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Does Scripture Teach Prevenient Grace in the Wesleyan Sense?
(chapter 18 in the book, Still Sovereign)
Dr. Thomas R. Schreiner
This chapter explores whether the Wesleyan
concept of prevenient grace can be supported from the Scriptures. Before
examining this question, I want to emphasize that there is a significant area
of common ground between Wesleyans and Calvinists. The disagreements that we
have in some areas can cause us to overlook the extent to which we agree on
major doctrines. In one arena of theology, namely, anthropology, the harmony
between Wesleyans and Calvinists is of the utmost importance and our harmony in
this area should be celebrated. Both camps acknowledge that fallen human beings
are born with a corrupt nature that is in bondage to sin, and that human beings
can do no good apart from the grace of God.
To sketch in the biblical data on the human
condition since the fall is helpful. Thereby we will see the extent to which
Wesleyans and Calvinists agree, and the gulf that the Wesleyan understanding of
prevenient grace creates between Arminians and Calvinists will also be
illuminated. Paul teaches that all human beings are born with a corrupt nature
inherited from Adam (Rom. 5:12-19). Without specifying the precise connection
between Adam’s sin and our condemnation-which is itself the subject of a long
theological controversy-it is clear from the text that we are sinners because
of Adam’s sin.[1]
Through Adam’s sin we died (Rom. 5:15,
17), are condemned (Rom. 5:16, 18), and are constituted as sinners (Rom. 5:19).[2]
Harmonizing with this portrait of humanity in
Romans 5 is Ephesians 2:3, which says we are by nature ”objects of wrath.”
Human beings by nature (physei) are
deserving of wrath, indicating that they are all born with a nature that is
sinful. The near context in Ephesians 2 confirms the depth of human depravity.
Human beings are ”dead in transgressions and sins” (Eph. 2:1; cf. 2:5 and Col.
2:13). The deadness of fallen humanity indicates that we are devoid of life
upon our entrance into the world. We have no inclination toward genuine
righteousness or goodness. Paul proceeds to say in Ephesians 2:2-3 that we
lived under the sway of the world, the devil, and the flesh before conversion.
What is in the consciousness of those who are
under the control of the ”flesh”? There is not necessarily a conscious
awareness of rebellion against God. Life in the flesh consists in ”gratifying
the cravings of our sinful nature and following its desires and thoughts” (Eph.
2:3). The desires of people who are “by nature objects of wrath” are naturally
and instinctively sinful desires. In other words, unregenerate people sm by
merely doing what they wish to do, by carrying out the motivations that are in
their hearts. Sinful desires dominate those who are in the flesh.
Is there biblical warrant for saying that the
desires of the unregenerate are dominated by sin? Ephesians 2:3 suggests such a
conclusion in saying that people are dead in trespasses and sins and that they
are ”by nature objects of wrath.” The trespasses and sins flow from a nature
that is sinful and warrants God’s wrath. Titus 3:3 confirms such a conclusion.
”At one time we too were foolish, disobedient, deceived and enslaved by all
kinds of passions and pleasures. We lived in malice and envy, being hated and
hating one another.” Note here that Paul says that we were ”enslaved by all kinds of passions and pleasures” (italics added).
It is fair to conclude that people who are enslaved by their own desires are
under the domination and tyranny of sin. This kind of tyranny is not externally
coerced. People do what they want to do, in that they pursue their own
pleasures and desires. Nonetheless, to describe this pursuit of their own
desires as slavery because they have no desire, inclination, or aspiration to do
good is appropriate.
The bondage of the will, then, is a slavery to
our own desires. Unregenerate human beings are captivated by what they want to
do! Jesus himself diagnosed sinning as an indication of slavery. ”Everyone who
sins is a slave to sin” (John 8:34; cf. 2 Pet. 2:19). Paul confirms that
unregenerate people are slaves of sin. He reminds the Romans that ”you are
slaves to sm” (Rom. 6:17) and speaks of the time ”when you were slaves to sin”
(Rom. 6:20). They had presented ”the parts of [their] bod[ies] in slavery to
impurity and ever-increasing wickedness” (Rom. 6:19). Believers have been
crucified with Christ ”so that the body of sin might be done away with, that we
should no longer be slaves to sin” (
Do unregenerate human beings always sin? Is
there not some good in their lives? We are not saying that they are as evil as
they can possibly be. Jesus says, ”... you then, though you are evil, know how
to give good gifts to your children” (Luke 11:13). If people were as evil as
they possibly could be, they would not desire to give good things to their
children. They would presumably find ways to inflict only evil upon their
children. Unbelieving parents often love their children and their friends (cf.
Matt. 5:46-47). They also may do much that is good for society. It should be
noted that Jesus still says that they are evil. Evil people still give good
gifts to their children and do kind things for other people.
If people are not as sinful as they can possibly
be, then in what sense are they slaves to sin? It is crucial to establish a
biblical definition of sm. Of course, sin consists in disobeying the law (1
John 3:4). But the root of sin is much deeper than this. Romans 1:21-25
clarifies that the heart of sin is failing to glorify God as God. The heart of
sin is a belittling of God and a scorning of his glory, which involves a
failure to glorify and thank him (Rom. 1:21). As Romans 3:23 says, ”All have
sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” Sinners do not give God the supreme
place in their lives but exchange ”the glory of the immortal God for images
made to look like mortal man and birds and animals and reptiles” (Rom. 1:23).
In other words, people ”served created things rather than the Creator” (Rom.
1:25). Sin is not first and foremost the practice of evil deeds but an attitude
that gives glory to something other than God. People may be loving to their
children and kind to their neighbors and never give a thought to God. The
essence of sin is self-worship rather than God-worship. The serpent persuaded
Eve and Adam to eat the fruit of the tree by promising them that they would ”be
like God” (Gen. 3:5). They could dispense with God and worship themselves; they
would worship the creature rather than the Creator.
Such a conception of sin helps us understand how
people can perform actions that externally conform with righteousness yet
remain slaves of sm. These actions are not motivated by a desire to honor and
glorify God as God.
They are not done out of an attitude of faith,
which brings glory to God (Rom. 4:20). Faith brings glory to God because he is
seen to be the all-powerful one who supplies our every good, and thus is
deserving of praise and honor. Actions that externally conform with
righteousness may still be sin, in that they are not done for God’s glory and
by faith. The necessity of faith is underscored by Romans 14:23, where Paul
notes that ”everything that does not come from faith is sin.” Slavery to sin
does not mean that people always engage in reprehensible behavior. It means
that the unregenerate never desire to bring glory to God, but are passionately
committed to upholding their own glory and honor. Of course, the power of sin
is such that all have fallen short of conformity with God’s law (Rom.
1:18-3:20). No one has perfectly done all that the law requires. The extent of
our slavery to sin is, however, even deeper than this. It is not merely that
the ”sinful mind is hostile to God” (Rom. 8:7). It is also true that it ”does
not submit to God’s law, nor can it do so” (
The Wesleyan View of
Fallen Humanity
It is notable that John Wesley would agree with
the preceding diagnosis. He writes,
I believe that Adam, before his fall, had such
freedom of will, that he might choose either good or evil; but that, since the
fall, no child of man has a natural power to choose anything that is truly
good. Yet I know (and who does not?) that man has still freedom of will in
things of indifferent nature.[3]
Human beings since the fall are so enmeshed in
the power of sin that apart from divine grace they cannot choose what is
spiritually good.[4]
This point is often acknowledged by Wesley scholars.[5]
Harald Lindstrom rightly remarks that ”Wesley maintains that natural man is
totally corrupt.”[6]
He is ”sinful through and through, has
no knowledge of God and no power to turn to him of his own free will.”[7]
Robert V. Rakestraw says that in
Wesley’s theology ”men and women are born in sin and unable in themselves to make
the least move toward God.”[8]
Colin W. Williams affirms the same
point: ”Because of original sin, the natural man is ’dead to God’ and unable to
move toward God or respond to him.”[9]
Leo G. Cox says, ”By nature man receives
nothing that is good. ... He is free but free only to do evil and to follow on
in the way of sin.”[10]
Wesley did not believe that the will of
fallen humanity was free. He says, ”Such is the freedom of the will; free only
to evil; free to ’drink iniquity like water;’ to wander farther and farther
from the living God, and do more ’despite to the Spirit of grace!’”[11]
The Wesleyan analysis of the human
condition does not differ fundamentally from the Calvinistic one.[12]
Indeed, in 1745 John Wesley said that
his theology was ”within a hair’s breadth” of Calvinism:
(1) In ascribing all good to the free grace of
God.
(2) In
denying all natural free-will, and all power antecedent to grace. And,
(3) In excluding all merit from man; even for
what he has or does by the grace of God.”[13]
Wesley’s analysis of the human condition and his bold proclamation of divine
grace should warm the heart of any evangelical Calvinist.
Prevenient Grace in the
Wesleyan System
If Wesleyans and Calvimsts concur on the human
condition, wherein do they differ? One major place that Wesleyans break with
Calvinists is through their doctrine of prevenient grace. Elton Hendricks says
that this doctrine ”played a more important role in Wesley’s theological
thought than in that of any other Protestant theologian.”[14]
Williams affirms that it ”has very great
significance in his theology.”[15]
Even though Calvinists and Arminians
hold much in common, H. Ray Dunning rightly says that ”the truth that holds
them but a hair’s breadth apart at the point of the watershed is the doctrine
of prevenient grace.”[16]
The differences between Calvinists
and Arminians on this point should not be minimized. William Ragsdale Cannon is
correct in saying that ”though Wesleyanism and Calvinism come in this instance
so close together, they are in reality worlds apart.”[17]
How crucial is prevenient grace to the
Wesleyan system? Wesleyans themselves seem to concur that their theology hinges
on the doctrine. Robert E. Chiles says that ”without it, the Calvinist logic is
irrefutable.”[18]
Williams asserts that Wesley’s theology
of prevenient grace ”broke the chain of logical necessity by which the
Calvinist doctrine of predestination seems to flow from the doctrine of
original sin.”[19]
It seems fair to conclude that if
prevenient grace is not taught in Scripture, then the credibility of Wesleyan
theology is seriously undermined.
Before probing to see whether Scripture teaches
prevenient grace, it is necessary to explore what Wesleyans mean by the term.
We need to recall that Wesley himself was not a systematic theologian but a
pastoral theologian who developed his theology in the course of his ministry.
Thus, no systematic treatment of the theme of prevenient grace is found in his
writings.[20]
In Wesleyan theology there are various
conceptions of prevenient grace that we do not need to specify here since, as
we shall see, there is common ground within the various positions on the issue
that concerns us.[21]
In some respects Wesleyans use the term prevenient grace in a way that matches
with the Calvinist term common grace.[22]
The conscience, according to Wesley,
is to be ascribed to prevenient grace.[23]
It is not to be understood as a natural
gift but is supernaturally given by God.[24]
In addition, some moral excellence and
virtue in the world exists even among those who are unregenerate.[25]
Prevenient grace is responsible for the
goodness that is present to some extent in every society, even in cultures that
are largely non-Christian.[26]
We are not surprised to learn, then,
that the relationship between prevenient grace and natural theology has been
explored by some, with a close connection being suggested.[27]
The Wesleyan understanding of prevenient grace
differs from the Calvinistic conception of common grace in one important area.
In the Calvinistic scheme common grace does not and cannot lead to salvation.
It functions to restrain evil in the world but does not lead unbelievers to
faith. For Wesleyans, prevenient grace may lead one to salvation. Cox rightly
says, ”The Wesleyan teaches that the prevenient grace leads on to saving grace,
prepares for it, enables a person to enter into it.”[28]
Indeed, in Wesley’s theology it seems
that a proper response to prevenient grace could lead to the salvation of those
who have not heard the gospel.[29]
What we are interested in exploring,
however, is not how prevenient grace affects those who have never heard the
gospel. The distinctive aspect of prevenient grace that is relevant for our
discussion is that it provides the ability to choose salvation, an ability that
was surrendered by Adam’s sin. Wesley describes it as follows:
Salvation begins with what is usually termed
(and very properly) preventing grace; including
the first wish to please God, the first dawn of light concerning his will, and
the first slight transient conviction of having sinned against him. All these
imply some tendency toward life; some degree of salvation; the beginning of a
deliverance from a blind, unfeeling heart, quite insensible of God and the
things of God.[30]
What separates Calvinists from Wesleyans is that
the former see electing grace as given only to some (the elect) and insist that
this grace cannot ultimately be resisted. The latter argue that prevenient
grace is given to all people and that it can be resisted.
What is common in all Wesleyan theories of
prevenient grace is that the freedom, which was lost in Adam’s sin, is
sufficiently restored to enable people to choose salvation.[31]
Prevenient grace provides people with the ability to choose or reject God. As
sinners born in Adam, they had no ability to do good or to choose what is
right. But as recipients of prevenient grace they can once again choose the
good. Wesley said, ”Natural free-will, in the present state of mankind, I do
not understand: I only assert, that Rogers’s own conclusions regarding Wesley’s
understanding of prevenient grace, on first glance, seem to be radically
different from that suggested by the other scholars. Further analysis, however,
reveals that the difference is one of degree, not one of kind.
For views that are quite similar to
Obviously, prevenient grace fixes a large gulf
between Calvinism and Wesleyanism. Calvinists contend that the unregenerate
have no ability or desire to choose God. God’s election of some is what brings
them from darkness to light, from Satan’s kingdom to God’s. Wesleyans believe
that God has given prevenient grace to all people. As descendants of Adam they
were born with no ability or desire to choose God, but God has counteracted
this inability by the gift of prevenient grace. Now all people have the ability
to choose God. The ultimate determination of salvation is the human decision to
say no or yes to God.[33]
Wesleyan Arguments in
Favor of Prevenient Grace
For all Bible-believing Christians, the most
important question in matters of doctrinal dispute is this: what is the Bible’s
teaching as it pertains to the issue at hand? Calvinists and Armimans likewise
must turn to the Bible. The critical question is whether or not the doctrine of
prevenient grace is supported by Scripture. We cannot examine this issue until
we see the arguments that are put forward to defend the doctrine. Wesleyans use
at least four arguments to support the idea that prevenient grace is a doctrine
rooted in Scripture.
First, the Scripture text that is appealed to
quite often is John 1:9.[34]
”The true light that gives light to
every man was coming into the world.” The meaning of this text is not analyzed
in detail by Wesleyan scholars, but their understanding seems clear enough. The
coming of Jesus Christ into the world brought enough light to all people so
that they are now able to reject or accept the message of the gospel. The
illumination (photizet) refers to the
granting of grace that overcomes the darkness that penetrated human hearts as a
result of Adam’s sin. This illumination does not guarantee salvation; it simply
makes it possible for men and women to choose salvation.
Such an understanding of the verse may be
confirmed in the subsequent context. Some rejected the light and ”did not
receive him” (John 1:11), while others responded to the light and ”received
him” (John 1:12). It should also be noted that this illumination is not
restricted to a few. It is granted to ”every person” (panta anthropon). This would support the Wesleyan view that
prevenient grace is given to all people.
A second argument employed by Wesleyans is that
prevenient grace is granted in the atonement of Christ (e.g., Tit. 2:11; John
12:32).[35]
This argument is bound up with the
universality of Christ’s atonement. His death for all necessarily implies that
grace is given to some extent to all. The argument is that Christ would not die
for all unless all were granted the opportunity to accept or reject him. John
12:32 can be understood as supporting this theory. Jesus says, ”But I, when I
am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to myself.” Henry Thiessen says
about this verse, ”There issues a power from the cross of Christ that goes out
to all men, though many continue to resist that power.”[36]
In the death of Christ grace is
operative so that all people are ”drawn” (helkuo)
to him. The drawing does not guarantee salvation but makes it possible,[37]
supporting the idea that grace is given in the atonement that reverses the
total inability of people to choose God. In addition, it should be pointed out
that John 12:32 refers to ”all people” (pantas).
The grace given in the atonement is not limited to some but is universally
distributed, giving all people everywhere the opportunity to respond or reject
it.
The third Wesleyan argument in favor of
prevenient grace has a theological cast. God must have granted the power to choose
him because otherwise the warnings, invitations, and commands in Scripture are
meaningless.[38]
Why would God give commands to people if
they are unable to put them into practice? There are numerous texts in
Scripture in which cornmands, invitations, and warnings are employed. Perhaps
Romans 2:4 is a particularly appropriate verse to cite in support.[39]
”Or do you show contempt for the riches
of his kindness, tolerance and patience, not realizing that God’s kindness
leads you toward repentance?” God would not cornmand people to repent and be
waiting for them to repent if he knew that they could not do so. His kindness
is such that he has provided the means for every person to repent if they would
only avail themselves of that means.
Fourth, prevenient grace is supported by the
very nature of God.[40]
A God of mercy, wisdom, justice, and
love would not leave human beings without an opportunity to repent and choose
salvation. A God of love and mercy who desires all to be saved (1 Tim. 2:4)
would see to it that all have the chance to partake of salvation. If God elects
only a few, he is guilty of partiality.[41]
A Critique of the
Wesleyan Arguments for Prevenient Grace
We now proceed to analyze the four arguments for
prevenient grace advanced by Wesleyans. I will argue that their case is
unpersuasive and that their doctrine of prevenient grace is not found in
Scripture. Wesleyans, however, advance some exegetical and theological
arguments in defense of prevenient grace that will be considered here.
We turn first of all to John 1:9. The crucial
phrase for our purposes is photizei panta
anthropon (enlightens every person), which enlightening is ascribed to ”the
true light.” Wesleyans understand this enlightenment to refer to prevenient
grace, which is given to all people, but there are serious reasons for doubting
that this is the meaning of the verse. In fact, the verse can be understood in
three other ways that do not yield the Wesleyan interpretation. First, the
illumination could refer to general revelation, which is granted to all people
through the created order.[42]
This shifts the debate to different
ground, for some argue that general revelation is sufficient for salvation.[43]
Such a view is unpersuasive given Paul’s
estimation of general revelation in Romans l:18-32.[44]
In any case, D. A. Carson is correct in
dismissing a reference to general revelation since this would have been more
appropriately dealt with earlier in the prologue (i.e., John l:3-4).[45]
The specific context is not general
revelation but the response of people to the incarnate Word of God, Jesus
Christ.
Second, the illumination may refer to an inward
illumination that leads to conversion.[46]
In this case, John would not be saying
that illumination is given to all people ”without exception” but to all
”without distinction.”[47]
The light is not confined to the Jews,
but also has an effect among the Gentiles. Other sheep that are not of the fold
of the Jews will be brought in (John 10:16). Jesus died not only for the Jews
but also for the children of God scattered throughout the world (John
11:51-52).
The context of John 1:9-13, however, suggests
that another interpretation is the most probable.[48]
The word enlighten (pbotizo) refers not to inward illumination but to the
exposure that comes when light is shed upon something. Some are shown to be
evil because they did not know or receive Jesus (John 1:10-11), while others
are revealed to be righteous because they have received Jesus and have been
born of God (John 1:12-13). John 3:19-21 confirms this interpretation. Those
who are evil shrink from corning to the light because they do not want their
works to be exposed (v. 20). But those who practice the truth gladly come to
the light so that it might be manifest that their works are wrought in God (v.
21). The light that enlightens every person does not entail the bestowment of
grace, nor does it refer to the inward illumination of the heart by the Spirit
of God. Rather, the light exposes and reveals the moral and spiritual state of
one’s heart. C. K. Barrett rightly says that ”the light shines upon every man
for judgement, to reveal what he is.”[49]
Or, as
Wesleyans appeal to grace given in the atonement
and Christ’s death for all as an indication of prevenient grace. I shall not
examine the question of the extent of the atonement since that is treated
elsewhere in this work.[52]
Indeed, Calvinists have typically seen
grace as bestowed upon the elect in the atonement, but in this case the grace
bestowed is effective and guarantees salvation. The question is whether in the
atonement of Christ the Wesleyan conception of prevenient grace is taught; that
is, does Scripture teach that people are given the ability to choose or to
reject God by virtue of the atonement? Doubtless grace is manifested in the
atonement. For instance, Titus 2:11 says that ”the grace of God that brings
salvation has appeared to all men.” Calvinists usually argue that this text
teaches that the atonement secures and accomplishes redemption for the elect.
It is not my purpose to defend or refute that interpretation. Even if the text
were suggesting that salvation is potentially available for all people (cf. 1
Tim. 4:10), that is a far cry from saying that through the atonement God has
counteracted the effects of Adam’s sin so that all people have the opportunity
to accept or reject him. Titus 2:11 says that God’s grace has been manifested
through Christ’s work on the cross, but it does not say that God has thereby
supplied the ability to believe to all people. Wesleyans conclude from the
atonement effected by Christ that enough grace has been imparted to all people
so that they can now choose whether or not to believe. But it is precisely this
point that is not taught explicitly in the verse. It does not necessarily
follow that since grace was manifested in the death of Christ that all people
as a result have the ability to believe in him. Specific exegetical support for
this conclusion is lacking.
A text that might lead to the Wesleyan
conclusion is John 12:32. But this involves a misreading of the text. In John
6:37 Jesus says, ”All that the Father gives me will come to me, and whoever
comes to me I will never drive away.” Note that this text specifically teaches
that only some will come to Jesus, namely, those who have been given by the
Father to the Son. In other words, the Father has not given all to the Son; he
has selected only some, and it is they who will come to the Son and believe in
him (cf. John 6:35).[53]
The teaching of John 6:37 is reaffirmed
in 6:44. ”No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him, and I
will raise him at the last day.” The word draw
(helkuo), which is used in John 12:32, is also used in John 6:37. The point
of John 6:44 is that the Father does not draw all people, only some. Carson
rightly remarks, ”The combination of v[erse] 37a and v[erse] 44 prove that this
’drawing’ activity of the Father cannot be reduced to what theologians
sometimes call ’prevement grace’ dispensed to every individual, for this
’drawing’ is selective, or else the negative note of v[erse] 44 is
meaningless.”[54]
The Johannine conception of drawing is
not that it makes salvation possible, but that it makes salvation effectual.
Those who are drawn will come to Jesus and believe in him.
Does this definition of drawing mean that John
teaches universahsm, since 12:32 says that Jesus will draw all to himself by
virtue of the cross? The context of John 12:20-33 helps us answer that
question. Greeks, that is, Gentiles, approached Philip because they wanted to
see Jesus (vv. 20-23). Jesus ignores the request and instead speaks of the need
for a gram of wheat to die in order to bear fruit (vv. 24-26), and of his
commitment to carry out his commission (vv. 27-28). Jesus’ death is the means
by which God’s judgment of the world and his triumph over Satan will be
accomplished (v. 31). He concludes by saying that if he is lifted up he will
draw all people to himself (v. 32).
The context is of paramount importance for
understanding John 12:32. Jesus appears to ignore the request from his
disciples to meet with the Greeks who wanted to see him. But the point Jesus
makes is that the only way Gentiles will come to him is through his death. He
must die in order to bear much fruit and bring Gentiles to himself. The power
of Satan as the ruler of the world will be broken only by the cross. Thus, when
Jesus speaks of drawing all people to himself by virtue of the cross, the issue
in the context is how Gentiles can come to Jesus. The drawing of all does not
refer to all people individually but the means by which Gentiles will be
included in the people of God.
The third Wesleyan argument for prevement grace
is probably the most powerful one. Why would God give commands unless people
were given some ability to obey them? Romans 2:4 says that his kindness is
intended to lead people to repentance. Does this not imply that people have the
ability to repent if they would only choose to do so?
It should be acknowledged that Wesleyan logic is
coherent here, and one can see why Wesleyans would deduce human ability from
the giving of cornmands. Nonetheless, even though their logic is impeccable, it
does not necessarily follow that their conclusion is true. An argument may be
logically co-herent and not fit with the state of affairs in the world because
the answer given is not comprehensive. To put it another way, one of the
premises in the Wesleyan argument is not in accord with the reality of life as
it is portrayed in the Scriptures. They are incorrect in deducing that God
would not give commands without giving the moral ability to obey them. The
distinction between physical and moral ability is crucial.[56]
For instance, human beings are
physically able (in most cases) to walk up steps, but they are physically unable
to jump over houses. In a similar way, God gives commands to unbelievers that
they can physically obey; that is, they could observe his commandments if they
desired to do so. Unbelievers are morally unable to keep God’s cornmands in the
sense that they have no desire to obey all of his commandments. God commands
all people (Gal. 3:10; Rom. 1:18-3:20) to obey his law perfectly, but no one is
morally able to do this. Because all people are born with a sin nature
inherited from Adam, they will inevitably sin. Even though people cannot
morally obey God’s commands, biblical authors assume that they should keep his
commandments. They should keep his commandments because they are right and good
(Rom. 7:12) and are not physically impossible to keep. People could observe the
commandments if they wanted to do so. The biblical view, however, is that
unbelievers as slaves of sin have no desire to keep God’s law.[57]
The state of affairs that obtains under the law
remains when Christ comes. That is, all people should come to Jesus in order to
have life (John 5:40). Jesus upbraids those who do not believe despite all his
works (Matt. 11:20-24), and he invites all to come to him (Matt. 11:28-30). Yet
he also teaches that no one can come to him unless drawn by the Father (John
6:44), and only those to whom the Father and Son reveal themselves will come to
know him (Matt. 11:25-27). All people are summoned to believe in Jesus and are
censured for not believing. Nonetheless, the Scriptures also teach that they
have no moral ability to believe, and that the only way they will believe is if
they are given by the Father to the Son. This revelation is not vouchsafed to
all people but only to the elect. Jesus commands believers to be perfect (Matt.
5:48), but the need for forgiveness (Matt. 6:14-15) demonstrates that
perfection is impossible to attain.
The problem with Wesleyamsm at this point is
that it is guided by human logic and rationality rather than the Scriptures.
Their view that commands would not be given that people could not morally obey
is certainly attractive. But our counterargument is that such a notion is not
taught in the Scriptures. The doctrine of original sin and human inability is an
offense to reason.[58]
This is not to say that it is
irrational. The distinction between physical and moral ability goes a long way
toward resolving the difficulties. Nonetheless, not all the difficulties are
resolved by the Calvmist view, for ultimately we do not fully understand how
people can be responsible for sin when they are born with an inclination that
will inevitably lead them to sin.
An example from another area of life might help.
Robert Wright in an article on alcoholism was musing on the theory that it
might be determined by one’s genes.[59]
If so, could we conclude that people are
not responsible for alcoholism? Wright correctly says no. If we draw this
conclusion, then the reality of human responsibility will be slowly whittled
away as we discover the impact of genetics on human behavior. Even if
alcoholism is determined genetically, people are still responsible for their
behavior.[60]
We may not fully understand how both
determinism and human responsibility can be true, but both are necessary to
account for the nature of humanity and genetic research. So too, sinners who have
inherited a sin nature from Adam and who have no moral ability to obey God’s
law and no inclination to respond to him are still responsible for their
failure to respond to God’s grace.
The preceding comments prepare us for
understanding Romans 2:4. The wording of this text should be taken seriously,
but our own philosophical presuppositions should not be read into it. It is the
case that the kindness of God should lead people to repentance.[61]
God’s kindness is not a charade but is
profoundly present in that he spares people and does not immediately destroy
them for their sin. The kindness and patience of God should induce people to
seek him and to confess their sin. But this text does not say that people have
the moral ability to repent and turn to God. It simply says that they should
repent and turn to him. Wesleyans read into this verse their theology of
prevenient grace, thereby squeezing more out of the verse than it says.[62]
What we have said about Romans 2:4 leads us
naturally to the fourth argument used for prevenient grace, that is, the
justice, wisdom, mercy, and love of God. What I have been arguing is that the
fundamental problem with the Wesleyan understanding of prevenient grace is that
it is not taught in the Scriptures. It is a philosophical imposition of a
certain world view upon the Scriptures. This world view is attractive because
it neatly solves, to some extent, issues such as the problem of evil and why
human beings are held responsible for sin. But the Scriptures do not yield such
neat solutions.[63]
God is wholly just in condemning sinners
who have no ability to obey his law (
The scandal of the Calvinist system is that
ultimately the logical problems posed cannot be fully resolved. The final
resolution of the problem of human responsibility and divine justice is beyond
our rational capacity. The doctrine of prevenient grace in the Wesleyan sense
is read into the Scriptures because it solves so many logical problems and
attempts to clarify how God is just and loving. Calvinists also affirm God’s
mercy, wisdom, justice, and love. We trust that he is good, and that no one
will perish who does not deserve judgment. There is significant evidence to
vindicate the justice, mercy, and love of God. Nonetheless, we cannot
comprehensively explain how these attributes of God fit the reality portrayed
in the Scriptures. There are finally some mysteries that we cannot unravel.
The doctrine of prevenient grace should be
accepted only if it can be sustained from a careful exegesis of the Scriptures.
What was most striking to me in my research was how little scriptural exegesis
has been done by Wesleyans in defense of prevenient grace. It is vital to their
system of theology, for even Wesleyans admit that without it ”Calvinist logic
is irrefutable.”[64]
Nonetheless, not much exegetical work
has been done in support of the doctrine. This is particularly astonishing when
one compares the biblical data for prevenient grace to Calvinist texts that
support unconditional election. The Calvinist case has been promulgated,
rightly or wrongly, via a detailed exegesis of numerous texts. The plight of
humanity due to Adam’s sin (which we investigated) is reversed only by the
electing grace of God, according to the Calvinist. Wesleyans contend that
prevenient grace counteracts the inability of humanity due to Adam’s sin, but
firm biblical evidence seems to be lacking. One can be pardoned, then, for
wondering whether this theory is based on scriptural exegesis. Millard Erickson
rightly says about it, ”The problem is that there is no clear and adequate
basis in Scripture for this concept of universal enablement. The theory,
appealing though it is in many ways, simply is not taught explicitly in the
Bible.”[65]
Prevenient grace is attractive because it solves
so many problems, but it should be rejected because it cannot be exegetically
vindicated. But if prevenient grace is rejected, then all people are in bondage
to sin. They will never turn to God because they are so enslaved by sin that
they will never desire to turn to him. How then can any be saved? The
Scriptures teach that the effectual calling of God is what persuades those who
are chosen to turn to him. God’s grace effectively works in the heart of the
elect so that they see the beauty and glory of Christ and put their faith in
him (2 Cor. 4:6). Because God’s choice lies behind our salvation, we cannot
boast before him that we were noble or wise enough to choose him. We can only
boast in the Lord who chose us to be his own (1 Cor. 1:29, 31).
The above article by Dr. Thomas Schreiner makes up one chapter in the book, Still Sovereign, edited by Bruce A. Ware and Thomas R. Schreiner. The book is highly recommended. Pick up a copy today!
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Does the Bible Teach "Prevenient Grace" in the Wesleyan/Arminian Sense? by Joseph M. Gleason A Short Response to the Arminian Doctrine of Prevenient Grace by John Hendryx Prevenient Grace by Davis W. Huckabee The Arminian Doctrine of Prevenient Grace by Sam Storms Why Does One Person Choose God and Not Another? by John Hendryx Regeneration Precedes Faith by Dr. R. C. Sproul
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[1] For two insightful treatments
of this text see Douglas J Moo, Romans
1-8, WEC (Chi cago Moody, 1991), 325-59, C E B Cranfield, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the
Epistle to the Romans, 2 vols , ICC (Edinburgh T and T Clark, 1975, 1979),
269-91
[2] Arthur Skevmgton Wood (” The
Contribution of John Wesley to the Theology of Grace,” in Grace Unlimited, ed Clark H Pmnock [Minneapolis Bethany Fellowship,
1975J, 212) demonstrates that Wesley interpreted our participation in Adam’s
sin similarly
[3] The Works of John Wesley, ed. T. Jackson, 14 vols. (1831; reprint,
1979), 10:350. Hereafter designated as Works.
[4] Wesleyan theology
differs from that of Charles Finney in that Finney believed that all people
possess the ability, apart from grace, to choose what is good. Contrary to
Wesleyans he rejects the idea that people are born morally depraved because of
Adam’s sin. Thus, it is not surprising to learn that Finney repudiated the
doctrine of prevenient grace. See J. E. Smith, ”The Theology of Charles Finney:
A System of Self-Reformation,” Tnn J 13
(1992): 75-77, 82-84.
[5] See Wood, ”Theology of Grace,” 212-13; Charles A. Rogers, The Concept of Prevenient Grace in the Theology of John Wesley (Ph.D. dissertation, Duke University, 1967), 107-13,156-58, 194-98,200-2.
[6] Harald Lindstrom, Wesley and Sanctification: A Study in the Doctrine of Salvation (London: Epworth, 1950), 45.
[7] Ibid.
[8] Robert V. Rakestraw, ”John Wesley as a Theologian of Grace,” JETS 27 (1984): 196.
[9] Colin W. Williams, John Wesley’s Theology Today (Nashville: Abmgdon, 1960), 41.
[10] Leo G. Cox, ”Prevenient Grace-A Wesleyan View,” JETS 12 (1969): 147.
[11] Works, 5:104.
[12]
So also Melvm E. Dieter, ”The Wesleyan Perspective,” in Five Views on
Sanctification (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1987), 21-23; M. Elton Hendricks,
”John Wesley and Natural Theology,” Wesley Th J 18 (1983): 9; J. Weldon Smith
in, ”Some Notes on Wesley’s Doctrine of Prevenient Grace,” Religion in Life 34
(1964-65): 70-74. The extent of the agreement should be qualified, according to
H. Orton Wiley, Christian Theology (
[13] Works, 8:284-85. Italics added.
[14] Hendricks, ”Natural Theology,” 8.
[15] Williams, Wesley’s Theology, 41.
[16] H. Ray Dunning, Grace, Faith, and Holiness: A Wesleyan Systematic Theology (Kansas City, Mo.: Beacon Hill, 1988), 49.
[17] William Ragsdale Cannon, The Theology of John Wesley: With Special Reference to the Doctrine of Justification (New York: University Press of America, 1974), 102.
[18] Robert E. Chiles, Theological Transition in American Methodism: 1790-1935 (Nashville: Abmgdon, 1965), 50.
[19] Williams, Wesley’s Theology, 44. See also his comments on 46. In agreement with Williams are Rakestraw (”John Wesley,” 197) and Wood (”Theology of Grace,” 215).
[20] For a survey of the positions of Wesley and John Fletcher see Mark Royster, John Wesley’s Doctrine of Prevenient Grace in Missiological Perspective (D.Miss. dissertation, Asbury Theological Seminary, 1989), 30-72.
[21]
[22] So Dunning, Grace, Faith, and Holiness, 296; cf. Cox, ”Prevenient Grace,” 143-44. In fact, Wiley (Christian Theology, 2:357) thinks that the Wesleyan conception of prevenient grace precludes any need for ”common grace.”
[23] Works, 7:187-88. For Wesley’s understanding of the role of prevenient grace in relationship to the conscience see Rogers, Prevenient Grace, 184-89.
[24] So Rakestraw, ”John Wesley,” 197; Lmdstrom, Wesley and Sanctification, 48. Wesley (Works, 7:187; see also 6:512) specifically says it is ”a supernatural gift.”
[25] Wesley, Works, 7:345; see also 7:374.
[26] So John Miley, Systematic Theology (New York: Eaton and Mams, 1894), 2:244, 246.
[27] See Hendncks, ”Natural Theology,” 7-17; Smith, ”Prevenient Grace,” 77-80; Lmdstrom, Wesley and Sanctification, 46-47.
[28] Cox, ”Prevenient Grace,” 144.
[29] See Dunning (Grace, Faith, and Holiness, 161-70) for a helpful discussion. See also Rogers, Prevenient Grace, 243-47.
[30] Works, 6:509.
[31] The description of prevenient grace in this paragraph is supported by Langford, Practical Divinity, 33; Dunning, Grace, Faith, and Holiness, 339; Rakestraw, ”John Wesley,” 196; Williams, Wesley’s Theology, 41, 46; Chiles, American Methodism, 149; Cox, ”Prevenient Grace,” 147-49; Lindstrom, Wesley and Sanctificatton, 45-46; Hendncks, ”Natural Theology,” 9-11; Smith, ”Prevenient Grace,” 75; Henry C. Thiessen, Lectures in Systematic Theology, rev. Vernon D. Doerksen (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1979), 106, 259; William B. Pope, A Compendium of Christian Theology (London: Wesleyan Conference Office, 1880), 2:358-67.
[32] Works, 10:229-30.
[33] Rakestraw (”John Wesley,” 199) rightly says that in Wesley’s theology ”that one is ultimately the determining factor in the decision of his or her justification. Faith is offered as God’s free gift, but the sinner must then actively respond to that offer and reach out with the arms of true repentance to receive the gift.”
[34] E.g., Wesley, Works, 10:230, 7:188; Lindstrom, Wesley and Sanctiftcation, 45.
[35] So, e.g., Miley, Systematic Theology, 2:247; Wiley, Christian Theology, 2:353; Adam Clarke, Christian Theology (New York: Eaton and Mams, 1835), 117; Wood, ”Theology of Grace,” 216; Langford, Practical Divinity, 34; Smith, ”Prevenient Grace,” 75; Lindstrom, Wesley and Sanctificatio