One of the texts often appealed to in support of the teaching of a
common grace of God and a sincere desire of God, that every human be
saved is Ezekiel
33:11 (Ezekiel 18:
23,32 is a similar passage).
Rev. H. Hoeksema gave an explanation of this text in his book, Het
Evangelie, of de Jongste Aanval op de Waarheid der Souvereine Genade
(The Gospel, or the Most Recent Attack on the Truth of Sovereign Grace).
Because the text is still used in the Reformed community to promote
the doctrine of common grace and because the book in which Hoeksema's
explanation of the text appears has not been translated, I have translated
the section of Het Evangelie that contains the explanation of
Ezekiel 33:11
(pp. 206-212).
It should be kept in mind that Hoeksema's interpretation of the passage
was given in the context of controversy with a Professor Heyns (of Calvin
Seminary), who explained Ezekiel
33:11 as teaching a universal grace of God and a sincere desire
of God that every human be saved, i.e., a well-meant offer of salvation.
- David Engelsma
We can certainly agree with the professor when he says that we would
be doing violence to the text, if we would read "I have no pleasure
in the death of the elect wicked, but I have pleasure in this, that
the elect sinner turn and live. Turn ye, O elect sinner;" I do not believe
that Heyns has ever heard of such an interpretation. By writing this,
he shows that he correctly understands neither the text nor the explanation
of his opponents. At any rate, I will not believe that he does not write
about these things in all seriousness. And so, he makes a strawman here,
in order then, in the following paragraph, to demolish it with all seriousness.
Certainly, if someone would be found who would read the text this way,
not only would he do violence to the text, but he would also rob the
text of its power. This is so, not because there is in the text some
comfort for the reprobate (the sinner who does not turn), much less
because the text teaches that God loves the reprobate (the sinner who
does not turn) neither because there is a well-meant offer of grace
for the reprobate wicked here (the sinner who does not turn), for even
such a one as this would not be able to understand the text in this
way.
Rather, the simple reason is that the viewpoint of the text is not
that of God's sovereign predestination: neither of election nor of reprobation.
The viewpoint is ethical. The question is: how should we then
live, if we pine away in our sins? Is there hope for the sinner with
God? Therefore, the answer is: most certainly, in the way of turning.
The sinner will taste that God is merciful and gracious, that He abundantly
pardons, if he turns. The viewpoint is thoroughly ethical, Indeed,
the sinner who turns is the elect, and, indeed, the sinner who does
not turn is the reprobate; nevertheless, you would be doing violence
to the text if you were to substitute the terms of predestination for
the words wicked and converted.
The divine demand to turn does not come to the elect only, but
also to the reprobate and it does not come to elect and reprobate as
such, that is, viewed as the predestinated, but it comes to them as
rational, moral creatures. And viewed thus, it then remains eternally
true that the way of life for the sinner is the way of turning. Also
Heyns should have no trouble seeing this. We do not read the text in
the way Heyns presents it. In the second place, it should not be difficult
for Professor Heyns to see also that there is in this text not only
no universal, well-meant offer, but, in fact, no offer at all.
To be sure, Heyns asserts that there is, but he will never be able to
make this evident.
When you analyze the text closely in all its parts, you arrive at the
following: 1.) God says something about Himself. He says that He has
no pleasure in the death of the wicked; indeed, that He has pleasure
in his turning and living. 2.) God swears to that which He says of Himself
with an oaths as truly as I live! 3.) On the basis of this oath, in
which God reveals what pleases Him, He comes to the house of Israel
with the demand and the call to turn. If God really has pleasure in
the turning and the living of the wicked, why should they then yet die?
It is only because they hate God and love the way of wickedness! There
is, therefore, absolutely no offer in the text. Even if it were true
that we were allowed to read the text thus, "I have no pleasure in the
death of a single wicked person," Heyns would still not make any headway
in proving his notion of a universal offer. Also this, the professor
himself will surely see.
In the third place, I believe also, that it will not be difficult for
me to convince Heyns that there is in the text no element of a universal
love for sinners. If men in the Christian Reformed Churches had
not, already for a long time, become accustomed to such language, they
would be astounded to read of a professor in the Theological School
that he believed in a universal love for sinners. Pray tell, what is
the difference, really, between a universal love for sinners and universal
saving grace? Everyone will agree that there is no difference here.
Heyns himself can see no difference. And what now is the difference
between this notion and that which our fathers at the Synod of Dordt
have condemned as un-Scriptural and un-Reformed? There is no difference.
And yet Heyns proclaims this universal love for sinners without shame,
in the paragraphs quoted above, God wills the salvation of all His creatures,
writes the professor; that is, He wills the salvation of all men. Therefore,
the "wicked" of Ezekiel 33:11 may not be limited, God loves all wicked
men, with the desire to save them, with a great love for sinners, And
He swears to this with an oath!
And when Heyns writes all this, there seems to be no one whose hair
stands on end; at any rate, there seems to be no one any longer in the
Christian Reformed Churches who reaches for his pen. How is the gold
become dim!
And yet, it is not difficult to convince even Heyns that the text in
Ezekiel 33:11
by no means teaches this, teaches this so little that even no wicked
person could receive this impression from the text, I will now not speak
of "elect" and "reprobate" wicked, as Heyns supposes that I must do
in order to deny a universal offer. This is not the viewpoint of the
text, as we already noticed.
But I will indeed make the distinction between "wicked who turn" and
"wicked who do not turn". This distinction is very plainly grounded
in the text itself. And then I dare say that also Heyns does not have
the courage to read the text this way: "I have no pleasure in the death
of the wicked, whether he turns or not". In the first place, this would
stand in diametrical opposition to Holy Scripture. For the sake of His
own Name, God has, in fact, a holy pleasure, not in this, that the wicked
does not turn, for that displeases Him but in this, that He casts the
wicked who does not turn into eternal destruction. God will even laugh
at their destruction. To prove this, I could adduce a hundred texts,
but I proceed on the assumption that Heyns knows them as well as I do.
In the second place, such an interpretation takes no account of the
second part of the text. It simply will not do, to make wicked
in the first part refer to all wicked men without distinction,
Such an interpretation is also guilty of doing violence to the text.
For in the first part, the Lord declares wherein He has no pleasure;
in the second part, He declares wherein He does have pleasure.
We have to do, therefore, with a contrast. Now the Lord declares in
the second part, that He has pleasure in this, that the wicked turn
and live. He has pleasure, therefore, in the living of the wicked,
only if he turns. Turning and living are inseparably connected
with each other. But from this, it also follows that the wicked who
do not turn are excluded in the first part of the text.
Therefore, we may undoubtedly read the text this way, I have no pleasure
in this, that the wicked does not turn and dies, but in this, that he
turns and lives. Whoever does not turn is certainly killed by God with
eternal death, and God certainly has pleasure in this death as punishment
for sin, for it is a manifestation of His justice. But whoever turns
shall live, not because he turns, for that would never be able
to earn life for him, nor to blot out his former sins; but because God
has no pleasure in the death of the wicked who turns, but in eternal
mercy has blotted out his unrighteousness. And so, Heyns will have to
agree with me, that there is no universal love for sinners in the text,
but a love for the sinner who turns.
Thus, in the end, Heyns will also have to agree with me, that, although
there is here no mention of elect and reprobate as such, the text is,
according to its content, so obviously particular, that there is absolutely
no possibility that the reprobate wicked would be able to receive the
impression that God here promises or offers him anything. He has no
share in the matter here. For he never turns.
On the other hand, the text, also by virtue of its context, is exactly
intended as rich comfort for God's elect people. For they are the wicked
who, in fact, turn. And Heyns will agree with me, that this turning
is a gift of God, a gift of His grace, by His Spirit and Word. The professor
will also agree with me, that God bestows this gift of turning on whom
He wills and that He bestows it only out of pure, sovereign grace on
His elect.
And if then those elect, those wicked who turn, cannot understand that
they shall receive life in the way of turning ? since that turning does
not blot out their guilt or give any right to life ? then God swears
by Himself that He has no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but in
this; that they should receive life in the way of turning.
Turn ye, turn ye, then, O house of Israel (God speaks here also to
the Church), for why should you die? If I had not been merciful
to you with eternal mercy, you would have to die in your sins; then
no turning would make any difference, nor would there even be a way
of turning open. But now it is otherwise. There is no reason that you
should die. Turn ye then to me and live!
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