Lou Martuneac
New Member
Brother George Zeller wrote and gave me permission to post the following at my blog. I want to share with BB readers Zeller's penetrating review of one of John MacArthur's Lordship views that fails the test of Scripture.
For links to additional documentation of Lordship Salvation’s doctrinal errors, see the original posting at my blog of Can God-Given Faith be Defective?
I especially encourage you to read Zeller’s article, John MacArthur’s Position on the Lordship of Christ. In that article Zeller discloses and examines some of MacArthur’s most serious doctrinal missteps.
Or you can view over three dozen articles that deal with various aspects of Lordship Salvation’s departure from the biblical plan of salvation. All articles are thoroughly documented from the writings of various Lordship Salvation advocates, primarily the best known most prolific Lordship apologist of them all, Dr. John MacArthur.
LM
John MacArthur teaches that the God-given faith of a believer cannot be defective:
“Scripture teaches that salvation is all God’s work. Those who believe are saved utterly apart from any effort on their own (Titus 3:5). Even faith is a gift of God, not a work of man (Eph. 2:1-5, 8). Real faith therefore cannot be defective or short-lived but endures forever (Phil. 1:6; cf. Heb. 11[/I]).” (An Introduction to Lordship Salvation by John MacArthur, from Grace Community Church’s The Distinctives of Lordship Salvation).
MacArthur’s reasoning is as follows: Faith is a gift of God. If God gives it, then it must be perfect. How could God give an imperfect gift? And if God’s gift is perfect, then it cannot be defective. The main problem with this view is that it contradicts many passages of Scripture which show that the faith of believers can, at times, be defective.
When Peter denied the Lord three times in a moment of weakness, he certainly had a lapse of faith. His faith was defective. Because of our Lord’s intercessory ministry, Peter was assured that his faith would not ultimately fail: “I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not” (Luke 22:32). On this one occasion Peter’s faith failed and was defective, but thanks to the faithfulness of Christ, his faith would not ultimately fail. Another example of Peter’s faith being defective is found in Galatians 2:11-14 when Paul had to strongly rebuke Peter because he was not walking uprightly according to the truth of the gospel.
Other passages indicate that the faith of believers can, at times, fail. How many times did our Lord say to His disciples who believed on Him, “O ye of little faith?” The faith of Thomas was defective when he refused to believe that Jesus had risen from the dead. The apostles recognized that their faith was not everything it should be when they said to Jesus, “Lord, increase our faith!” (Luke 17:5).
But the biggest proof that the faith of believers can be defective is seen by each one of us when we think about our own walk with the Lord and how many times we failed to trust Him as we should have. If faith is God’s perfect gift which can never be defective, then why would a believer ever sin? MacArthur believes that “Christians can and do sin, sometimes horribly” (same document), but how could this be true if the faith of Christians is not defective. Doesn’t every sin in some way involve some failure of faith?
MacArthur’s teaching that the faith of believers cannot be defective fails the test of Scripture. The reason any of us persevere to the end is not due to our great faith, but due to the great faithfulness of our Saviour who is “able to keep [us] from falling, and to present [us] faultless before the presence of His glory with exceeding joy” (Jude 24). Amen!
For links to additional documentation of Lordship Salvation’s doctrinal errors, see the original posting at my blog of Can God-Given Faith be Defective?
I especially encourage you to read Zeller’s article, John MacArthur’s Position on the Lordship of Christ. In that article Zeller discloses and examines some of MacArthur’s most serious doctrinal missteps.
Or you can view over three dozen articles that deal with various aspects of Lordship Salvation’s departure from the biblical plan of salvation. All articles are thoroughly documented from the writings of various Lordship Salvation advocates, primarily the best known most prolific Lordship apologist of them all, Dr. John MacArthur.
LM