The following is taken from an article entitled “Common Grace,” written by Rev. Angus Stewart, minister of the Covenant Protestant Reformed Church in Northern Ireland.
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We reject common grace on the basis of the
Word of God. Common grace teaches that God loves the reprobate, but the
Scriptures proclaim that “the Lord abhorreth”
“the covetous” (Ps. 10:3). The Psalmist declares of God: “… thou hatest all workers of iniquity”
(Ps. 5:5). God does not “hate the sin but love the sinner”! Moreover, “… the
wicked and him that loveth violence his soul hateth” (Ps. 11:5). Here
is the intensity of God’s aversion to the reprobate: His very soul—all that He
is—detests him. Thus Jehovah “shall rain snares, fire and brimstone” upon him (6).
Common grace teaches that the good things
which the reprobate receive in this life are proof of God’s love for them. This
was Asaph’s mistake, and it is the mistake of many. In “the sanctuary of God”
(Ps. 73:17), Asaph came to understand that “the prosperity of the wicked” (3)—their
health (4), food (7), riches (12)—was “surely” God’s setting them “in slippery
places” before He casts “them down into destruction” (18). God gave them good
things in His providence, but He “despised” them (20) for their wickedness (8).
Solomon, the wisest of men, declared, “The
curse of the Lord is in the house of the wicked” (Prov. 3:33). All the good
things in his house—wife, children, possessions, food etc.—come not with God’s
love but with His curse.
Some people say that we reject common grace
on the basis of inferences drawn from the eternal predestinating counsel of
God. But God’s revealed truth of predestination is not the only doctrine that
militates against common grace. Against God’s unity (Deut. 6:4), common grace teaches that God has two loves, two mercies, two lovingkindnesses,
etc. Against God’s immutability (Mal. 3:6), common grace teaches that God loves
the reprobate in time and then hates them in eternity. Against the divine
righteousness, which is so great that God cannot “look on iniquity” (Hab.
1:13), common grace says that God loves those who are completely evil (Rom.
3:10-18). In short, common grace postulates a temporary, limited, changeable,
unrighteous love of God (outside of Jesus Christ!) for the reprobate. But the
Scriptures teach us that God loves Himself, and that He loves His elect church
(Eph. 5:25) with a particular (Rom. 9:18), eternal (Jer. 31:3), infinite (Eph.
3:17-19), unchangeable (Ps. 136) love in Jesus Christ.
This initial error of a love of God for the
reprobate is being used by many (including professing Calvinists) to erode the
antithesis (Gen. 3:15), to soften total depravity, to compromise particular
atonement, to preach a desire of God to save the reprobate, to silence and
(then) deny unconditional reprobation and election, to refuse to condemn
Arminianism and its teachers, and to enable fellowship with unbelievers.
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Excellent. Thanks
ReplyDeleteAMEN and AMEN
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