THE
FREE AGENCY OF MAN
T.P.
Simmons
Clear
thinking is very much needed when we come to deal with the free agency of man.
Some have imagined it a very difficult subject because they have made out of it
something other than what it is. For the same reason some
have charged that the doctrine of unconditional election, a Bible and Baptist
doctrine, destroys the free agency of man.
Well
does Spurgeon say: "In reference to the matter of predestination and free will,
I have often heard men ask, 'How do you make them agree?' I think there is
another question just as difficult to solve. 'How do you make
them differ?' The two may be as easily made to concur as to clash. It seems to
me a problem which cannot be stated, and a subject that needs no solution!"
(Sermons, Vol. 13, p. 31).
I.
FREE AGENCY OF MAN A BAPTIST DOCTRINE
The
New Hampshire Declaration of Faith, widely accepted among Baptists, declares
that election is "perfectly consistent with the free agency of man."
The
late George W. McDaniel, while president of the Southern Baptist Convention,
said in a personal letter to the author: "The Baptist
position recognizes both divine sovereignty and free moral agency." Spurgeon
says: "The predestination of God does not destroy the free agency of man, or
lighten the responsibility of the sinner" (Sermons, Vol. 18, p. 30).
D.
F. Estes (Hamilton Theological Seminary and Colgate University) says: "The moral
freedom of man was clearly held by Paul, and none the less
positively and tenaciously because of certain other views which he held but
which seem to some to be inconsistent therewith" (New Testament Theology, p.
104).
W.
W. Hamilton says: "God has united certain great facts in salvation, and we must
surely come to grief if we fail to recognize this.
Sovereignty and free will are seen closely related when Peter said at the great
revival on Pentecost, 'Him being delivered up by the determinate counsel and
foreknowledge of God, ye by the wicked hands of lawless men did crucify and
slay." (Bible Evangelism, p. 90).
J.
M. Pendleton says: "There are no truths more plainly reveled
in the Bible than that God is sovereign and man is free (Christian Doctrines, p.
103).
E.
Y. Mullins says: "Free will in man is as fundamental a truth as any other in the
Gospel and must never be cancelled in our doctrinal statements. Man would not be
man without it and God never robs us of our true moral
manhood in saving us" (Baptist Beliefs, p. 26).
J.
P. Boyce says: "Free agency belongs to the nature of an intelligent moral
creature. He must have freedom of choice, or he would not be responsible for his
action. The very essence of responsibility consists in the power of contrary
action, had one so pleased" (Abstract of Systematic Theology, p. 224).
A.
H. Strong says: "Free agency ... has been shown to be consistent with the
decrees (of God)" (Systematic Theology, p. 117).
It
is manifest from the above quotations that free agency,
according to its use among Baptist authors, must have a meaning different from
that which many people understand it to have. Spurgeon, Estes, Pendleton,
Mullins, Boyce, and Strong are all clear in their teaching of unconditional
election. This leads us, then, to consider:
1.
BY DICTIONARIES.
Funk
and Wagnall's Desk Standard Dictionary defines free agency as "the power or
capacity of acting freely, i. e., without constraint of the
will".
Webster's
New International Dictionary, in defining the term "free," in its application to
the acts of a moral being, says: "Not determined by anything beyond its own
nature or being; not necessitated by an external cause or agency; choosing or
capable of choosing for itself; as a free agent."
2.
BY STANDARD THEOLOGICAL WRITERS.
N.
L. Rice says:
"Free
agency is nothing more nor less than acting without compulsion, and in
accordance with one's own desires and inclinations" (God Sovereign and Man Free,
p. 58).
J.
M. Pendleton repeats the definition of Andrew Fuller, which is as follows:
"A
free agent is an intelligent being who is at liberty to act according to his
choice, without compulsion or restraint" (Christian Doctrines, p. 104).
A.
H. Strong says:
"Free
agency is the power of self-determination in view of motives or man's power (a)
to choose between motives, and (b) direct his subsequent activity according to
the motive thus chosen" (Systematic Theology, p. 176).
Luther
denied "Free-will," as it was used by his great opponent,
Erasmus, and also by the Pelagians and Sophists; and, with all his profundity of
understanding, mistakingly supposing that the use made of "Free-will" by the
above errorists was the only sense of the expression, opposed its use.
Nevertheless, he attributed to the will a freedom such as is attributed to it by
others here quoted; and he defined that freedom in the following words:
"Will,
whether divine or human, does what it does, be it good or evil, not by any
compulsion, but by mere willingness or desire, as it were, totally free" (The
Bondage of the WM p. 41).
John
Gill, who is often falsely accused of antinomianism says:
"A
determination of the will to some one thing, is not contrary to choice, for the
human will of Christ, and the will of angels and glorified saints, are
determined only to that which is good, and yet they both choose and do that good
freely . . . . Besides, neither the disability of man, nor the efficacious
influence of grace, at all hinder the freedom of human actions. A wicked man,
who is under the strongest bias, power, and dominion of his
lusts, acts freely in fulfilling of them; as does also a good man, in doing what
is spiritually good; and never more so, than when he is under the most powerful
influences of divine grace" (Cause of God and Truth, pp. 184, 185).
Jonathan
Edwards viewed free agency as the "power, opportunity or
advantage that any one has to do as he pleases" (Freedom of the will p. 17).
We
have purposely reserved until last the definition that is the most explicit of
all because it sums up all the others and states them in greater detail and in a
more easily understandable way. This definition is from E. Y. Mullins:
"Freedom
in man does not imply exemption from the operation of influences, motives,
heredity, environment. It means rather that man is not under compulsion. His
actions are in the last resort determined from within. He is self-determined in
what he does. Some hold that freedom in man means ability to transcend himself and act contrary to his character. (This is the
erroneous sense of free will, as believed by all Pelagians and Arminians, and as
opposed by Luther and many others.) The will is thus regarded, not as an
expression of what the man is in his essential character. It is free in the
sense of being capable of choices unrelated to past choices, acquired traits,
and hereditary tendencies. This is an untenable view of freedom. It makes the
will a mere external attachment to man's nature rather than
an expression thereof. Freedom excludes compulsion from without, it also
excludes mere caprice and arbitrariness. Freedom is self-determinative (The
Christian Religion in its Doctrinal Expression pp. 258,259).
Now
we submit that all of these great writers are in harmony
with each other in their view of that freedom which man possesses, although some
of them might deny that this should be called either free agency or free will.
However, if there be in all the universe such a thing as free agency, even in
the case of God, the freedom of man asserted in the foregoing is free agency.
To
make this more manifest, we take as our next proposition:
III.
MAN AS MUCH A FREE AGENT AS GOD
We
have noted that A. H. Strong says: "Free agency is the power
of self-determination." Others define it as the power one has to act according
to his choice, to do as he pleases. We have seen that free agency does not imply
ability to transcend oneself and to act contrary to one's character. It does not
exclude determination to either good or bad. It does exclude compulsion and
restraint from outside of ones nature, and it also just as surely excludes mere
caprice and arbitrariness.
What
more than this can be affirmed of God? What less can be affirmed of man? God is
self-determined. So is man, and at all times. God always acts according to His
choice; He does as He pleases.* So also does man. God cannot transcend Himself
and act contrary to His character.** Neither can man. God is
ever determined to good. Natural man is ever determined to that which is
spiritually evil. A regenerated man is determined, in the main, to that which is
good. When he commits evil, he is, for the moment determined to evil. The will
of God is never compelled or restrained by anything outside His own nature. The
same is true of man. God never acts capriciously or arbitrarily, that is,
without sufficient cause. Neither does man. God always acts according to His preference, considering things as a whole; but not
always according to His preference in things, considering them separately and
apart from His perfect plan.*** For instance, God immanently prefers holiness at
all times, but, in consideration of His plan as a whole, He purposed to permit
sin; because it, in some way, is necessary to the working out of His plan. This
is analogous to the fact that man has conflicting preferences, but he always follows his strongest preference; and in doing so, his will
is wholly and absolutely free.
__________
*Psa.
135:6; Isa. 46:10.
**We
know this because of God's immutability, for a discussion of which see chapter
on "The Nature and Attributes of God."
***See
chapter on "The Will of God."
The
position of God's will, and the nature and laws of its action, are the same as
in the case of man's will. Each is subject to the nature of its possessor. Both
express the nature of their possessors in view of motives. Both man and God are
free at all times to act out their most dominant desires and inclinations. God is not more truly a free agent than man is. That the free
agency of man at all times may be more manifest, we shall consider:
IV.
FREE AGENCY OF THE NATURAL MAN
Man
cannot do otherwise than continue in sin so long as he is in
his natural state (Jer. 17:9; Prov. 4:23; Job 14-4; Jer. 13:23; John 6:65; Rom.
8:7,8; 1 Cor. 2:14). But his continuance in sin is not due to outside compulsion
or restraint, but to his own character which causes him to choose darkness
rather than light (John 3:19). He continues in sin for the same reason that a
hog wallows in the mire. He continues in sin for the same reason that God
continues in holiness. Thus he is fully a free agent.
V.
FREE AGENCY AND DIVINE HARDENING AND BLINDING
In
the hardening and blinding of sinners, which is unmistakably attributed to God
in the Scripture (Rom. 9:18; John 12:40), there is no
outside force brought to bear upon the will of the sinner. While God is said to
blind and to harden the sinner, the sinner is said to blind and harden himself.
John 12:40 is a quotation from Isa. 6:10, where the prophet Isaiah is commanded
to shut the eyes of the people. Then in Matt. 13:14,15 there is another free
quotation from this same prophecy, and in Matthew the sinners are said to have
closed their own eyes. Then, still again, in 2 Cor. 4:3,4,
we have the blinding of sinners attributed to the devil. All of these passages
refer to the same thing, and all of them are true because they are in the Word
of God. We have the blinding of sinners attributed to God, to the devil, to the
prophet, and to the sinners themselves. It is ours to find, if we can, the
harmony between these statements. Here it is: The blinding is attributed to God
because He decreed, whether permissively or efficiently, all the circumstances that render the sinner blind. The blinding is
attributed to the devil because he is the author of sin by which the sinner is
blinded. The same blinding is attributed to the prophet because his preaching of
the Word brings out and makes the blindness of the sinner active in his
rejection of the Word. Then, finally, the blinding is attributed to the sinner
himself because he loves darkness rather than light, and manifests his choice of
darkness by rejecting the Word. This leaves the natural man
a free agent. If God, or the devil or the prophet, by a power outside of the
nature of the sinner, could compel the sinner against his choice to reject the
Word, the sinner would no longer be a free agent, and he would be no longer
responsible for his unbelief. Responsibility and free agency go hand in hand.
What
has been said of the blinding of the sinner is also true of the hardening of the
sinner. The hardening of the heart of Pharaoh is attributed to God (Rom. 9:18;
Ex. 4:21; 7:3; 7:13; 9:12; 10:1,20,27; 11:10). But it is also attributed to
Pharaoh himself (Ex. 8:15,32; 9.,34). The explanation is the same as for the
blinding treated above.
VI.
FREE AGENCY AND CONVERSION
Man
is unable to turn from sin until he is quickened by the Spirit of God. For proof
of this see the passages given in proof of the fact that man cannot do otherwise
than continue in sin so long as he is in his natural state.
The new nature, therefore, must be implanted logically (but not chronologically)
prior to the exercise of repentance and faith.* This is the meaning of the New
Hampshire Declaration of Faith when it says that repentance and faith are
"inseparable graces wrought in our souls by the regenerating Spirit of God."
This is also the teaching of Eph. 1:19,20.
But
when a man turns to God in repentance and faith he acts voluntarily and is thus
a free agent. He is not compelled to
__________
*For
fuller discussion of this see chapter on "Conversion."
__________
turn
by a power outside of his own nature. For, in implanting the new nature, the
Holy Spirit operates "in the region of the soul below consciousness" (Strong).
Then that new nature, when implanted, becomes as much a part
of the man as the old nature was; and it moves the will in strict conformity to
the nature, laws, and normal action of the will. Thus man is a free agent in
conversion; and, of course, remains a free agent, although God continues to work
in him "both to will and to work for his good pleasure" (Phil. 2:13). But this
work, like the work of quickening, does not coerce the will.
VII.
FREE AGENCY AND CHRISTIAN FREEDOM
Some
become confused in regard to free agency because of the statement of Christ in
John 8:32- "Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free." Christ
here referred to the freedom of the nature from sin's
bondage and not to free agency. This will become evident to any thoughtful
student upon a consideration of the foregoing treatment of free agency. The
position of the will and the nature and laws of its action, are the same before
conversion as after. In both cases man is self-determined in view of motives.
Both before and after regeneration the will expresses one's character. The
difference between the unregenerate and regenerate states is
not in regard to the freedom of the will but in the fact that before
regeneration man is the "bond-servant of sin" (John 8:34), while, after
regeneration, believers are, through the power of the new life, "bond-servants
of righteousness" (Rom. 6:18). In both cases men are bondservants, and the will
is subject to the character, being as free in one case as in the other.
VIII.
FREE AGENCY AND THE SOVEREIGNTY OF GOD
Without
the least reserve or hesitancy we subscribe to the Philadelphia Confession of
Faith in its declaration that "God hath decreed in himself from all eternity, by
the most wise and holy counsel of his own will, freely and unchangeably all things whatsoever comes to pass." This
includes evil as well and as fully as good, though in a different sense; and is
supported by both reason and revelation. See chapter on "The Will of God." Also
see Dan. 4:35; Isa. 46:10; Rom. 9:19; Eph. 1:11.
When
men say that the absolute sovereignty of God cannot be
reconciled with the free agency of man by finite minds, they betoken a
misunderstanding either of free agency, or the workings of God's sovereignty, or
both. Free agency is in perfect, full, and manifest harmony with the absolute
sovereignty of God. The bond of union between the two lies in the fact that the
will is subject to the character of its possessor. God has determined the
character of each man, through either His positive or
permissive decrees- positive in the case of all good, and permissive in the case
of all evil. And God, having determined all circumstances, controls the motives
that influence the will. Thus God controls the actions of men, and yet men act
at all times as freely as God Himself does. If there were no God, man could not
act more freely than he does.
We
see this harmony between the sovereignty of God and the free agency of man
strikingly exemplified in the crucifixion of Christ. God determined that Christ
should be crucified (Acts 2:23; 4:27,28). And He determined that certain ones
should do it, but He did this permissively. All that took part in the
crucifixion were only acting out their own natures, and were never freer in any
act, nor was God ever freer in any act. Through wicked
motives they chose to kill the Lord of glory. They killed Him because they hated
Him. They killed Him because He rebuked them for their sin. They killed Him
because He took away the glory that had been theirs. God did not cause them to
do it, but He decreed to permit them to follow their own inclinations and
desires in doing it.
IX.
FREE AGENCY AND THE POWER OF CONTRARY ACTION
It
will he noted that the expression on free agency quoted from J. P. Boyce implies
that the power of contrary action is essential to free agency. This is true if
the power of contrary action is defined as Boyce defines it,
that is, as the power that one has to do otherwise than he does, had he so
pleased.
This
is only saying that man is free from outward necessity and compulsion in his
actions. If at any moment, one had not pleased to act as he did, he could have
acted differently, for one is always free to do as he pleases. This means, of course, as he pleases on the whole. He follows
his strongest desire.
Or
if the power of contrary choice is used to mean the power of the soul to make
choices contrary to its previously ruling purpose, it is still implied in free
agency. Motives awaken latent tendencies in the soul, and thus the soul may act contrary to its previously ruling
purpose. In conversion the soul acts contrary to its previously ruling purpose.
But in this case, it is not due to the awakening of latent tendencies, but to
the implantation of the new life.
There
is another form of contrary action. One may and often does
put forth executive volitions contrary to his ultimate choice or immanent
preference. This is consistent with free agency.
But
if one supposes that the power of contrary action means that it is possible for
one to act at any moment differently from the way in which
he does act, the individual and the motives remaining the same, he is supposing
a contradiction and an absurdity. This is supposing that one may choose that
which he does not choose. All action is the result of an inward necessity of
consequence; but not of an outward necessity, nor a necessity of compulsion. In
other words, the action of any individual at any time could not have been
different without the individual or the motives being different. Otherwise there would be no cause for the will's
action. And all common sense forbids the supposition of a finite thing without a
cause. Thus the acts of the will proceed from an inward necessity. But the
individual is free and unconstrained. There is no power compelling the will, for
the will is simply the soul's faculty of choice. In fact, no power can compel or
coerce the will. It is necessarily free. It would not be will without this.