In this article, Kevin DeYoung addresses question of whether
sanctification is a monergistic or synergistic work – original source here:
Recently, in a leadership training class at our church, a spirited
discussion broke out on whether sanctification is monergistic or
synergisitic. No, this is not what every class is like at University
Reformed Church. But this one was. I wasn’t there, but I was told the
discussion was energetic, intelligent, and respectful. I’m glad to serve
at a church where people know and care about this level of theological
precision.
The terms monergism and synergism refer to the working of God in
regeneration. Monergism teaches that we are born again by only one
working (mono is Greek for “one,” erg is from the Greek word for
“work”). Synergism teaches that we are born again by human cooperation
with the grace of God (the syn prefix means “with” in Greek). The
Protestant Reformers strongly opposed all synergistic understandings of
the new birth. They believed that given the spiritual deadness and moral
inability of man, our regeneration is owing entirely to the sovereign
work of God. We do not cooperate and we do not contribute to our being
born again. Three cheers for monergism. Continue at John Samson
1 comment:
is your mom monergistic or synergistic? how about your dad? If our paternal relationships are often synergistic then let God damn everyone who says his is monergistic, amen.
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