Saturday, April 11, 2026

In the labyrinthine odyssey of human existence, wherein the soul is thrust from the womb into a cosmos perpetually arrayed in opposition to divine order, humanity finds itself circumscribed by six immutable axioms—law, covenants, curses, decrees, statutes, and promises—whose observance constitutes the very sine qua non of survival and flourishing. Yet this natal enclosure is immediately assailed by a world that does not merely challenge these truths but actively advances a profound redefinition of God’s self-revelatory word, deploying schemes calculated to undermine covenantal existence itself. When the believer affirms the self-authenticating character of Scripture, he acknowledges that these same axioms delineate the moral and ontological contours of his adversaries, all the while remaining under the sovereign superintendence of the Almighty, who sovereignly ordains both the threat and the triumph, thereby enabling the elect to vanquish every stratagem contrived against them (cf. Genesis 50:20; Romans 8:28).
The Luminous Expression in Psalm 138: Exaltation of the Divine Name and Word
This ongoing dialectic of opposition and divine safeguarding finds a luminous and enduring expression in Psalm 138. In this psalm, the psalmist prostrates himself before the holy temple, declaring with reverence and conviction: “I will bow down toward your holy temple and will praise your name for your love and your faithfulness, for you have exalted above all things your name and your word” (Psalm 138:2). Here, the sacred text elevates the divine name and divine word above every created reality—above the heavens, the earth, and all that is within them—establishing a profound theological hierarchy. Calvin, in his Commentary on the Psalms, emphasizes that this hierarchy forms the very foundation of authentic worship: the creature’s dependence upon the Creator’s self-disclosure. The psalmist then moves to testify to a deep personal transformation in verse 3: “When I called, you answered me; you made me bold and stouthearted.” This divine response is not a fleeting emotional comfort but a sovereign endowment of courage and strength that flows directly from the divine word itself. It sustains the believer amid existential peril, making him resolute and fearless, emboldened by the divine assurance that the divine presence and promise are unwavering.
The Creative Modality of God’s Word: Fiat and Natural Revelation
The core of the psalmist’s teaching reveals that God has made His powerful and life-generating word manifest through two primary modalities. First, through the divine fiat of creation itself, the Almighty spoke the universe into existence by His commanding word: “By the word of the LORD the heavens were made, their starry host by the breath of his mouth” (Psalm 33:6; cf. Hebrews 11:3; John 1:1–3). This natural revelation—where the breath of God functions as the animating and sustaining principle of all contingent reality—furnishes the essential ontological foundation of existence. It restores every aspect of creation to its intended teleological purpose and unifies the cosmos under the sovereignty of God's will. The apostle Paul affirms that the divine word is not inert or passive but an active, life-imbuing force that “is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword” (Hebrews 4:12). Wherever it is heeded, it generates health, wholeness, and coherence, restoring fallen creation to its divine purpose. To grow in faith and spiritual maturity, the believer must learn to inhabit the boundaries demarcated by the six axioms, placing unreserved hope and confidence in their protective and restorative efficacy. He must trust that the same God who spoke the universe into being has similarly fashioned each elect soul according to these divine principles “in the secret place of the womb” (Psalm 139:13–16, implied). Within this divine framework, the axioms become instruments of holistic healing, spiritual sanctification, and assured defense for the covenant people, guiding them through life's complexities with divine certainty.
The Prophetic Modality of God’s Word: The Six Axioms as Creative Utterances
Secondly, God's word possesses a distinct prophetic character—an active and creative utterance expressed through the six fundamental axioms—law, covenants, curses, decrees, statutes, and promises. Each of these constitutes a divine declaration that establishes the categorical framework within which blessing and cursing are dispensed in the kingdom of God. When the believer allows the word to interpret itself—without distortion or dilution—he aligns himself with divine blessing. Conversely, any attempt to oppose, distort, or neglect these divine declarations invites the self-inflicted reality of cursing. Blessing, in this divine economy, arises from the wholehearted acknowledgment, acceptance, and active affirmation of every scriptural declaration. Self-cursing, on the other hand, results from propagating doctrines or beliefs that are contrary to revealed truth, thereby invoking divine judgment through misalignment with divine principles. The Westminster Confession of Faith (Chapter I, Section 4) echoes this authority of Scripture: “The authority of the Holy Scripture… dependeth not upon the testimony of any man… but wholly upon God… who is truth itself.” These axioms transcend mere doctrinal taxonomy; they function as prophetic petitions and declarations that dispel feelings of loneliness, alienation, and spiritual disorientation. They orchestrate the believer’s life as a divine symphony, wherein security, peace, and divine favor reign as the overarching harmony.
Meditative Engagement with Curses and Decrees: Transformative Boldness and Supernatural Kingship
In the crucible of authentic piety and spiritual discipline, the deliberate and Spirit-empowered meditation upon these axioms—especially the recitation and internalization of curses and decrees—yields a transformative boldness that borders on the ineffable. By immersing the soul in the imprecatory and declarative force of the divine word, the believer begins to become “very bold and stouthearted,” echoing the psalmist’s experience. This boldness is not superficial bravado but a deep, supernatural confidence that arises from the divine infusion of courage and authority. It empowers the believer to speak forth divine judgments and decrees with confidence, knowing that every righteous word releases divine energy into the temporal realm. As a result, the believer perceives the divine pursuit of him with a power too weighty for unassisted flesh to contain—a divine pursuit that elevates him to royal dignity, crowning him as a king within the spiritual kingdom of God. Simply pronouncing the axioms unleashes divine supernaturalism into the fabric of time and space, producing an inbreaking of divine energy that transcends natural limitations. The prophet Isaiah captures this truth: “So shall my word be that goes out from my mouth; it shall not return to me empty, but it shall accomplish that which I purpose, and shall succeed in the thing for which I sent it” (Isaiah 55:11). Here, the six axioms cease to be abstract doctrinal propositions and become living, creative instruments—divine tools through which the believer is both defended and elevated, experiencing the word not merely as instruction but as the very breath of God that sustains, heals, and enthrones.
The Impregnable Sanctuary of the Self-Revelatory Word
Consequently, the believer who fully entrusts himself to these divine axioms recognizes that God has not only provided warnings about adversarial schemes but has also established an impregnable sanctuary within His own divine defense. The divine word—both creative and prophetic—remains sovereign and operative, shaping and disarming enemies while empowering His people to prevail in every spiritual conflict. In this divine economy, the myth of human resilience unsupported by divine grace dissolves before the stark reality of a God whose name and word are exalted above all creation, offering His people a boldness rooted in intimate communion, a kingship forged through meditative obedience, and a supernatural peace that the world cannot bestow. It is through this self-revelatory, living word that the eternal purpose of divine grace is fulfilled: to bring abundant life, divine health, and unassailable peace to those who dwell within its sacred boundaries, secure in the everlasting covenant and the divine decrees that uphold it.
The Incoherence of Libertarian Free Will and Divine Sovereignty
Clinging fervently to the doctrine of libertarian free will—the notion that human beings possess a genuine, uncaused power of contrary choice, free from any prior causal influence—upon closer examination, reveals itself to be a philosophical and theological contradiction of the highest order. If the creature’s will is truly autonomous, capable of making choices uninhibited by antecedent causes, then the divine sovereignty that ordains all things must be either illusory or subordinate to creaturely agency; conversely, if divine sovereignty is exhaustive and unalterable, then human freedom, in its most substantive sense, must be an illusion. The classical Reformed tradition, echoing the historic witness of Scripture and the early church, has consistently maintained that such a synthesis is inherently impossible. As the Westminster Confession of Faith (3.1) articulates with logical precision: “God from all eternity did, by the most wise and holy counsel of His own will, freely and unchangeably ordain whatsoever comes to pass.” This eternal decree, far from negating human responsibility, provides the very framework within which genuine moral accountability can exist, affirming that God's sovereignty and human responsibility are compatible within the divine economy.Scripture affirms this reality repeatedly and conclusively. The prophet Isaiah proclaims with majestic authority: “I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is none like me, declaring the end from the beginning and from ancient times things not yet done, saying, ‘My counsel shall stand, and I will accomplish all my purpose’” (Isaiah 46:9–10). Similarly, the apostle Paul, contemplating the sovereignty of the divine potter over the clay, rhetorically asks: “Has the potter no right over the clay, to make out of the same lump one vessel for honorable use and another for dishonorable use?” (Romans 9:21). Any attempt to uphold libertarian notions of autonomy in light of these texts inevitably diminishes the glory of divine aseity—the self-existence and independence of God—and redefines grace as something earned rather than given freely. Such attempts distort biblical teaching and threaten to reduce divine sovereignty to a mere veneer beneath the illusion of human choice.
Grace as Unmerited Favor and the Total Inability of the Fallen Will
In the presence of the Triune God—whose holiness is so transcendent that every human effort unaided by divine grace is rendered not merely insufficient but utterly hopeless—the biblical doctrine of grace emerges as the ultimate foundation for salvation. This grace, traditionally understood as favor Dei immerita—a favor that is unmerited, undeserved, and entirely gratuitous—does not serve as a supplement to human striving; rather, it confronts the total inability (totalis impotentia) of the fallen human will to incline itself toward God. The Canons of Dort (Third and Fourth Heads, Article 3) emphasize this point explicitly: “man is incapable of saving himself or of preparing himself for salvation by any inherent strength.” Paul’s letter to the Ephesians makes this reality sharply clear: “For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast” (Ephesians 2:8–9). To entertain the notion that the unregenerate human possesses libertarian freedom to “choose God” is to fundamentally misunderstand the nature of grace as a divine gift—an act of divine sovereignty—rather than a human achievement. Such a mistaken view risks reintroducing a subtle form of works-righteousness, cloaked in the guise of autonomous decision, and thereby diminishes the unmerited nature of divine grace.
The Ontological Threat of Limiting Divine Election
Furthermore, any limitation upon God's sovereign right to elect whom He will save—based on His own good pleasure—undermines the very foundation of divine sovereignty and the doctrine of creation ex nihilo. If God's will is not free to choose according to His own counsel (Ephesians 1:11), then the act of creation itself—calling the universe into existence from nothing—becomes contingent upon creaturely cooperation, thus subordinating the Creator to His creatures in the most fundamental ontological sense. This undermines the very nature of divine aseity and reduces divine sovereignty to a conditional, rather than an unconditional, reality.
Avoiding the Anthropomorphic Conflation of Power and Will
Another critical peril lies in the careless conflation of divine power with human notions of “will,” which risks anthropomorphizing the divine and diminishing the believer’s understanding of creaturely dependence. When divine omnipotence is reduced to human-like volition, the divine essence is distorted; this not only impoverishes the doctrine of divine sovereignty but also erodes the believer’s appreciation of the divine majesty and the dignity inherent in divine authority. Scripture, however, makes clear that God’s omnipotence is exercised in perfect wisdom and holiness, not as a neutral or impersonal force, but as the personal and purposeful determination of all causes and effects within the intra-Trinitarian counsel. The biblical understanding affirms that God works “all things according to the counsel of his will” (Ephesians 1:11), and that “we live and move and have our being” in Him (Acts 17:28). His sovereignty is not an arbitrary power exercised capriciously but is rooted in the divine nature—personal, wise, holy, and loving—within the eternal counsel of the Godhead. To distort this divine activity by reducing it to a mere power or force external to His will is to commit a form of theological reductionism that impoverishes the richness of biblical revelation.
The Eternal Decree and the Discovery of True Freedom
Therefore, the sovereign God, who sustains all causes and governs every contingent reality, has in His inscrutable counsel chosen all objects of His divine will and formed all minds and hearts in eternity past. The psalmist declares: “Our God is in the heavens; he does all that he pleases” (Psalm 115:3). This divine decree, far from making history mechanical or human responsibility meaningless, establishes a teleological progression—“the end from the beginning”—whereby all events are infallibly foreordained according to the divine good pleasure (Isaiah 46:10; Ephesians 1:5, 11). It is within this divine economy that true freedom is rediscovered—not in the illusory autonomy of fallen human nature but in joyful submission to the sovereign will of the Triune God, who, in His mercy, has liberated the elect from the bondage of sin and deception. This divine sovereignty does not produce fatalism but engenders a doxological response—worshipful adoration—since every detail of history and every human act serves the divine purpose for the praise of His glorious grace.
Conclusion: The Dissolution of the Myth of Second Chances
In this light, the myth of “second chances” dissolves into the reality of a salvation that is wholly initiated and secured by divine grace—from eternity past, through the historical work of Christ, to the consummation of all things—offering the redeemed an unshakeable hope rooted not in human effort or chance but in the immutable decree of the sovereign God who works all things according to His divine counsel for the praise of His glorious name.
The Bible does not portray its saints as flawless exemplars of virtue but rather as deeply human individuals whose lives vividly reveal the profound reality of human fallenness—highlighting the inherited corruption of original sin (Psalm 51:5; Romans 5:12), the oppressive and tyrannical influence of indwelling sin, and the ongoing spiritual conflict between the flesh and the Spirit. God, in His sovereign wisdom, records these struggles not to shame or condemn but to demonstrate His grace, to reveal the reality of repentance, and to illustrate the tension that exists between the “already” of justification and the “not yet” of complete glorification.
The Biblical Portrait of Fallen SaintsThis narrative includes key figures from both the Old and New Testaments who openly display their battles with sin and the dominion of a fallen nature that sought to rule or still rules over them, providing believers with a model of honest acknowledgment of personal weakness and divine mercy.
David: The Man After God’s Own Heart and the Depths of Radical Corruption
David emerges as a prime example of a man after God's own heart, despite his grave sins. Following his act of adultery with Bathsheba and the orchestrated murder of her husband Uriah (2 Samuel 11), David confronts the full weight of his sinfulness. His heartfelt penitential psalm, Psalm 51, goes beyond confessing specific acts; it exposes the radical corruption of his entire being, confessing, “Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me” (Psalm 51:5). He earnestly pleads with God for a clean heart and a steadfast spirit (v. 10), acknowledging that his fallen nature produced both outward transgressions and a deep-rooted heart bent toward evil. His other penitential psalms, such as Psalm 32 and Psalm 38, further reveal the physical and emotional toll of unconfessed sin—manifested through guilt, shame, and bodily suffering—demonstrating how sin’s foreign power can dominate even the most chosen. Yet, despite these failures, God refers to David as “a man after my own heart” (Acts 13:22), highlighting that genuine repentance and humility are what make a person truly beloved by God.
Moses: The Meekest Man and the Fury of Fleshly Anger
Moses, another key Old Testament figure, displayed a temper rooted in his human fleshly nature. His anger led him to murder an Egyptian (Exodus 2:11–12), and later, his disobedience at Meribah—striking the rock instead of speaking to it (Numbers 20:10–12)—prevented him from entering the Promised Land. His frequent frustrations with the Israelites often boiled over into complaints and self-pity, illustrating that even the meekest man could be temporarily controlled by impulsive, fallen tendencies like rage and presumption.
Jacob: The Supplanter and the Long Struggle with Deceit
Jacob, later renamed Israel, embodied the deceiver’s nature from before birth. He manipulated his brother Esau through cunning and lies (Genesis 25:29–34; 27), schemed within his family, and lived with the consequences of a scheming heart. His ongoing spiritual journey, marked by a literal wrestling match with God at Peniel (Genesis 32), signifies a process of divine discipline and transformation, yet the narrative continually acknowledges the lingering influence of his old, self-serving nature.
Samson: The Nazirite Enslaved by Lust and Vengeance
Samson illustrates the destructive power of lust and impulsivity. Set apart as a Nazirite from birth, he repeatedly violated his vows through sexual immorality and vengeful rage (Judges 14–16). His final act of repentance—praying for strength after losing his sight and being enslaved—demonstrates how a divinely endowed man can be dominated by fleshly desires until brokenness and divine intervention bring him to acknowledgment of his need for grace.
Elijah: The Zealous Prophet Overcome by Fear and Despair
Elijah, despite his mighty miracles and zealous stand for God, succumbed to fear and despair after confronting Baal’s prophets. He fled, despaired, and even wished for death (1 Kings 19), revealing that even the most fervent and faithful can fall prey to self-pity, isolation, and doubt about God's sovereignty.
Other Old Testament Testimonies of Fallenness
Other Old Testament figures such as Noah, who drunkenly exposed his nakedness (Genesis 9:20–21); Abraham, who twice lied about Sarah out of fear (Genesis 12 and 20); and Solomon, whose many foreign wives led him into idolatry (1 Kings 11), all demonstrate that even those who make covenants with God could be dominated by unbelief, sensuality, and compromise. Their stories underscore the persistent reality that fallen human nature can influence even those chosen by God, emphasizing the need for ongoing repentance and reliance on divine grace.
Paul: The Apostle and the Wretched War Within
The Apostle Paul offers perhaps the most explicit and theologically rich depiction of the ongoing struggle against a fallen human nature. In Romans 7:14–25, he laments, “For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I keep on doing… Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?” (vv. 19, 24). Paul describes the delight he finds in God’s law within his inner being, contrasted with the presence of “another law” in his members, which wages war against his renewed mind and seeks to enslave him to sin. Whether this passage reflects his pre-conversion experience under the law or the ongoing reality of sanctification, it powerfully reveals that indwelling sin remains a hostile force even after one is born again. Paul also refers to himself as the “foremost of sinners” (1 Timothy 1:15) and the “least of the apostles” because of his past persecution of the church (1 Corinthians 15:9), constantly aware of how deep his former rebellion was and how grace continually restores him.
Peter and the Disciples: Self-Confidence, Fear, and Fleshly Failure
Peter, originally Simon, vividly exposes the weakness of self-confidence rooted in fleshly pride. He boldly declared he would never deny Jesus (Matthew 26:69–75; Luke 22:31–34), yet within hours, he cursed and swore, denying his Lord thrice. Jesus warned him that Satan sought to sift him like wheat, demonstrating how even the most outspoken disciple could be controlled by fear and self-preservation. Despite Peter’s subsequent restoration by Jesus (John 21) and his leadership in the early church, his episode of hypocrisy—withdrawal from Gentile believers out of fear of the circumcision party (Galatians 2)—exposes the persistent influence of fleshly partiality. The disciples collectively displayed their fallen tendencies—arguing over greatness (Luke 22:24), falling asleep during Jesus’ prayer in Gethsemane (Matthew 26:40–41), and abandoning Him at His arrest (Matthew 26:56)—showing that their spiritual strength was often compromised by human weakness and ambition.
The Theological Unity of Honest Struggle Across the Testaments
Across both Testaments, these biblical characters share a common thread: they or the inspired authors who record their lives openly acknowledge that sin is not merely external acts but a ruling power rooted in a corrupted human nature. David’s acknowledgment of being “conceived in sin” highlights the innate depravity from birth. Paul personifies sin as an indwelling tyrant that frustrates the renewed will, illustrating that even redeemed believers continue to wrestle with residual sin. This honesty aligns with the broader biblical doctrine that, even after regeneration, believers possess a residual “flesh” that wars against the Spirit (Galatians 5:17), creating the ongoing tension described in the Penitential Psalms and Romans 7.
The Divine Purpose in Exposing Human Brokenness
God’s purpose in revealing these struggles is multifaceted: to humble the self-righteous, to comfort the saints burdened by their ongoing battles, and to magnify the sufficiency of divine grace. No believer fully overcomes this spiritual opposition in this life; the fallen personality remains until the final glory of complete sanctification. However, the same God who exposed David’s sins, Paul’s weakness, and Peter’s denial also extended forgiveness, restoration, and empowerment. These saints’ honesty about their struggles did not disqualify them but became the very foundation for divine mercy to work through their brokenness.
Conclusion: Daily Warfare and the Triumph of Grace
In conclusion, the Bible’s candid portraits of these men and women serve as a powerful reminder that the Christian life involves a daily, honest warfare against the flesh—fueled not by despair but by hope in the Spirit, sustained through the Word and the blood of Christ, which “speaks a better word” (Hebrews 12:24). The most visibly broken and struggling saints often become the most effective vessels of divine grace, their humility and repentance serving as a testament to the transformative power of God's mercy and the ongoing process of sanctification that will only reach completion in the fullness of Christ’s return and the final glorification of believers.