By William Burt Pope, D.D.,
CHRISTIAN SONSHIP
T HE Christian privilege of Sonship is that of filial life restored to man in and through Christ. This blessing, connecting the Mediatorial Trinity, as the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, in a special manner with the new relations of the believer, may be distinguished as the internal Regeneration and the external Adoption. But, however distinct, these two are to be united when we consider the peculiar Prerogatives of the children of God viewed as His children: they are the rights of adoption conferred on such as are made capable of them by their renewal, or, in another view, the rights of regeneration which in adoption are acknowledged and bestowed1. No terms are more strictly correlative than Regeneration and Adoption. They describe the same blessing under two aspects: the former referring to the filial character, the latter to the filial privilege. But they are not thus closely connected as cause and effect: they are co-ordinate, and the link between them is the common Sonship. The assurance of filial adoption does not produce the regenerate life; nor does the infusion of the perfect life of regeneration of itself invest the children of God with all the prerogatives of heirship Moreover, they are as distinct from the other leading blessings in the economy of grace as they are themselves united. The justified state does not involve of necessity the special privileges of adoption; nor does regeneration as such imply the specific relation to God which sanctification signifies The two terms we now consider embrace in their unity an entirely distinct department of the Spirit's administration of the New Covenant: they lead us into the household of faith and the family of God. Touching at many points those other departments, they are nevertheless perfect and complete in themselves 2. The privilege of Christian sonship connects the Holy Trinity in a peculiar manner with the administration of grace. If such a distinction may be allowed, it has a more direct connection than the other privileges of the covenant with the Son Incarnate. This specific blessing is in relation to righteousness and sanctification what the Son is in relation to the Father and the Holy Ghost. Among the last sayings of the Savior were these: I ascend unto My Father and your Father, 1 to that Father of whom all paternity in heaven and earth is named.2 He who is the Logos to the creation generally is the Son towards the filial creation. But this special relation to the Son extends to both aspects of sonship as adoption and regeneration. We are adopted into the relation which the Son occupies eternally: hence the term which expresses this prerogative is uiothesia, where the uios is preserved as the solitary word that is ever used to signify the Son's relation to the FatherWe are regenerated by the life of Christ imparted through the Spirit: hence it is paliggenesia, and we are tekna, both terms as it were reproducing in time the eternal generation. Our regeneration answers to the eternally Begotten, our adoption to the eternally Beloved 1 John 20:17; 2 Eph. 3:15 3. There are some passages in the New Testament which unite the two; and these may be introduced as the general preface to what follows. But as many as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God: 1 exousían tékna Theoú genésthai, authority or privilege to be made into children, because they believe on the name of the Son. This is precisely the same as what is afterwards called adoption. Which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God: here we have a most complete definition of regeneration. The two ideas run through the eighth chapter of the Romans; though both there, and in the Galatian epistle, it is the adoption that is more conspicuous. In St. Peter we have both. Which according to His abundant mercy hath begotten us again:2 this is regeneration; to an inheritance incorruptible denotes the adoption to which inheritance belongs as a privilege. But best of all in St. John: Behold .. that we SHOULD BE CALLED and WE ARE the sons of God.3 In this however, as in all, our Lord Himself gave the word: If the Son, therefore, shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed;4 that is, by the possession of a place among the children, and the children's freedom. If God were your Father, ye would love Me: here, as the context shows, regeneration or the possession of new life is meant1 John 1:12; 2 1 Pet. 1:3,4; 3 1 John 3:1,2; 4 John 8:36,42 Regeneration is the final and decisive work wrought in the spirit and moral nature of man when the perfect principle of spiritual life in Christ Jesus is imparted by the Holy Ghost Many and various descriptions of this fundamental change are given in Scripture: showing its relations to the several Persons of the Trinity, to the penitent faith of the recipient, to the means employed in effecting it. The best method of acquiring a clear view of the teaching of the word of God on this subject is simply to arrange and classify these descriptions I. The Divine Agent in the new life is the Holy Trinity, Whose agency is that of generation and creation: each of these terms being respectively the centre of a circle of phrases 1. The Persons of the Sacred Trinity are Severally Agents. It is said of the Father: Of His own will begat He us with the word of truth. 1 You hath He quickened.2 So God, generally, or God and the Father; Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ . . . Who hath begotten us again!3 The Son quickeneth whom He will.4 I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly,5 perisson: the higher, deeper, fuller life which is the result of Christian regeneration, in contradistinction to the preliminary life that precedes the new birth, as well as to the imperfect privilege of the older economy. It is, however, the adoption of sonship which is more expressly ascribed to the Son: to them gave He power to become the sons of God6 by privilege who were born of God. But the Holy Ghost is the specific Agent: as the Administrator of redemption He is a quickening Spirit.7 That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is horn of the Spirit is spirit.8 There is no more exact translation of New-Testament thought into ecclesiastical phrase than that which gave the Holy Ghost the title: to Kurion to soopoion, the Giver of life1 Jas. 1:18; 2 Eph. 2:1; 3 1 Pet. 1:3; 4 John 5:21; 5 John 10:10; 6 John 1:12; 7 1 Cor. 15:45; 8 John 3:6 2. The Divine operation presents three general classes of terms (1.) Some refer to generation. The simplest is that of begetting: every one that loveth Him that begat, loveth him also that is begotten of Him, 1 tón genneésanta. The idea is modified in St. Peter's begotten us again,2 anagenneésas. In one passage the mother's function is used in the original, though disguised in the translation: of His own will begat He us:3 apekúeesen, as before in ver. 15 the same peculiar verb is employed, bringeth forth death.4 These are united in the general word quickening: the Son quickeneth whom He will, zooopoieí. This is modified again: quickened us together with Christ.5 St. John's is a remarkable variation on the thought: whosoever is begotten of God doeth no sin, because His seed remaineth in him.6 All these descriptions are very impressive as adopting and applying to Christians the sacred language first used of the ONLY BEGOTTEN [GOD], which is in the bosom of the Father.7(2.) Again many other terms refer to creationSt. James unites this idea with the former: begat He us . . . that we should be a kind of first-fruits of His creatures. 8It is both creation, new creation, and the secondary creation of renewal, If any man be in Christ he is a new creature:9 ktísis, creation or creature. He is created in Christ Jesus unto good works. It is however a secondary creation, or reduction of the soul to order out of its chaos: by the renewing of the Holy Ghost,10 anakainoóseoos. Here we must remember the analogy of the genesis of all things at the beginning: there was an absolute creation of matter, or calling that which was not into being; and there was the subsequent fashioning of that matter into forms which constitute the habitable Cosmos. The latter is the creator on which the Scripture most dwells: whether it regards the physical or it regards the spiritual order. Just as the sleeper is dead and the dead is only asleep, —awake thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead,11 —so the creation is only a renewal, while the renewal is no less than a creation. (3.) These sometimes are united. And have put on the new man, ton neon, which is renewed,12 tón anakainoúmenon. And be renewed in the spirit of your mind,13 ananeoústhai and that ye put on the new man, tón kainón ánthroopon, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness. It is well to note, without pressing too far, the distinction between the two forms, neos and kainos, and their combinations. The former refers to time: the new man is entirely different from his FORMER self. The latter refers to quality: the new man is different from his former SELF, and the idea of a great change is more marked. In these passages the creating act of God is regarded as a process issuing in the new character; as a process in which He uses the co-operation of man. But in another passage the creating idea is used rather of a definite act: for we are His workmanship,14 poíeema, created in Christ Jesus unto good works. We are saved apart from our own merit, through a new Divine energy that prepares us for works which then are good: good because they spring from a renewed nature, are performed under the influence of the Holy Spirit, and for ever renounce all claim to goodness independent of His grace1 1 John 5:1; 2 1 Pet. 1:3; 3 Jas. 1:15,18; 4 John 5:21; 5 Eph. 2:5; 6 1 John 3:9; 7 John 1:18; 8 Jas. 1:18; 9 2 Cor. 5:17; 10 Tit. 3:5; 11 Eph. 5:14; 12 Col. 3:10; 13 Eph. 4:23,24; 14 Eph. 2:10 II. As wrought in man, regeneration is described in many ways: there is a greater variety of indirect and figurative definitions of this blessing than of any other in the covenant of grace 1. The terms indicating the spiritual birth take the lead. Christians are born of God, 1 ek toú Theoú; they are children of God; they are born again,2 ánoothen, which is the same as from above: indeed the expression has rather a local than a temporal meaning, and is strictly from above, or from heaven, that is, born of God, according to St. John's interpretation in the epistle. As describing regeneration it must have the preeminence, being our Lord's own first and only formal word on the subject. When He adds: the wind bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit,3 we are taught that the preliminary grace of the Holy Ghost has its mysterious issue in the new birth of him who has been born (ho gegenneeméno, in the perfect, the completion of a process). It is, as we have defined it, the full filial life. The word distinguishes the new product from that which is born of the flesh;4 it is a paliggenesia, and indicates the bestowment of a new life according to the original idea of man in the Divine mind1 1 John 3:9,10; 2 John 3:3; 3 John 3:8; 4 John 3:3,6,7 2. It is a resurrection from a state of death; from death, and not merely a rising up generally from sin: as those that are alive from the dead. 1 (1.) It is therefore the same man who was dead in trespasses and sins;2 and the idea seems to be that the new man is raised up within the old: to be nourished and grow while the latter dies. This follows the analogy of our Lord's words: except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and die, it abideth alone.3 The old nature is mortified with Christ and the new rises from it. But the analogy in other respects fails. The true life of the spirit is life in death, and death unto life; but it is not the dissolution of the old nature that feeds the new germ. (2.) Hence the stricter view of this interior new birth is that of a resurrection in the fellowship of the risen Savior, and connects it with the fellowship of His atoning death unto the condemnation of sin. In other words the new life is the counterpart of the death to the law. Therefore we are buried with Him by baptism into death that, like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. For if we have been planted together in the likeness of His death, we shall be also in the likeness of His resurrection.4 He that is united to the Redeemer by faith, of which baptism is the sign, is justified from sin; but this cannot be without a spiritual resurrection with Him, of which the rising out of the water is the symbol, as descending into it is the symbol of the former. In this passage regeneration is regarded rather as a process following the instantaneous death: that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin.5 Hence the expression, Reckon ye also yourselves [to be] dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. The same instantaneous life with Christ, followed by the same death in life of spiritual mortification, is taught in the Colossian epistle. And you, being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh, hath He quickened together with Him, having forgiven you all trespasses . . .. Mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth.6 (3.) Spiritual Circumcision in union with Christ is another aspect of the same truth. The uncircumcision of your flesh7 is spiritual death as contrasted with dead in your sins as the condemnation of the law. And in this fulfillment of the symbol, in the taking away the foreskins of your heart, that inward circumcision which is that of the heart, in the spirit, and not in the letter,8 we have the New-Testament antitype of a large series of Old-Testament types of the future regeneration1 Rom. 6:13; 2 Eph. 2:1; 3 John 12:24; 4 Rom. 6:4,5,7; 5 Rom. 6:6,11; 6 Col. 2:13;3:5; 7 Jer. 4:4; 8 Rom. 2:29 3. It is the introduction into a new world. This follows from the former: the children of this resurrection are quickened or raised into newness of life. 1 They have new tastes, appetites, dispositions, senses adapted to a new state of things. If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature, old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.2 Of this change our Lord spoke when He said: except a man be born of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.3 Christians, having ascended with Christ, sit in the heavenly places;4 they are required therefore to set their affection on things above.5 This aspect of the new birth conjoins it with Illumination. It is Let there be light!6 in the soul. For God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts:7 which connects the New-Testament spiritual genesis, or palingenesis, with the natural one of the Old Testament1 Rom. 6:4; 2 2 Cor. 5:17; 3 John 3:5; 4 Eph. 1:20; 5 Col. 3:2; 6 Gen. 1:3; 7 2 Cor. 4:6 4. It is sharing, in a deeper sense than any yet referred to, the life of Christ. Our Lord at the outset of His teaching spoke of that which is born of the Spirit: 1 at the close He represented regeneration as being union with Himself: I am the Vine, ye are the branches.2 Because I live ye shall live also.3 And, between these, He spoke of Himself, received by faith, as the life of the soul. Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink His blood ye have no life in you.4 This is sometimes said to be Christ in you,5 and Christ formed in6 the nature. It is more than a federal fellowship in His death and life, such as results from faith in the common Redeemer and exhibits regeneration in some sense as a corporate blessing. It is the mystical communication of a certain Divine-human virtue of the Saviour's being which cannot be defined in words. Thus we become partakers of the Divine nature.7 To this referred one of those profound sayings which our Savior uttered, without interpretation, to be pondered by His people for ever: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it MORE,8 perissón, that, like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life.9
1 John 3:6;
2
John 15:5;
3
John 14:19;
4
John 6:53;
5
Col. 1:27;
6
Gal. 4:19;
7
2 Pet. 1:4;
8 Rom. 6:4;
9
Heb. 10:16
5. It is a new law established in the heart; according
to the terms of the evangelical
covenant: I will
put My laws into their hearts, and in their minds will I write them.
1 Heb. 10:16;
2
Rom. 8:4;
3
Rom. 8:10;
4
Rom. 8:2
6. Lastly, regeneration is the renewal of man into the
Divine image. This specific view is
certainly not peculiar to St. Paul but he gives it
special prominence: the new man
which is
renewed in knowledge after the image of Him that created
him.
As the one regeneration leads to a continuous renewal,
so the one image re-engraven
leads to a continuous transformation: be ye transformed by the renewing of
your mind.
1 Col. 3:10,11;
2
Eph. 4:24;
3
2 Cor. 3:18;
4
Rom. 12:2;
5
Rom. 8:10;
6
1 Cor. 2:14;
7 Jude 19;
8
1 Cor. 2:15;
9
2 Pet. 1:4;
10
Eze. 36:26
7. We cannot review these various aspects of the new
life without being impressed with
the feeling that it is in some sense the central
blessing of the Christian covenant
Justification is unto life, and this life is devoted to
God in sanctification. But the life, as
the life is in Jesus, is the unity of all. I am the Way, the Truth, and
Thus the Bible closes with all the elements of the
doc-trine of Regeneration. It is the
Divine begetting of the filial life of Christ in us: thus it is
once for all. It is the progressive
life which regarded in its perfected ideal cannot sin:
thus it is the renewal into a finished
birth. And it is that very eternal life which, begun on
earth, will be consummated in
heaven
III. Regeneration is described with reference to the
means employed in the economy of
grace. The Divine act is always represented in
connection with instrumentality. God
begets by the word of truth; our Lord gives His life,
and not only sustains it, in the eating
and drinking of Himself; the Holy Spirit instrumentally
regenerates through the ordinance
or sacrament of baptism. These points we need only now
indicate briefly: they will be
more fully discussed when we reach the Means of Grace
and the Sacraments
1. The Word of God is the instrument and power of
regeneration
(1.) Not as the absolute authoritative voice which calls
into new life, but as the truth
which is applied to the understanding and to the
feelings, and through them to the will. It
is the word of conviction or reproof in the preliminary
process: the reproof in the
understanding which enforces on the sinner the Lord's
word Ye must be born again,
(2.) It is the instrument, further, as it is the vehicle
of the presentation of the Savior
Himself, the Truth, the supreme Object of trust.
Embraced by the faith which is at once
the last act of the unregenerate and the first act of
the regenerate soul, He becomes the
Life as well as the Truth. Of the word which offers and
conveys the quickening Lord it is
said by St. Peter that it is the incorruptible seed;
(3.) But, more generally still, it is the Word of God
which is the instrument of every
Divine operation in the human heart: man shall not live by bread alone, but
by every
word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.
Every energy of God from heaven at last goes back to His
word
2. Baptism, also, as the sacrament of the new birth, or
rather of the soul's entrance into
Christ, gives regeneration both a special name and a
special character. The baptism
with
the Holy Ghost
Adoption is the term occasionally used to signify the
Divine declaratory act by which
those who are accepted in Christ are reinstated in the
privileges of forfeited sonship for
the sake of the Incarnate Son. It is used also of the
state to which these privileges belong
I. The term is used only by St. Paul, It was perhaps
taken into the Christian vocabulary
from the Roman law. Cum in alienam familiam inque
liberorum locum extranei
sumuntur, aut per praetorem fit, aut per populum. Quod
per praetorem fit
II. As to the thing signified it may be regarded first
as the act of God, and then as
conferred on man: the Divine declaration and its human
result
1. Adoption is connected with the Triune God. (1.) It is
the Father who adopts into His
own household: of
Whom the whole family—all
paternity or race relation—in
heaven and
earth is named.
1 Eph. 3:15;
2
Heb. 3:6;
3
John 8:36;
4
Rom. 8:15;
5
2 Cor. 6:18;
6
Rom. 8:16
2. As received by man, adoption defines the peculiarity
of the filial relation as a sonship
restored in respect to its privileges
(1.) It is not the sonship of creation which is
signified. The angels are the
sons of God;
(2.) Nor is it the sonship of likeness: in the Hebrew
idiom we read of the children of
light
and children of
this world,
(3.) But it is the restoration of prodigals to the
household of God, and maybe regarded in
two lights: first, being a simple reinstatement in the
original position of children of the
creating Father; and, secondly, it is altogether a new
endowment, being an investiture
with the special prerogatives of brethren of Jesus,
the Firstborn among many
brethren.
THE PRIVILEGES OF CHRISTIAN SONSHIP
The privileges of entrance into the family of God by
adoption—which as privileges are
connected rather with adoption than regeneration—are
distinctly exhibited in the New
Testament. They are filial access in the confidence of
devotion : freedom from all kinds
of bondage; the advantages of the election; the
assurance of a constant guidance and
direction of the Holy Spirit; and the enjoyment, first
in earnest, and then finally, of the
Christian inheritance. These all of course have relation
to the other blessings of the new
Covenant so far as these blessings are one in their
diversity; but they are specially
connected with the Christian Sonship
I. Access to God in filial confidence is the first
prerogative. Ye have received the
Spirit of
adoption in Whom we cry, Abba, Father.
Paul adds another passage from another place, and will be a Father unto you.
II. Whatsoever belongs to Liberty or Freedom, in the
New-Testament sense of the word,
is linked with sonship. The Savior said, the truth shall make you free;
III. The privileges of the Election of God belong to the
filial relation which is sealed by
admission into the ark of the Christian family. Israel
was the chosen people, to whom
pertaineth the adoption,
IV. Another special prerogative of the adoption is the
personal and never-failing direction
and guidance of the Holy Spirit. For as many as are led by the Spirit of
God, they are the
sons of God:
He that is joined unto the Lord is one Spirit,
V. The inheritance to which Christians are called is the
last privilege of their adoption. Of
God's ancient children-people it was said: I loved him, and called My son out of
Egypt;
1. The Christian inheritance belongs to the children of
God in a twofold sense. And if
children, then heirs; heirs of God, and joint-heirs with
Christ.
1 Rom. 8:17;
2
Rom. 8:29;
3
1 John 3:2;
4
Psa. 17:15;
5
Mat. 5:8;
6
Psa17:15
2. They enter into an heritage of which they have now
only an earnest. The inheritance of
Christians is in its deepest meaning reserved in heaven.
Paul: ye were
sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise, which is the earnest of our
inheritance until the redemption, of the purchased
possession.
1 1 Pet. 1:4;
2
Eph. 1:13,14;
3
Eph. 1:11;
4
Heb. 3:14
3. That participation awaits the believer: we are waiting for the adoption,
1 Rom. 8:23;
2
Phil. 3:21;
3
Col. 3:4;
4
Heb. 9:16;
5
Luke 15:31;
6
Rev. 21:7;
7
Mal. 3:17
The variations in opinion on this general subject may be
class under these heads: the
various theories of the relation of the new birth to the
sacrament of baptism; differences
as to the measure of human co-operation admitted; its
place in the Ordo Salutis, or plan
of salvation; its effect upon the various constituent
elements of human nature; and its
value as a Divine gift in respect to the other blessings
of the Christian covenant
I. A certain theory of Baptismal Regeneration appears in
the first ages of the Church,
which seems in some measure to have merged the internal
regeneration into the external
adoption
1. The first question will be considered again more
fully when we reach the doctrine of
the Sacraments; a brief statement, rather historical
than polemic, is however necessary
here also
(1.) This was probably one out of many results of Jewish
influence on Christian thought
During the interval between the Old and New Testaments
the converts to Judaism were
said to be born again: "a convert is like a newborn
child." As to his new position he was
called a Proselyte: either of the Gate, as admitted to
civil privileges and a place in the
Court of the Gentiles; or of Righteousness, as
circumcised and baptized and bound to the
whole law. The term therefore answered to the Christian
Adoption. So Maimonides: "
The Gentile that is made a proselyte, and the servant
that is made free, behold, he is like a
child new born. And, as to all those relations he had
whilst either Gentile or servant, they
now cease." But there was in Judaism no other
regeneration than that of this external
adoption
(2.) Early Patristic literature similarly fell into a
vague style of connecting the two. It
represented the new birth as a translation into the
Christian estate, an initiation by
baptism into the Christian mysteries. The internal
renewing process was faithfully taught;
but was not connected always with the scriptural term:
in fact, regeneration was
equivalent to adoption simply. The new life was spoken
of as renewal or renovation; and
thus adoption, instead of being a concomitant of the new
birth, was its precursor. The
Regeneration was understood in the same broader meaning
which our Savior gave it
when He spoke of the final restitution of all things;
only that in their view this
regeneration was simply the establishment of the new
order of Christianity
(3.) In this sense baptismal regeneration has been
understood by very many advocates of
infant baptism in every period. They use the term with a
larger meaning than it generally
bears: as the external estate out of which the new birth
grows. Baptismal regeneration
accordingly is, in the case of children, baptismal
adoption, as baptism undeniably seals to
the children of Christian parents their place in the
family of God; it is also a seal or
pledge of a regenerating grace awaiting all Christian
children duly baptized, the pledge
being the preliminary grace that rests upon them and
prompts to personal dedication in
due time when that pledge can be by themselves redeemed
2. In a stricter sense the doctrine of baptismal
regeneration is held by the larger part of
Christendom: that, namely, which holds the sacraments to
be the preeminent and proper
Means of Grace. The Roman Catholic, Oriental, Lutheran,
and Anglican communions,
though in varying language, hold that regeneration is
generally connected with baptism as
its instrument. The Lutheran Augsburg Confession says:
De baptismo docent, quod sit
necessarius ad salutem. And what this necessity means is
taught by Luther's Catechism:
Baptismus operatur remissionem peccatorum, liberat a
morte. The English Article xxvii
gives its sentiment thus: " But it is also a sign of
regeneration or new birth, whereby, as
by an instrument, they that receive baptism rightly are
grafted into the church: the
promises of forgiveness of sins, and of our adoption to
be the sons of God, are visibly
signed and sealed." Here it is obvious that a certain
distinction is made between
regeneration, of which baptism is the sign, and
adoption, of which it is the instrument
The Westminster Confession declares the same; with both
a needful and a needless
qualification. " Although it be a great sin to contemn
or neglect this ordinance, yet grace
and salvation are not so inseparably annexed unto it, as
that no person can be regenerated
or saved without it, or that all that are baptized are
undoubtedly regenerated. The efficacy
of baptism is not tied to that moment of time wherein it
is administered; yet,
notwithstanding, by the right use of this ordinance, the
grace promised is not only
offered, but really exhibited and conferred by the Holy
Ghost, to such (whether of age or
infants) as that grace belongeth unto, according to the
counsel of God's own will, in His
appointed time." In these weighty words the regeneration
of infants in baptism is clearly
asserted to be possible, and, in the case of the elect,
certain. But the addition of the words
" not tied to that moment," and " in His own appointed
time," may seem to allow that the
full regeneration is reserved for the period when the
infant shall be capable of receiving
the gift
3. By many the regeneration of the soul is regarded as
sacra-mentally pledged and
promised in virtue of the general grace bestowed upon
mankind in redemption. Baptism
is therefore a sign of the blessing into which
preliminary grace is to mature; and the seal
of its bestowment if that preliminary grace is used
aright. It should be remembered that in
this scheme regeneration stands connected with all the
blessings of the Christian
covenant, as in the sentences quoted from the
formularies above. Baptism is not more
intimately allied with the new birth than with remission
of sins and sanctification to God
There is, according to the Nicene Confession, " one
baptism for the remission of sins,"
that is, one baptism unto pardon, regeneration,
sanctification, and all the benefits of our
Lord's passion. Children baptized are externally
pardoned, adopted, and made holy: the
internal reality corresponding with these is sealed to
them by the preliminary grace that
belongs to the family of redeemed man, and especially to
the children of the household of
faith. Baptism in this doctrine, which carefully stated
is irrefragable, is the sign and seal
and instrument to adult believers of their pardon and
renewal and sanctification. To the
children of believers it is the sign and seal and
instrument of imparting these blessings so
far as they are capable of them: original guilt is
removed, the bias to evil is counteracted
by initial grace, and adoption into the household of
faith is absolutely conferred. If what
may be loosely called the germ of grace is regeneration
in the infant, then it becomes new
birth in the adult
4. The strict systematic dogma of the two mysteries
which makes baptism the sacrament
of birth, and the eucharist the sacrament of
nourishment, may have some measure of truth
in it so far as the word means the sacramental emblem.
But it must not be forgotten that
our Lord speaks of the sacramental eating and drinking
of Himself as connected with
regeneration. If the words of St. John's Gospel are
referred to the Lord's Supper then we
have a eucharistic regeneration as well as a baptismal:
Except ye eat the flesh of the
Son
of man and drink His blood, ye have no life in you:
it is not, ye have no abiding
life.
1 John 6:53
II. The measure of human co-operation has been much
contested
1. Extreme Calvinism holds that the life of regeneration
is given by an act of as absolute
sovereign power as that which gave physical existence:
therefore, as there are undeniably
some stirrings of spiritual life in penitents, and the
beginnings of tendency to life even
before true repentance, these are all regarded as
evidences of renewal, and regeneration is
placed before all other blessings of the Spirit. Man in
this theory is purely passive. This
doctrine effaces preliminary grace, so far as that grace
tends to spiritual activity: such
grace is preliminary no longer, but the very
regeneration itself. It forgets that wherever
the human will is a factor, there can be no pure
passivity; and that the actual state of the
soul in which it is passive under the regenerating power
of the Spirit is itself produced by
a self-surrendering faith of the penitent desire
2. Pelagianism, at the opposite extreme, reduced the
great change to an act of the human
will: as it is always in man's power to choose, and act
accordingly, he really may
regenerate himself by fixing his purpose fully on the
Good. Semi-Pelagianism admitted
that the first conversion requires Divine power, but
claimed that the human will in its
freedom is that power itself; and as to the regeneration
of the soul it has always regarded
that as the Divine blessing on human determination. But
this dogma in every form lowers
grace to external teaching and inducements: nature
itself is in a sense grace, and the
operation of the Holy Ghost effects nothing that the
human will does not under His influence
itself accomplish. The error in every Semi-Pelagian
theory is that of forgetting that
the Holy Spirit always ends, even as He always begins,
the work of goodness in man
without human concurrence. He begins before co-operation
joins Him; and cooperation
must cease at the crisis where He finishes the work
3 Synergism in the Lutheran church differed little from
the latter; but its esteem of the
sacramental blessing of baptism gave Divine grace its
full honor in relation to baptized
children. Arminianism in its doctrine of universal
prevenient grace carries back the
Synergism, or co-operation between God and man, to the
nature behind and before
baptism. In certain American schemes, which represent
regeneration as the right ultimate
choice of the soul, there are some errors to be noted.
(1.) This choice is a conviction and
desire before regeneration, and may be called
conversion; or, in its higher form of entire
consecration of the will, it is a fruit of renewal. It
cannot be regeneration itself. (2.) The
state of the soul before God is more than merely its
present will and act or exercise: it has
a disposition or character underlying this with which
the new birth has most to do. (3.)
Therefore, in common with almost all errors on this
subject, these Semi-Pelagian rather
than Arminian theories imply a failure to distinguish
between the preliminary grace of
life and the life of regeneration
III. Regeneration is sometimes erroneously placed first
in the order of the bestowment of
Gospel privileges. The release of the sinner from
condemnation must take precedence, his
new life then begins in its fullness, and that life is
consecrated to God in sanctification
But in many confessions regeneration takes the lead, and
this doctrine is maintained in
various forms by parties fundamentally differing as to
the nature of the blessing itself
1. All advocates of sacramental regeneration ex opere
operato hold this opinion, at least
in the case of infants baptized. Generally, a
distinction is established between the
regeneration which confers at the outset a germ of
spiritual life and the renewal which
goes on, with varying and sometimes very irregular
processes, to the end. Conversion, on
that scheme, is placed after regeneration, which is
reduced in its significance to the
infusion of a principle of grace neutralizing, or rather
contending with, the vice of nature;
and, when fall from grace makes it needful,
counteracting original sin as a principle of
concupiscence
2. The Latitudinarians who believe in the regeneration
of mankind in Christ, and allow no
subsequent regeneration as necessary, of course
entertain the same notion. By some it is
so far modified as to admit a difference, so to speak,
between the regeneration that
imparts to all the first germ of life, and the new birth
or the full consummation of that
life. The error of this system, in its best forms, is
simply its effacing the distinction
between the universal grace which is unto life and life
itself. Its sufficient refutation is
that one saying:
If any man be in Christ he is a new creature.
1 2 Cor. 5:17
3. This order is quite essential to Calvinism, which
allows of no life in the soul of man
other than regenerate life, and makes regeneration the
precursor of conviction,
repentance, faith, and conversion. The first spark of
sovereign grace decides all: that once
kindled introduces the rest, and can never be
extinguished
4. Calvinism and Sacramentarianism and Latitudinarianism
strangely agree, therefore, in
denying the possibility of the repetition of
regeneration. It is certainly true that the New
Testament speaks of one washing of the man who needeth not save to wash his feet;
IV. It is important to notice the many views which are
held by philosophic theologians as
to the relation of the new birth to the constitution of
human nature. This is literally an
illimitable subject in itself, though limited in regard
to the present question. The true
principles of the question are simple
1. Regeneration is the restored life of the whole nature
of man: it is a new heart, the heart
being the soul or self, including though distinct from
the mind, the affections and the will
These three are one in human nature, and in
regeneration, which, in its full meaning, is a
new creation or a renewal of the inmost personality
2. It is not a change in the substance of the soul, nor
in its individual acts; but in the bias
towards evil which is the character. That bias, however,
is not destroyed though it is
arrested and made subordinate. In perfect regeneration,
which is equivalent in another
region of thought to entire sanctification, that bias is
utterly suppressed and destroyed
3. Hence there is in regeneration no distinction between
the spirit and the soul, between
the pneuma
and the psuch. The regenerate
is spiritual, inasmuch as the Holy Ghost reigns
in his spirit: not because by the impartation of the
Holy Ghost he has acquired that
element, or even attained to the supremacy of the spirit
in his nature. Both these are true
in the popular and figurative speech of Scripture, which
sometimes speaks as if the spirit
in man is latent until possessed by the Divine Spirit,
and as if the unregenerate spirit is no
better than an animal soul. But the development of this
view into a theory of human
nature as unrenewed and renewed leads to great
confusion
V. Lastly, divergences in regard to the value of
regeneration as a principle of new life
have been more or less anticipated
1. The lowest degree is that assigned by those who
regard it as the merely being born into
a condition or constitution of things. Against this
virtual annihilation of the specific gift
of the new birth enough has already been said; too much,
however, cannot be urged in
opposition to a notion which limits the high estate of
regeneration to a blessing
unconsciously received. All men are born into the new
constitution of grace; multitudes
of Christian children are baptized into it. But
regeneration is more than this universal
blessing of redemption
2. Next comes the opinion of those who make it the mere
infusion of a germ, so slight
that (1) it can scarcely be distinguished from the
universal preliminary life that is the gift
of redemption, and (2) it is utterly inconsistent with
the high views of the ascendency of
the regenerate life which Scripture teaches. The lowest
doctrine sanctioned by the Word
of God includes freedom from the law of sin and death
3. Some descriptions of this blessing pitch it in so
high a strain as to be utterly
inconsistent with the common facts of experience. St.
John and St. Paul must be
reconciled in the true doctrine of regeneration, even as
St. Paul and St. James in the true
doctrine of justification. St. Paul speaks of a conflict
between the flesh and the Spirit,
which are
contrary the one to the other 1 Gal. 5:17; 2 1 John 3:9; 3 1 John 2:1 |
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