I recognized the author from an interview I saw, where he was interviewed along with another pastor that I occasionally follow. So, when I saw this book, I picked up a copy. My copy is a 25th anniversary copy, a silver color in hardback.
I thought this might have content to inspire faith or to savor faith or to direct our faith to God. Instead, it's more of a theologically technical analysis of faith. I knew that it would involve the faith vs. works debate, as to which saves us and gets us to heaven. I thought that might be an encouragement as I've seen a loved one wander. But ... and this is more important than mere encouragement ... I was glad to see that the book not only addressed the works vs faith debate, but also addressed the antinomianism that so many churches fall into, in their valid efforts to escape legalism. I think of it as legalism as a ditch on one side, and antinomianism as a ditch on the other side.
"The debate over justification often suffers from a crass caricature by which the Reformed position is characterized as 'justification by faith' and the Roman Catholic position is characterized as 'justification by works.' Popular sentiment tends to conclude that Rome is not concerned with faith
and that the Reformers were not concerned about works." (155)
"The questions that remain are these:
1. Is sola fide essential to the gospel?
2. Is the gospel essential to Christianity and to salvation?
3. Is the denial of the gospel an act of apostasy?
Sproul's diagrams were also helpful. Particularly:
Roman Catholic View: Faith + Works -> justification
Reformation View: Faith -> justification + works
And the difference between imputed righteousness (Reformation view) and infused righteousness (Catholic view). It's interesting to me that Catholics think of imputed righteousness as "legal fiction" because they think "A person is either just or sinful. They can't be both at the same time. (For the reformers, one is both at the same time, but not in the same way.)"
This book reminds me of John Piper's "The Future of Justification." Of the two, I'm not sure which one I'd recommend most. The topic is important, but both books involve a difficult slog through technical ground.
I think Sproul said some crucial things in this book, but I have a hard time envisioning the average church attender either reading it or understanding it. He had a good mind for theology, but, at least in this book, did not show a good communication skill for the common reader.
First, I think he didn't really make his case for why this book and its topics are important until the ending chapters. If that's not immediately apparent to today's reader, I doubt they would wade that far into it to find out. That is to say, why are apostacy and syncretism and faith important concepts?
"But though we, or an angel from heaven, should preach unto you any gospel other than that which we preached unto you, let him be anathema." - Paul in Galatians 1:8.
Why is holding to the gospel so important?
"It is a concern for the flock, the people of God."
"Jesus, Himself, who was characteristically gentle and tender with the victims of false teaching, but vehement in denouncing false teachers as serpents, dogs, and the like."
"When a child has been bitten by a dog, the parents chase the dog but console and soothe the weeping child with the sweetest of words." That is, "We should show that toward those poor disciples who have been led astray we feel as parents feel toward their children, so that they may see our paternal zeal and maternal feelings toward them and may see that we seek their salvation. But when it comes to the devil and his servants ... we should follow the example of the apostles. We should be ... condemning their sham as sharply and harshly as we can." - Luther
"He calls them troublers of the church and of consciences [those preaching untrue gospels], who do nothing but seduce and deceive and endless number of consciences and cause horrible damage and trouble and condemnation going on in the church ..." - Luther
"So weak and miserable is this present life, and so beset are we by the snares of Satan, that one fanatic can often destroy and completely undo in a short time what it took faithful ministers the hard labor of many years day and night to build up." - Luther
"But the Word of God must bind the conscience and take precedence over any and all other loyalties."
"To remain obstinate and unyielding in error is a sin. To be uncompromising with the truth of the gospel is a virtue and is demanded of all who would be servants of Christ."
"That all religions are tolerated, however, does not mean that all religions are equally valid or that each religion must tolerate all theological views."
"The gospel itself cannot change."
The second reason I think the average reader would struggle with this book is that Sproul often references scripture or parts of scripture without saying what verses these come from. I think I usually caught them, but a more casual reader might not. For example, Sproul quoted "one Lord, one faith, and one baptism" without saying where that phrase is from:
"There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called to one hope when you were called; one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all." - Ephesians 4:4-6, NIV
Thirdly, I'd rather see where an idea is presented in scripture than what various other people say about it. There were several times verses could have been applied to the situation:
"For by works of the law no human being will be justified in his sight." - Romans 3:20
"For we hold that one is justified by faith apart from the law." - Romans 3:28, ESV
"For by grace you have been saved, through faith. And this is not of your own doing; it is the gift of God, not the result of works, so that no one may boast." - Ephesians 2:8, ESV
Fourth, there are so many technical terms that I didn't know, that I began to annotate the margins with their definitions. There were likewise many definitions that I did know, but doubt that the casual reader knows, so I added those as well. I plan to pass this volume along, and am hopeful that it's more likely to be read if definitions are provided. I do think this is an important topic, and it's important for us to have an understanding.
I'll include them here.
There are 37 terms, not including ones I didn't add because he defined them in the text. Of these, I previously knew 22, if you want to compare scores. (22/37 is 59%. I failed.) I am including my favorite quote at the end of this review. My other favorite quotes are above in the "why this book?" part of my review.
ameliorated - make something bad better
anathema - something loathed or cursed
antinomianism - the belief of not being bound by moral law; "Easy-believism"
apostacy - an act of refusing to continue to follow a faith. A change away from following it.
attrition - a repentance motivated by a fear of punishment.
condign merit - merit proportional to positive or negative reward. Entitled to reward.
congruous merit - good deed, appropriate for reward, but reward is not obligatory.
contrition - remorse; feeling or showing sorrow over one's actions for having offended God, coupled with a resolve to turn away from the sin.
dispensationalism - belief of seeing God's order in history
evangelical - having to do with sharing one's faith. (It does not have a political meaning.)
evangelism - the act of sharing one's faith
expiation - atonement
forensic - legal declaration
gospel - good news. More specifically, in this context, it means the good news of Jesus choosing to die for our penalty of sin, to rescue us.
heresy - a religious opinion contrary to church teaching, often indicating a seriousness on a core belief such that the individual is not saved as a result.
impute - attributed to someone by virtue of another
inchoate - incomplete, not fully formed
indulgence - the purchase of an end to punishment
inerrancy - containing no errors
inhere - stick to, exist permanently in
irenic - aiming for peace
justification - to treat as righteous before God
modalistic - the belief that God is a single person with three roles, rather than the belief that God is one being with three persons.
obscuration - the action of hiding something
obstreperous - difficult to control
orthodoxy (Biblical) - right thinking, thinking from the Bible, or with a Biblical worldview.
Pelagianism - denies the doctrine of original sin, that we inherit our tendency to sin
penance - an action to show sorrow over sin and a change of heart
plenary - unqualified, absolute
polemical - expressing a strongly critical attack
recant - to withdraw or repudiate a statement
regenerate - formed or created again
righteous - this is not self-righteous, which is a somewhat smug opinion of oneself. I often find people confuse the two. Righteous means to have right behavior with a right heart in right relationship with God, not to be smug about it, because we know our righteousness comes from God.
sanctification - being made holy, more like Jesus in attitude and action
simony - the buying or selling of ecclesiastical privileges.
schism - split or division
syncretism - a buffet-style approach to religion, where people take some of this and some of that, resulting in conflicting, incompatible, and illogical combinations of beliefs.
Favorite quote:
"If two parties agree on the wording of a statement, but do not mean the same thing by the words used, is the agreement a real agreement?"