Everything about Irresistible Grace totally explained
Irresistible Grace (or
efficacious grace) is a
doctrine in
Christian theology particularly associated with
Augustinism,
Thomism and
Calvinism which teaches that the saving
grace of
God is effectually applied to those whom He has determined to save (the
elect) and, in God's timing, overcomes their resistance to obeying the call of the
gospel, bringing them to a saving
faith in
Christ.
The doctrine
According to Calvinism, those who obtain
salvation do so, not by their own "free" will, but because of the sovereign discriminating grace of God. That is, men yield to grace, not finally because their
consciences were more tender or their faith more tenacious than that of other men. Rather, the willingness and ability to do God's will, are evidence of God's own faithfulness to save men from the power and the penalty of
sin, and since man is so corrupt that he won't decide and can't be wooed to follow after God, God must powerfully intervene. In short, Calvinism argues that
regeneration must precede faith.
Calvin says of this intervention that "it isn't violent, so as to compel men by external force; but still it's a powerful impulse of the Holy Spirit, which makes men willing who formerly were unwilling and reluctant,"
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John Gill says that "this act of drawing is an act of power, yet not of force; God in drawing of unwilling, makes willing in the day of His power: He enlightens the understanding, bends the will, gives an heart of flesh, sweetly allures by the power of His grace, and engages the soul to come to Christ, and give up itself to Him; he draws with the bands of love. Drawing, though it supposes power and influence, yet not always coaction and force: music draws the ear, love the heart, and pleasure the mind."
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Jonathan Edwards has sometimes been quoted—notably by
R. C. Sproul—as referring to the irresistible call of God as the "holy rape of the soul," but the phrase doesn't appear in Edwards'
Works. Instead, the phrase seems to have been coined by
Puritan scholar Perry Miller, and many Calvinists distance themselves from it.)
Objections to the doctrine
Christians associated with
Arminianism, notably followers of
John Wesley and part of the
Methodist movement, reject the Calvinist doctrine. Instead, they believe that God's
prevenient grace is equally provided to all human beings alike, drawing them toward His love and salvation. In this view, (1) after God's universal dispensation of grace to mankind, the will of man, which was formerly adverse to God and unable to obey, can now choose to obey; and (2) although God's grace is a strong initial move to effect salvation, it can ultimately be resisted and rejected.
Both sides agree that the resistibility of grace is inexorably bound up with the theological system's view of humanity's
inability to respond to God and of the extent of God's
grace. As Calvinist
Charles Hodge says, "The (
Arminian) and (
Roman Catholic) doctrine is true, if the other parts of their doctrinal system are true; and it's false if that system be erroneous. If the (Calvinistic) doctrine concerning the natural state of man since the fall, and the sovereignty of God in election, be Scriptural, then it's certain that sufficient grace doesn't become efficacious from the cooperation of the human will."
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) Thus the passages discussing those doctrines are also relevant here.
Biblical passages related to the doctrine
The statement of
St. Paul is said to confirm that those whom God effectually calls necessarily come to full salvation: "(T)hose whom (God) predestined He also called, and those whom He called He also justified, and those whom He justified He also glorified" (
Romans 8:28,30), but it's especially several verses from the
sixth chapter of the
Gospel of John, which contains a record of Jesus' teaching on humanity's abilities and God's activities in salvation, that serves as the central proof text for the Calvinist doctrine (all quotes from the
ESV):
- 6:37,39: "All that the Father gives me will come to me.... And this is the will of Him who sent me, that I should lose nothing of all that He has given me, but raise it up on the last day."
- 6:44–45: "No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws him.... Everyone who has heard and learned from the Father comes to me."
- 6:65: "(N)o one can come to me unless it's granted him by the Father."
Proponents of Arminianism argue that the word "draw" (
Greek:,
helkô(External Link
)) as used in John 6:44 doesn't require the sense of "drag", though they admit this is the word's usual meaning (as in
Jn. 18:10; 21:6; 21:11; Acts 16:19; 21:30; Jas. 2:6
). They point to John 12:32 as an example: "And I, when I'm lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself." Arminians interpret this to mean that Jesus draws all people to Himself but some are able resist this drawing since, if the call is truly irresistible, then all must come to Christ and be saved.
Calvinists argue that (1) the word "draw" should be understood according to its usual
semantics in both John 6:44 and 12:32; (2) the word "all" (translated "all people" in v. 12:32) should be taken in the sense of "all kinds of people" rather than "every individual"; and thus (3) the former verse refers to an irresistible internal call to salvation and the latter to the opening of the
Kingdom of God to the
Gentiles, not a universal, resistible internal call. Some have asserted on this basis that the text of John 6:44 can
logically yield either
universalism or Calvinism, but not Arminianism.
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Arminian
William Barclay argues that "man's resistance can defeat the pull of God" mentioned in John 6:44, but
commentator Leon Morris contends that "(n)ot one of (Barclay's) examples of the verb ('draw') shows the resistance as successful. Indeed we can go further. There isn't one example in the New Testament of the use of this verb where the resistance is successful. Always the drawing power is triumphant, as here" (
The Gospel According to John, revised edition, 1995, p. 328, n. 116).
History of the doctrine
In the Catholic Church, debates concerning the respective role of efficacious grace and
free will led to the establishment of the
Congregatio de Auxiliis at the end of the
16th century by the Pope
Clement VIII. The
Dominicans insisted on the role of the efficacious grace, but the
Jesuits embraced
Molinism, which postulated greater liberty in the will. These debates also led to the famous
formulary controversy in France which pitted the
Jansenists against the Jesuits.
The doctrine is one of the so-called
Five points of Calvinism that were defined at the
Synod of Dordrecht during the
Quinquarticular Controversy with the Arminian
Remonstrants, who objected to the general predestinarian scheme of Calvinism. In Calvinist churches, the doctrine is most often mentioned in comparisons with other salvific schemes and their respective doctrines about the state of mankind after
the Fall, and it isn't a common topic for
sermons or studies otherwise.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Irresistible Grace'.
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