ABSOLUTE PREDESTINATION
2
Mr. Beebe:—In a former
letter I requested your views on the absolute predestination of all things. I
asked for information, and for nothing else; but I will excuse you for not
answering me, for I know that I am not worthy of notice, but I am a poor
unworthy worm of the dust.Your unworthy friend.R.S.
Reply.—We assure
our friend R.S. that our apparent neglect of this request was not owing to
any want of respect for him, nor to any unwillingness to give him such views as
we have on the important subject of his inquiry. Those who truly feel sensible
that they are poor unworthy worms of the dust, and yet have a desire to be
informed in regard to the universal government of the supreme God, of his
prescience and irrevocable decrees, are the very persons above all others,
whom we desire to serve to the full extent of the ability God may be pleased to
give us.
Predestination, as a highly esteemed writer in the Signs
once remarked, does not require to be qualified by prefixing to it the word
absolute, as the
predestination of God must of necessity be absolute in every particular. Jehovah
is an absolute God, and all that he purposes or performs must be absolute. There
can be no fiction nor anything merely nominal with him. Predestination is
destination beforehand, and as nothing can be before hand, or subsequent with
him, the term as it is used in the scriptures is used in reference to our finite
state, as creatures of time; or rather as creatures of God, but for the present,
in the time state of existence. God inhabits eternity, and all things are
present with him. The progression of time and development of events can add
nothing to his stock of knowledge. We his creatures may and we certainly do,
live and learn. He has himself called our attention to the fact that he has
declared the end from the beginning, saying, my counsel shall stand, and I will
do all my pleasure. This declaration of the end from the beginning proves his
prescience, so conclusively, that but few are so hardened in infidelity as to
openly and in so many words, deny his foreknowledge of all events; for if he
were deficient in knowledge he could not with unerring certainty declare the end
from the beginning and from ancient times, the things which are yet to
transpire. But there are those who while they admit what is called the
foreknowledge of God, deny that his knowledge is based upon his own purpose and
determinate counsel. They urge the following objections to predestination. It is
fatalism, it destroys man’s free-agency, and his accountability, and makes
God the author of sin; and some there are who go still farther and say if the
doctrine of predestination be true, God in predestinating the events of time,
etc., has transcended his right and is unjust. Our friend R.S., we think, will
agree with us, that it very easily becomes poor sinful dying mortals thus
irreverently, not to say blasphemously, to question the eternal right of God to
do what seemeth to him good, in the armies of heaven and among the inhabitants
of earth, or to set up their standards of justice and denounce their creator if
he does not abide by their decisions. Let all such first meet the searching
interrogative of the inspired apostle, “Hath not the potter power over the clay,
to form one vessel to honor” etc.? The holy prophet of Jehovah, by
inspiration, has informed us that God is the potter, and we are the clay.
Hence we must acknowledge his eternal right to dispose of all things, all
events, and of all worlds according to his own pleasure. Let this be admitted
and all murmuring against his predestination will cease. It is not our purpose
to meet the objections urged by men to the doctrine of divine revelation, and by
logical argument to put them to silence; nor do we design to attempt to make the
doctrine palatable to the natural mind of man which is enmity against God, for
all such attempts are without the least prospects of success. The enmity of the
carnal mind is fully demonstrated in the objections which they bring, but
we design rather to search out and call the attention of our inquiring friend to
what God has revealed in the scriptures on the subject, and this we will do, if
God permit, whether men will hear, or whether they forbear. The term
predestination, as we have intimated, has reference to the order and
succession of events in time, by which the eternal designs of God are brought to
pass. And, so far as pass, predestination simply signifies that God had
purposed, God’s providence is concerned in bringing his designs to decreed,
ordained, or destined the accomplishment of those things before they were, in
order of time brought to pass.— Hence to us, it is predestination, with God it
is destination, because his infinity connects and comprehends the end with the
beginning, for he is himself the First and the Last, the Alpha and Omega, the
Beginning and the Ending.
Having, as clearly as we are able, defined
predestination, we pass to enquire whether it be a Bible doctrine. If it be a
Bible doctrine, we must admit it, or reject the Bible as a record of infallible
and eternal truth, and take the open ground of infidelity. And who can trace the
sacred pages of the holy book and say that it contains no testimony in support
of the doctrine? In the absence of predestination how was it that the prophets
of Jehovah foretold the events of ages, thousands of years before those events
were actually fulfilled? Who, or what directed the prophetic vision of holy men
of old, to look down the vista of intervening centuries, and in the name of the
Lord Jehovah predict the things that should come to pass down to the end of
time, and even the resurrection of the slumbering dead, and the judgement of the
last day. If these things were not before determined of God, how were they
known, and if they were unknown to God and man how were they foretold? And if
they were foreknown of God, and he inspired holy men to foretell them, that
knowledge and decision of God was what the Bible calls predestination. But we
have no need of ifs in this investigation. The scriptures do most
clearly and emphatically declare that “Holy men of old spake as they were moved
by the Holy Ghost”; that God spake to the fathers by the prophets, and also that
the spirit of Christ, which was in the prophets, did testify beforehand of his
sufferings and of the glory that should follow. This was and is predestination.
God spake by the prophets, saying, “It shall come to pass.” Do not these words
imply a decree when uttered by him who speaks the word, and it stands fast, who
commands, and it is done? How harmoniously do both testaments agree in this
fundamental doctrine. Throughout the first, or Old Testament, God, by his
prophets, declared the things that should come to
pass. Apostles and inspired
evangelists in the New Testament respond, saying, “And it came to pass.” But
perhaps some may demand, What came to pass? We reply, all that God by the
prophets said should come to pass. First, in reference to the advent of the
blessed Saviour, for he himself declared that all that was written of him in the
law, and in the prophets and in the psalms must be fulfilled, and when dying on
the cross of Calvary he exclaimed, “It is finished!” and in awful confirmation
the retiring sun, prevailing darkness, the quaking earth, rending rocks, opening
graves, rising dead, and rending vail gave ample demonstration. Daniel, in
harmony with all the other prophets of the Lord, had predicted that at a
specific time the God of heaven should set up a kingdom that should never be
destroyed, that the Messiah should come, should be cut off, should make an end
of sin, and bring in everlasting righteousness. The whole New Testament is a
record of the faithful fulfillment of these predictions. Long had the prophet
slumbered with his fathers, before the accomplishment of his seventy weeks,
but the word of our God could not die, it liveth and abideth forever.
The
predestination of our God also embraces all the heirs of immortality. “For whom
he did foreknow, them he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of
his Son, that he might be the first born among many brethren. Moreover whom he
did predestinate, them he also called, and whom he called, them he also
justified, and whom he justified them he also glorified.”—This predestinated
people is blessed with “all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ
Jesus, according as he (God) hath chosen them in him before the foundation of
the world, that they should be holy and without blame before him in love. Having
predestinated them unto the adoption of children, according to the good pleasure
of his will. In whom we have received an inheritance, being predestinated
according to the purpose of him who worketh all things after (or according to)
the counsel of his own will.”
There are those who admit the doctrine of
predestination, so far as it applies to the coming of the Savior, the work which
he was to perform, the sufferings which he was to endure, and the glory which
was to follow; and also in relation to the good works which God before ordained
that his people should walk in; but reject the idea that his purpose and
foreknowledge extends to the wicked acts of men and devils. But for ourself, it
is our firm conviction that if a single event could possibly transpire from the
creation of the world to the end of time, from the rise and fall of empires, to
the falling of a sparrow, or a hair of our head to the ground, that such
unforeseen and consequently unprovided for events would unavoidably endanger and
render uncertain the execution of what is admitted to be ordained and
decreed of God. How could it be otherwise? Can we consistently believe that it
was predestinated that Christ should suffer on Calvary to redeem sinners, and
yet that he did not foreknow that there would be any sinners to save? Did he
decree that his dear Son should be delivered into the hands of wicked men; and
yet not contemplate in that decree, either the existence of wicked men, or what
they should do in condemning and crucifying him? But aside from all human
reasoning, or vain speculation on the subject, God has informed us, by his
inspired apostles, that Jesus was delivered by his determinate counsel, and
foreknowledge, and put to death by wicked hands. And again, the inspired
apostles break forth in praise to God, in devout acknowledgement both of the
decree and of its accomplishment, that, “And when they had heard that, they
lifted up their voice to God with one accord and said, Lord, thou art God, which
hast made heaven and earth, and the sea, and all that in them is; who by the
mouth of the servant David hast said, Why did the heathen rage, and the people
imagine vain things? The kings of the earth stood up, and the rulers were
gathered together against the Lord, and against his Christ. For of a truth,
against thy holy child Jesus whom thou hast anointed, both Herod and Pontious
Pilate, with the gentiles and the people of Israel, were gathered together, for
to do whatsoever thy hand and thy counsel determined before to be done.” (Acts
iv. 24-28). Here let it be observed the holy apostles of the Lamb did not start
back with horror, and exclaim, fatalism! this makes God the author of sin! or
this destroys the accountability of man! They saw nothing in all this reflecting
unfavorably on the character or purity of the supreme God; but they saw such
harmony in the purpose, decrees, and actual accomplishment of the designs of
God, as led them simultaneously and with one accord to lift up their voice in
devout adoration and praise to the Most High God, whose providential government
was so clearly manifested in controlling all events. The things which they now
saw brought to pass were distinctly spoken of by David in his day, and pointed
out by the slaughtered lamb which Abel, by faith, offered to God some four
thousand years before any of the actors in the crucifixion of Christ, were born.
God had not only decreed what they should do, but he had also decreed what they
should not do. “The enemy should not exact upon him, nor the son of wickedness
afflict him.” “A bone of him should not be broken.” “He should not be holden of
the pains of death.” His soul should not be left in hell, nor should his flesh
see corruption. Neither death nor hell could go beyond the purpose and decree of
God. None but Judas could betray him, without involving a contradiction of the
purpose and decree which was recorded in the scriptures; the pieces of silver
for which he was betrayed were numbered and recorded in the decree of God, as
published by the prophet hundreds of years before Judas was born. The parting of
his raiment, and casting lots for his garments, was all a matter of ancient
record, together with all the minute circumstances which occurred; all of which
we are informed were done that the scripture should be fulfilled. The murder of
the infants by Herod, brought to pass the decree published by the prophets six
hundred years before. “Thus saith the Lord, A voice was heard in Ramah,
lamentation, and bitter weeping; Rachel weeping for her children refused to be
comforted for her children because they were not. (Jer. xxxi. See also, Matt.
ii.18. The case also of Joseph and his brethren is a very clear and striking
illustration of the overruling government of God, as embracing all events. And
who shall dare to charge God with unrighteousness, because he retains in his own
hand a supreme control of all beings and of all events; because he worketh all
things after the counsel of his own will. Who has a right to infer that God is
the fountain of sin or unholiness; when we are informed that men with wicked
hands, do whatsoever his
hand and counsel before determined should be done? Paul when declaring what
God had said of Pharaoh, that for this purpose he had raised him up to make his
power known in him, etc., anticipated the blasphemous out breakings of the human
mind in opposition to the predestination of God. “Thou wilt surely say unto me,
Why doth he yet find fault,” or hold man as a responsible being, “for who has
resisted his will?” But the apostle did not forbear to declare this doctrine
because men resisted and blasphemed it; but says the apostle, “Nay, but who art
thou, O man, that repliest against God?” etc. When the enmity of the human heart
is subdued by the quickening power and grace of God in regeneration, then the
heaven-born child is reconciled to God, and loves to contemplate the power and
glory of Jehovah. Then is he prepared, with the inspired psalmist, to rejoice
that the Lord God Omnipotent reigneth; that all power in heaven and in earth is
vested in the blessed Savior. But if left to doubt his all-prevading power and
providence for a moment, now sinks his spirit at the fearful thought that
some wheel in the vast, and apparently complicated machinery of nature
might be suffered to revolve unbound by the wisdom and foreknowledge of God. If
one of the wheels could work without the power and providence of God, its
effects might be to ungear the whole system of divine government, and worlds on
worlds be dashed in irretrievable ruin. When the enlightened mind of God’s dear
children contemplates the glory of this subject, they fall down before God in
admiration, and with the four beasts, and four and twenty elders, cry Holy,
Holy, Holy, Lord, God, Almighty. They are filled with the most profound
reverence for, and confidence in the God of their salvation.
One reason we
have thought why some of the children of God have seemed to be unreconciled to
this doctrine is that they have failed to discriminate between the overruling
power and providence of God and the effusions of his Spirit. “Let no man say
when he is tempted, that he is tempted of God; for God cannot be tempted,
neither tempteth he any man.” When men are tempted to sin they are tempted of
their own lusts, and by the devil. But how hopeless and desperate would be the
condition of all who are tempted, if God had not the power and providence to
control the temptation, and overrule its effect according to his eternal purpose
and pleasure for the good of his tried and tempted children, and for the glory
of his own great name. Our every temptation, though they flow not from God, are
directed, and restricted and made serviceable to his saints, by him, is
absolutely certain. Hence Peter assured the saints that God would control this
matter. He will not suffer you to be tempted beyond that which ye are able; but
will also with the temptation make a way for your escape. That glorious High
Priest which becometh us, was himself tempted in all points as his children are,
and knows how to succour them that are tempted. Soon after he was baptized, he
was led up by the Spirit, unto the wilderness to be tempted of the devil. He was
not led there by the devil; but by the Holy Spirit of the Lord God which was
upon him. Neither was he tempted of the Spirit of God which led him into the
wilderness; but he was tempted of the devil. The devil could neither afflict
poor old Job, nor even drown the herd of swine, until he received permission of
the Lord, and it is hard for us to think that any of the saints, however shy
they may seem to be of the doctrine of predestination, really would wish or be
willing that God should have less, or that sin or Satan should have more power.
It is a blessed reflection to us that
“Death and hell can do no moreThan
what our Father please.”
Volumes have been written upon this subject, and volumes may still
be written, it is too rich and boundless ever to be exhausted, but after all
that we can say, it is the Spirit of the Lord alone who can present it in its
beauty to the sons of men. He, the Spirit of the Truth, whom the world cannot
receive, can slay the enmity of our carnal mind, and give us the light of the
knowledge of the glory of God, shining in the face of Jesus Christ. May that
spirit in all its quickening power and grace be with our friend R.S. and all
others who earnestly desire a knowledge of the true God and eternal life.
Middletown, N.Y., Feb. 1, 1854Editorials of Gilbert BeebeVolume III - pgs.
18-25