Note: The article below begins an occasional five
part series on the doctrines of grace (or “the five points of Calvinism”). I abbreviated this material from a previously
written discipleship booklet, and Bonnie Beach is helping me format it into a
tract that we can copy and distribute when we minister this Saturday at the
Fluvanna Correctional Center.
The Biblical doctrines of grace are sometimes referred to by the
acronym: TULIP. Each letter in TULIP stands for one foundational
doctrine in the doctrines of grace. The
“T” in TULIP stands for “Total Depravity” (or “radical depravity”).
Total Depravity maintains that the extent of the impact of sin
since the fall (Gen 3) is so devastating as to make any human being’s salvation
completely dependent on the work of God alone.
This doctrine takes seriously the hideous
nature of human sin. Those who are not
believers generally hold an optimistic view of human nature. They believe that people are basically good
and only are corrupted due to culture or environment. The Biblical teaches, however, that men are
sinners who reject God.
In Romans 3:11 Paul said, “There is none that
understandeth; there is none that seeketh after God.” He was describing the plight of unregenerate
(unconverted) human beings. The Bible
holds out the scandalous truth that the only way a sinner becomes a seeker of
the one true God is when God sovereignly opens his heart to believe the gospel
(see the model conversion of Lydia in Acts 16:15: “whose heart the Lord opened”).
A firm understanding of the sinful human
condition is required for the gospel rightly to be understood. We must hear the “bad news” of God’s wrath,
before we can understand the “good news” of his love, mercy, and grace.
Seven
reflections on Total Depravity:
1.
Total Depravity does not mean
we are as bad as we possibly can be.
Total depravity is often misinterpreted as
saying that mankind is somehow sub-human. Total depravity, however, is not absolute depravity. We are not all Hitlers! Even as sinners, we are still God’s image
bearers (see Gen 9:6; Psalm 8; James 3:9).
Still, we are completely dependent upon God alone for salvation.
2.
Sin’s impact is total in that it touches the totality of
our being.
This is where the term “radical depravity” is
perhaps more helpful. The English word
“radical” comes from the Latin word radix
meaning root or foundation. Sin reaches
to our roots. It is basic to our present
condition. Sin is radical in that it
impacts every aspect of life: physically,
emotionally, rationally, intellectually, personally, politically, and
spiritually. In Romans 7:18 Paul
confessed: “I know that in me (that is,
in my flesh) dwelleth no good thing.”
3.
Sin is universal (impacting all
human beings).
In Romans
3:23, Paul said, “For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of
God.” In the days of Noah the Lord
looked at mankind and saw that “every imagination of the
thoughts of his heart was only evil continually” (Gen
6:5). The prophet Jeremiah lamented: “The heart is deceitful
above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it? (Jeremiah
17:9). It has well been said that, “the
best of men are men at best.”
4.
We are sinners from birth.
The Bible teaches that we inherit a sin
nature at birth from our first parents, Adam and Eve (cf. Rom 5:17; 1 Cor
15:21-22). This is sometimes called
“original sin.” In Psalm 51:5 David
says, “I was shapen in iniquity; and in sin did my mother conceive me” (cf. Ps
58:3). As one has put it, “We are not
sinners because we sin; we sin because we are sinners.”
5.
In addition to our inherited sin nature we also commit actual sins.
Every human being not only has an inclination
to sin, but when given time and opportunity he willfully breaks God’s
commands. In Isaiah 53:6 we read, “All
we like sheep have gone astray.” John
notes, “If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is
not in us” (1 John 1:8). Sin is not
merely theoretical but actual in our lives.
6.
Apart from regeneration (a change
of heart), no sinner willingly chooses God.
Jesus told Nicodemus, “Except a man be born
again, he cannot see the kingdom of God” (John 3:3). A new
birth experience (regeneration) is required before a person can willingly turn
to Christ!
Paul describes the spiritual dullness
of the unconverted: “But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they
are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are
spiritually discerned” (1 Cor 2:14). In
2 Corinthians 4:3, he describes unbelievers as “blinded” to the truth.
In light of this condition we must talk about human inability. The unregenerate do not welcome the light of Christ (see John 3:18). They do not seek God (Rom 3:11).
Apart from regeneration, repentance, and faith in Christ, we remain “children
of wrath” who deserve a holy God’s righteous judgment (see Eph 2:1-3).
It is painful to come to grips with this
reality. The flesh will revolt against
the Bible’s condemnation of what we falsely believe to be our innate spiritual
goodness. The unsaved usually have a
“But I’m a good person!” mentality. We
must be honest, however, about what the Bible teaches and humble in
understanding our condition.
7.
Total Depravity accentuates the gap between
the holiness of God and the sinfulness of mankind.
Psalm 5:5 declares, “thou hatest all workers
of iniquity.” Psalm 7:11 adds that “God
is angry with the wicked every
day.” His eyes are too pure to look upon
unrighteousness (see Hab 1:13). God not
only hates sin, but he hates sinners. The
Puritan minister Ralph Venning wrote: “God
hates man for sin.”
The truth of
Scripture is that Christ saves us from experiencing the wrath of God for our
sin. John 3:36 declares, “He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth
not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him.” Likewise, in Romans 5:9, Paul declares that “being now justified
by His blood, we shall be saved from wrath through Him [Jesus].” Until we understand the magnitude of human
sin we will not perceive the magnitude of salvation.
Conclusion:
Sin is not a minor hurdle we must overcome with merely a little bit of God's help. It is an insurmountable obstacle that will only be overcome by God setting down to set us over it.
An honest and sober reckoning of unregenerate man's plight in sin is a necessary starting point to understand properly the solution offered by God's grace in Christ.
Copyright 2013 Jeffrey T. Riddle. Copies of this article may be reproduced in whole or in part for non-profit use, including personal and corporate Bible study. For information on ordering print copies, email info.crbc@gmail.com
2 comments:
Thank you for this explanation. I will look for this tract. I have been following a blog on occasion called the Orthodox - Reformed Bridge. It is a pro Eastern Orthodox Blog. Even though I agree with their choice text for the New Testament, I have taken issue with a series of posts they have made regarding the TULIP. I am still learning their theology, and feel that I am a bit out of my league to engage in an online discussion with them. I sure would like to know your thoughts about it, if you ever get the time. The most recent link concerning this is: http://orthodoxbridge.com/in-defense-of-plucking-the-tulip-a-response-to-jacob-aitken/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=in-defense-of-plucking-the-tulip-a-response-to-jacob-aitken
Phil,
Thanks for the comment. We distributed over a 100 hard copies of these tracts in the prison last Saturday. We have some left over if anyone would like to order some (send an email to info.crbc@gmail.com). I hope to continue the series through TULIP in upcoming months.
Thanks for making me aware of the Reformed-Orthodox blog articles on TULIP. Interesting. I'll see if I can get around to giving it a look.
JTR
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