Article III: Total Depravity
Primarily the Fall of man affected two key functions, one deontological and the other soteriological- that is, one area relates to our moral obligation, the other is the very cornerstone to our salvation. This article will go over how the area of man and his moral obligation was affected. This doctrine is
total depravity- the consummate wickedness of mans desires towards sin and the inability to combat the sinful desires of our nature that we all are born with, without the divine intervention of God. This doctrine throws cold water on
everybody because its very point of emphasis is the depraved moral helplessness of us all and the inherent wickedness of humankind. This accounts for my original rejection of the doctrine. The problem was not because my objections were Biblical inconsistencies with the doctrine of total depravity, but rather my pride and in large part my misunderstandings of the doctrine. But allow me to explain what led me to Gods truth.
This
slavery towards evil that we speak of does not result from Satan forcing us to do evil. And God forbid the notion that our heavenly Father forces us to sin. Slavery gives us the imagery of a person being violently forced against their will to fulfill their masters desires. Opponents of total depravity charge that the doctrine teaches that man cannot make choices and that according to predestination we are
forced to act one way or another. On the contrary, we
earnestly believe that were able to choose for ourselves.
Free will can be defined as the ability to do whatever it is we want to without ever being forced to act contrary. The real difference is that we believe that which man naturally desires is sin, since we are fallen by nature. In actuality, were not slaves because we have no free will or ability to do what we want; were totally depraved
because we have the free ability to do what we desire. We do not deny free will, but actually acknowledge that total depravity exists as a direct result of free will. That which we want and desire is a reflection of the fallen nature that we inherited.
These next paragraphs are probably some of the deepest philosophies within this book, and so read slowly and think carefully. Im trying to write this in the most reader-friendly way possible: Mans decisions are made in regard to various aspects, such as our thoughts, our feelings, and our environment. These conflict with each other, and whatever gives us the strongest compulsion towards a particular action, we will choose to oblige. We will always choose whatever weighs up to be the strongest compulsion towards action. It is mans natural tendency to always do that which most compels us most, or what Jonathon Edwards calls our strongest motive. We choose to study for finals because we know we need a good grade to get to a good school, we choose to date and marry because we fall in love, we choose to run because theres a fire. If you carefully examine each choice you make, youll soon realize that each of these different facets directly affect our decisions. Most of the time they conflict. When they do, whichever one or two or three factors drive us to a certain compulsion in the strongest manner will be acted upon. As R. C. Sproul put this,
It is determined in the sense that those choices are caused by the motive that is the strongest one in the mind at the moment of choosing. (Sproul, 159).
Heres a very practical example I actually found myself in not too far back: Visualize yourself at church where the congregation is taking a vote to decide whether they should rebuild the church, and you are actively taking part. You must vote for rebuilding the church or vote against it. You want to vote to rebuild the church because you
feel like its musty and crowded and needs more room for prospective members. But you also
know that reconstruction of a religious institution is financially draining to the churchs budget and may cause the church to go into debt. On the other hand, you break into a cold sweat when you glance around the rest of the congregation, and
everyone else has their hands in the air. Take the different factors that will influence your decision. You may act on your knowledge and understanding of potential financial problems (and vote to not rebuild the church), or on your feelings and environment (and vote to reconstruct the church). Whatever drives or compels you to act in a certain decision the most will produce that result. If you feel most strongly about ensuring the church does not make a financial mistake, then you will vote against the project. If you feel most strongly compelled to raise your hand because everyone else is doing it, and also because the church is too old and gloomy, then youll vote for the project. These three factors work in different manners in virtually every decision you make.
Isnt it most interesting, that the One who may change the desires of our hearts, enlighten us with knowledge, and alter our environment is God alone? He who created our hearts, He who created our minds, He who created our environment, has the full ability to change and alter them. If God doesnt want us to sin, he may give us His common grace; if He doesnt want us to make a certain decision, He may change our thought processes. If God doesnt want us to go to a picnic, He might make it rain, or make you desire to go home and cook, or simply fill your mind with the embarrassing memory of when you fell in the lake last time. You see, by changing one of these three different factors, our entire mood and desire to do something is changed altogether.
If all three of these factors are within His direct jurisdiction and sovereign control, then, by altering any of these three, He may encourage us to choose to act in a certain way, without any violation to our will. He may confirm that we will act in a way, while in no way forcing us to act in a certain manner, but by merely changing our environment, or our heart, or our minds, our will and natural choices will be confirmed in a certain manner which He has foreordained. The Bible is packed to the full with examples- of Jonah (who was engulfed by a storm and swallowed by a fish) and of Judas (whose heart was moved to betray Jesus), of Lydia (whose heart was opened) and of Lot (who learned of the destruction of his city), of Pharaoh (whose heart was hardened) and of Pilate (who stood before the crowd shouting Crucify Him!). In each example, God used different methods to change the hearts of the men and women above, and thus, affected their choices. In essence, God was sovereignly in control, yet Jonah, Judas, Lydia, Lot, Pharaoh, and Pilate all made decisions from their own free will to act in a particular manner.
In practicality, God may influence each of our decisions to accomplish the ends He desires. If God does not have sovereign control over the means, then how may He foreordain the ends? How is it that God can ordain what will happen in the end, unless He is in control of what actions leads up to it? The existence of prophecies and the book of Revelation themselves must testify that God must be in sovereign control if those prophecies are to be fulfilled.
The inventor of the above view of how man makes choices is to the best of my knowledge, the greatest native American theologian to date, Jonathon Edwards. His greatest contribution is in strengthening the doctrines of hamartiology. To quote,
To talk of the determination of the will supposes an effect, which must have a cause. If the will is determined, there is a determiner. This must be supposed to be intended even by them that say, the will determines itself. If it be so, the will is both determiner and determined; it is a cause that acts and produces effects upon itself, and is the object of its own influence and action. (Edwards, 141-
Freedom of the Will)
To translate out of Puritan-ese, let me elaborate. The Fall of man gave man a fallen, totally depraved, sinful nature. This causes mans desires to be evil, and this determines mans will for a particular course of action. In other words, since man is depraved, man will naturally make all sinful choices, thus making all decisions uniformly the same. But if youre Arminian, you have a problem because the will is supposed to be free and morally neutral. A desire, a thought, or something around you that prompts an action must have a sufficient cause.
There must be a sufficient explanation as to what might cause a persons heart to desire good or lust for evil, thus causing them to act good or act evil in certain circumstances
. If the will is neither inclined towards good nor evil, then actions that are good or evil must have a cause. Surely the will cannot be both holy and unholy. If morally neutral, then there must be a first cause. If you believe that those first causes are directly related to the activities of God, then shake hands with Calvinism.
It would suffice to say that if mans will is free, and neither perpetually prompted towards good nor evil, man should
never have desires for good nor evil. If man does have such desires present, tugging in one direction, then there must be a cause. If the cause is an unnatural desire caused by the activity of
someone else, then it is not us who can be at fault for our own actions, but the orchestrator. If, in Arminian theology the desires are present, then ultimately it is not man who is responsible for moral actions but God, and it is not man who is ultimately responsible for sinning, but Satan. If some Arminian states that
God or Satan is this cause of our actions, then I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but they are far more hyper-Calvinistic than
I, because this defies the meaning of free will in both the Arminian
and the Calvinist context! Our will would then be tossed to and fro, in one wind towards righteousness, in another towards immorality. It is not really a free will but a constant visage of the current victor of spiritual warfare for our hearts. I really only wish that most Arminians would be willing to see the dead end alley their theology naturally leads them into.
Ponder this. For every action, there is a cause. The will prompts us towards evil naturally, and good when God influences or enlightens us, or puts in our hearts the
desire to act morally. Thus free will is never violated (since we act out what we
want and
choose to), God is ultimately in control (since He bears the reigns of regenerative and common grace),
and man is responsible for his own actions (since the actions we made are our own choices)! Youve got to love philosophy.
John Calvin wrote:
Man will then be spoken of as having this sort of free decision, not because he has free choice of good and evil, but because he acts wickedly by will, not by compulsion...for man not to be forced to serve sin, yet to be such a willing slave.... (Calvin, 264- emphasis added). So for the sake of clarity one last time, we believe in free will-
we believe that men have the ability to choose to do whatever they want to. The real question is, what does man naturally desire? Good or evil or both? What we do deny is that men can make choices towards obedience, because as a result of a fallen nature they will never
want to make choices towards obedience,
unless something separate and greater than them counteracts it. The doctrine of total depravity is centered on the fact that man has an inability to do good without Gods help, something that is taught consistently throughout the Scriptures without fail. The question arises: Does the fact that man cannot act righteous on his own without Gods help mean that man cannot be held accountable for acting in a sinful manner? After all, how can God hold man accountable for acting out what they do naturally? Dr. Robert L. Reymond masterfully answers:
God deals with man according to his obligation
, not according to the measure of
his ability. Before the Fall, man had both the obligation and the ability to obey
God. As a result of the Fall, he retained the former but lost the latter....His
obligation to obey God remains intact. If God dealt with man today according to
his ability to obey, he would have to reduce his moral demands to the vanishing
point. (Reymond, 454)
Theres the problem: if God dealt with man today according to his ability to obey, then he would be required to adjust His divine requirements of morality, and alter whatever standard of perfection and virtue that He has in order to well accompany the ability of men.
Defenders of semi-Pelagianism advocate a series of randomly assorted verses in which God commands His people to repent and choose righteousness. They rejoice in victory over verses that use the word choose- as if thats some sort of proof for their theology. As Calvin confirmed above, total depravity does not deny that men can make choices. The fascinating part is that in the Biblical scheme, man is not
supposed to be able to obey the Law perfectly. God knows were depraved and unable to follow the Law. Hes well aware we cannot obey the Law. But you see, thats the point. Our inability to obey is the purpose of God imposing moral commands. The point of God giving 613 Levitical laws, the purpose of Jesus commanding the Pharisees to be perfect as your Father in heaven is perfect is not because He actually anticipates perfect obedience and submission to all the laws or expects moral perfection from the Pharisees. Supporters of free will reason, God would not make commands of people that they are incapable of following. But the truth is that they
are incapable of following and obeying on their own, and thats
exactly why God made that command. The unreachable standard is
supposed to give man such an utter, overwhelming feeling of helplessness and despair, that it forces them on their knees and encourages them towards humility and dependence on God. The inability to follow the Law is supposed to be the reason why we need Jesus. Our constant sinful tendencies is supposed to encourage prayer. God has throughout history given commands that men could not act out on their own so that they learn to depend on God and accept Jesus when they are convicted of their sinfulness! If all men had...