by John Hendryx
Monergism: The view that the Holy Spirit is the only agent who
effects regeneration of Christians. It is on contrast with
synergism, the view that there is a cooperation between the divine and
the human in the regeneration process. (Westminster Dictionary of
Theological Terms)
God the Father made a pretemporal covenant with the Eternal Son (Psalm
110; John 6:38, 17:2; Eph 1:3, 4; Heb. 6:16-17; Heb 10:5) to redeem His
people by effectually calling and supernaturally drawing them to Him (John
6:37, 44, 63-65; 15:16, Acts 13:48; Rom. 8:29; Eph. 1:4). Christ himself
was chosen to be our Savior before the creation of the world (1 Pet.
1:20; Ephesians 1:4) and accomplishes this for His people in last times
by taking on their flesh, fulfilling the demands of the law for them
in His life, death and physical resurrection. The Holy Spirit
applies the life-giving work of the Son to the same by raising them from
spiritual death, opening their blind eyes, unplugging their deaf ears,
disarming their natural hostility and granting them new spiritual
affections unto faith through the means of the preaching of the gospel (Ezek
36:26; Rom 10:17; 12:3; 1 Cor. 12:3; 2 Cor 4:13; Eph 6:23; Phil 1:29; 1
Thess 2:13; Heb 12:2). He then counts the obedience and satisfaction of
Christ unto those united to Him through faith.
Due to the fall, the natural condition of human beings is that of
total depravity which means that apart from a supernatural work of the
Holy Spirit applying the work of Christ, no person would naturally
submit to the humbling terms of the gospel. The will, affections, mind
and body are enslaved to sin until Christ sets us free (Ps 51:5; Matt.
15:19; Rom 7:14-15; Eph 4:17-19; John 8:36; Rom. 6:22). The result of
depravity is that the natural man is impotent to respond in faith to God
(Rom 8:7, 8; 1 Cor 2:14). Only the work of the Holy Spirit through the
preaching of the Redeemer as revealed in Scripture (John 20:31; Rom
10:17) infallibly results in His people's response of faith (Eph 2:8-9;
Titus 3:5). The grace of God restores fallen human affections by
softening the heart and illumining the mind so that all distorted views
of God are corrected (Eph 2:4-6; 4:17-24; Phil 2:12-13). In other words,
it is grace itself that makes us humble and willing to respond in faith
- Our certain response is, therefore, grounded in the initiative and
regenerating work of God, not in any natural capacity.
Since He knows His sheep by name, God's love for his sheep is both
intensive and particular, not a general love. When He sees that His lamb
is lost He goes off in search of it until He finds it. He then scoops it
up in his arms, puts it on His shoulders and carries it home. He does
not merely go out and stand at a distance calling to any old stray sheep,
hoping in vain that it wants to come home with Him. No, God calls us by
name (since His sheep know his voice) and He mercifully does what is
best for us. To those who do not follow Him Jesus said, "you do not
believe because you are not part of my flock. My sheep hear my
voice, and I know them, and they follow me." (John 10:26, 27) In other
words, He saves His loved ones, not with an ineffectual, passive love
but with an active love which accomplishes that which he set out to do
and actually gets the job done.
Monergistic regeneration is a redemptive blessing purchased by Christ
for those the Father has given Him (1 Pet 1:3, John 6:37, 39). This
grace works independently of any human cooperation and conveys that
power into the fallen soul whereby the person who is to be
saved is effectually enabled to respond to the gospel call (Acts
2:39, 1 Cor 1:2, 9, 24, Rom 8:30 John 1:13, Acts 13:48). It is that
supernatural power of God alone whereby we are granted the spiritual
ability and desire to comply with the conditions of the covenant of
grace; that is, to apprehend the Redeemer by a living faith, to come up
to the terms of salvation, to repent of idols and to love God and the
Mediator supremely. The Holy Spirit, in quickening the fallen soul,
mercifully illumines the mind and renews the heart, giving God's elect
the capacity and inclination to exercise faith in Jesus Christ (John
6:44, 1 John 5:1). This instantaneous and intensely personal work of God
is the means by which the Spirit brings us into living union with Him.
The Westminster Confession, also points out that faith is both a
requirement of the covenant and something that God enables man to
fulfill by granting him new spiritual capacities and affections:
Under the terms of the covenant of grace, God "freely offereth
unto sinners life and salvation by Jesus Christ; requiring of
them faith in him, that they may be saved, and
promising to give unto all those that are ordained unto eternal
life his Holy Spirit, to make them willing, and able to believe."
- Westminster Confession of Faith CHAP. VII. - Of God's Covenant
with Man III (emphasis mine)
The great Puritan Divine Richard Sibbes once said, "God knoweth we
have nothing of ourselves, therefore in the covenant of grace he
requireth no more than he giveth, and giveth what he requireth, and
accepteth what he giveth."
In other words, what God requires of us (faith, repentance, to
love Him supremely) he grants to us in Christ (2 Timothy 2:25;
Eph 2:5,8). This means that while there are many precious promises
declared to us in the gospel (Rom 10:4), yet the Lord understands that
the outward letter, even though vigorously preached, does not
itself spiritually enable sinners to receive Jesus for righteousness and
salvation. A command and a promise is established in the gospel that
whoever receives Jesus will be accepted and justified. Yet none of us,
due to our natural love for darkness, are inclined to receive the Christ
of the gospel (John 3:19). Therefore, in His great mercy to those He
loves, Jesus sends His Holy Spirit to quicken us (John 6:63; John 1:13,
3:6) to a living faith that apprehends Christ and His benefits. The dead
in sin are granted new life (John 5:25) by the Spirit who works in us
all that is required to be made partakers of his righteousness that we
might be reconciled to God. As the Spirit illumines and regenerates the
soul, Christ's perfect faith and obedience are reckoned to us by God's
grace, and on account of Him are we accepted as righteous before Him.
What we sinners were incapable of due to pride and evil inclinations,
Christ purchased for us as the Spirit unites us to His life,
death and resurrection. This was so the righteousness of the law might
be met in us. This purchased grace which includes our regeneration,
justification and sanctification is all that power and righteousness
which Christ has procured for us and of which He makes us partakers.
In fact, all the benefits of our salvation can be traced back to
Christ and His finished work on the cross. Regeneration, one of these
redemptive benefits (1 Pet 1:3), is granted to those God has set His
affection on before creation (Eph 1:4), that they may appropriate those
blessings at His appointed and accepted time. Therefore, it is important
to not confuse the concepts of regeneration and justification.
Regeneration gives us a new sense that beholds God's beauty and
excellency. This inward working of the Holy Spirit gives rise to faith
in Christ and appropriates the blessing of justification. These are all
spiritual blessings which Christ accomplished for us by fulfilling the
covenant from our side in perfectly obeying both the passive and active
demands of God's law. He lived the life we should have lived and died
the death we deserved. The sinner, once willfully blind to God's
loveliness, making it impossible for him to have natural affection for
God or to understand Spiritual things (1 Cor 2:14), is now granted the
Holy Spirit, who circumcises the heart (Ezekiel 36:26, Colossians 2:11),
heals our blindness and illumines the mind to understand the knowledge
of Christ in the Scriptures (John 6:45;1 John 5:20). By the Spirit alone
can we apprehend God's beauty and unsurpassed excellency which gives
rise to new affections for Him infallibly leading to a living faith in Christ. To come to
Christ we must understand and desire Him and such holy desires and
understanding require a supernatural work of God's grace. Apart from the
work of the Holy Spirit we have no spiritual knowledge and thus our
pride and deep-rooted affection for sin will hinder us from believing
the gospel.
"...if anyone makes the assistance of grace depend on the humility
or obedience of man and does not agree that it is a gift of grace
itself that we are obedient and humble, he contradicts the Apostle who
says, "What have you that you did not receive?" (1 Cor. 4:7), and,
"But by the grace of God I am what I am" (1 Cor. 15:10). - Council of
Orange 529 A.D.
Why is this so vitally important? Simply because it exalts the glory
of Jesus Christ and it is biblically sound. The Scripture teaches that
everything related to the gospel is designed to glorify Christ and abase
man. So it follows that anything that diminishes Christ’s glory is
inconsistent with the true gospel. Therefore those who teach that the
autonomous faith of natural men is what causes them to differ
with others, rather than the grace of God which gives rise to
their faith, are unduly exalting the role of man in salvation.
Monergism is the biblical doctrine that regeneration (the new
birth) both precedes and elicits faith in Christ in those
whom the Holy Spirit has sovereignly determined to save (John 6:63-65;
Eph 1:3-5; Acts 16:14b; 1 John 5:10, 20). When preached in the power of
the Holy Spirit, the gospel (James 1:18, 1 Peter 1:23, 25) has the power
to open blind eyes and unstop deaf ears. Paul, when speaking to the
elect at the church of the Thessalonians said, "for our gospel did
not come to you in word only, but also in power and in the
Holy Spirit and with full conviction." (1 Thess 1:5) In
other words, the word of God does not work "ex opere operato,"
(automatically) rather, it is the work of the Holy Spirit sovereignly
dispensing grace (John 3:8), quickening the heart through the word to bring forth life. So the
written word is not the material of the spiritual new birth, but rather
its means or medium. "The word is not the begetting principle itself,
but only that by which it works: the vehicle of the mysterious
germinating power" [ALFORD]. It is because the Spirit of God accompanies
it that the word carries in it the germ of life. The life is in God, yet
it is communicated to us through the word.
The gospel declares that repentance and faith (commands of God) are
themselves God's working in us the desire both to will and to do (2 Tim
2:25, Eph 2:5, 8) and not something that the sinner himself contributes
towards the price of His salvation. Repentance and faith can only be
exercised by a soul after, and in immediate consequence of, its
regeneration by the Holy Spirit (1 John 5:1, 10; Acts 16:14b; Acts
13:48; John 10:24-26; Ezekiel 36:26-27; John 6:37; John 1:13; 1 Cor.
4:7; 1 Cor. 15:10; Jas. 1:17; John 3:27; 1 Pet 1:3). God regenerates,
and we, in the exercise of the new gracious ability given, repent. God
disarms the opposition of the human heart, subduing the hostility of the
carnal mind, and with irresistible power (John 6:37, 63-65), draws His
chosen ones to Christ. The gospel confesses "We love him because He
first loved us." Whereas before we had no desire for God, but now God's
regenerating grace gives us the desire, willingness and delight in His
person and commands that infallibly gives rise to faith. Faith and works
are both the evidences of the new birth, not the cause of it.
More Biblical Support
Aside from the two places where the word "regeneration" is actually
used in the Bible text (Titus 3:5, Matthew 19:26) the same doctrinal
notion is elaborated in many places under various terminology such as
(1) spiritual resurrection (John 5:21; Romans 6:13; Ephesians 1:19-20;
2:5; Colossians 2:13; I John 3:14) and our (2) re-creation in Christ (2
Corinthians 5:17; Galatians 6:15; Ephesians 2:10; 4:24). The apostle
John, apart from recording Jesus' famous discourse on the new birth in
John 3, further refers to being born of God eleven times. Interestingly,
while being born again is necessary for salvation, it is never once
spoken of in the imperative mood as if the hearer could
independently produce it. Rather, it is always spoken of as a work of
God alone. For example John 1:13 (as if to stress this point) says we
were "born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of
man, but of God. " While John 1:12 teaches that faith is the
crucial precondition of justification, but verse 13 teaches that
regeneration is a necessary and efficient precondition of faith
in Jesus Christ. Verse 13 therefore qualifies verse 12 making
clear that regeneration causally and immediately precedes faith.
Of particular note the apostle John speaks of our spiritual
resurrection (John 5:21 & Eph 2:5). The text (John 5:21) shows Jesus
Himself clearly exercising sovereignty on whom He will grant the
spiritual resurrection: "For as the Father raises the dead and gives
them life, so also the Son gives life to whom he will."
Ephesians 2:5 likewise says we were dead in sins until God, who
is rich in mercy, "made us alive together with Christ." Paul's
word for "made us alive" or "quicken" is the Greek term Paul uses for
regeneration with Christ. In both these instances we must conclude that
the regenerating work of the Holy Spirit causally precedes and enables
man's response of saving faith to God's call.
Another critical text that we should take a closer look at is 1 John
5:1, 10:
"Everyone who believes that Jesus is the Christ has been born of
God...Whoever believes in the Son of God has the testimony [of
God] in himself."
Before anything else I want you to notice the clear sequential cause
and effect aspect of regeneration and faith in this passage. Important
for us to note is that John speaks of our actions that take place as the
result of regeneration several times in this epistle (1 John
2:29, 1 John 3:9, 1 John 4:7, 1 John 5:1, 1 John 5:18). For example in 1
John 3:9 he says, "No one born of God makes a practice of sinning, for
God's seed abides in him, and he cannot keep on sinning because he
has been born of God." Here we also find a cause and effect
relationship between the cause of new birth and the effect that the
Christian does not continue in a life of sin.
1 John 5:18
gives us a similar pattern of speech. Both showing that the cause of
regeneration brings about the effect of a life that does not continue
sinning. So not only does the tense of 1 John 5:1 show belief being
actualized as the result of regeneration but this is also a continuation
of a pattern of speech that John uses throughout the epistle. Therefore
it is extremely unlikely that the Apostle means anything else by this
than faith is the result of our spiritual birth ... that the
regenerating work of the Holy Spirit is the cause of the desires that
give rise to faith. Verse 10 further demonstrates the reality of this
when it says that "whoever believes in the Son of God has this testimony
[of God] in himself." Consider whether it is even possible for an
unregenerate man, who does not have the testimony of God in himself, to
actually understand or believe the gospel. It isn't possible. Instead, a
person must first have the testimony of God in him if he is to believe.
In other words, we must be taught of God, illumined in mind, given a new
understanding... and once we are taught and understand, we will
infallibly come to faith in Christ. To further drive the point home
notice that 1 John 5:20 gives us the following assurance:
"And we know that the Son of God has come, and has given us
understanding so that we may know Him who is true; and we are in
Him who is true, in His Son Jesus Christ. This is the true God and
eternal life."
To summarize, those dead in sin (Eph 2:1,5,8), play no part in their
own new birth (Rom 3:11, 12; 8:7) and are just as passive as a
new born physical baby in the regenerative act. However, once restored
with a new sense and given spiritual understanding through Word and
Spirit, the soul's new disposition immediately plays an active
roll in conversion (repentance and faith). Thus, man does not cooperate
in his regeneration but rather, infallibly responds in faith to the
gospel as the Holy Spirit changes our hearts' disposition (John 3:6-8;
19-21). Faith is, therefore, not something produced by our unregenerated
human nature. The fallen sinner has no moral ability or inclination to
believe prior to the new birth. Instead, the Holy Spirit must open one's
ears to the preaching of the gospel if one would desire to hear and
believe.
Century Dictionary
Monergism: "In theol., The doctrine that the Holy Spirit is the
only efficient agent in regeneration - that the human will possesses no
inclination to holiness until regenerated, and therefore cannot
cooperate in regeneration."
The following are some Christians in the history of the Church who
defended the biblical doctrine of monergism:
Jonathan Edwards, Charles Spurgeon, Martin Luther (who considered
this doctrine the heart of the Reformation), John Calvin, John Owen, the
Puritans of the 17th century, Augustine, George Whitefield, and some
contemporary pastors and theologians such as Martyn Lloyd-Jones, John
Piper, Wayne Grudem, R.C. Sproul, Michael Horton, J.I. Packer, James
Montgomery Boice, and signatories to the Alliance of Confessing
Evangelicals.