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The
False God and Gospel of Moral Government Theology E. Calvin Beisner
From the Christian Research Journal, Fall 1994, page 20. The Editor-in-Chief of the Christian Research Journal is Elliot Miller. SUMMARY Moral government theology (MGT),
rooted in the philosophical definition of freedom as the “power of contrary
choice,” denies the fundamental Christian doctrines of God’s perfection in
knowledge, goodness, and power; original sin; human moral inability; the
substitutionary satisfaction of God’s justice in Christ’s atoning death;
redemption; and justification by the crediting of Christ’s righteousness to
believers by grace through faith apart from works. As documented in this
article, these denials are unbiblical and are so serious as to warrant
classifying MGT as non-Christian. Judy was a former missionary whose
faith had collapsed; she no longer believed that God was unchangeably good or
faithful or that He even knew all of the future. George (both names have been
changed) was another former missionary who ardently rejected the historic belief
that Adam’s sin and guilt are shared in by the whole human race. What tied the
two together? Both had been taught the same doctrinal system in training with a
popular youth mission organization in the 1970s. In one, it brought depression;
in the other, pride. Both effects, strangely enough, were fitting. Since the 1960s, a new heretical
theology has been infiltrating evangelical circles. Not officially
embraced by any well-known denomination or parachurch organization, the system
has nevertheless made serious inroads into at least one large and well-known
missions organization and has spawned a ministry and publication dedicated to
its promotion and defense.[1]
This system of doctrine is paradoxically old and new: its elements are old,[2]
but the manner in which they are tied together into a complete structure is new. THE
RISE OF MORAL GOVERNMENT THEOLOGY The system’s major proponents dub
it moral government theology. But today’s moral government theology is a far
cry from what went by that name two centuries ago, when people as diverse as
Jonathan Edwards (a firm Calvinist) and John Wesley (a firm Arminian) both used
it to refer to God’s government of moral agents through His moral law as
contrasted with His government of the physical creation through physical law. Contemporary moral government
theology is principally the brainchild of the late Gordon C. Olson. During the
1930s and 1940s, Olson’s studies led him to believe that God’s foreknowledge
is necessarily limited by human free will and that the classical doctrines of
original sin, human depravity and moral inability, the Atonement, and
justification were as wrong as the classical doctrine of absolute foreknowledge.
During the 1960s and 1970s, Olson
and an engineering associate of his named Harry Conn began to teach moral
government theology for various mission organizations, often in recruiting,
motivating, or training young people. Moral government theology (hereafter MGT)
first began to spread rapidly when Olson and Although ROOT
AND BRANCHES At the root of MGT lies a
philosophical assumption about freedom. According to Olson, “the power to the
contrary is essential to free agency—A free moral agent may always act
contrary to any influence, not destructive to his freedom, that may be brought
to bear upon him.”[7]
Indeed, “voluntary responsible action involves the possibility of
non-compliance or of contrary choice—the freedom of uncertainty. Virtuous
action must be voluntary action. If no contrary choice, then no virtuous choice.
. . .”[8]
No choice may be called virtuous, then, unless the one who made it might just as
well have chosen the opposite. Add to this philosophical definition of freedom
the assertion that God and man are inherently free, and important doctrines
necessarily follow. First, man is born morally
neutral and is always capable of choosing whether to sin. Olson insists that
“holiness and sin are free voluntary acts of will or states of mind, and,
although strongly influenced, are not caused by any internal force of nature,
tendency, or instinct”; that “sin is not . . . an abstract thing which
invades and lodges somewhere in our personalities, but is rather an orderly
sequence of wrong choices and conduct”; that “depravity strongly influences,
but does not compel, toward wrong action. We choose to follow our inclinations
when we sin”; that “moral depravity. . .is always a voluntary development
which results from the wrong choices of our wills”; that “the universality
of sin in the world is not to be accounted for, therefore, by some fixed
causation in our personality inherited by birth”; and that “so-called
inability is a question of ‘will not’ rather than ‘cannot’ obey God’s
reasonable requirements.”[9]
Each person is hence condemned only
for his or her own sin. For Olson, “a contradiction would exist in the
Bible if any statement could be found declaring our guilt for Adam’s sin.”[10]
In his view, “if the Bible affirmed that we are held accountable for other’s
(sic)
sins, and particularly for Adam’s sin, this would become such a gross
injustice in the economy of God as to erect a barrier to intelligent thought and
the meaning of guilt.”[11]
Why? Because “all sin consists in sinning—there can be no moral character
but in moral acts.”[12]
Second, man’s future free choices
cannot be foreknown by God; if they were then they would no longer be free. The
“future choices of moral beings,” Olson writes, “when acting freely in
their moral agency, have not been brought into existence as yet and thus are not
fixities or objects of possible knowledge.”[13]
Thus, “many Bible passages, when taken in their natural meaning, appear to
indicate that God does not have absolute foreknowledge over all his own future
actions, nor over all those of His moral creatures.”[14]
Therefore God’s foreknowledge is limited, and He learns new things as people
make choices. Third, the principle of contrary
choice “applies to actions of the Godhead as well as to the self-caused
actions of men.”[15]
Therefore: (1) God cannot foreknow His own future choices, for if He did then He
would not make those choices freely, and He would cease to be a moral agent. (2)
God’s moral character, like man’s, depends constantly on His choices:
“Moral attributes involve the element of choice, or have a voluntary causation
to them. They are not natural attributes in that they are not endowments of
God’s existence, but are moral in the sense that they are the result of a
disposition of will. They exist because each Member of the Godhead
perpetually chooses that they should be so. Moral character must be an
active something. It cannot be a static fixity of some sort back of the will,
causing its actions” (emphasis added).[16]
Hence, the absolutely unfettered will, not the moral nature, lies at the root of
God’s (or any moral agent’s) choices and character. This follows necessarily
from Olson’s first principle, already cited: “Voluntary responsible action
involves the possibility of non-compliance or of contrary choice—the freedom
of uncertainty. . . . If no contrary choice, then no virtuous choice. . . .”[17]
The shocking implication of this
last idea—that God is morally changeable—might appear to contradict another
of Olson’s statements: “God’s nature and moral character imposes
limitations. God is able to do whatever He wills (except with moral beings [sic]),
but His will is limited to doing those things which are in harmony with His wise
and holy and perfect character. God cannot do things contrary to Himself. This
is not a defect in Divine omnipotence but a perfection of the Divine Being.”[18]
But Olson chooses his terms
carefully. “Moral character,” he says, “is dynamic; it is the whole
personality in action; it is what we are doing with our endowments or abilities
of personality and the moral understanding which we possess.”[19]
If it is true that Olson believes that God’s “will is limited to
doing those things which are in harmony with His wise and holy and perfect character”
(emphasis added),[20]
it is also true that Olson believes God’s character “cannot be a
static fixity of some sort back of the will, causing its actions,” but “is
the whole personality in action; it is what [God is] doing with [His] endowments
or abilities of personality and the moral understanding which [He] possess[es].”[21]
As Olson puts it, “the will
determines the nature or character, rather than the nature the will”
(emphasis added).[22]
Should God ever choose to make His character other than wise and holy and
perfect—and no “internal force of nature” can prevent His doing so—then
of course that wise and holy and perfect character will no longer limit what He
wills; a different sort of character will do so. To put it simply, we have no assurance
that God will not decide tomorrow to become the Devil. Not only God’s knowledge and moral
character but even His power collapses before the inexorable implications
of human autonomy in MGT. Olson hints at this in a parenthetical phrase in his
statement of the limits on God’s will, cited above: “God is able to do
whatever He wills (except with moral beings), but His will is limited to
doing those things which are in harmony with His wise and holy and perfect
character” (emphasis added).[23]
He makes it explicit when he writes, “Man as an endowed moral being has been
given the ability to limit the omnipotence of God in his sphere of life.
Mankind by their rebellion against God and their obstinacy in refusing the mercy
and forgiveness through the atoning death of Christ have imposed very great
limitations upon God’s will and happiness. . . . God in creating moral
creatures with the power of contrary choice made this a possibility”
(emphasis added).[24]
The implications of these ideas do
not end here. They yield a whole new understanding of justification and
salvation as well. Since Olson explicitly denies that man inherits sin or guilt
from Adam (i.e., he denies the doctrine of original sin—the imputation of
Adam’s sin and guilt to his posterity), it should come as no surprise that he
also denies the imputation of Christ’s righteousness to believers. He finds
the cause of salvation not in Christ’s atoning death but in the believer’s
self-reformation: “Romans 5:12–19 does not establish the dogma of the
literal imputation of Adam’s sin to all his posterity, but merely affirms in a
parallelism that just as Adam’s sin was the occasion, not cause, of the
voluntary disobedience of all men, so Christ is the occasion, not cause, of the
salvation offered to all men.”[25]
“The active obedience or holiness of Christ,” Olson says, “is not legally
imputed to the believer.”[26]
And if Christ’s righteousness is not credited to the believer, neither is the
believer’s sin credited to Christ on the cross. For sin is not a principle;
sins are isolated, individual acts only. But if our sins are not borne by
Christ on the cross, how are we to be freed from the penalty due them? Ah, the
question assumes that a penalty is due, but none is! “A voluntary disposition
of mercy and forgiveness prevails equally among all the Members of the Godhead.
The Godhead is without personal vindictiveness. The problems of forgiveness are
not personal but governmental. God does not require an exact payment for sin to
satisfy retributive justice, but only requires that an atonement shall
satisfy public justice and all the problems of a full and free
reconciliation in His government of moral beings.”[27]
This denial of any demand for the
satisfaction of retributive (or “vindictive”) justice in God leads Olson to
deny that Christ’s atoning death was the true payment of a penalty to satisfy
that justice: The
atonement of Christ “rendered satisfaction to public justice (a demonstration
before all that rebellion against authority will be punished), as distinguished
from retributive or vindictive justice.”[29]
(1)
Freedom entails the power
of contrary choice, and God and man are both free. (2)
God is finite, imperfect,
and changeable in His knowledge, character, and power, and He does not require
vengeance for sin. (3) Man is perfectly free, which implies that he cannot have inherited either sin or a morally corrupt nature from Adam, and his freedom necessarily limits God’s knowledge, will, and power
(4)
The gospel is that “the atoning death of Christ,” as Olson deigns to call
it—nay, even Christ Himself—“is the occasion, not cause, of the salvation
offered to all men.”[30]
The “consequences of right and wrong moral action” in MGT “are based solely
upon personal merit or demerit as known only to God” and “are and will
be in exact accord or in proportion to merit and demerit” (emphasis added).[31] By defining freedom as the “power
of contrary choice,” Olson is forced ultimately to deny nearly the whole
defining body of Christian faith: original sin, unregenerate man’s moral
inability, the imputation of Christ’s righteousness in justification (parallel
to the imputation of Adam’s sin i.n condemnation), the substitutionary and
satisfactory atonement for sin in Christ’s death, and the moral and
intellectual infinity, perfection, and immutability of God. And Olson reaches
his conclusions not on the basis of Scripture but by inferences from
philosophical assumptions. What might Olson have found had he subjected his
first principle and his inferences to the light of Scripture? HUMAN
FREEDOM AND SIN IN SCRIPTURE Scripture knows nothing of freedom
as the “power of contrary choice.” Real freedom is not autonomy but
deliverance from the slavery to sin in which all humans are born, into
the glorious freedom of the children of God: “But thanks be to God that though
you were slaves of sin, you became obedient from the heart to that form
of teaching to which you were committed, and having been freed from sin, you became
slaves of righteousness” (Romans 6:17–18, emphases added). Try as he might,
man never can escape being Number Two—he must always be someone’s slave.
The serpent’s trickery was to make Adam and Eve think that by disobeying God
they could begin to rule their own lives—they could be Number One. Instead,
rejecting God’s rule only meant embracing Satan’s (Ephesians 2:2). “But
now having been freed from sin and enslaved to God, you derive your benefit,
resulting in sanctification, and the outcome, eternal life. For the wages of sin
is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord”
(Romans 6:22–23). Far from human freedom being the
“power of contrary choice,” the very exercise of that power robbed human
beings of the only freedom for which we were made: the freedom of obedience to
our rightful Sovereign. And no “power of contrary choice” in us will ever
free us from sin’s tyranny, for we are “dead in trespasses and sins” and
“by nature children of wrath” (Ephesians 2:1, 3). We suffer, as Luther put
it in the title of one of his most famous books, from The Bondage of the Will;
our wills are bound to our corrupt, rebellious, sinful nature inherited from
Adam.[32]
What we need is not a free will but
a new, holy, obedient, righteous nature (2 Corinthians 5:17) to which our will
can be bound. And we cannot produce that new nature for ourselves—least of all
by an act of our own will, which is bound by the contrary nature. Dead,
rebellious humans do not—cannot—repent, believe, and reform their
lives. DIVINE
KNOWLEDGE, HOLINESS, AND JUSTICE IN SCRIPTURE Far from divine freedom being the
“power of contrary choice,” God’s freedom is precisely that He never will
or even can do anything contrary to His holy and good nature. “Thou art
good and doest good” (Psalm 119:68). That is why God “cannot
lie” (Titus 1:2); why we know that His promise and His purpose are
“unchangeable” and therefore that “it is impossible for God to lie”
(Hebrews 6:17–18); why God could rest His assurance to Israel on His own
immutability when He said, “For I, the LORD, do not change; therefore you, O
sons of Jacob, are not consumed” (Malachi 3:6); why we can be comforted to
know that “if we are faithless, He remains faithful; for He cannot deny
Himself” (2 Timothy 2:13; cf. Like His moral nature, so also
God’s knowledge is perfect, admitting no increase or improvement. “God . . .
knows all things” (1 This God of infinite and
unchangeable knowledge and holiness is also a God of perfect justice who,
contrary to Olson, does demand vengeance on sin: “I, the LORD your God,
am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children, on the
third and the fourth generations of those who hate Me . . .” (Exodus 20:5, cf.
20:7; THE
GOSPEL OF REDEMPTION AND JUSTIFICATION Thank God that although “all have
sinned and fall short of the glory of God,” we are “justified as a gift by
His grace through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus; whom God displayed
publicly as a propitiation [i.e., satisfaction of man’s debt to
God’s outraged holiness] in His blood through faith. This was to demonstrate
His righteousness, because in the forbearance of God He passed over the sins
previously committed; for the demonstration, I say, of His righteousness at the
present time, that He might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith
in Jesus” (Romans 3:23–26, emphasis added). This redemption by Christ is truly a
payment of our penalty for sin, Olson’s denials notwithstanding: “You
were not redeemed with perishable things . . . but with precious blood, as of a
lamb unblemished and spotless, the blood of Christ” (1 Peter 1:18–19).
“The Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life
a ransom for many” (Matthew 20:28). “In Him we have redemption through His
blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of His
grace” (Ephesians 1:7). The Holy Spirit “is given as a pledge of our
inheritance, with a view to the redemption of God’s own possession”
(Ephesians 1:14). Christ “gave Himself for us, that He might redeem us from
every lawless deed” (Titus 2:14). For this reason Christ is praised: “Worthy
art Thou to take the book, and to break its seals; for Thou wast slain, and
didst purchase for God with Thy blood men from every tribe and tongue and people
and nation” (Revelation 5:9). In His atoning death, Christ truly
substituted Himself for us in bearing the penalty for our sins: “But He was
pierced through for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; the
chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, and by His scourging we are
healed” (Isaiah 53:5). He was offered up “to bear the sins of many”
(Hebrews 9:28), “the just for the unjust” {that
is, the just “in the stead of, as a substitute for” the unjust[34]}
(1 Peter 3:18), “a ransom[35]
for[36]
all” who would be saved (1 Timothy 2:6). Just as surely as He gave Himself to
bear our sins, Christ also gives us the gift of His righteousness: For
if by the transgression of the one, death reigned through the one, much more
those who receive the abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness will
reign in life through the One, Jesus Christ. So then as through one
transgression there resulted condemnation to all men, even so through one act of
righteousness there resulted justification of life to all men. For as through
the one man’s disobedience the many were made sinners, even so through the
obedience of the One the many will be made righteous. (Romans 5:17–19) And we obtain this gift of
righteousness not by works but solely by faith: “I count all things to be loss
in view of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have
suffered the loss of all things, and count them but rubbish in order that I may
gain Christ, and may be found in Him, not having a righteousness of my own
derived from the Law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the
righteousness which comes from God on the basis of faith” (Philippians
3:8–9; cf. MINOR
ABERRATION OR DEPARTURE FROM THE FAITH? Proponents of MGT often depict
opposition to it as rooted in “hyper-Calvinism,” claiming that their
doctrines are nothing but Wesleyan-Arminianism, which is recognized in
evangelical circles as a non-heretical option in theology. Not so. Neither Wesley nor Arminius would
ever have dreamed of denying God’s absolute and infinite foreknowledge or His
unchangeable goodness. Wesley boldly defended God’s foreknowledge in
commenting on [Some]
brought forward an instance, or example, in which [they alleged that] Necessity
and Both Wesley and Arminius clearly
affirmed that all human beings (except Christ) inherit the sin and guilt of Adam
and therefore are naturally bound to sin until regenerated by God. “This,
therefore, is the first grand distinguishing point between Heathenism and
Christianity,” wrote Wesley. He continued: The
one acknowledges that many men are infected with many vices, and even born with
a proneness to them; but supposes withal, that in some the natural good much
over balances the evil: the other declares that all men are “conceived in
sin,” and “shapen in wickedness”—that hence there is in every man a
“carnal mind,” which is enmity against God; which is not, cannot be, subject
to “his law”; which so infects the whole soul, that “there dwelleth in”
him “in his flesh,” in his natural state, “no good thing”; but “every
imagination of the thoughts of his heart is evil,” only evil, and that
“continually.” Hence
we may learn that all who deny this, call it “original sin,” or by any other
title, are but Heathens still, in the fundamental point which differences
Heathenism from Christianity. . . . But here is the shibboleth: Is man by nature
filled with all manner of evil? Is he void of all good? Is he wholly fallen? Is
his soul totally corrupted? Or, to come back to the text, is “every
imagination of the thoughts of his heart only evil continually?” Allow
this, and you are so far a Christian. Deny it, and you are but a Heathen still.[41]
In like manner Arminius insisted: The
whole of this sin, however, is not peculiar to our first parents, but is common
to the entire race and to all their posterity, who, at the time when this sin
was committed, were in their loins, and who have since descended from them by
the natural mode of propagation, according to the primitive benediction. For in
Adam “all have sinned.” (Romans 5:12) Wherefore, whatever punishment was
brought down upon our first parents, has likewise pervaded and yet pursues all
their posterity. So that all men “are by nature the children of wrath,”
(Ephesians 2:3)[42] Arminius wrote elsewhere that in
his lapsed and sinful state, man is not capable, of and by himself,
either to think, to will, or to do that which is really good; but it is
necessary for him to be regenerated and renewed in his intellect, affections or
will, and in all his powers, by God in Christ through the Holy Spirit, that he
may be qualified rightly to understand, esteem, consider, will, and perform
whatever is truly good. When he is made a partaker of this regeneration or
renovation, I consider that, since he is delivered from sin, he is capable of
thinking, willing and doing that which is good, but yet not without the
continued aids of Divine Grace. (emphasis added)[43]
Both Wesley and Arminius affirmed
the substitutionary, penal satisfaction doctrine of the atoning death of Christ.
In commenting on In explaining the priestly office of
Christ, Arminius wrote that by it God exercised both His love for humanity and
His love for justice, united
to which is a hatred against sin. It was the will of God that each of these
kinds of love should be satisfied. He gave satisfaction to his love for the
creature who was a sinner, when he gave up his Son who might act the part of
Mediator. But he rendered satisfaction to his love for justice and to
his hatred against sin, when he imposed on his Son the office of Mediator by
the shedding of his blood and by the suffering of death; (Hebrews 2:10; 5:8, 9)
and he was unwilling to admit him as the Intercessor for sinners except when
sprinkled with his own blood, in which he might be made [expiatio] the propitiation
for sins. (Hebrews 9:12) . . . In this respect also it may with propriety be
said that God rendered satisfaction to himself, and appeased himself in “the
Son of his love” (italicized emphases in original, boldfaced emphases added).[45]
Both Wesley and Arminius affirmed
that we are justified by God’s crediting the righteousness of Christ to our
account as a gift through faith apart from works. Commenting on In each of these points, MGT stands
in stark contradiction not only to Arminius and Wesley but also to the great
creeds and doctrinal statements of every branch of Protestantism[48]
and, most important, to Scripture. If Wesley, the great champion of Christian
tolerance and catholicity, could treat rejection of the doctrines of original
sin and moral inability as sufficient by itself to define one as “a Heathen
still,” surely MGT, which makes not only this grave error but also many others
graver still, must be classified not as a form of Christianity but as heathenism
masquerading as Christianity. About
the Author E. Calvin Beisner is an associate
professor of interdisciplinary studies at Copyright
1994 by the Christian Research Institute. COPYRIGHT/REPRODUCTION
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Research Institute
[1]
Evangelistic
Education Ministries ( [2]
It
combines some of the teachings of the fifth-century monk Pelagius, who was
opposed principally by Augustine and condemned by the ecumenical councils of
[3]
For
thorough documentation that MGT has been a widespread and often central
element of YWAM training, see Alan W. Gomes, Lead Us Not into
Deception: A Biblical Examination of Moral Government Theology, 3d rev.
ed. (La Mirada, CA: published by the author, 1986), Appendices A and B. At
least during the 1970s and the early 1980s, MGT was the dominant theological
perspective at every YWAM training base around the world that Gomes and I,
with the help of many contacts both inside and outside YWAM, were able to
check. As well, many of YWAM’s most respected teachers, both on and off
staff, taught MGT, according to firsthand testimony by YWAM students. [4]
E.g.,
Harry Conn, Four Trojan Horses (Nyack, NY: Parson Publishing, 1978),
especially chapter 3 and appendices 1 and 2; Harry Conn, ed., Finney’s
Systematic Theology (Minneapolis: Bethany Fellowship, 1976); Howard Roy
Elseth, Did God Know? (St. Paul: Calvary United Church, 1977); Winkie
Pratney, Youth Aflame (n.p., 1970; rev. ed., [5]
Most
important among Olson’s writings has been his evangelism training manual, Sharing
Your Faith: The 3 M’s of Witnessing: The Messenger, The Message, The
Method, 4th rev. ed. (Chicago: Bible Research Fellowship, 1976),
republished with very little alteration as The Truth Shall Make You Free
(Franklin Park, IL: Bible Research Fellowship, 1980). See also his
40-tape lecture series, “The Messenger, the Message and Method of Sharing
Your Faith.” Other important publications by Olson include The Entrance
of Sin into the World (Minneapolis: Men for Missions, 1973), Holiness
and Sin (Minneapolis: Men for Missions, 1971), and The Moral
Government of God, 3d rev. ed. (Minneapolis: Men for Missions, 1974). [6]
For
extensive citations from other MGT proponents in a longer critique of the
system, see E. Calvin Beisner, The Heresy of Moral Government
Theology (Sunnyvale, CA: Coalition on Revival, 1989, 1990). For a more
extensive critique specifically of MGT’s rejection of God’s
foreknowledge, see Beisner, “The Omniscience of God: Biblical
Doctrine and Answers to Objections,” Crosswinds: The Reformation Digest
2:1 (Spring/Summer 1993), 10-26. Copies of both are available from the
author at $5 each prepaid ( [7]
Olson,
Sharing Your Faith (henceforth Sharing), W-Me-IV-7. (Olson
uses this page numbering system in both Sharing and The Truth
Shall Make You Free.) [8]
Olson,
The Truth Shall Make You Free (henceforth Truth), T-V-1. [9]
Truth,
T-V-1; T-V-3; T-VI-5; T-VI-6; Sharing, W-Me-IV-4-5; W-Me-VIII-6. [10]
Sharing,
W-Me-IV-5. [11]
Ibid.,
W-Me-VII-3. [12]
Ibid.,
unnumbered page opposite W-Me-IV-6. [13]
Truth,
T-III-13. [14]
Ibid.,
T-III-18. [15]
Ibid.,
T-III-13. [16]
Ibid.,
T-III-23. [17]
Ibid.,
T-V-1. [18]
Ibid.,
T-III-22. [19]
Ibid.,
T-III-23. [20]
Ibid.,
T-III-22. [21]
Ibid.,
T-III-23. [22]
Olson,
Holiness and Sin, 24. [23]
Truth,
T-III-22. [24]
Ibid. [25]
Ibid.,
T-VI-8. [26]
Sharing,
“Historical Opinions,” 2. [27]
Truth,
T-VII-4. [28]
“Historical
Opinions as to the Nature of Christ’s Atoning Death,” 3, in Truth,
page following T-VII-10. [29]
Ibid.,
T-VIII-4. [30]
Ibid.,
T-VI-8. [31]
Ibid.,
T-IV-11. [32]
Martin
Luther, The Bondage of the Will, trans. Henry Cole (Grand Rapids:
Baker, 1976); also in Luther and Erasmus: Free Will and Salvation,
ed. E. Gordon Rupp and Philip S. Watson (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1969). [33]
Truth,
T-III-13. [34]
The
Greek word huper, here translated for, conveys, in contexts
like this, the sense of substitution. See A. T. Robertson, A
Grammar of the Greek New Testament in the Light of Historical Research
(Nashville: Broadman Press, 1934), 630-31; A. T. Robertson, Word Pictures
in the New Testament, 6 vols. (Nashville: Broadman Press, 1933),
6:115-16; R. C. H. Lenski, The Interpretation of the Epistles of St.
Peter, St. John and St. Jude (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1966), 156. [35]Greek:
antilutron, literally, “a substituted payment.” [36]
Greek:
huper, “in the place of”; see note no. 34 above. [37]
John
Wesley, Explanatory Notes upon the New Testament, 15th ed. ( [38]
By
John Wesley: A Modern Reader’s Introduction to the Man and his Message. .
.,
ed. T. Otto Nall (New York: Association Press, 1961), 20-21; extract from
the sermon, “Divine Providence,” in The Works of the Rev. John Wesley,
ed. John Emory (New York: Methodist Book Concern, 1916), 2:99-107. [39]
By
John Wesley, 62-63; extracted from Wesley’s sermon, “The
Lord of Righteousness,” in Standard Sermons of John Wesley,
2:426-27. [40]
Arminius,
Apology Against Thirty-one Defamatory Articles, Article XXII, in The
Writings of James Arminius, 3 vols., trans. James Nichols and W. R.
Bagnall (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1977), 1:344-46. [41]
By
John Wesley, 29-30; extracted from Wesley’s sermon,
“Original Sin,” in Standard Sermons of John Wesley, 2:222-25. [42]
Arminius,
Public Disputations, VII, XV-XVI, in Writings of James Arminius,
1:485-86. [43]
Arminius,
Declaration of Sentiments, III, in Writings of James Arminius,
1:252-53. [44]
Wesley,
Explanatory Notes, 370. [45]
Arminius,
Public Disputations, XIV, XVI, in Writings of James Arminius,
1:560. [46]
Wesley,
Explanatory Notes, 375. [47]
Arminius,
Declaration of Sentiments, IX, in Writings of James Arminius,
1:264. [48] I have cited these at great length in point-by-point opposition to the primary tenets of MGT in The Heresy of Moral Government Theology.
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