









 | |

The Extent of the
Atonement:
Limited Atonement Versus Unlimited Atonement
by Ron
Rhodes
The
following discussion of limited atonement versus unlimited
atonement has been put together because many people have
contacted me for more information regarding what this debate is
all about--and why I (Ron Rhodes), in particular, hold to
unlimited atonement.
The following discussion is intended as a brief summary. Not
every argument for limited atonement has been listed; not every
argument for unlimited atonement has been listed. But the major
arguments for both positions are set forth in a brief fashion.
I also quote from advocates of both positions.
Though I strongly believe in unlimited atonement, I have many
friends who believe in limited atonement. We do not divide over
this issue; neither should you.
My position is known in theological circles as "4-point
Calvinism."
As a backdrop, "5-point Calvinists" hold to T-U-L-I-P:
Total
Depravity.
Unconditional Election.
Limited Atonement.
Irresistible Grace.
Perseverance of the Saints.
As a 4-point
Calvinist, I hold to all the above except limited
atonement.
I point this out simply because it has been the habit of some
of the limited atonement persuasion to say that all who hold to
unlimited atonement are Arminian in their theology. This simply
is not so.
The Issue
Defined
Theologian Walter
Elwell summarizes the debate over the extent of the atonement
this way: "Although there are variations as to the basic ways
in which this subject can be addressed, the choices boil down
to two: either the death of Jesus was intended to secure
salvation for a limited number or the death of Jesus was
intended to provide salvation for everyone. The first view is
sometimes called 'limited atonement' because God limited the
effect of Christ's death to a specific number of elect persons,
or 'particular redemption' because redemption was for a
particular group of people. The second view is sometimes
referred to as 'unlimited atonement' or 'general redemption'
because God did not limit Christ's redemptive death to the
elect, but allowed it to be for mankind in general."
LIMITED
ATONEMENT
Definition of Limited
Atonement: "A reference to the view that Christ's atoning death
was only for the elect."
Louis Berkhof says: "The Reformed position is that Christ died
for the purpose of actually and certainly saving the elect, and
the elect only. This is equivalent to saying that He died for
the purpose of saving only those to whom He actually applies
the benefits of His redemptive work."
Representative
Passages Offered in Support of Limited
Atonement
Matthew 1:21: "She
will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name
Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins."
Matthew 20:28: "...the Son of Man did not come to be served,
but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many."
Matthew 26:28: "This is my blood of the covenant, which is
poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins."
John 10:15: "...and I lay down my life for the sheep."
Acts 20:28: "Keep watch over yourselves and all the flock of
which the Holy Spirit has made you overseers. Be shepherds of
the church of God, which he bought with his own blood."
Ephesians 5:25: "Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ
loved the church and gave himself up for her."
Hebrews 9:28: "So Christ was sacrificed once to take away the
sins of many people; and he will appear a second time, not to
bear sin, but to bring salvation to those who are waiting for
him."
John 15:13: "Greater love has no one than this, that he lay
down his life for his friends."
Arguments
Set Forth in Favor of Limited Atonement
The Bible speaks of a
limited extent of the atonement.
The Bible says Christ died for a specific group of people--"the church," "His people," "His sheep."
Louis
Berkhof says: "Scripture repeatedly qualifies those for whom
Christ laid down His life in such a way as to point to a
very definite limitation. Those for whom He suffered and
died are variously called 'His sheep,' John 10:11, 15, 'His
Church,' Acts 20:28; Eph. 5:25-27, 'His people,' Matt. 1:21,
and 'the elect,' Rom. 8:32-35."
Since the elect were
chosen before the foundation of the world, how can Christ
honestly be said to have died for all men? Put another way, how
could Christ design that which by virtue of His omniscience He
knew would never come to pass?
Reformed
scholar Charles Hodge explains the problem this way: "If God
from eternity determined to save one portion of the human
race and not another, it seems to be a contradiction to say
that the plan of salvation had equal reference to both
portions; that the Father sent his Son to die for those whom
He had predetermined not to save, as truly as, and in the
same sense that He gave Him up for those whom He had chosen
to make the heirs of salvation."
The argument seems to be that "it would have been a waste
and a lack of foresight on the part of God to have Christ
die for those whom he had not chosen to salvation."
It is argued that the nature of ransom is such that, "when
paid and accepted, it automatically frees those for whom it
is intended. No further obligation can be charged against
them. Now, if the death of Christ was a ransom for all
alike, not just for the elect, then it must be the case that
all are set free by the work of the Holy Spirit."
Some advocates of limited atonement say that Christ is
defeated if He died for all men and all men aren't
saved.
If Christ died for
all people, as unlimited atonement advocates say, then God
would be unfair in sending people to hell for their own
sins.
It is argued
that "no law court allows payment to be exacted twice for
the same crime, and God will not do that either."
Christ paid for the
sins of the elect; the lost pay for their own sins.
Since Christ didn't pray for everyone in His High Priestly
prayer in John 17, but only for His own, Christ must not have
died for everyone.
It is argued
that since the intercession is limited in extent, the
atonement must be too.
As Louis Berkhof puts it, "Why should He limit His
intercessory prayer, if He had actually paid the price for
all?"
In the Middle Ages
such scholars as Prosper of Aquitaine, Thomas Bradwardine, and
John Staupitz taught limited atonement. It is claimed that even
though John Calvin did not explicitly teach the doctrine, it
seems implicit in some of his writings. Calvin's successors
then made limited atonement explicit and included it in
Reformed confessions of faith like the Canons of Dort and the
Westminster Confession of Faith.
Though terms like "all," "world," and "whosoever" are used in
Scripture in reference to those for whom Christ died (e.g.,
John 3:16), the terms are to be understood in terms of the
elect. In other words:
"All" refers to "all of the elect" or "all classes of men (Jew
and Gentile)."
Louis
Berkhof says "the word 'all' sometimes has a restricted
meaning in Scripture, denoting all of a particular class, 1
Cor. 15:22; Eph. 1:23, or all kinds of classes, Tit.
2:11."
What does the Bible mean when it says Christ is the "Savior
of all men"? Charles Hodge answers: "What is meant is that
He is our Savior, the Savior of men rather than of angels,
not of Jews exclusively nor of the Gentiles only, not of the
rich or of the poor alone, not of the righteous only, but
also of publicans and sinners...."
"World" refers to
"world of the elect" or to people without distinction (Jews and
Gentiles).
Louis
Berkhof says the unlimited atonement position is based "on
the unwarranted assumption that the word 'world'...means
'all the individuals that constitute the human
race.'....When it is used of men, [the word] does
not always include all men, John 7:4; 12:19; 14:22; 18:20;
Rom. 11:12, 15."
Berkhof also says: "There are passages which teach that
Christ died for the world....In the passages referred to it
may simply serve to indicate that Christ died, not merely
for the Jews, but for people of all the nations of the
world."
In keeping with the
above, the word "whosoever" is interpreted to mean "whosoever
of the elect."
Such universal terms simply show that Jesus died for all men
without distinction (that is, all kinds of people, and people
from among both the Jews and Gentiles), not that Jesus died for
all men without exception (i.e., every lost sinner).
UNLIMITED
ATONEMENT
Definition of
Unlimited Atonement: "A reference to the doctrine that Christ's
redemptive death was for all persons."
Representative
Passages Offered in Support of Unlimited
Atonement
(Note: To clarify my
position on a few of these verses, I have added some
expositional text and quotations from various biblical
scholars.)
Luke 19:10: "For the Son of Man came to seek and to save what
was lost." (The "lost" seems to refer to the entire world of
lost humanity, not just the lost elect.)
John 1:29: "The next day John saw Jesus coming towards him and
said, 'Look, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the
world.'"
What is the
"world" here? Exegete B. F. Westcott says: "The fundamental
idea of kosmos [world] in St. John is that of the
sum of created being which belongs to the sphere of human
life as an ordered whole, considered apart from God....the
world comes to represent humanity in its fallen state,
alienated from its Maker."
John Calvin says of this verse: "He uses the word sin in the
singular number for any kind of iniquity; as if he had said
that every kind of unrighteousness which alienates men from
God is taken away by Christ. And when he says the sin of the
world, he extends this favor indiscriminately to the whole
human race."
Ryle similarly states: "Christ is...a Savior for all
mankind....He did not suffer for a few persons only, but for
all mankind....What Christ took away, and bore on the cross,
was not the sin of certain people only, but the whole
accumulated mass of all the sins of all the children of
Adam....I hold as strongly as anyone that Christ's death is
profitable to none but the elect who believe in His Name.
But I dare not limit and pare down such expressions as the
one before us....I dare not confine the intention of
redemption to the saints alone. Christ is for every
man....The atonement was made for all the world, though it
is applied and enjoyed by none but believers."
John 3:16: "For God
so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that
whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal
life."
The Greek
lexicons are unanimous that "world" here denotes humankind,
not the "world of the elect."
John 3:16 cannot be
divorced from verses 14-15, wherein Christ alludes to Numbers
21 with its discussion of Moses setting up the brazen serpent
in the camp of Israel, so that if "any man" looked to it, he
experienced physical deliverance. In verse 15 Christ applies
the story spiritually when He says that "whosoever" believes on
the uplifted Son of Man shall experience spiritual
deliverance.
John Calvin
says: "He has employed the universal term whosoever, both to
invite all indiscriminately to partake of life, and to cut
off every excuse from unbelievers. Such is also the import
of the term world which He formerly used [God so loved
the world]; for though nothing will be found in the
world that is worthy of the favor of God, yet He shows
Himself to be reconciled to the whole world, when He invites
all men without exception [not merely 'without
distinction'] to the faith of Christ, which is nothing
else than an entrance into life."
John 4:42: "They said
to the woman, 'We no longer believe just because of what you
said; now we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this
man really is the Savior of the world.'"
It is
certain that when the Samaritans called Jesus "the Savior of
the world," they were not thinking of the world of the
elect.
Likewise, when Jesus said, "I am the Light of the world"
(John 8:12), He was not thinking of Himself as the Light of
the world of the elect. "The sun in the heavens shines on
all men, though some, in their folly, may choose to withdraw
into dark caves to evade its illuminating rays."
When Jesus called His disciples "the light of the world"
(Matt. 5:14), He did not mean they were the "light of the
elect."
Likewise, the "Savior of the world" in John 4:42 cannot be
limited to the elect.
Acts 2:21: "And
everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved."
Romans 5:6: "You see, at just the right time, when we were
still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly."
2 Corinthians 5:14-15: "For Christ's love compels us, because
we are convinced that one died for all, and therefore all died.
And he died for all, that those who live should no longer live
for themselves but for him who died for them and was raised
again."
1 Timothy 2:3-4: "This is good, and pleases God our Savior, who
wants all men to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the
truth."
1 Timothy 2:5-6: "For there is one God and one mediator between
God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who gave himself as a ransom
for all men--the testimony given in its proper time."
1 Timothy 4:10: "We have put our hope in the living God, who is
the Savior of all men, and especially of those who
believe."
Titus 2:11: "For the grace of God that brings salvation has
appeared to all men."
Hebrews 2:9: "But we see Jesus, who was made a little lower
than the angels, now crowned with glory and honor because he
suffered death, so that by the grace of God he might taste
death for everyone."
The word
"everyone" is better translated "each."
Henry Alford comments: "If it be asked, why pantos (each)
rather than panton (all), we may safely say that the
singular brings out, far more strongly than the plural word,
the applicability of Christ's death to each individual
man."
2 Peter 3:9: "The
Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some understand
slowness. He is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish,
but everyone to come to repentance."
1 John 2:2: "He is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not
only for ours but also for the sins of the whole world." (Note
the distinction between "ours" and "the whole world.")
1 John 4:14: "And we have seen and testify that the Father has
sent his Son to be the Savior of the world."
Arguments
Set Forth in Favor of Unlimited Atonement
There are certain
Scripture passages that seem very difficult to fit within the
framework of limited atonement. For example:
Romans 5:6 says: "At just the right time, when we were still powerless,
Christ died for the ungodly." It doesn't make much sense to
read this as saying that Christ died for the ungodly of the
elect.
Romans 5:18 says: "Consequently, just as the result of one
trespass was condemnation for all men, so also the result of
one act of righteousness was justification that brings life
for all men."
Regarding
this verse, John Calvin says: "He makes this favor common
to all, because it is propoundable to all, and not
because it is in reality extended to all [i.e., in
their experience]; for though Christ suffered for the
sins of the whole world, and is offered through God's
benignity indiscriminately to all, yet all do not receive
Him."
Regarding the two occurrences of the phrase "all men," E.
H. Gifford comments: "The words all men [in v.
18] must have the same extent in both
clauses."
1 John 2:2 says:
"He is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not only for
ours but also for the sins of the whole world." A natural
reading of this verse, without imposing theological
presuppositions on it, seems to support unlimited
atonement.
Isaiah 53:6 says: "We all, like sheep, have gone astray,
each of us has turned to his own way; and the LORD has laid
on him the iniquity of us all" (Isa. 53:6).
This
verse doesn't make sense unless it is read to say that
the same "all" that went astray is the "all" for whom the
Lord died.
"In the first of these statements, the general apostasy
of men is declared; in the second, the particular
deviation of each one; in the third, the atoning
suffering of the Messiah, which is said to be on behalf
of all. As the first 'all' is true of all men (and not
just of the elect), we judge that the last 'all' relates
to the same company."
Theologian Millard Erickson comments: "This passage is
especially powerful from a logical standpoint. It is
clear that the extent of sin is universal; it is
specified that every one of us has sinned. It should also
be noticed that the extent of what will be laid on the
suffering servant exactly parallels the extent of sin. It
is difficult to read this passage and not conclude that
just as everyone sins, everyone is also atoned
for."
1 Timothy 4:10 says: "...we have put our hope in the living God, who is the
Savior of all men, and especially of those who
believe."
There is
a clear distinction here between "all men" and "those who
believe."
Erickson notes that "apparently the Savior has done
something for all persons, though it is less in degree
than what he has done for those who believe."
In 2 Peter 2:1, it
seems that Christ even paid the price of redemption for
false teachers who deny Him: "But there were also false
prophets among the people, just as there will be false
teachers among you. They will secretly introduce destructive
heresies, even denying the sovereign Lord who bought them--bringing swift destruction on themselves." Millard Erickson
notes that "2 Peter 2:1 seems to point out most clearly that
people for whom Christ died may be lost....there is a
distinction between those for whom Christ died and those who
are finally saved."
John 3:17 says: "For God did not send his Son into the world
to condemn the world, but to save the world through
him."
Regarding
this verse John Calvin says: "God is unwilling that we
should be overwhelmed with everlasting destruction,
because He has appointed His Son to be the salvation of
the world."
Calvin also stated: "The word world is again repeated,
that no man may think himself wholly excluded, if he only
keeps the road of faith."
Many passages indicate that the Gospel is to be
universally proclaimed, and this supports unlimited
atonement.
Matthew 24:14:
"And this gospel of the kingdom will be preached in the
whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end
will come."
Matthew 28:19: "Therefore go and make disciples of all
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the
Son and of the Holy Spirit..."
Acts 1:8: "But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit
comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and
in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth."
Acts 17:30: "In the past God overlooked such ignorance, but
now he commands all people everywhere to repent."
Titus 2:11: "For the grace of God that brings salvation has
appeared to all men."
In view of such
passages, it is legitimate to ask: "If Christ died only for the
elect, how can the offer of salvation be made to all persons
without some sort of insincerity, artificiality, or dishonesty
being involved? Is it not improper to offer salvation to
everyone if in fact Christ did not die to save everyone?"
"How can God authorize His servants to offer pardon to the
non-elect if Christ did not purchase it for them? This is a
problem that does not plague those who hold to General
[Unlimited] Redemption, for it is most reasonable to
proclaim the Gospel to all if Christ died for all."
Those who deny unlimited atonement cannot say to any sinner,
"Christ died for you." (After all, he may be one of the
non-elect.)
Reformed
counselor Jay Adams comments: "As a reformed Christian, the
writer believes that counselors must not tell any unsaved
counselee that Christ died for him, for they cannot say
that. No man knows except Christ himself who are his elect
for whom he died."
Louis Berkhof, a defender of limited atonement, admits: "It
need not be denied that there is a real difficulty at this
point."
Theologian Robert Lightner comments: "Belief in limited
atonement means that the good news of God's saving grace in
Christ cannot be personalized. Those who hold to such a
position cannot tell someone to whom they are witnessing
that Christ died for him because that one may, in fact, not
be one for whom Christ died."
Such Christians believe the gospel must be presented in very
general terms, such as: "God loves sinners and Christ died
for sinners."
"To believe that some are elect and some nonelect creates no
problem for the soulwinner provided he is free in his
convictions to declare that Christ died for each one to whom
he speaks. He knows that the nonelect will not accept the
message. He knows also that even an elect person may resist
it to near the day of his death. But if the preacher
believes that any portion of his audience is destitute of
any basis of salvation, having no share in the values of
Christ's death, it is no longer a question in his mind of
whether they will accept or reject; it becomes rather a
question of truthfulness in the declaration of the
message."
2 Peter 3:9 says:
"The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some
understand slowness. He is patient with you, not wanting anyone
to perish, but everyone to come to repentance." How can this be
if Christ died only and exclusively for the elect?
Romans 5 indicates that through Adam's act of disobedience the
entire human race became the recipients of sin. And through one
act of obedience the last Adam made provision for the gracious
gift of righteousness for the entire human race. The
disobedience of the one was co-extensive with the obedience of
the other.
Scripture says that Christ died for "sinners" (1 Tim. 1:15;
Rom. 5:6-8). The word "sinner" nowhere is limited to the elect
or to the church. It is used exclusively in the Bible of lost
humanity. Scripture tells us that Christ died for sinners, not
penitent sinners, and for the ungodly, not for just some of
them.
Seemingly restrictive references can be logically fit into an
unlimited scenario more easily than universal references made
to fit into a limited atonement scenario.
"The problem
that both groups face is the need to harmonize passages that
refer to limited redemption with passages that refer to
unlimited redemption. To the unlimited redemptionist the
limited redemption passages present no real difficulty. He
believes that they merely emphasize one aspect of a larger
truth. Christ did die for the elect, but He also died for
the sins of the whole world. However, the limited
redemptionist is not able to deal with the unlimited
redemption passages as easily."
The two sets of passages noted earlier--one set seemingly
in support of limited atonement, the other in support of
unlimited atonement--are not irreconcilable. As Elwell puts
it, "It is true that the benefits of Christ's death are
referred to as belonging to the elect, his sheep, his
people, but it would have to be shown that Christ died only
for them. No one denies that Christ died for them. It is
only denied that Christ died exclusively for them."
Millard Erickson likewise says that "statements about Jesus
loving and dying for his church or his sheep need not be
understood as confining his special love and salvific death
strictly to them....It does not follow from a statement that
Christ died for his church, or for his sheep, that he did
not die for anyone else, unless, of course, the passage
specifically states that it was only for them that he
died....Certainly if Christ died for the whole, there is no
problem in asserting that he died for a specific part of the
whole. To insist that those passages which focus on his
dying for his people require the understanding that he died
only for them and not for any others contradicts the
universal passages. We conclude that the hypothesis of
universal atonement is able to account for a larger segment
of the biblical witness with less distortion than is the
hypothesis of limited atonement."
Robert Lightner similarly argues: "The task of harmonizing
those various Scriptures poses a far greater problem for
those who hold to a limited atonement than it does to those
who hold to an unlimited position. Those who hold to an
unlimited atonement recognize that some Scriptures emphasize
the fact that Christ died for the elect, for the church, and
for individual believers. However, they point out that when
those verses single out a specific group they do not do so
to the exclusion of any who are outside that group since
dozens of other passages include them. The 'limited'
passages are just emphasizing one aspect of a larger truth.
In contrast, those who hold to a limited atonement have a
far more difficult time explaining away the 'unlimited'
passages."
The fact is, the Scriptures do not always include all
aspects of a truth in any one passage. "If these texts are
used in isolation to 'prove' that Christ died only for the
elect, then it could be argued with equal logic from other
isolated passages that Christ died only for Israel (cf. John
11:51; Isa. 53:8), or that He died only for the Apostle Paul
(for Paul declares of Christ, 'Who loved me, and gave
himself for me,' Gal. 2:20). As well might one contend that
Christ restricted His prayers to Peter because of the fact
that He said to Peter, 'But I have prayed for thee' (Luke
22:32)."
Let us examine in
greater detail some passages that speak of Christ being the
Savior of the Israelites.
Acts 13:23 says: "From this man's descendants God has brought
to Israel the Savior Jesus, as he promised."
This
verse indicates that Jesus was the proffered Savior to
Israel, not that every Israelite had placed faith in
Christ and was saved by the Savior.
"What ground have we for thinking that all of these
persons received the salvation? None, whatever. Yet,
plainly, it was put within their reach."
In Matthew 1:21 we
are told that Jesus "will save his people from their
sins."
Throughout
the Old Testament God speaks of the Israelites as "My
people."
Seven times God tells the Pharaoh, "Let My people go"
(Exod. 5:1; 7:16; 8:1, 20; 9:1, 13; 10:13).
(I urge the reader to check a concordance to see for
himself that God continues to refer to the Israelites as
"My people" throughout the entire Old Testament.)
The last occurrence is Zechariah 13:9: "They will call on
my name and I will answer them; I will say, 'They are my
people,' and they will say, 'The LORD is our God.'"
Now, in Luke 1:68 Zacharias said: "Praise be to the Lord,
the God of Israel, because he has come and has redeemed
his people." Zacharias is using the phrase "his people"
in the standard Old Testament sense.
In Matthew 1:21, when an angel told Joseph, "She will
give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name
Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins,"
the words "his people" seem to be referring specifically
to the people of Israel, not the entire company of God's
elect (which includes non-Israelites or Gentiles). Yet,
as Norman Douty asks, "Who believes that the Jewish
people have a monopoly on Christ's saving grace? All hold
that it goes beyond their confines to the Gentile world
as well."
Likewise we read
in John 11:50: "You do not realize that it is better for you
that one man die for the people than that the whole nation
[i.e., Israel] perish."
In none of these passages do the advocates of limited
atonement insist that the Jewish people exclusively are the
objects of God's saving grace. Similarly, when Christ is
said to have purchased the church with His blood (Acts
20:28), we cannot limit Christ's atoning work to the church
alone.
Galatians 2:20 declares that Christ loved Paul and gave
Himself for him ("The life I live in the body, I live by
faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for
me"). But this does not mean that Christ gave Himself only
for Paul.
To sum up, Christ did not give Himself in the atonement only
for Paul, or only for Israel, or only for the church, but
for all men.
Universal terms like
"world" should not be restricted in contexts which speak of the
atonement.
It is true
that words like "all" and "world" are sometimes used in the
Bible in a restricted sense. But context is always
determinative. Robert Lightner comments: "Those who always
limit the meaning of those terms in contexts that deal with
salvation do so on the basis of theological presuppositions,
not on the basis of the texts themselves."
A word study of the word "world"--particularly in the
apostle John's writings, where it is used 78 times--indicates that the world is God-hating, Christ-rejecting,
and Satan-dominated. Yet this is the world that Christ died
for. Particularly in John's writings, interpreting "world"
as "world of the elect" seems a great distortion of
Scripture.
Among the scholarly lexicons, encyclopedias, and
dictionaries that know nothing of the meaning "world of the
elect" for the biblical word "world" (kosmos) are:
Kittel's
Theological Dictionary of the New Testament.
Vine's Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words.
Vincent's Word Studies in the New Testament.
Thayer's Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament.
Souter's Pocket Lexicon of the New Testament.
The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious
Knowledge.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible.
The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia.
The New Bible Dictionary.
Baker's Dictionary of Theology.
Arndt and Gingrich's A Greek-English Lexicon of the New
Testament.
Walter Martin,
founder of the Christian Research Institute, observes: "John
the Apostle tells us that Christ gave His life as a
propitiation for our sin (i.e., the elect), though not for
ours only but for the sins of the whole world (1 John
2:2)....[People] cannot evade John's usage of
'whole' (Greek: holos). In the same context the apostle
quite cogently points out that 'the whole (holos) world lies
in wickedness' or, more properly, 'in the lap of the wicked
one' (1 John 5:19, literal translation). If we assume that
'whole' applies only to the chosen or elect of God, then the
'whole world does not 'lie in the lap of the wicked one.'
This, of course, all reject."
We must also ask, How can the Holy Spirit have a ministry to
the whole world in showing men their need of Jesus Christ
(John 14-16) if the death of Christ does not make provision
for the whole world?
John
16:8-11 says: "But I tell you the truth: It is for your
good that I am going away. Unless I go away, the
Counselor will not come to you; but if I go, I will send
him to you. When he comes, he will convict the world of
guilt in regard to sin and righteousness and judgment: in
regard to sin, because men do not believe in me; in
regard to righteousness, because I am going to the
Father, where you can see me no longer; and in regard to
judgment, because the prince of this world now stands
condemned."
Notice in this passage that "the world" is clearly
distinguished from "you" and "your."
Yet the Holy Spirit is said to bring conviction on the
world. And one of the things the Spirit convicts "the
world" of is the sin of not believing on Christ (v.
9).
We are not to conclude that "the world" that is convicted
of unbelief is the world of the elect, are we? (If so,
then Satan, the "prince of this world" [v. 11, same
context], must be the "prince of the elect.")
Calvin says of this passage that "under the term world
are, I think, included not only those who would be truly
converted to Christ, but hypocrites and
reprobate."
Though God is
completely sovereign over all things, this does not mean He
brings into reality everything He "desires."
Norman Douty
offers this insight: "Consider the beginnings of human
history. God told our first parents to refrain from eating
of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. Did He want them
to eat of it, or did He not? Plainly, He did not want them
to do so. Yet they ate of it. Was He frustrated? Of course
not. He was not frustrated because, by His efficient grace,
He could have induced them to refrain. Yet He chose to
withhold that grace and to permit the fall. Nevertheless,
the full responsibility for that sin belonged to Adam and
Eve, who had sufficient grace to refrain, but did not use
it."
Consider Matthew 23:37: "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who
kill the prophets and stone those sent to you, how often I
have longed to gather your children together, as a hen
gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not
willing." What Christ desired was not what came about.
Douty concludes: "As God could have induced our first
parents to refrain from eating of the tree, so He could have
induced...the resistant Jews of Christ's time to have
received His gracious ministry of salvation. But He did not
choose to effect these desirable ends. Yet this in no wise
means that He wanted evil to befall any. He merely allowed
the violation of His desires in order to carry out a hidden
purpose He had in mind."
One further example relates to Jesus, who told some Jews in
John 5:34: "I say these things that you may be saved." But
"saved" they were not. Why? Because Christ added in verse
40, "You are unwilling to come to Me, that you may have
life." Here is a clear case of "but ye would not," despite
the clear offer of salvation.
"There are reasons which are based on the Scriptures why our
sovereign God might provide a redemption for all when He
merely purposed by decree to save some. He is justified in
placing the whole world in a particular relation to Himself
so that the gospel might be preached with all sincerity to
all men, and so that on the human side men might be without
excuse, being judged, as they are, for their rejection of
that which is offered to them."
That one rejects
limited atonement does not in any way mean that one lessens or
diminishes the clear scriptural doctrine of the sovereignty of
God.
Any who make
such an allegation are simply uninformed.
"Without the slightest inconsistency the unlimited
redemptionists may believe in an election according to
sovereign grace, that none but the elect will be saved, that
all of the elect will be saved, and that the elect are by
divine enablement alone called out of the state of spiritual
death from which they are impotent to take even one step in
the direction of their own salvation. The text, 'No man can
come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him'
(John 6:44), is as much a part of the one system of doctrine
as it is of the other."
Matthew 26:28 says,
"This is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many
for the forgiveness of sins." The reference to "many" in
Christ's words do not support limited atonement but rather
support unlimited atonement.
One must
keep in mind that earlier in Matthew Jesus had said that few
find eternal life (Matt. 7:14) and few are chosen (22:14).
But Christ did not say His blood was poured out for a few,
but for many.
John Calvin thus declares of this verse: "By the word many
He means not a part of the world only, but the whole human
race."
This is the same meaning as in Romans 5:15: "For if the many
died by the trespass of the one man, how much more did God's
grace and the gift that came by the grace of the one man,
Jesus Christ, overflow to the many! Note that the "many" of
verse 15 is clearly defined in verse 18 as "all men":
"...just as the result of one trespass was condemnation for
all men, so also the result of one act of righteousness was
justification that brings life for all men."
Notice that in this verse Paul speaks of Adam's sin, and of
the resultant death coming upon all his descendants. But
then the apostle goes on to speak of the grace of God and of
its resultant gift (of life), abounding to the same
company.
I say, "to the same company," because "the many" in the
second clause of the verse is coextensive with "the many" in
the first clause.
Answers to
Three Common Questions
1. If Christ died for
those who go to hell, what benefit have they from His death?
Answer: "We may as well ask, What good did the bitten
Israelites get from the brazen serpent to which they refused to
look? None, of course, but God got the glory of being a God
generous enough to provide for them."
2. If satisfaction has been made for all, how can any go to
hell? Answer: "Though God has provided atonement for all, He
has also stipulated that none get the good of it, except
through repentance and faith. Deliverance from doom was not
contingent on the atonement itself but on the reception of it.
Men can starve in the presence of a free feast, if they refuse
to partake of it."
3. Why would God have Christ die for those whom He, in His
omniscience, knew would never receive His provision? Answer:
"Why did God richly endow the angels who subsequently sinned,
when He knew they would not use His gifts to their everlasting
good? Why did He bestow valuable gifts on our first parents, to
be employed for their and our advantage, when He knew they
would not so employ them? Why did He send Noah to preach to
people He knew would not receive His message? And why did He
send the prophets to Israel, when He knew they would continue
in their apostasy? There is such a thing as the divine
benevolence."
Reply to
Some Criticisms Made By Proponents of Limited
Atonement
The charge that
unlimited atonement leads to universalism is special pleading.
"Just because one believes that Christ died for all does not
mean all are saved. One must believe in Christ to be saved, so
the fact that Christ died for the world apparently does not
secure the salvation of all. Those who assert this are simply
wrong."
God makes
the provision of salvation for all men, but it is
conditioned by faith. Thus, salvation becomes actual only
for the elect, although it is potential and available to
all. "Our inheriting eternal life involves two separate
factors: an objective factor (Christ's provision of
salvation) and a subjective factor (our acceptance of that
salvation)."
Moderate Calvinists distinguish between the provisional
benefits of Christ's death and the appropriation of those
benefits by the elect.
Although the provision of atonement is unlimited, yet the
application of it is limited.
In his book The Death Christ Died, Robert Lightner explains:
"[Moderate Calvinists] believe the cross does not
apply its own benefits but that God has conditioned His full
and free salvation upon personal faith in order to
appropriate its accomplishments to the individual. This
faith which men must exercise is not a work whereby man
contributes his part to his salvation, nor does faith, in
the moderate Calvinist view, improve in any way the final
and complete sacrifice of Calvary. It is simply the method
of applying Calvary's benefits which the sovereign God has
deigned to use in His all-wise plan of salvation."
God is not unfair in
condemning those who reject the offer of salvation. He is not
exacting judgment twice. "Because the nonbeliever refuses to
accept the death of Christ as his own, the benefits of Christ's
death are not applied to him. He is lost, not because Christ
did not die for him, but because he refuses God's offer of
forgiveness."
The electing purpose of God is not complete until the elect are
in glory. Since this is true, and since the cross provides
salvation dependent on faith for its reception, and since the
cross does not secure salvation apart from that faith, there is
no contradiction with God's sovereignty.
Unlimited atonement has been held by a majority of scholars
throughout church history.
Millard
Erickson points out that unlimited atonement has been "held
by the vast majority of theologians, reformers, evangelists,
and fathers from the beginning of the church until the
present day, including virtually all the writers before the
Reformation, with the possible exception of Augustine. Among
the Reformers the doctrine is found in Luther, Melanchthon,
Bullinger, Latimer, Cranmer, Coverdale, and even Calvin in
some of his commentaries....Is it likely that the
overwhelming majority of Christians could have so misread
the leading of the Holy Spirit on such an important
point?"
Robert Lightner addresses Calvin's position on the issue:
"Those who subscribe to a limited atonement generally argue
that that is the position espoused by Calvin. But it is
highly debatable that he did, in fact, hold that
view....Whereas some scholars have attempted to show that
there is harmony between Calvin and later orthodox
Calvinism, others have argued that contemporary Calvinism
has veered significantly from Calvin's teaching, including
his teaching on the extent of the atonement."
(The reader will recall that a number of Calvin's citations
in this paper show him favorable to unlimited
atonement.)
Quotations
from the Early Church Fathers
Clement of
Alexandria (150-220): "Christ freely brings...salvation to
the whole human race."
Eusebius (260-340): "It was needful that the Lamb of God
should be offered for the other lambs whose nature He assumed,
even for the whole human race."
Athanasius (293-373): "Christ the Son of God, having
assumed a body like ours, because we were all exposed to death
[which takes in more than the elect], gave Himself up
to death for us all as a sacrifice to His Father."
Cyril of Jerusalem (315-386): "Do not wonder if the
whole world was ransomed, for He was not a mere man, but the
only-begotten Son of God."
Gregory of Nazianzen (324-389): "The sacrifice of Christ
is an imperishable expiation of the whole world."
Basil (330-379): "But one thing was found that was
equivalent to all men....the holy and precious blood of our
Lord Jesus Christ, which He poured out for us all."
Ambrose (340-407): "Christ suffered for all, rose again
for all. But if anyone does not believe in Christ, he deprives
himself of that general benefit."
He also said, "Christ came for the salvation of all, and
undertook the redemption of all, inasmuch as He brought a
remedy by which all might escape, although there are many
who...are unwilling to be healed."
Augustine (354-430): Though Augustine is often cited as
supporting limited atonement, there are also clear statements
in Augustine's writings that are supportive of unlimited
atonement. For example: "The Redeemer came and gave the price,
shed His blood, and bought the world. Do you ask what He
bought? See what He gave, and find what He bought. The blood of
Christ is the price: what is of so great worth? What, but the
whole world? What, but all nations?"
He also stated, "The blood of Christ was shed for the remission
of all sins."
Cyril of Alexandria (376-444): "The death of one flesh
is sufficient for the ransom of the whole human race, for it
belonged to the Logos, begotten of God the Father."
Prosper (a friend and disciple of Augustine who died in
463): "As far as relates to the magnitude and virtue of the
price, and to the one cause of the human race, the blood of
Christ is the redemption of the whole world: but those who pass
through this life without the faith of Christ, and the
sacrament of regeneration, do not partake of the
redemption."
He also said, "The Savior is most rightly said to have been
crucified for the redemption of the whole world." He then said,
"Although the blood of Christ be the ransom of the whole world,
yet they are excluded from its benefit, who, being delighted
with their captivity, are unwilling to be redeemed by
it."
Quotations
from the Reformers of the 16th Century
Martin Luther
(1483-1546): "Christ is not cruel exactor, but a forgiver of
the sins of the whole world....He hath given Himself for our
sins, and with one oblation hath put away the sins of the whole
world....Christ hath taken away the sins, not of certain men
only, but also of thee, yea, of the whole world...Not only my
sins and thine, but also the sins of the whole world...take
hold upon Christ."
Philip Melanchton
(1497-1560): "It is necessary to know
that the Gospel is a universal promise, that is, that
reconciliation is offered and promised to all mankind. It is
necessary to hold that this promise is universal, in opposition
to any dangerous imaginations on predestination, lest we should
reason this promise pertains to a few others and ourselves. But
we declare that the promise of the Gospel is universal. And to
this are brought those universal expressions which are used
constantly in the Scriptures."
Other people involved to some degree in the Reformation who
held to unlimited atonement include: Hugh Latimer, Myles
Coverdale, Thomas Cranmer, Wolfgang Musculus, Henry Bullinger,
Benedict Aretius, Thomas Becon, Jerome Zanchius, David Paraeus,
and, as noted earlier, John Calvin.
Quotations
from Other Luminaries from Recent Church
History
Philip Schaff:
"His saving grace flows and overflows to all and for all, on
the simple condition of faith....If, by the grace of God, I
could convert a single skeptic to a childlike faith in Him who
lived and died for me and for all, I would feel that I had not
lived in vain."
B. F. Westcott: "Potentially, the work of Christ extends
to the whole world." And "the love of God is without limit on
His part, but to appropriate the blessing of love, man must
fulfill the necessary condition of faith."
A. T. Robertson: [The word "world" in John 3:16--"For God so loved the world"--means] "the whole cosmos of
men, including the Gentiles, the whole human race," and adds
that "this universal aspect of God's love appears also in II
Cor. 5:19; Rom. 5:8."
MY
CONCLUSION
In this brief
outline, we have looked at both sides of the debate regarding
the extent of the atonement. I believe that when one considers
all the scriptural evidence collectively, the correct view is
unlimited atonement.
Go
Back to Downloadable Articles

|