The Arminian view is by far the most popular of the four views of the atonement in the Christian church today.
However, serious objections must be lodged against Arminian universal redemption, among which are these:
- It slanders God's attributes, such as his love. Arminianism presents a love that actually doesn't
save. It is a love that loves and then, if refused, turns to hatred and anger. It is not unchangeable love that
endures from everlasting to everlasting. It provides atonement for all, but then withholds the means of grace
that would make that salvation effectual in all lives. Are we to believe that Christ died for everyone in the
deepest jungle and the darkest city, but his love doesn't provide the missionaries, preachers, or sermons that
would make his death effectual?
- It slanders God's wisdom. Why would God make a plan to save everyone, then not carry it out? Would
he be so foolish as to have his Son pay for the salvation of all if he knew that Christ would not be able to
obtain what he paid for? Some say he didn't realise the consequences; he saw far enough to provide atonement,
but couldn't see that some wouldn't take it. Does not that assertion slander the wisdom of God? Could God plan
and provide atonement, but not realise that his atonement would not be accepted?
I would feel foolish if I went into a store and bought something, then walked out without it. Yet Arminianism
asks us to believe that this is true of salvation — that there was a purchase made, a redemption, and yet the
Lord walked away without those whom he had redeemed. That view slanders the wisdom of God.
- It slanders God's power. Arminian universalism obliges us to believe that God was able to accomplish
the meriting aspect of salvation, but that the applying aspect is dependent on man and his free will. It asks us
to believe that God has worked out everyone's salvation up to a point, but no further for anyone. The
implication is that God has built the bridge of salvation between him and us, and we have only to walk over it
by accepting his terms of salvation through a free act of the will. 'God does his part,' Arminians say, 'and now
we must do our part.'
Calvinists respond by saying that this makes salvation dependent on the will of humanity, thereby reducing God
and his power. Instead of our coming to God with our withered hands and saying, 'If Thou wilt, Thou canst make
us whole,' this view has God coming to us with a withered hand, a hand that is not strong enough to save anyone,
and saying, 'If thou wilt, thou canst complete this salvation; thou canst make me whole.' In essence, modern
evangelistic sermons often take such an approach: 'God has done much, but he needs you to complete the job.'
Does that way of thinking not slander the all-sufficient power of God? It makes God dependent on the will of
man.
- It slanders God's justice. Did Christ satisfy God's justice for everyone? Did Christ take the
punishment due to everybody? If he did, how can God punish anyone? Is it justice to punish one person for the
sins of another and later to punish the initial offender again? As Augustus Toplady said,
Payment God cannot twice demand;
First at my bleeding Surety's hand,
And then again at mine.
God can't and won't demand payment twice. Double punishment is injustice.
- It disables the deity of Christ A defeated Saviour is not God. This error teaches that Christ tried
to save everyone but didn't succeed. It denies the power and efficacy of Christ's blood, since not all for whom
he died are saved. Hence, Christ's blood was wasted on Judas and Esau. Much of his labour, tears, and blood was
poured out in vain. In other words, he will not see of the travail of his soul and be satisfied (Isa.
53:11) on behalf of many for whom he died. There will be many miscarriages — those with whom he travailed in
soul yet who will not ultimately be saved. Does such defeat not make Christ less than God? No wonder Charles H.
Spurgeon called this a 'monstrous' doctrine.1
- It undermines the unity of the Trinity. Just as parents must work together to run a family
effectively, so the triune God co-labours in each of his persons with identical purposes and goals. One person
cannot possibly have in mind to save some that another person has not determined to save, but Arminian
universalism implicitly teaches just that. It denies the Father's sovereign election, since Christ would have
died for more than God decreed to save, thereby making Christ seem to have a different agenda from that of the
Father. That would have been anathema to Jesus, who asserted that his entire redemptive ministry was
consciously designed to carry out a divinely arranged plan (John 6:38-39). T. J. Crawford writes,
The atonement originated in the love of God. It is the consequence and not the cause of God's
willingness to save sinners. In this light the Savior Himself is careful to present it. Instead of ascribing to
His Father all the sternness and severity, and claiming as His own all the tenderness and compassion, He
takes special pains to impress us with the assurance that the purpose of His mission was to proclaim the loving
message and to execute the loving will of His Father who is in heaven.2
In the atonement, we are not running from the Father, who as a stern Judge is ready to condemn us, to the Son,
who is more gracious than the Father. Rather, in the atonement we have a way to run to the Father and rest in
him, for Christ's sake, the way a child runs to and rests in the lap of his or her father.
Then, too, Arminian redemption divides Christ from Christ, as it were. Calvinism insists that Christ's entire
priestly work must be viewed as a harmonious whole. His expiation by atoning death and his priestly intercession
are co-extensive. What an oxymoron it is to maintain that Christ died for everyone but intercedes only for some
(John 17:2, 4, 6, 9, 12, 20, 24).
Finally, Arminian redemption disavows the saving ministry of the Holy Spirit, since it claims that Christ's
blood has a wider application than does the Spirit's saving work. Any presentation of salvation that makes the
Father's or the Spirit's work in salvation lag behind Christ's work contradicts the inherent unity of the
Trinity. The Father and the Son are one. The Spirit and the Son are one. Christ cannot possibly have died for
those whom the Father did not decree to save and in whom the Spirit does not savingly work. God cannot be at
odds with himself. Arminianism is inconsistent universalism.
- It rejects all of the other points of Calvinism. The Arminian view of the atonement rejects the
doctrine of man's total depravity, teaching that man has the ability within himself to receive and accept
Christ. It rejects unconditional election, teaching that God elects on the basis of foreseen faith. It
rejects irresistible grace, teaching that man's will is stronger than God's. It rejects perseverance of the
saints, teaching that man can apostatize from the faith. J. I. Packer says,
It cannot be over-emphasized that we have not seen the full meaning of the cross till we have seen
it as the centre of the gospel, flanked on the one hand by total inability and unconditional election and on the
other by irresistible grace and final preservation.3
- It detracts from the glory of God. If God does everything in salvation, he gets all the glory. But
if God can only do so much and not everything, then the person who completes the bridge gets at least some
glory. That is why there is so much emphasis in mass evangelism on the free will of man. The glory of God is not
exalted, and neither is the glory of Christ lifted up for providing a perfect and complete salvation. We are
told of the free will of man, without which salvation cannot be put into effect. We are told to exercise our
free will without being told that this will is in bondage due to our depraved nature. We cannot freely choose
God and salvation on our own. We cannot complete the bridge. God completes the bridge, as we are told in 1
Corinthians 1:18-31, so that 'no flesh should glory in his presence.' Universal atonement exalts the will of man
and debases the glory of God.
- It undermines thankfulness and assurance. Why should I thank God for something that I achieved? If
the Lord Jesus did no more for me than he did for Judas and the inhabitants of Sodom, why should I thank him
rather than myself? And if there are some for whom Christ died who are in hell today, how can I be sure the
atonement will atone for me?
- It perverts evangelism. We repeatedly hear today in evangelistic messages: "Christ died for you.
What will you do for him?' But do we ever find in the Bible that someone is told personally, 'Christ died for
you'? Rather, we find the work of Christ explained, followed by a call to everyone: 'Repent and believe the
gospel.' The message is not 'Believe that Christ died for you' or 'Believe that you are one of the elect.' It is
'Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you will be saved.'
- It disparages the intrinsic efficacy of the atonement itself. Arminians teach that Christ's work
induces the Father to accept graciously what Jesus accomplished in the place of a full satisfaction of his
justice. It is as if Jesus persuaded his Father to accept something less than justice demanded. That is why
Arminius claimed that when God saved sinners, he moved from his throne of justice to his throne of grace. But
God does not have two thrones; his throne of justice is his throne of grace (Psa. 85:10). Arminianism
forgets that the atonement does not win God's love but is the provision of his love. In that provision, Christ
paid the full price of justice. He did not make a down payment on the debt owed; he paid the full price of sin
so that the Father as Judge could justly cancel the debt (Heb. 10:14-18).
Arminianism, then, is ultimately inconsistent universalism, as John Owen showed powerfully in his A Display
of Arminianism. Owen explains the fallacy of the Arminian view of the divine design of the atonement as
follows:
God imposed his wrath due unto, and Christ underwent the pains of hell, for, either all the sins of
all men, or all the sins of some men, or some sins of all men. If the last, some sins of all men, then have all
men some sins to answer for, and so shall no man be saved. If the second, that is it which we affirm, that
Christ in their stead and room suffered for all the sins of all the elect in the world. If the first, why, then,
are not all freed from the punishment of all their sins? You will say, 'Because of their unbelief; they will not
believe.' But this unbelief, is it a sin, or not? If not, why should they be punished for it? If it be, then
Christ underwent the punishment due to it, or not. If so, then why must that hinder them more than their other
sins for which he died from partaking of the fruit of his death? If he did not, then did he not die for all
their sins.4
Notes:
1. Autobiography, Volume 1:
The Early Years (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 1962), p. 172. This chapter from The Early Years is
also available in booklet form from the Trust, A Defence of Calvinism.
2. The Doctrine of Holy Scripture Respecting the Atonement (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1954), p. 192. My
heartfelt thanks to David Murray for several thoughts contained in this article.
3. Quoted in John Blanchard, The Complete Gathered Gold (Darlington, England: Evangelical Press, 2006),
p. 35; cf. Ronald Cammenga and Ronald Hanko, Saved by Grace: A Study of the Five Points of Calvinism
2nd ed. (Grandville, Mich.: Reformed Free Publishing Association, 2002), pp. 122-123.
4. The Works of John
Owen, Volume 10 (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 1967), pp. 173-4.
Taken with permission from the October 2009 Banner of Sovereign Grace Truth. Note 1
added.
|