Can an Unregenerate Person Believe the
Gospel?
Dr. Charlie Bing
Many would answer this question, "Of course. How else could a person
be eternally saved?" But there are some who would disagree, because they
think that a person must be regenerated (born again) before he or she can
believe the gospel. That perspective is demanded by their view of man's
sinfulness, which they call total depravity. But what does the Bible say?
The issue of total depravity
Total depravity is a theological term used by some to describe the
sinfulness of man. The term itself is not in the Bible. After Adam's fall in
Genesis 3, man is considered "dead in trespasses and sins" as
described in Ephesians 2:1 (see also Rom. 3:10-18; 5:12; 1 Cor. 15:22).
How one understands this spiritual death determines how one relates faith to
regeneration.
Those who insist that God must
regenerate a person before that person can believe define total depravity as
man's total inability to respond positively to God. They believe that an
unregenerate person cannot even understand and believe the gospel. This view is
held by Reformed theology and strong versions of Calvinism.
It would be more biblical to take "dead in trespasses and sins"
as a description of man's condition before God. Because of Adam's sin and man's
relationship to Adam, man is totally separated from God and lacks anything that
can commend him to God. Though sin's corruption extends to every man and all of
his being, man retains the capacity to respond to God's initiative. Even after
Adam sinned and died spiritually, he was able to talk with God immediately (Gen. 2:17; 3:1-19).
The biblical evidence that regeneration does not precede
faith
Many biblical arguments show that man's
sinfulness does not require regeneration before faith.
Man
remains in God's image. Man was made in God's image, which includes a
measure of self- determination. The image of God was not destroyed by man's
fall, but marred or corrupted, with the result that man, when left to himself,
is inclined toward evil and rejection of God. Self-determination, even if used
to reject God, is essential to humanness and personhood. Without
self-determination man would be nothing more than a robot with every decision
and action determined and controlled by God.
Man is
responsible. Because human beings can make self-determining choices, unbelievers
are held accountable by God for rejecting the gospel (John 3:18, 36; 5:40-47; Acts 17:30; 2 Thess. 1:6-10).
God would not be just or fair if He condemned people who could not believe
because He did not regenerate them. That would actually make God the author of
evil.
The
invitation to believe is legitimate. God's invitation to be saved
through the gospel is a sincere and legitimate offer only if any and every
person can believe it. If God must regenerate people before they can believe
the gospel, then the invitation is not really to all people, but only to those
already born again. But this is contrary to biblical statements that the gospel
is for all (John 3:16; 2 Cor. 5:19-20; 1 Tim. 2:3-6; 1 John 2:2).
Just as Paul preached everywhere with the assumption that anyone could respond
to the gospel (Acts 20:21), we also should share
the gospel with everyone (Matt. 28:18-20; Mark 16:15; Acts 1:8) because it is a genuine
offer to everyone. God regenerates anyone who believes the gospel.
God draws
men to Himself. Because in his sinful state man does not seek God. The Bible teaches
that before anyone believes, God draws that person to Himself (John 6:44; 12:32). God convinces or persuades
the unbeliever of truth, righteousness, and judgment concerning Jesus Christ (John 16:8-11).
The Holy Spirit works mysteriously in a person's heart to bring her to the
point of faith (John 3:8).
Faith is
the means not the result. Nowhere does the Bible say that faith is created by
regeneration. John 3:16 is a very familiar
verse which, according to the preceding context of 3:1-15, explains how God
gives eternal life as a result of faith, not a requirement for faith.
Likewise, Ephesians 2:8 explains how it
is through faith God made alive those who were dead in sins (Eph. 2:1-7). Regeneration is the
result of receiving God's eternal life, and that life is only available through
faith (John 5:24; 20:31).
Faith is
simply a personal response. Man can believe either truth or falsehood that is
presented to him. An unregenerate person can believe the truth of the law of
gravity, or he can believe the error of a flat earth. Likewise, an unregenerate
person can believe the truth of Christ's gospel or she can believe the error of
a false religion. Since faith is only the instrument, the response of faith in
the gospel is not a special kind of faith. Faith is simply faith. It is the
object of faith, the gospel of Jesus Christ, that is special and brings
salvation.
Faith is
not a good work. Those who define total depravity as total inability claim that if
man were able to believe, then that faith would be a meritorious good work for
salvation. But that cannot be true, because the Bible declares that faith is
necessarily contrary to works (Rom. 3:27; 4:4-6; 11:6; Eph. 2:8-9). Faith is not the cause
of our salvation; God is the cause. Faith is God's designated means by which
the unregenerate can receive His grace for salvation. Faith is passive because
it means that one is convinced that something is true or trustworthy. It is not
a work in the sense of actively doing something, thus it is non-meritorious.
Conclusion
The view that regeneration must precede faith is a theological construct,
not a biblical one. To say that a person goes from being spiritually dead to
eternally alive before he believes in Jesus Christ is both absurd and contrary
to biblical teaching. The Bible teaches that man is so corrupted by sin that
left to himself, he would not seek God or believe the gospel. Therefore, God
must draw a person to the point of faith. Nevertheless, it is the person who
believes. Faith is not man's contribution or good work. It is the means through
which man receives God's grace in salvation. The unregenerate person believes
in Jesus Christ as Savior precisely because he can contribute nothing to God's
work of salvation. Faith makes the new birth accessible to anyone, but that
birth is God's work.
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