Dear Friend,
We shall now proceed to examine the various passages of scripture which, as you say, are generally adduced by those who seek to overthrow the doctrine of final perseverance. But, before doing so, we deem it of importance to lay down the following fundamental principle which will, in our judgment, be found most helpful in the interpretation of scripture generally. The principle is very simple. No one passage of holy scripture can, by any possibility, contradict another. If, therefore, there be a seeming contradiction, it must arise from our want of spiritual intelligence. Thus, for example, if any one were to quote Jas. 2:24, in defense of the doctrine of justification by works, I might not be able to answer him. It is quite possible that thousands, like Luther, have been sadly perplexed by that passage. They may feel the fullest and clearest assurance that they are justified, and that not by any works that they have done, but simply “By faith of Jesus Christ;” and yet be wholly unable to explain these words of James, “Ye see then how that by works a man is justified, and not by faith only.”
Now, how is one to meet such a difficulty as this? He really does not understand the apostle James. He is involved in much perplexity by the apparent contradiction between James and Paul. What is he to do? Just to apply the principle above stated. No one passage of scripture can possibly contradict another. As well might we apprehend a collision between two of the heavenly bodies, while moving in their divinely appointed orbits, as that two inspired writers could possibly clash in their statements. Well, then, I read in Rom. 4:5, such plain words as these, “But to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness.” Here I find works entirely excluded, as a ground of justification, and faith alone recognized. So also, in chapter 3. I read, “Therefore we conclude that a man is justified without (or apart from) works of law.” (χωρίς έργων νομον.) And, again, “Being justified by faith we have peace with God.” Exactly similar is the teaching in the epistle to the Galatians, where we read such plain words as these, “Knowing that a man is not justified by works of law, but by faith of Jesus Christ, even we (Jews) have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by faith of Christ (εκ πίστεως) and not by works of law: for by works of law shall no flesh be justified.” Chap. 2:16.
In all these passages, and many more which might be quoted, works are sedulously excluded as a ground of justification, and that, too, in language so plain that a wayfaring man, though a fool, need not err therein. If, therefore, we cannot explain Jas. 2:24, we must either deny its inspiration or have recourse to our principle, namely, that no one passage of holy scripture can possibly contradict another, and so remain, with unshaken confidence, and unruffled repose, rejoicing in the grand foundation truth of justification by faith alone, apart from law-works altogether.
Having called the reader’s attention to the famous passage in Jas. 2, it may not be amiss to offer him, in passing, a word or two of exhortation which will help him in the understanding of it. There is a little word in verse 14 which will furnish the key to the entire passage. The inspired apostle inquires, “What doth it profit, my brethren, though a man say he hath faith? “Had he said, “What doth it profit though a man have faith?” the difficulty would be insuperable, the perplexity hopeless. But the important word “say” quite removes all difficulty, and unfolds, in the simplest possible way, the point which the apostle has in his mind. We might inquire, “What doth it profit though a man say he hath, ten thousand a year, if he have it not?”
Now, we are aware that the word “say” is constantly left out in quoting Jas. 2:14. Some have even ventured to assert that it is not in the original. But any who can read Greek has only to look at the passage, and he will see the word Χγη (legee—say) placed there by the Holy Ghost, and left there by all our leading editors and Biblical critics; nor can we well conceive a word of more vital importance in a passage. Its influence, we believe, is felt throughout the entire contest in which it occurs. There is no use in a man merely saying he has faith; but if he really has it, it “profits” him for time and eternity, inasmuch as it connects him with Christ, and puts him in full and inalienable possession of all that Christ has done, and all that He is for us before God.
This leads us to another point, which will greatly tend to clear away the seeming contradiction between the two inspired apostles, Paul and James. There is a very material difference between law-works and life-works. Paul jealously excludes the former; James as jealously insists on the latter. But, be it carefully noted, that it is only the former that Paul excludes; as it is only the latter that James insists on. The acts of Abraham and Rahab were not law-works but life-works. They were the genuine fruits of faith, apart from which they would have possessed no justifying virtue whatever.
It is well worthy of note that, with the history of four thousand years before Him, the Holy Ghost, in the apostle, should have fixed upon two such works as that of Abraham in Gen. 22 and that of Rahab in Josh. 2 He does not adduce some acts of charity, or benevolence, though surely He might easily have selected many such from the vast mass of materials which lay before Him. But, as if anticipating the use that the enemy would make of the passage now before us, He takes care to select two such illustrations of His thesis as prove, beyond all question, that it is life-works and not law-works, He is insisting upon, and leave wholly untouched the priceless doctrine of justification by faith, apart from works of law.
Finally, if any should feel disposed to inquire as to the difference between law-works and life-works, it is simply this; law-works are such as are done in order to get life: life-works are the genuine fruits of life possessed. And how do we get life? By believing on the Son of God. “Verily, verily, I say unto you, he that heareth my words, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life.” (John 5:24.) We must have life before we can do anything; and we get life not by “saying” we have faith, but by really having it, and when we have it, we will manifest the precious fruits thereof, to the glory of God.
Thus, then, we not only implicitly believe that Paul and James must harmonize, but we can plainly see that they do.
Having thus sought to define and illustrate our principle, we shall leave you, dear friend, to apply it in the various cases of difficulty and perplexity which may come before you in the study of scripture, while we endeavor to expound, as the Lord may enable us, the important passages of scripture which you have laid before us.
1. The first quotation is from the second epistle of Peter. “But there were false prophets also among the people, even as there shall be false teachers among you, who privily shall bring in damnable heresies, even denying the Lord that bought them, and bring upon themselves swift destruction.” (Chap. 2:1.) The difficulty of this passage arises, we suppose, from the expression, “Denying the Lord that bought them.” But there is in reality no difficulty whatever in these words. The Lord has a double claim on every man, woman, and child beneath the canopy of heaven. He has a claim founded on creation, and a claim founded on redemption. It is to the latter of these two that the apostle refers. The false teachers will not merely deny the Lord that made them, but even the Lord that bought them. It is of importance to see this. It will help to clear away many difficulties. The Lord Jesus has a purchased right over every member of the human family. The Father has given Him power over all flesh. Hence the sin of those who deny Him. It would be sin to deny Him as Creator. It is a greater sin to deny Him as Redeemer. It is not, at all, a question of regeneration. The apostle does not say, “Denying the Lord that quickened them.” This would indeed be a difficulty; but as the passage stands, it leaves wholly untouched the truth of final perseverance.
2. The second passage occurs at the close of the same chapter, verses 20 and 22. “For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world, through the knowledge of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, they are again entangled therein and overcome, the latter end is worse with them than the beginning........But it is happened unto them according to the true proverb, The dog is turned to his own vomit again; and the sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire.” The diffusion of scriptural knowledge and evangelical light may and does frequently exert an amazing influence upon the conduct and character of persons who have never known the saving, quickening, emancipating, power of the gospel of Christ. Indeed it is hardly possible for an open Bible to be circulated, or a free gospel to be preached, without producing very striking results which, after all, will be found to fall far short of the grand result of regeneration. Many gross habits may be abandoned, many “pollutions” laid aside, under the influence of a merely intellectual “knowledge of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ,” while, at the same time, the heart has never really been savingly reached at all. Now, it will be invariably found that when persons shake off the influence of evangelical light—even though that influence never extended beyond their outward conduct—they are sure to plunge into greater depths of evil, and greater excesses of worldliness and folly than ever; “The latter end is worse with them than the beginning.” The devil takes delight in dragging the quondam professor through deeper mire than that in which he wallowed in the days of his ignorance and thoughtless folly. Hence the urgent need of pressing on all with whom we have to do, the importance of making sure work of it, so that the knowledge of truth may not merely affect their external conduct, but reach the heart and impart that life which, when once possessed, can never be lost. There is nothing in this passage to terrify the sheep of Christ; but very much to warn those who, though they may, for a time, put on the outward appearance of sheep, have never been, inwardly, aught but as the dog and the sow.
3. Eze. 18:24, 26. “But when the righteous turneth away from his righteousness, and committeth iniquity, and doeth according to all the abominations that the wicked man doeth, shall he live? All his righteousness that he hath done shall not be mentioned: in his trespass that he hath trespassed, and in his sin that he hath sinned, in them shall he die..........When a righteous man turneth away from his righteousness and committeth iniquity, and dieth in them; for his iniquity, that he hath done, shall he die.” With this we may connect your reference to 2 Chron. 15:2, “The Lord is with you while ye be with him: and if ye seek him, he will be found of you: but if ye forsake him, he will forsake you.” We feel constrained, dear friend, to say that it evidences a sad want of spiritual intelligence to adduce such passages of scripture as bearing, in any way, upon the truth of the final perseverance of Christ’s members. These and numberless other scriptures, in the Old Testament, as well as many similar passages in the New Testament, unfold to us the deeply important subject of God’s moral government.
Now, to be merely a subject of God’s government, is one thing; to be a subject of His unchangeable grace is another. We should never confound them. To elaborate this point, and refer to the various passages which illustrate and enforce it, would demand a volume; we would here only add our full persuasion that no one can understand the word of God who does not accurately distinguish between man under government, and man under grace. In the one case, he is looked at as walking down here, in the place of responsibility and danger; in the other, he is looked at as associated with Christ above, in the place of inalienable privilege and eternal security. These two Old Testament scriptures to which you have referred us are entirely governmental, and, as a consequence, have nothing whatever to do with the question of final perseverance.
4. Matt. 12:45. “Then goeth he and taketh with him seven other spirits more wicked than himself, and they enter in and dwell there: and the last state of that man is worse than the first. Even so shall it be unto this wicked generation.” This closing sentence of this passage quite explains the whole context. Our Lord is describing the moral condition of the Jewish people. The spirit of idolatry had gone out of them, but only for a time, and to return again, in seven-fold energy and intensity, rendering their last state worse, by far, than aught that has yet appeared in their most marvelous history. This passage, taken in a secondary way, may be, very intelligently applied to an individual, who, having undergone a certain moral change, and exhibited a measure of improvement in his outward conduct, afterward falls back and becomes more openly corrupt and vicious than ever.
5. 2 John 1:8, 9 John, 8, 9. “Look to yourselves, that we lose not those things which we have wrought, but that we receive a full reward. Whosoever transgresseth, and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ, hath not God. He that abideth in the doctrine of Christ, he hath both the Father and the Son.” In verse 8, the apostle exhorts the elect lady and her children to look to themselves lest, by any means, he should, lose aught of the fruit of his ministry. They were to form part of his reward in the coming day of glory, and he longed to present them faultless, in the presence of that glory, that his reward might be full. Verse 9 needs no explanation. It is solemnly plain. If one does not abide in the doctrine of Christ, he has got nothing. Let slip the truth as to Christ, and you have no security as to anything. The Christian most assuredly needs to walk watchfully in order to escape the manifold snares and temptations which surround him; but whether is that watchfulness better promoted by placing his feet upon the shifting sand of his own performances, or by fixing them firmly upon the rock of God’s eternal salvation? Whether am I in a more favorable position for the exercise of watchfulness and prayer, while living in perpetual doubt and fear, or reposing in artless confidence, in the unchangeable love of my Savior-God? We think, dear friend, we may very safely anticipate your reply.
6. Revelation 3:11. “Behold, I come quickly; hold that fast which thou hast, that no man take thy crown.” Two things are here to be considered, namely, first, this is an address to an assembly; and, secondly, it does not say, “That no man take thy life.” A servant may lose his reward; but a child can never lose his eternal life. Attention to this would remove a host of difficulties, Sonship is one thing; discipleship is quite another. Security in Christ is one thing; testimony for Christ is quite another. If our security were dependent upon our testimony—our sonship upon our discipleship, where should we be? True, the more I know my security and enjoy my sonship, the more effective will be my testimony, and the more faithful my discipleship, but these things must never be confounded.
In conclusion, dear friend, you say that “All those texts which speak of enduring to the end, and overcoming, are thought to mean that, since there is a possibility of our not doing so, we may not be saved in the end.” As to this we would merely add that we shall be most happy, at any time, to enter with you upon close examination of every one of those passages to which you, in this general way, refer, and to prove, by the grace of God, that not one of them, when rightly interpreted, militates, in the smallest degree, against the precious truth of final perseverance; but that, on the contrary, each passage contains within itself, or within its immediate context, that which will clearly prove its perfect harmony—with the truth of the eternal security of the very feeblest lamb in all the blood-bought flock of Christ.
May the Lord establish our souls, more and more firmly, in His own truth, and preserve us unto His heavenly kingdom, to the glory of His holy name!