist view of divine providence appears to be the only providential model that holds high the biblical assertion of absolute sovereignty as it relates to human action.
In order to understand the concept of human freedom in light of divine sovereignty, one must properly define the term freedom. Do humans have libertarian freedom, or is it less absolute? Models that claim libertarian freedom assert that nothing significantly predisposes the human will in one direction or the other. While the sentiment of this argument is understandable, there is no scriptural basis to suggest that this is the case, as we have seen previously. Compatibilism interjects to say that through the providence of God, there are sufficient conditions and reasons that would determine the action to be taken. The cause of these conditions that predetermine the decision that will be taken is God himself. As long as these determinative reasons do not force the agent into an action, then the moral agent is free in his decision. Another scriptural aspect of freedom that rejects libertarianism is the freedom to be experienced in the heaven. In the life to come, human freedom will be perfected through the glorification of God, who will make us not able to sin. This freedom will not come from ourselves, but be totally from the power of the Lord after the resurrection of the body.[25] Perfected freedom will glory in total and unfettered submission to God’s will for eternity. This end goal of the context of freedom within the eternal plan of God rejects libertarianism.
How, then, does compatibilistic freedom work? If man is free in his actions, yet those actions are determined by God, then how can those actions not be forced? Although it appears rational to assume that if our choices are real they cannot be caused by God, it seems theologically better to affirm that “God causes all things that happen, but that he does so in such a way that he somehow upholds our ability to make willing, responsible choices.” These decisions “have real and eternal results, and for which we are held accountable.”[26] But this does not mean that human history is totally determined by the “radical intervention” of God.[27] Although the comprehensiveness of divine sovereignty should not be placed in doubt, God’s “providential care for the details of the lives of all his creatures does not require ceaseless interventions on his part.”[28] Much of what goes on in every day human life would be on the “order of divine permission.”[29] The term divine permission must be used very carefully, though. In fact, Calvin himself avoided using this term without extreme caution.
It seems absurd to them for man, who will soon be punished for his blindness, to be blinded by God’s will and command. Therefore, they escape by the shift that this is done only with God’s permission, not also by his will; but he, openly declaring that he is the doer, repudiates that evasion. However, that men can accomplish nothing except by God’s secret command, that they cannot by deliberating accomplish anything except what he has already decreed with himself and determines by his secret direction, is proved by innumerable and clear testimonies.[30]
Thus, we must not “in the place of God’s providence, substitute bare permission – as if God sat in a watchtower” acquiescing to the chance events unfolding in human history.[31] Thus, when every day human life and activity is described as falling under God’s divine permission, this is not a passive permission, but an active permission. But when permission is used to “indicate the manner of Divine ruling, by which He grants room within His ruling for human freedom and responsibility, then the line of Biblical thinking has not been wholly abandoned.” Thus, human freedom finds its place within God’s rule over his creation.[32]
But, if God’s omnipotence makes him able to achieve his will in all situations through providence, then is man truly responsible for his actions and decisions? In Scripture, the providence of God and human responsibility “do not exist together as something problematic. They both reveal the greatness of Divine activity, in that it does not exclude human activity and responsibility, but embraces them and in them manifests God on the way to the accomplishment of His purposes.”[33] To be morally responsible, humans must be significantly free since a person is not responsible for an action that is coerced or forced. But his does not mean that human decisions are completely random and indeterministic.
Radical indeterminism is as destructive of moral responsibility as coercion would be. If there are no reasons for a person’s choices, then those choices are as random as the number-selecting computer in a lottery and just as amoral. To be responsible, an act must be intentional. Thoroughly indeterministic or libertarian freedom is therefore not only unnecessary to “significant freedom,” it would destroy the intentional selfhood of that very freedom that indeterminists are so anxious to preserve.[34]
Therefore, the decisions of human beings are made for reasons and are not done in random fashion. God is able to accomplish his purposes through free human decisions because he “understands all of us” and his Spirit is active “within the mental worlds of rational beings.” God is able to guarantee that his plans are achieved “regardless of the power of creatures who are committed to preventing the realization of those purposes.” Nonetheless, people are accountable for the actions “they take within God’s all-determining providence, because God always deals with people as people and not as stones.”[35] What God purposes to accomplish, he is able to achieve in, through, and with his creatures, but he can do so without removing their authentic moral agency and responsibility.[36]
If God is the ultimate cause of all actions and willing choices of humanity, then is God responsible for the deliberative and rebellious decisions by human beings against the moral law of God? Without delving into the problem of evil in this paper, it is still necessary to refute this charge. J.P. Boyce offers a comprehensive answer to God’s relationship to human sin. Although we can have no doubt that he could have prevented sin to exist, there is “nothing in its existence which makes him its author or shows any unholy action on his part in its introduction.”[37] Biblical data and human experience teach us a few truths regarding the relationship between God and sin. First, sin only exists according to the purpose of God. Along that line, sin cannot occur “at any time nor in any form without his permission. While he does not actively originate it, he holds such absolute control over it that no single event in connection with it can take place without his permission.”[38] Sin cannot accomplish any goal, which God has not providentially intended, nor can it “go any farther than the limits he has assigned.” Through sin, God works out his own righteous purposes. Another important truth is that the “same act may be sinful in the sinner” but not to God. This is true because God has “supreme control over life and property. Man has not.” Also, the sinful acts of human beings may be utterly reprehensible and vile, yet the concurrence of God in those acts is “altogether most holy.”[39]
The compatibalist view of God’s providence provides God’s children with reassuring and motivating implications for the Christian life. First, Christians must understand that compatibilism does not encourage them to sit back and wait in laziness for certain events to take place. To say that Christians are trusting in God instead of acting responsibly is pure slothfulness and is a misrepresentation of the doctrine of providence. Thus, a belief in the comprehensive providence of God is not an impediment but a call to action, such as Christian service, evangelism, and missions work.[40] The compatibalist view also encourages believers to not be afraid in the conditions of life, but to place their trust in the Lord’s omnipotent care. Finally, the compatibilist view points to the scriptural truth that nothing occurs on earth by mere luck or chance. Therefore, Christians should give thanks for all good things that occur, for it is the Lord who is bringing these events about.[41] On the flip side of this observation, if bad things occur in life, one ought to not assign the calamity to random chance, but realize that God is always in control and is mysteriously working out His eternal plan even through the tragic moments of life. That is the God who has revealed Himself through Scripture, and it is the God that all Christians should joyfully worship and serve.

[1]Millard Erickson, Christian Theology (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983), 387.
[2]Wayne Grudem, Systematic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1994), 317.
[3]Paul Helm, The Providence of God, Contours of Christian Theology (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1993), 73.
[4]Terrance Tiessen, Providence and Prayer: How Does God Work in the World?(Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2000), 31.
[5]Ibid., 52
[6]Ibid., 71.
[7]John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, ed. John T. McNeill, trans. Ford Lewis Battles, The Library of Christian Classics, vol. 20 (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1960), 205.
[8]Ibid., 211.
[9]John M. Frame, The Doctrine of God (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2002), 144.
[10]Grudem, Systematic Theology, 338.
[11]Ibid., 339.
[12]Psalm 135:6
[13]Ephesians 1:11
[14]Psalm 104:14
[15]Matthew 6:26
[16]Psalm 148:8
[17]Proverbs 16:9
[18]Acts 2:23
[19]2 Samuel 24:1
[20]2 Samuel 16:11
[21]Romans 10:9
[22]Genesis 22:14
[23]Revelation 20:14
[24]Stephen J. Wellum, “The Inerrancy of Scripture,” in Beyond the Bounds: Open Theism and the Undermining of Biblical Christianity, ed. John Piper, Justin Taylor, and Paul Kjoss Helseth (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 2003), 274.
[25]Anthony A. Hoekema, Created in God’s Image (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1986), 243.
[26]Grudem, Systematic Theology, 321.
[27]G.C. Berkouwer, The Providence of God, trans. Lewis B. Smedes (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1952), 92.
[28]Tiessen, Providence & Prayer, 303.
[29]Ibid, 304.
[30]Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, 1:229.
[31]Ibid., 1:231.
[32]Berkouwer, Providence of God, 140.
[33]Ibid., 98.
[34]Tiessen, Providence & Prayer, 312-313.
[35]Ibid., 314.
[36]Ibid., 315.
[37]James Petigru Boyce, Abstract of Systematic Theology (Philadelphia: American Baptist Publication Society, 1887), 225.
[38]Ibid., 226.
[39]Ibid.
[40]Grudem, Systematic Theology, 335.
[41]Ibid., 337.