Atonement
Sufficiency Examined
by Oscar B. Mink
(1924-2004)
Part One
Part Two
Part Three
(Romans
5:11), "And not only so, but we
also joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom we have now received
the atonement."
Voluminous
are the writings of sovereign grace advocates under the heading of limited
atonement or particular redemption, and this is as it should be; for in this
great truth, God’s attributes of omnipotence and omniscience are gloriously
manifested. There is near to perfect accord in the school of sovereign grace
as to the salvational effectuality of the atonement, but there is at the same
time a disconcerting measure of discord in the ranks of sovereign grace
believers as to the extent of the sufficiency of the atonement. Was Christ’s
expiatory sacrifice sufficient to remit the sins of mankind, or was it
restricted in atonement sufficiency to those chosen of God from the Adamic
race? This question poses a dark enigma to many, and has been the basis of
much debate throughout the history of Christendom. Nevertheless, our
feeble efforts in this treatise shall be expended in an attempt to magnify the
truth as relates to the question. If by God’s grace our endeavor is
rewarded with a small token of success, a proportionate measure
of darkness will be lifted from the question and our efforts amply
recompensed.
Some
brethren whom I esteem very highly, and whose friendship I am determined to
keep in constant repair, espouse what I consider an unorthodox view of the
sufficiency of the atonement; namely, atonement sufficiency is equal in extent
to human evil, but not in intent. This view is commonly referred to by
theological scholars, as, the sufficiency-efficiency view of the atonement,
and is today, by far, the most popular view being propagated by Calvinists and
Baptist. However, there are today among God’s elect people, as there have
always been, and shall ever be, a large and concerned number who take a more
conservative view of the atonement of Christ; that view being, all that was
wrought in and by the
atonement was and is limited to the elect of God. This view magnifies the
Majesty of God more than the other, for in it there is no undersigned
sufficiency.
The
position on atonement sufficiency, which I contend is the Scriptural one, and
which I purpose to defend in this writing, can in brief be described thusly:
Atonement sufficiency and efficacy are equal in extent and application.
This position, some would say, "Allows for deficiency in God, in that He
was notable to provide a sufficiency adequate to the Adamic
transgression." Inability and deficiency are incongruous to the nature of
God, for with Him all things are possible, and they who would charge us with
teaching that God’s throne has a dim shade of insufficiency over it need to
learn that it is the "design" of atonement sufficiency we are
concerned with; and that the sovereignty of God’s sufficiency has
never been questioned by New Testament Baptists. The deficiency in sufficiency
supposition is an absurdity that needs no further refutation or consideration.
I will
strive vigorously for Scriptural accuracy in this treatise, but it is needful
to be understood by all, that the ultimate literary skills this side of Divine
inspiration can, only with so great a theme, develop an abstraction of it.
However, an abstraction can be more than the sharing of theory. It can
be and should be an enlargement of face, and this is my aim, and by divine
enablement, the end which shall be accomplished. So, let us embark henceforth.
To effect the
purpose of this treatise, as stated above, the following three sub-headings are
prescribed:
1. The
design of atonement sufficiency.
2.
Scripture typology and atonement sufficiency.
3. A
passive or inoperative sufficiency is alien to the attributes of God.
In the following
the above order, let us first consider:
Return To Index
Part One
1.) THE DESIGN OF ATONEMENT
SUFFICIENCY.
In introducing
this point, I will set down a maxim, i.e., God is the only absolute infinity.
Therefore, all things are subject to metamorphosis or transformation except
the essential glory of God. God’s essential glory is not capable of more or
less. Addition and diminution have to do with God’s manifestive glory, and
not with that glory which is inherent in His nature. All of creation is
sovereignly appointed to serve God’s intrinsic glory, but some things of
creation are designed by Him to declare or display a greater manifestation of
His glory than are some others.
The stars
of heaven are an infinite host, but God knows "the
number of the stars; He calleth them all by their names" (Psalms
147:4). The universe is an infinity, but to the dismay of the pantheists,
it is not the absolute infinity; for only God is omnipresent and
nondimensional. Atonement efficiency and sufficiency are
infinite, but both are limited in design by the covenant of redemption (Hebrews
13:20). This covenant knows nothing of sufficient grace that does not
suffice.
In the
eternal covenant God decreed to save a number of Adam’s fallen posterity by
the vicarious sufferings of Christ, and the rest He left in their sins to
their just condemnation. Seeing that this covenant is eternal, that there can
be no new thought with God, and what He does He always determined to do; I
ask, Why would God make Christ’s atonement sufficient for those whom He had
already passed over in the covenant of eternal favor? What is the purpose of a
sufficiency beyond that of Divine satisfaction? The design of the sacrifice of
Christ was to reconcile the elect unto God, and the sufficiency of that
glorious and infinite sacrifice was limited to that infinite sum, beloved of
the Father and given to the Son in the covenant of redemption.
The value
of the blood of Christ is not diminished by what it does not do. It did not
procure repentance and faith for all men, it did not stay the retributive
justice of God against the non-elect, and it did not provide salvational
sufficiency for all men. The preciousness of the work of the Holy Spirit is
not lessened because He does not once convict the non-elect of their sins, and
does nothing to alter their hatred of God, but leaves them in their utter
rebellion against all that is holy, just, and good, which culminates in their
eternal suffering.
What is the
value of the blood of Christ? Surely, no redeemed person would say it is
less than infinite, but it borders on Arminianism to contend that the blood of
Christ sufficiently atoned for the sins of mankind. The blood of Christ cannot
be overvalued, but in the thinking of finite creatures, its value can be
misapplied; and this is precisely what the universal sufficiency theory does.
The atonement of Christ cannot be denuded of any of its parts, and neither can
it be made to bear more than what omniscience designed for it to bear.
The blood
of Christ was shed to satisfy the just demands of the law brought against the
elect people of God, and when satisfaction is attained, it asks no more.
God’s atoning love is equal to the condemnation of His people, and when His
justice was satisfied, He had no further quarrel with the elect. God’s law
is the basis or standard of His judgment, and the demands of the law levied
upon the elect have been substitutionarily satisfied by the death of Christ,
and the Righteous Judge has taken His legal pen and has written
"justified" on their record, (Romans 8:33). But the
atoning sufficiency of Christ’s death was not redundant. It did not exceed
what was necessary to satisfy the debt which His people owed to His law,
and now Divine justice looks for
satisfying sufficiency beyond the covenant of sovereign mercy and finds none,
except in merited damnation of the non-elect.
Thus, the
equitable and incontestable verdict rendered by the court of Heaven against
all who die in there sins reads: "… I
never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity." (Matthew
7:23). They were fully known by God’s omniscience, but they were total
strangers to the covenant of love; and their namesbeing omitted from the
Lamb’s book of life, no redemptive sufficiency was provided for them by the
atoning blood of Christ.
A
sufficiency which satisfaction does not require is alien to His Scriptures and
to the experience of all rational creatures. So it is, in realizing
satisfaction, sufficiency and efficiency are co-extensive; for sufficiency is
measured by the effect it renders. The old adage which says: "It is
better to have too much than too little" is true in the general sense,
but it can never apply to God, for He never has too much or too little; just
the perfect measure.
The value
of the blood of Christ is infinite, but it is a divinely pre-assigned
infinity, and is restricted in its atoning worth and utility to the elect of
God. Wherein is the wisdom in purchasing a sufficiency for a people whose sins
are inexpiable and were reprobate before the foundation of the World? Wherein
is the wisdom of God in
extending the value of the blood to those whom He hated before the ages were
born? Wherein is the wisdom of God in subjecting His beloved Son to infinite
suffering in order to purchase a sufficiency for a people who would never
receive the least benefit from it? Most certainly we would not think of
questioning the wisdom of God, but the universal sufficiency view is a mooted
one, and raises many questions.
God did
not, by the shedding of Christ’s blood, obtain a universal sufficiency for
the curse of sin, but His sacrificial blood was the means of ratifying the
covenant of redemption (Hebrews 13:20), which covenant beneficially
precluded the non-elect.
1. The design
and sufficiency of Christ’s intercessory prayer is limited to the elect of
God (John 17:9).
2. The design
and sufficiency of Christ’s imputed righteousness is limited to the elect of
God (Romans 4:6.)
3. The design
and sufficiency of Christ’s atoning love is limited to the elect of God (Jeremiah
31:3 ; John 17:23 ; Romans 9:13).
4. The design
and sufficiency of Christ’s justification is limited to the elect of God. (Romans
8:33).
5. The design
and sufficiency of Christ’s meditorial office is limited to the elect of God (Romans
8:34 ; Hebrews 7:25).
6. The design
and sufficiency of the eternal covenant is limited to the elect of God (John
5:21 , 6:63 ; II Timothy 1:9).
7. The design
and sufficiency of regenerative grace is limited to the elect of God (John
17:6; Hebrews 13:20).
8. The design
and sufficiency of Heaven is limited to the elect of God (I Peter 1:2-4).
The term
"sufficiency" in the eight postulates enumerated above could be
replaced with the word "Efficiency" and it would not change the
design or results in the least. As defined by Webster, both terms mean
adequacy. The primary distinction between the terms is chronological,
for sufficiency begets efficiency; but God is the author of both, and He,
being omniscient, would not appropriate a sufficiency beyond
the suitability of His designs for efficiency.
Jesus bled,
suffered, and died as the substitute for His people, and the value of His
blood was equal to their sin debt, for the Father would not charge one
farthing more than that which was owed. "…The
Blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin" (I
John 1:7). Forgiveness cannot extend beyond the offense; and the
blood of Christ, though infinite in value, did not procure a sufficiency
beyond that which was equal to the sinfulness of His people. "Where
sin abounded, grace did much more abound" (Romans 5:20),
but this abounding grace has not to do with a redemptive sufficiency for the
non-elect, but with the bestowal of sonship on the atoned-for ones, whereby
they become "joint heirs with Christ"
(Romans 8:17).
There is no
question as to the capability of God. He could have, had He been pleased,
provided satisfaction for the devil and his angels; but we know this was not
His pleasure. It is the design of God’s sovereign grace we are
concerned with, and redemptive sufficiency is a product of the omniscient
Designer. To talk of atoning sufficiency without forelove runs counter to the
tenor of Scripture. Such terms as "uncovenanted mercies,"
"heathen virtue," and "universal sufficiency," should
arouse infinite skepticism in the minds of all who hold the truth of God’s
sovereign grace.
It was
God’s eternal design to "bruise"
His Son (Isaiah 53:10) and by His infinite suffering provide atoning
sufficiency for all whom He represented in His suffering. Therefore,
Peter, in speaking to the elect, says: "Rejoice,
inasmuch as ye are partakers, of Christ’s sufferings; that, when His glory
shall be revealed, ye may be glad also with exceeding joy" (I
Peter 4:13). Are the non-elect in any sense or measure partakers of the
suffering of Christ? To affirm the universal sufficiency view of the atonement
is to say Christ’s substitutionary suffering was at least in part for the
reprobate world, for there can be no atoning sufficiency apart from the
sufferings of Christ.
The
atonement of Christ is a very special and infinitely gracious work which is
limited to the elect (John 10:11), but a general sufficiency which is
common to all mankind would destroy the particularistic nature of the
atonement, and put a wider dimension on the atonement than is Scripturally
warranted.
God’s love for
His people is infinite, yet it is a fixed love; and it can never be more or
less than what it has eternally been (Jeremiah 31:3 ; John 13:1 ;
Hebrews 13:8). God’s infallible justice has drawn a demarcation
line between the elect and the non-elect, and His love honors the line and
limits which He has set for it. God is not divided in Himself. God’s love
will not manifest itself, even infinitesimally, toward any person whose name
is not written in the Lamb’s book of life. Why then, I ask, take atoning
sufficiency and set it apart from God’s love? Why make Christ’s atoning
sufficiency to go beyond His sufferings, beyond the covenant of redemption,
and beyond God’s restrictive design for it? The answer is simply
because the universal sufficiency doctrine is ill conceived.
Return To Index
Part Two
2.) SCRIPTURE
TYPOLOGY AND ATONEMENT SUFFICIENCY.
"All
Scripture is given by the inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine
…" (II Timothy 3:16). This text most assuredly includes the Old
Testament and its many and various types, for the New Testament was not yet in
existence. A type has been aptly defined as "A Divinely appointed
illustration of some spiritual truth." A better definition would be hard
to come by and because of the sameness of meaning of type and symbol, I will
use them interchangeably in this writing. Typical teaching permeates the
Scriptures. Everywhere we turn in the Bible we are confronted with types and
they are there for our profit.
A.)
First let us look at the Ark of Noah, a vivid type of Christ. I Peter
3:20-21 is a clear and
unmistakable reference to Noah and the Ark passing through the judgmental
flood in connection with the atoning death and justifying resurrection of
Jesus Christ. The design of the Ark was given to Noah in minute detail by the
omniscient Designer and Architect of the universe (Genesis 5:14-16).
Now the question is, was the ark sufficient in size to accommodate all who
were living on the earth at that time? Surely, this question is answered
in the asking.
It was not
the divine purpose to save all the antediluvian posterity of Adam in the Ark,
but only Noah and his family, and seeing there is no negligible quantity in
God, all the space and sufficiency sovereignly vested in the ark for flood
survival was fully and gloriously utilized. Noah was "a
preacher ofrighteousness," and "while
the ark wasa preparing," Noah preached Christ by symbol and
sermon; for to preach righteousness is to preach Christ, for He is the
believer’s justifying righteousness (I Corinthians 1:30).
No doubt
during this exceeding period of one hundred and twenty years of Ark
preparation, Noah warned others as he was warned of God (Hebrews 11:7).
However, only seven believed his report and they were of his own house (Genesis
7:1). Then God brought judgment upon the world of the ungodly and
theyperished in the flood (II Peter 2:5). The Noachian family is a type
of the household of God (Ephesians 2:19), and Christ, the antitype of
the Ark (Acts 4:12) and Head "over
His own house" (Hebrews 3:6), has made sufficient
room for His family and none else. Christ is the Sovereign Sufficer, and
having eternally loved His family, He made room for them and them alone in the
storm swept citadel of His grace. The Ark as a type was not given to us in
shorthand, but in minute detail, and every detail speaks of Christ.
Atonement
sufficiency is anchored in God’s forelove, and Christ loves only those who
were given to Him by the Father in the covenant of redemption (Jeremiah
31:3; John 13:1, 17:6; Romans 8:37). In the
redemptive scheme there is no such thing as uncovenanted love, and hence no
universal atonement sufficiency.
The Ark was
a divine provision made before the waters of judgment fell from heaven, and in
construction of the Ark, Noah followed the heavenly specifications with
unvarying exactitude. "Thus did Noah;
according to all that God commanded him, so did he" (Genesis
6:22). There was not one extra cubic inch in the fullness of the Ark, nor
was there any unused or wasted space. The sufficiency of the Ark was
according to God’s purpose, and His elective purpose was to save only eight
souls from the flood (I Peter 3:20).
Likewise,
Jesus Christ was provided by God before the foundation of the world to deliver
His people from the storm of judgment upon sin (II Timothy 1:9).
Christ’s mission to this earth, as with the Ark, was according in every
detail to the need of His people, and not one thing wrought by the atoning
death of Christ was extended beyond those for whom He died. The sufficiency
and efficiency of Christ’s sacrifice was eternally shut up to the elect of
God, and there was no redemptive sufficiency left over. The purpose of atoning
sufficiency must be measured by its accomplishments, and it has none beyond
"the people of His pasture, and the sheep
of His hand ..." (Psalms 95:7). To contend otherwise is to
argue for an unsure curse upon the sins of the non-elect, for who can say how
long a sovereign sufficiency will remain in protraction? The universal
sufficiency theory has the rudiment of universal restoration of mankind in it.
BEWARE!
B.)
The second type we want to consider is that of the Passover Lamb of Exodus
12 . The pure, free, and infinite grace of God provided Israel with the
passover lamb; and in this sacrificial lamb was their redemption and
sufficiency. However, let it be clearly understood that the taking of
the lamb from the flock, the slaying of it, and the roasting of it with fire
was not sufficient to save Israel from the imminent judgment upon Egypt.
The blood must be sprinkled upon the posts and lintel of the door of
each Israelitish home. God
emphatically declared that "When I see
the blood, I will pass over you" (Exodus 12:13). This He
said to Israel, and not to Egypt.
It is the
common concurrence that Israel in slavery to Egypt is a type of God’s elect
in their pre-regenerate state, in which state they "walked
according to the course of this world" (Ephesians 2:2), or
like ancient Israel in bondage, walked according to the course of Egypt. It is
also uniformly held by students of the Scriptures, that Egypt is a type of
this present evil world, a tyrant to whom man in his native state pays perfect
allegiance. However, the powerful tyranny exercised by the world over man does
not in any degree lessen his responsibility to denounce the world and come out
of it.
Christ said
of all who have owned His Lordship over them, "They
are not of the world, even as I am not of the world" (John
17:16). There is no spiritual commonality between the regenerate person
and the world, and Divine sufficiency is certainly spiritual. Redemptive
sufficiency is a product of God’s love and was purchased by Christ’s
sacrificial blood. In view of this glorious truth, I ask, Does God’s atoning
sufficiency extend beyond His love? Are they not both co-extensive,
retrospectively and prospectively, and have as their objects the same number
of people, i.e., the elect of God?
The Apostle
Paul said, speaking of the antitype of Israel’s Passover lamb, "… For
even Christ our passover is sacrificed for us" (I Corinthians
5:7). To universalize the pronoun "us"
in this text and make it apply in any sense to the reprobate world is to
bedim the glory of the atonement. A sufficiency, the generality of which is
such that it makes no distinction whatsoever between the people of God and
those of the devil, is far too general for the Scriptures. God does not deal
with the non-elect world through sufficient grace, but with sufficient and
unadulterated justice, which provides no measure of atoning sufficiency, but
eternal and merited suffering.
God’s
counsel is eternal and so are all His decrees. Thus, the decree of
unpardonableness against the sin of blaspheming the Holy Spirit is eternal (Matthew
12:31-32). Does it not follow then, seeing that contradictory decrees
cannot emanate from God, that He would not decree an atoning sufficiency for a
sin that He decreed never to forgive? Pharaoh is an unmistakable type of
Satan. He was bent on the elimination of Moses, a type of Christ, and on the
annihilation of Israel, a type of God’s elect. His reprobation was glaringly
manifest, and it was God’s eternal intention to drown him in the Red Sea (Romans
9:17); as it is God’s purpose to cast Satan, the antitype of Pharaoh,
into the lake of fire (Revelation 20:10).
In view of
this, I ask, Did the atoning sufficiency of Israel’s Lamb extend unto
Pharaoh?
"... The
Lord doth put a difference between the Egyptians and Israel" (Exodus
11:7). This "difference"
which distinguished Israel from Egypt was the Passover lamb. God did not give
Egypt a Passover lamb, and consequently, no atonement sufficiency was provided
for Egypt. When atoning blood is denied apeople, they are left to themselves,
and people left to themselves have never been objects of atonement
sufficiency. Sufficiency is a vital part of God’s redemptive purpose for His
people, and that purpose and sufficiency corresponds precisely with the number
of names eternally registered in the Lamb’s book of life.
Knowledge
of the importance and purpose of the lamb was limited to Israel. Sprinkling of
the blood of the lamb was limited to Israel. The promise of God, wherein He
said, "When I see the blood I will pass
over you," was limited to Israel. All redemptive or atoning
benefits, including sufficiency, were limited toIsrael. Conversely, the death
curse of the firstborn was visited upon the household of Pharaoh and all the
land of Egypt (Exodus 12:29). God’s infinite holiness and inflexible
justice sees the non-elect as unatoned for sinners, and has provided for them
smiting rather than sufficiency. The only thing God ever does with sin is
smite it, and God’s atoning Lamb was not smitten with as much as one stripe
for any beyond the limits of His shed blood.
Christ, the
antitype of Israel’s Passover lamb and antitype of Israel’s High Priest (Hebrews
9:7), having obtained eternal redemption for His people (Hebrews
9:11-12), entered into the tabernacle not made with hands. In the
heavenly tabernacle behind the veil, the blood of Christ was sprinkled and
accepted to the full satisfaction of the Father for the sins of His covenant
children (Hebrews 6:19, 10:24, 13:20). Therefore, the guilt of God’s
elect is forever removed from heaven’s court docket and the sovereign
verdict now reads, "Their sins and
iniquities will I remember no more" (Hebrews 10:17).
Peter,
speaking of the glorious and exclusive offering of the blood of Christ within
the veil of heaven’s tabernacle, says "Elect
according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through sanctification of
the Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ: grace
unto you , and peace be multiplied" (I Peter 1:2). "Grace"
and "peace" are blessings
purchased for the elect by the shed and sprinkled blood of Christ, and every
other purchase made by the vicarious sufferings of Christ shall be realized by
the elect of God, and by them only; for His intercession on the cross was
eternally and sovereignly restricted to them. "... the
good shepherd giveth His life for the sheep" (John 10:11).
In no sense did He die for the goats.
Every
blessing the redeemed of God shall ever experience in time and eternity was
procured for them by the sacrificial blood of Christ. On the other hand, all
the suffering and grief which the non-elect shall ever know, is owing to their
infinite hatred of the blood of God’s Lamb (Hebrews 10:29), and not
to an ill-supposed sufficiency.
What is
typically true of the lamb of Exodus 12 is equally true of all the God
ordained animal sacrifices of the Old Testament, for they all were typical of
the all-concluding sacrifice which God would make upon Calvary. The
institution of animal sacrifices must reach its terminus, for the offended and
infinite justice of God could never be satisfied with the blood of a beast as
the means of expiation for the sins of utterly depraved men. Every sin is an
infinite insult to the honor and holiness of God, and when the offense is
infinite, so must the sacrifice be by which the sin is expiated. Hence, the
incarnation and crucifixion of Christ. Christ "... appeared
to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself" (Hebrews 9:26).
"For
by one offering He hath perfected forever them that are sanctified"
(Hebrews 10:14). "Sanctified",
i.e., set apart by the covenant of eternal redemption. The saints’
perfection is not of personal character, but of legal standing before the bar
of God’s inflexible and just law. The saints’ perfection has not to do
with personal righteousness, but with imputed righteousness which was
appropriated for them in the covenant of eternal and unconditional election,
and merited not by them, but by the precious blood of Christ (I Peter
1:18-20).
The
justification or declaration of the saints’ legal righteousness is eternally
anchored in the sovereign, holy, and active love of God. The love of God is
infinite, but exclusive. It does not reach all mankind, but only those
whose names are written in the Lamb’s book of life. Thus it is seen that
Christ is God’s beloved Son, and singular channel of His blessings. All the
blessings of the atonement come to the elect of God through Christ, the
Mediator of the covenant of grace, and no good thing shall be withheld from
them for whom it was purchased.
Most
surely, atonement sufficiency is infinitely good, and no good thing wrought by
the propitiation of Christ shall ever be voided. Therefore, atonement
sufficiency is limited to the elect, and they are made more than conquerors
through Him that loved them (Romans 8:37). All that was purchased by
the atoningblood of Christ will be infallibly applied to all those for whom
the purchase was made. To say otherwise is to change God with vanity, and the
universal sufficiency view of the atonement gives credence to this baseless
allegation. BEWARE!
The
Passover Lamb of Exodus 12 is not a picture of universal sufficiency,
but of particular protection. Atonement sufficiency equals deliverance from
the curse. Christ did not die to provide a sufficiency that would go eternally
wanting for a people to protect, but His shed blood has provided a covering
for thepeople of God, and Paul says: "Blessed
are those whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered"
(Romans 4:7). It irrevocably follows: all whose sins are not covered,
Calvary’s atonement has no value for them.
Return To Index
Part
Three
3.) A PASSIVE OR
INOPERATIVE SUFFICIENCY IS ALIEN TO THE ATTRIBUTES OF GOD.
"... the
LORD spake, saying, I will be sanctified of them that come nigh me, and before
all the people I will be glorified ..." (Leviticus 10:3)
"... My counsel shall stand, and I
will do all my pleasure." (Isaiah 46:10) All of God's
purposes and pleasures are rooted and grounded in His determination to glorify
Himself. God has never done anything, nor shall He ever do anything that is
not subordinated to this one supreme end; that is the manifestation of His
personal glory.
God
manifests His attributes and in so doing magnifies His person. God is holy; so
are all of His works. God is infallible; so are all His designs. God is
omniscient; so all of His works are perfectly wrought. God is just; so are all
His ends. "If my soul was sent to hell, God's righteous law approves it
well." God is immutable; so His sufficiency changes not. God is
sovereign, and so is His sufficiency.
Maxim:
There is no such thing as a powerless power. God has sent forth His
sufficiency, not inertly, but with power to achieve His purpose for which it
was sent. Salvational sufficiency is a product of Divine love, and God's love
cannot be other than effective. God's love is sovereign and so is the
sufficiency which is sent to manifest that love. There is no such thing as an
unpremediated or purposeless sufficiency emanating from God, as would be the
case with salvational sufficiency for the non-elect; for it never suffices.
Neither God's love nor His sufficiency can fall into a void, and neither of
them know any disturbing influences, but run sovereignly to the goal appointed
of Him "Who worketh all things after the
counsel of His own will." (Ephesians
1:11)
What worth
is atoning sufficiency to a people who were already in hell when the price of
it was paid? Abel's lamb had no sufficiency for Cain. Moses' lamb had no
sufficiency for Pharaoh, and most certainly the blood of Calvary's Lamb did
not provide salvational sufficiency for those who were already in hell when
Christ died. To contend for the universal sufficiency view of the atonement is
to charge God with designing a sufficiency to no avail, and raises the
question: how can God be just and withhold from any person that which was
purchased for them by the precious blood of His own Son?
The
universal sufficiency theory and Christ's words, wherein He said; "... I
pray not for the world ..." (John 17:9) have an element of
incongruity in them. This incongruity causes some to wonder why Christ would
not pray for those for whom He would suffer the shedding of His blood to
provide them with salvational sufficiency, and what the design of that
sufficiency is, seeing that the blood purchased sufficiency does not prevail
in behalf of all its objects.
The
exclusiveness of Christ's mediatorialship, both on the cross and on the
throne, was and is solely for the elect of God. Christ's mediation cannot be
empty or futile, and all for whom He interceded on the cross, He now
intercedes for with the crown of all majesty. There is in God a sufficiency
toward the non elect, but it is one of indignation, and not salvation. God
says: "... Esau have I hated."
(Malachi 1:3; Romans 9:13), and God's hatred knows nothing of
salvational sufficiency, but only eternal damnation. If this truth seems
harsh, it is not in the least so; for truth cannot adorn itself in any
defective robe.
I have
often read the following analogy from various sources, and in every instance
it is set forth in an effort to support the erroneous doctrine of universal
sufficiency of the atonement. The analogy: "The sun necessarily gives off
as much heat even if only one plant is to grow, Christ necessarily suffered as
much even if only one person was to be saved." This analogy brings honor
to God when properly considered, but when used to try and support the
contention that the atonement of Christ purchased salvational sufficiency for
the non elect, it breaks down.
The analogy
is expounded thereby: Christ would have suffered as much for one of His elect
as He did for all of them. He would have also suffered as much for one elect
person had his sin been but one (James 2:10). Sin in any measure or
nature is an infinite insult to the holiness of God, and therefore an infinite
atonement is necessary to reconcile the sinner unto God. If the
"plant" of this analogy is one of God's planting, then the grace of
God's Son will shine just as brightly as if He was the only one whom the Lord
planted. But the truth is: Christ never suffered in any degree or sense for
the non elect, and the salvational sufficiency of the Son has never shined
upon any plant the heavenly Father has not planted (Matthew 15:13).
The
analogy, if applicable at all, must be restricted to God's elect people,
for the solar sun does nothing for rocks, but hardens them, and the
salvational sufficiency of the Son of God does nothing for spiritually
reprobate rocks, but hardens them. The "stony
ground" hearers of Matthew 13 were not benefited by the
gospel seed, for the simple reason the gospel was not endowed with sufficiency
to convict them of their sins, and they were left with their hard and stony
hearts. "Therefore hath he mercy on whom he will have mercy, and whom he
will he hardeneth." (Romans 9:18 ). The conviction sufficiency of
the gospel is by omniscient design restricted to the elect of God.
Every part
and parcel of atonement favor was a ransom paid, i.e., the blood of Christ.
Surely it is agreed that sufficiency, as well as efficiency, was
purchased by the vicarious punishment of Christ. How then can the non elect be
objects of salvational sufficiency, seeing no ransom was paid for them? Only
the sins of the elect were imputed to Christ, and only for the elect "many"
did He give His life as a ransom (Matthew 20:28). Therefore, the ill
supposed atonement sufficiency for the non elect adds up to universal zero.
There
cannot be efficiency without sufficiency, and there can be no atoning
sufficiency or efficiency without the suffering of Christ upon the cross.
Therefore, it unavoidably follows that the advocates of the universal
sufficiency theory of the atonement have Christ suffering for the non elect on
the cross. A most grievous error!
It is
readily and gladly admitted that the power of Christ's blood is greater than
all sin, yea, of angels and men. However, we need to remember that His atoning
blood is the "blood of theeverlasting
covenant" (Hebrews. 13:20), and that it is shut up in
redemptive exercise to all whose names are written in the Lamb's Book of life
(Revelation 13:8, 21:27). Surely, none would say that Christ in His
atonement purchased salvational sufficiency for the fallen angels, but if not,
why not, seeing the power of His blood is greater than all sin? The answer is
simply that God never intended to save the fallen angels, nor reprobate men,
so He limited the atoning power of Christ's shed blood to His elect.
To say
God's love is greater than all the fires of hell is to speak the truth, but it
does not mean that God loves a single person who is in hell, or that shall
ever go there. God's love for one of His elect is as great as it is for all of
His elect, for His love is never less than perfect, and every elect person is
as a "firebrand" plucked from
the burning by the love of God. God's love is sufficient to quench every
infernal blaze, but all who enter those dread gates enter because Christ in
His substitutionary and loving death merited no atonement sufficiency for
them. The Apostle John, speaking of the atoning death of Christ, says:
"... Having loved his own which were
in the world, he loved them unto the end" (John 13:1).
Christ went
to Calvary with infinite love for His people. He suffered their infinite
penalty, and in so doing, He purchased for them a sufficiency that is
infinitely superior to the infinite condemning power of sin. "For
where sin abounded, grace did much more abound" (Romans 5:20).
The Lord laid upon Him all the iniquity of all His sheep and He, in His death,
atoned for their every transgression, but He did not take to Calvary one sin
of the infinite sum of the sins of the non elect, and He suffered not in any
sense or measure for the sins of the goats. Consequently, no blessing was
purchased for them by the blood of Christ.
Christ made
no satisfaction for the sins of the non elect, so their sins remain; and the
atonement sufficiency which some claim for them is of no value to them; and
the proponents of the universal atonement sufficiency theory are left with a
sovereign and omniscient sufficiency which has lost its way. Perish the
thought! Wherever divine efficacy is limited, so is divine sufficiency. Even
the thought of a sufficiency which affects not its designs is ridiculous, for
sufficiency manifests itself by the fruit it produces. There is no such thing
as a fruit without root, and there is no such thing as a sufficiency without
fruit.
Over and
over in the Scriptures Christ is metaphorically referred to as the "root"
of His people (Isaiah 11:10, 53:2; Romans 15:12)? and by
inspiration, Paul says: "... If the
root be holy, so are the branches" (Romans
11:16). But of the non elect, the Lord says: "These
have no root" (Luke 8:13). Saying they "have
no root" is equal to saying "they have no Christ", and
saying this is to say they have no atoning sufficiency, for this sufficiency
is of Christ. Paul says to the church at Corinth: "... Our
sufficiency is of God" (II Corinthians 3:5).
There is
eternal and perfect harmony between all of God's attributes. His love never
interferes with His holiness, for His love is holy. His justice has no
argument with His grace, for it is by His grace the elect are justified (Titus
3:7). His sufficiency and His efficiency know no variance. His sufficiency
is not more or less than His efficiency and vice versa. They are equal in
strength and design. Salvational efficiency makes manifest the trophies of
God's sovereign and sufficient grace, but they travel hand in hand in bringing
to pass this glorious end, for where one is, so is the other.
It is a
true premise from God's Word that the expression of one thing excludes all
else unless otherwise specified by the Scriptures. Many illustrations
could be cited from Scripture which affirm this premise, but I will refer only
to the all important one, and that is blood redemption. The blood of Christ is
the Biblically specified remedy for sin. Therefore, every other pretended
remedy has been precluded by the blood of the everlasting covenant, and is
nothing more than Satanic quackery. Hence, all but the elect of God are
excluded from the sufficiency of the atonement, for nowhere in holy Writ is it
even inferred that the blood of Christ was shed to make an atonement for the
non elect. So that which follows is not universal atonement sufficiency, but a
limited atonement; for God will not provide a sufficiency for sins apart from
the shed blood of His Son. (I John 1:7; Hebrews. 9:22; Revelation
1:5).
There are
no passive attributes in God. His love is ever reaching forth to bless its
objects. His love and His redemptive sufficiency cannot be separated, and His
love and redemptive sufficiency infallibly follow the lines set out for them
in the covenant of election. Jesus was the personification of I truth. He said
"I am the truth" (John
14:6). However, He said to the reprobate Jews: "... My word hath no
place in you" (John 8:37). The Lord's salvational sufficiency
cannot be separated from His truth.
The Lord's
inflexible justice never quits its search for satisfaction. Therefore we read:
"Be sure your sin will find you out"
(Numbers. 32:23). God's loving sufficiency provided a substitute
for" His people in the person of Christ (II Corinthians 5:21), and
His just law, yet looking for satisfaction from all those who were not
represented by Christ on the cross, provided hell to serve that end.
Salvational sufficiency and condemnatory sufficiency have had, by eternal
decree, two classes of people to work with in satisfying God's justice, i.e.,
the elect and the reprobate; and these two distinct functions of God's
sufficiency are never frustrated.
God is
holy. "Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of
hosts" (Isaiah 6:3). Salvational sufficiency is holy
sufficiency, and clothes the people of God with robes of righteousness (Isaiah
61:10), but leaves the non elect destitute of the prescribed garment (Matthew
22:12). The military wardrobe of salvational sufficiency has provided
every piece of armor the elect shall ever need in their warfare with the
world, the flesh and the devil; and makes them more than conquerors through
the Captain of their salvation (Romans 8:37 ; Ephesians 6:11; Hebrews
2:10). However, no salvational sufficiency is provided for those not
subject to Holy Spirit conscription (John 5:40, 6:44; Romans
8:7-8), and consequently, no protection from the penalty of the just and
holy law of God.
As defined
by Webster both terms, sufficiency and efficiency mean
"adequacy." The synonymy of the two terms is so exact that a
distinction between them is virtually nonexistent, and if a distinction would
be allowed, it would be one of chronology rather than design. However, let us
remember that God is not subject to chronology as finite men are. He is not
such a one as we. God is not subject to the rules of mathematics, and more
often than not the equations of men run counter to the omniscient counsel. The
chronology of Holy Spirit regeneration comes under the heading of language
accommodation, for with God there are no prerequisite functions in bringing to
pass the new birth of His people.
In the
eternal mind, atonement sufficiency and efficiency have never known a
distinction in design, function, or results. God is the sovereign and
omniscient author of both, and He would not appropriate a sufficiency beyond
the suitability of His designs for efficiency. The universal sufficiency
theory does not as much as produce one straw of mercy upon the infinite ocean
of God's everlasting judgment, but this lack of favor toward the non elect
does not in any wise vitiate the sufficiency of God, for it is immune to
negation.
Let me
reiterate. Every person whom God intended to be saved by the atonement shall
be saved. So it follows by inevitable deduction, that God never meant the
infinite power of the atonement would prevail for or provide a propitiatory
sufficiency for the non elect, seeing, none of them are ever saved. Both the
unlimited power and design of the atonement are seen by the fact that some of
every kindred, tongue, and people are saved.
All the
elect are made willing by the power of God (Psalms l10:3), but all who
are left to their own will are eternally beyond the scope of God's atonement
designs. God is the sovereign discriminator, and the difference He has put
between His people and those of the devil (John 8:44) is manifested by
atonement sufficiency and efficiency. This divinely placed difference allows
for no spiritual communion between the saved person and the world, for there
is no communion between light and darkness (II Corinthians 6:14). And
atonement sufficiency being spiritual, it cannot be held in common by all
mankind; for all are not included in the covenant wherein atonement
sufficiency is mandated.
Abraham's
lamb (Genesis 22:13) had no atoning sufficiency for the cities of Sodom
and Gomorrah, for they had already perished under the fiery indignation of God
(Luke 17:29). Did Israel's typical sacrifices picture a general
sufficiency which included the pagan nations round about Israel? If so, it was
a vain sufficiency, for they perished in their own ways (Acts 14:16).
What good
is the digging of a sixty foot well, when the same measure and quality of
water may be had at thirty feet? The answer of course is, none. God is
infinitely more wise than the wisest of His creatures, and He would not send
forth a universal atonement sufficiency when a particular sufficiency would
accomplish the same end.
What good
is a belt and buckle that never meet? What good is an atonement sufficiency
for a people who are never benefited by it? Are reprobates divinely appointed
to both eternal wrath and eternal sufficiency? Or could it be the sufficiency
purchased for them by the atoning death of Christ finally exhausts itself?
Perhaps this atonement sufficiency loses interest in some of the people for
whom Christ died in order to procure it for them, and finally enters an
abeyance that can never be broken. Atonement sufficiency is a benevolent work
of God, and there is not nor shall ever be such a thing as a disinterested
benevolence emanating from God.
I do not
mean to satirize, nor to try to rationalize the Scriptures, and would never
knowingly tamper with the Word of God. But it is my purpose and aim to alert
the reader of this treatise to the fact that in many cases what we want to
believe is not necessarily the truth. Where is the one among us who does not
love broad and spacious theological horizons? Is not the doctrine of the
universality of the gospel appealing? Surely it is, and rightfully so.
Is not the
doctrine of the universality of God's family appealing? Surely it is, and
rightfully so. Is not the doctrine of the universal sovereignty of God
appealing? Surely it is, and rightfully so. But where is the one among us who
will not say that the doctrine of the universal sufficiency of the atonement
that does not suffice for all whom Christ died to provide it is appalling?
Surely none, for so it is.
The
atonement sufficiency of Christ is definite and absolute; and it is limited in
its designs, operations, and effects. To say this is not to question the
sovereignty of God's sufficiency, nor is it to question His omniscience from
which the redemptive scheme was formulated. But it is said to magnify both
God's sovereignty and omniscience; for a sufficiency which is particular, and
infallibly accomplishes all of its designs, is more honoring to God than an
atonement sufficiency which leaves part of the people for whom it was
purchased to perish in their sins.
No doubt
what I have said herein will become grist for the mills of theological
controversy, and some polemicists may seem to turn it to their advantage but
that disturbs me not. It might be at the mercy seat of Christ, I will say:
"I wish I had not written that." But until I look upon the face of
Him who atoned for my sins upon the tree of Calvary, I am confident I shall be
contented with the position contended for in this treatise. One thing for
sure, the sending forth of this writing has for now erased all the wonder as
to whether I should have written it or not.
Either way,
I am convinced that the disturbance of theological quiet, is more honoring
unto God, than what some dear brethren refer to as: "Respectful
Silence."
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