Lou Martuneac
New Member
At my blog this morning one contributor posted the following notes on LS and John MacArthur written by a Roman Catholic theologian and apologist, Robert Sungenis. This has bearing on the discussion of LS at BB.
There are many who see Lordship Salvation as the first cousin of Roman Catholicism. At another blog I frequent one man had this to say (in the opening of a longer comment) about LS in which he draws the connection.
My contributor noted,In order to combat what he called “antinomianism” among his opponents, MacArthur spent almost all of his 300-page work exegeting passages from the Gospels, systematically going through many of the teachings of Jesus which specified that works indeed play a large part in our standing and relationship with God. This is not surprising. Catholic theology has always maintained that the Gospels deny faith alone theology most emphatically. Yet from another perspective it is quite ironic that MacArthur chose Jesus’ teachings as his best attack against the faith alone theology of Zane Hodges. The attack on Hodges is in direct contrast to MacArthur’s most recent joint venture, Justification By Faith Alone, which is a mere 20 pages attempts to refute Catholic theology by pointing out various passages in the Gospels that teach a faith alone theology. In this attempt, MacArthur cites only four passages which he feels illustrates his point. We find it contradictory that MacArthur can amass a 300 page volume emphasizing Jesus’ teaching on works from faith, yet refrain from calling such teaching heresy. Yet he and his colleagues do not hesitate to affirm that Rome’s joining of faith and works, even under the auspices of God’s grace, is “another gospel” deserving of anathema. Like most Reformed theologians, MacArthur has found himself trying to walk the razor-thin edge between the gospel of Hodges and the gospel of Rome (Sungenis, Not By Faith Alone, 597).
“It is of concern to me that a Roman Catholic theologian is finding himself comfortable with MacArthur and Lordship Salvation. When one reads Sungenis, we see that he is not only comfortable with MacArthur on the issue but with other Reformed theologians as they emphasize works so much. One cannot avoid seeing the fact that there are similarities between MacArthur's soteriology and Rome's.”
There are many who see Lordship Salvation as the first cousin of Roman Catholicism. At another blog I frequent one man had this to say (in the opening of a longer comment) about LS in which he draws the connection.
When one gets faith wrong and makes it a work or quality of the soul, they then must have faith as a gift of God. In order for that to happen they then need regeneration to precede faith. With that then they load all sorts of expectations upon the soul desiring to come to Christ. This is probably why MacArthur indicates one cannot be saved without “unconditional surrender…full exchange of self for the Saviour.” His subsequent books do not clarify or moderate these kinds of statements but only reinforce them.
This is wrong and an unbiblical definition of faith and what one must do to be saved. It demands certain qualities be present in the soul. That is clearly works! It is very disheartening to see people that would endorse MacArthur’s position. They should point out its errors. These are not merely over statements as in question and answer sessions. MacArthur has made his position very clear. It is not classic Calvinism, but Puritan.
He has been accused by others of bordering on a Roman Catholicism works salvation… . Of course, from MacArthur’s viewpoint, all these qualities are part of faith so he repeatedly states that “salvation is by faith alone.”