[Calvinistic] Christian – Part 2 – Calvinism Correctly Defines Divine Justice

abacabb3

Newbie
Jul 14, 2013
3,215
561
✟82,284.00
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Why I Am a [Calvinistic] Christian – Part 2 – Calvinism Correctly Defines Divine Justice

A former Calvinist wrote posts here and here detailing why he is no longer one. My first point, which answers to the objection that Calvinism is somehow “dehistoricized,” is answered here.

Now, as for me, I used to hate Calvinism. It made no sense that God would change people. I know that Rush song, “I choose free will,” so everyone can, right?

And something happened. I read the Bible and when I began learning what it actually said, I realized that the ideology behind the Rush song did not find itself repeated in Scripture, or the church fathers for that matter.

In fact, what put me on my path of understanding Calvinism was understanding God’s sovereignty. If God is all powerful, it stood to reason that God can control everything and is responsible for everything. When I first read the Book of Job, and found this how God responded to Job concerning charges that He was not fair, it made perfect sense to me.

“God is bigger and smarter than me,” I thought. “Of course the way He has things are for a good reason, even if I am too dumb to understand.”

Apparently, a lot of people do not understand God’s answer to Job:

Will you really annul My judgment?
Will you condemn Me that you may be justified?
Or do you have an arm like God,
And can you thunder with a voice like His?
(Job 40:8-9)

There is an accusation that Calvinism “destroys God’s justice,” but what we really see that it merely destroys man’s justice.

This is the thrust of his argument against Calvinism:

The idea here is that God could not have properly saved the elect, let alone demonstrated His justice to them, without having a group of people with whom He can be angry for all of eternity.

He then goes on to find the most unflattering and overly philosophical stuff you can find in a Calvinist screed to make them all look silly.

We already covered in part 1 what Paul actually says: God with patience prepared vessels of wrath so He can make known His mercy to “vessels of mercy.” That’s not my opinion, that is explicitly what Romans 9:22-23 says in its proper context. If you really want to take the idea to its logical extreme, simply read what Paul wrote earlier in that chapter, you know, the stuff about God hating Esau before he even did anything wrong… The reason given? “o that God’s purpose according to His choice would stand” (Romans 9:11).

Now, because simply stating what the Scripture actually says would completely disprove what he would want God’s divine justice to be, he ignores it entirely and makes a mocking caricature:

Imagine a potter who labors continually until he has created a number of excellently wrought vessels of great beauty. But he is not satisfied with that—he must also construct a second class of vessels in order to smash them into a hundred bits. This proves to everyone that he has strength. The God of Calvinism is like this potter; he must have two classes of people: One group with which to demonstrate His love and mercy, and another group with which to demonstrate His wrath and hatred of sin.

To me, what is written above is ignorance at best (the potter is an allusion from Jeremiah 18, acting as a metaphor for God who literally does destroy the pots!) and blasphemy at worst (as the clear implication is that what Paul says about God’s justice must be wrong.) He mistakenly asserts that God only makes “excellently wrought vessels of great beauty,” However, according to Paul, God also makes vessels of wrath, “prepared for destruction” (Romans 9:22).

Then, the blog goes into all of this philosophical mumbo jumbo I care not to even get into, simply because I don’t want to make this issue needlessly complicated. If R.C. Sproul, John Calvin, or anyone else adds to the words of the Scripture in order to rationalize the very clear things the Scripture says about God and His justice, then they are wrong. However, so are those that ignore what the Bible says about these things.

It might blow some people’s minds, but the Bible never says “God is not the author of evil.” It sounds Biblical, but it was actually coined by Irenaeus in response to pagans who read the Scripture and understood the logical extreme of an all powerful God sovereign over a creation with obviously evil stuff in it.

Being that we have a God that created Satan, it seems obvious to me that God made a creation purposely with evil in it. Case closed. You can try to twist words and make it sound like something else, but there was a snake in that garden and God knew about it. God made the snake and though He could have crushed it then, He is obviously waiting to do that in the future during the end times.

So, why do I have to go into a long philosophical defense as to why God would do this when I already know that God is love, He is patient, and He desires all men to be saved? We obviously do not have a vindictive and evil God. We have a God who “works all things for good for those who love Him, that have been called according to His purpose” (Romans 8:28).

And there it is! Now Romans 9, with the good and bad pots, makes sense. Good does not work itself out for the bad pots, it only does for the good pots. This is in the lens we must understand good and evil, and God’s sovereign purpose behind it. The point behind creation is not that it would be totally perfect and without evil, because otherwise God would have made it that way.

“The Lord is good,” as Nahum 1:7 simply says. He is just not good in the way we want Him to be good and therein lies our confusion. God’s not confused about this of course, but us wanting this our own way, we confuse ourselves.

God is good in the way He knows is good. He is the author of justice. He knows better than us. “For My own sake, for My own sake, I will act” (Isaiah 48:11) God declares. ”For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher than your ways and My thoughts than your thoughts” (Isaiah 55:19).

The Lord is righteous within her [Zion];
He will do no injustice.
Every morning He brings His justice to light;
He does not fail.
(Zephaniah 3:5)

The irony in the charge that “Calvinists who hold to these ideas do not realize that their origins are in Greek philosophy rather than the Bible, and … fail to appreciate that their philosophy is actually creating a lens by which they read Paul” is that the whole way the author understands God’s justice is never made explicit.

For one, it is not defined using Scripture. So, I issue the challenge, what in Romans 9 is unfair if God explicitly says it is not? If God says He will do no injustice, isn’t His word good enough for the faithful, who supposedly walk by faith and not by sight?

Interestingly enough, the author’s assertion that Calvinism destroys God’s justice reads more like a litany of philosophical disagreements and almost never invokes Scripture. The author only quotes Scripture once saying,

For example, Psalm 5:5. In the Septuagint—the Old Testament text quoted by the New Testament writers and the canonical text of the ancient Church—Psalms 5:4 reads “For You are not a God who wills (thelon) lawlessness (anomian).”

Yes, this is true, but the implication of the author is that if God does not will lawlessness, then God cannot be responsible for any evil. However, interpreting Scripture by using Scripture, this one quote does not undo that God created Satan, that He used Satan to make David conduct a census, He explicitly permitted Satan to put Job through trial, and that He causes both well being and calamity (Isaiah 45:7).

God is certainly not one who wills lawlessness. He prepares vessels of wrath and grace. And He not being lawless, has a good reason for it. If we have faith in Christ and the Scripture, which Christ Himself had faith in, then we are to have faith like little children that our Father works all things for good.