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What is Lordship Salvation?

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Reformed

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The Lordship Salvation controversy dominated seminaries and bible colleges in the late 1980's when John MacArthur published his book, "The Gospel According to Jesus" in 1988. The argument itself can trace its beginning decades earlier, but it became a full-blown controversy after MacArthur's book. The controversy split churches, seminaries, and even well-respected theologians and preachers. While the temperature of the controversy has dropped over the years, its substance still remains.

Lordship Salvation is often misunderstood. Some claim that is proponents are adding works to the Gospel. Those who have made that charge include Charles Ryrie, Dave Hunt, John Walvoord, and Zane Hodges. The actual controversy stems from the Bible's teaching on grace and sanctification. Since John MacArthur is still the leading voice from the Lordship Salvation side, I will quote his view on understanding the role of grace:

John MacArthur said:
The doctrine of grace, for example, is profoundly affected by no-lordship teaching. Defenders of the no-lordship gospel often refer to their unique teachings as "Grace Theology" and their movement as "the Grace Movement." They are convinced that only their system preserves the gospel's message of grace. That is precisely why they insist every opposing opinion is a kind of works-salvation.

But they are working with an unbiblical notion of "grace." Grace is not a liberal clemency or a passive indulgence that simply tolerates and coexists with sin. Divine grace doesn't guarantee heaven in the afterlife while merely overlooking the evils of this life. Authentic grace is the undeserved favor of God toward sinners, delivering them from the power as well as the penalty of sin (Romans 6:14). Grace is dynamic, "teaching us that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly in the present age" (Titus 2:12).

Furthermore, grace is not merely God's response to the sinner's initiative. Quite the opposite. Because He is gracious, God takes the initiative, drawing the sinner (John 6:44, 65), granting repentance (Acts 3:26; 5:31; 11:18), and awakening the heart to faith (Acts 13:48; 16:14). Every aspect of the believer's response—conviction, repentance, and faith—is the result of God's gracious work in the heart. "For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God" (Ephesians 2:8).

God's grace is rooted in Christ's atonement for sin, which was infinitely costly. In fact, Christ's death on behalf of sinners is the supreme expression of divine grace. It is unthinkable that God would sacrifice His Son to purchase heaven for sinners but leave them to fend for themselves against the power of sin in this life (cf. Romans 8:32).

Sanctification is impacted because the non-Lordship position refutes that good works are a necessary sine qua non of the Christian life. Ephesians 2:10 teaches that Christians are "...His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand so that we would walk in them."

The Lordship Salvation position is that Jesus Christ is both Lord and Savior regardless of whether a sinner is converted. When a sinner is converted he experiences the beneficial aspects of Jesus as Lord and Savior; his sins are forgiven and he is now treated as a covenant-keeper, not a covenant-breaker. Jesus does not first become Savior and then becomes Lord at some later date (as is the de facto thought behind rededication ceremonies).

That is it for now. Let us see how this thread plays out.
 

Rob_BW

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Sanctification is impacted because the non-Lordship position refutes that good works are a necessary sine qua non of the Christian life.

I don’t recall the other side making that claim.

Free Grace theology is the view that 1) everlasting life is a free gift (which the Lord Jesus fully paid for by His death on the cross for our sins) which is received by faith alone in Christ alone, apart from works of any kind; 2) that assurance of one’s eternal destiny is based solely on believing Jesus’ promise to the believer and not at all on our works or on our feelings; and 3) that all people, believers and unbelievers, are accountable for their works, receive recompense for what they do in this life, and will be judged at the end of the age (in two separate judgments) to determine degrees of reward (believers) or degrees of torment (unbelievers) in the life to come, but not to determine their eternal destinies.

What Is Free Grace Theology? | Grace Evangelical Society
 

Reformed

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Rob_BW said:
I don’t recall the other side making that claim.

Rob, I do. I attended more than a few debates on the controversy. The Bible college I attended made that point.

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Reformed

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Oh, and the Free Grace Society is not the only dissenting voice.

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Rob_BW

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Rob, I do. I attended more than a few debates on the controversy. The Bible college I attended made that point.

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Then, since you let MacArthur speak for his side, you should find a proponent of the "other team" to quote from in summarizing their views. In the interest of fair play.
:Smile

Otherwise we run the risk of having an interesting thread immediately devolve into accusations of mischaracterizarion.
 

Rob_BW

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Oh, and the Free Grace Society is not the only dissenting voice.

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Oh, granted. Would you say that Zane Hodges has had a MacArthur-sized influence in regards to the dissenting opinion? It appears so to me, though I certainly don't claim to know as much about this debate as others.
 

Reformed

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Then, since you let MacArthur speak for his side, you should find a proponent of the "other team" to quote from in summarizing their views. In the interest of fair play.
:Smile

Otherwise we run the risk of having an interesting thread immediately devolve into accusations of mischaracterizarion.
I enjoy the mischaracterization charge. It is going to be levied against me anyway, so I might as well embrace it. :)

Actually, I am not going to do the work that those who are anti-LS should do for themselves.

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Reformed

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Oh, granted. Would you say that Zane Hodges has had a MacArthur-sized influence in regards to the dissenting opinion? It appears so to me, though I certainly don't claim to know as much about this debate as others.
Hodges, Ryrie, Hunt et al. Ryrie wrote a refutation with his book, "So Great Salvation".

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Reformed

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When properly understood the controversy is no controversy at all. When a sinner is converted he belongs to Christ. Jesus is both Lord and Savior, not one first and the other later. Our progress in sanctification is different, but the Holy Spirit is constantly at work conforming us to the image of Christ. Good works (Eph. 2:10) are an outward evidence of the inward change that took place at conversion.

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thatbrian

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When properly understood the controversy is no controversy at all. When a sinner is converted he belongs to Christ. Jesus is both Lord and Savior, not one first and the other later. Our progress in sanctification is different, but the Holy Spirit is constantly at work conforming us to the image of Christ. Good works (Eph. 2:10) are an outward evidence of the inward change that took place at conversion.

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To some degree, I agree with you. "Lordship" is a non-issue. It's a given.

If you come to my house and ring the doorbell, when I open it to greet you and invite you inside, I must have all of you or none of you. I don't have the option of saying, come in John. Stay out, Smith.

HOWEVER (that's a big, however) this debate is one that, at its core, is over sola fide.
 

Deacon

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I’m hampered in this discussion because I’ve left my computer at home. Im using my iPad. Posting here is like writing with my left hand.


No lesser man than Wayne Grudem wrote a book not that long ago that attempted to resurrect the controversy.

He starts off poorly, refusing to use the term, “Lordship Salvation” after its initial introduction.

His first point centered around the statement:
“We are justified by faith alone , but the faith that justifies is never alone.”
Personally I found that his book solidified my free grace position. Grudem failed to understand middle ground that believers in the midst of the controversy agree upon.

Rob
 

TCassidy

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Sanctification is impacted because the non-Lordship position refutes that good works are a necessary sine qua non of the Christian life.
Uh, no. We also believe good works are the result of regeneration and will be present in the life of a regenerate person..

The Lordship Salvation position is that Jesus Christ is both Lord and Savior regardless of whether a sinner is converted.
Same as the other side.

That is it for now. Let us see how this thread plays out.
Let us see, in deed.

When a sinner is converted he belongs to Christ.
To which we all agree.

Jesus is both Lord and Savior, not one first and the other later.
To which we all agree.

Our progress in sanctification is different, but the Holy Spirit is constantly at work conforming us to the image of Christ.
To which we all agree.

Good works (Eph. 2:10) are an outward evidence of the inward change that took place at conversion.
To which we all agree. But the question remains, who is the judge of those good works?

In my experience (and I have been doing this a long, long time) most "Lordship Salvation" boils down to judging others but not allowing others to judge us. (A certain "evangelist" on this forum comes immediately to mind.)

We can't know the hearts, the motives, the struggles, the conflicts, the spiritual battles others are fighting.

I find it more expeditious to work out my own salvation rather than standing in judgment of the salvation of others. :)
 

Reformed

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Uh, no. We also believe good works are the result of regeneration and will be present in the life of a regenerate person..
Tom, there are those who hold to your position who do believe good works are not necessary. Beneficial, yes. Necessary, no. Those who hold to that opinion were already holding to it prior to the LS controversy. It is part and parcel with Finneyistic revivalism.

But the question remains, who is the judge of those good works?
Partly the church through properly exercised pastoral care. One's conscience also testifies to their faith.

In my experience (and I have been doing this a long, long time) most "Lordship Salvation" boils down to judging others but not allowing others to judge us. (A certain "evangelist" on this forum comes immediately to mind.)

We can't know the hearts, the motives, the struggles, the conflicts, the spiritual battles others are fighting.

I find it more expeditious to work out my own salvation rather than standing in judgment of the salvation of others.

We should always exercise caution when the possibility exists of over or under applying a scriptural command. I have been doing this a long time too, and I have seen the sad result of churches that do not exercise pastoral care over their members, so the pendulum swings both ways. Neither extreme is a good thing.

However, my advocacy of LS is theologically based. Is there any biblical precedent for making Jesus the Lord of your life at an unspecified time after conversion? I sat at a campfire service in 1987 when the speaker told anyone who wanted to make Jesus Lord of their life to take the stick they were given and throw it in the fire. Even then I knew there was something theologically wrong with that. That was one extreme faction of the anti-LS crowd. But then again, I do not think either side should be defined by extremes. What does scripture teach and how should that work out in our life?

P.S. Edited to correct typos.
 
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thatbrian

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This crosses a line that should not be crossed:

"Salvation isn't the result of an intellectual exercise. It comes from a life lived in obedience and service to Christ as revealed in the Scripture; it's the fruit of actions, not intentions. There's no room for passive spectators: words without actions are empty and futile...The life we live, not the words we speak, determines our eternal destiny" (John McAuthur Hard to Believe, p. 93).​

He actually says, "Salvation. . . comes from a life lived in obedience and service to Christ." (if we remove the section defining what salvation isn't).

I can't go down that road with John. Not for a million dollars and not in a million years.

For all who rely on works of the law are munder a curse; for it is written, n“Cursed be everyone who does not oabide by all things written in the Book of the Law, and do them.” pno one is justified before God by the law, for q“The righteous shall live by faith.”4 r“The one who does them shall live by them.” sredeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us—for it is written, t“Cursed is everyone who is hanged uon a tree”— vcome to the Gentiles, so that wwe might receive xthe promised Spirit5 through faith. (Galatians 3:10-14)​
 
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Reformed

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This crosses a line that should not be crossed:

"Salvation isn't the result of an intellectual exercise. It comes from a life lived in obedience and service to Christ as revealed in the Scripture; it's the fruit of actions, not intentions. There's no room for passive spectators: words without actions are empty and futile...The life we live, not the words we speak, determines our eternal destiny" (John McAuthur Hard to Believe, p. 93).​

He actually says, "Salvation. . . comes from a life lived in obedience and service to Christ." (if we remove the section defining what salvation isn't).

I can't go down that road with John. Not for a million dollars and not in a million years.

For all who rely on works of the law are munder a curse; for it is written, n“Cursed be everyone who does not oabide by all things written in the Book of the Law, and do them.” pno one is justified before God by the law, for q“The righteous shall live by faith.”4 r“The one who does them shall live by them.” sredeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us—for it is written, t“Cursed is everyone who is hanged uon a tree”— vcome to the Gentiles, so that wwe might receive xthe promised Spirit5 through faith. (Galatians 3:10-14)​

You are familiar with this, right?

From what I understand, Johnny Mac almost lost his sanctification with the editors who took...how shall we say it..."poetic license" with this manuscript.

P.S. I have a recent copy of Hard to Believe and that section is changed back to the way it was worded in the original manuscript.
 

thatbrian

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You are familiar with this, right?

From what I understand, Johnny Mac almost lost his sanctification with the editors who took...how shall we say it..."poetic license" with this manuscript.

No I wasn't. Is there a statement by him regarding his displeasure and a retraction? I would be interested in reading it if there is one.
 
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