The
Wrath Of God
by W. J. Grier
One of the evidences of decay and departure in the professing
Church is the large-scale rejection of the teaching of the
Scriptures on the wrath of God. Dr Martyn Lloyd-Jones in his
recently-issued Exposition of
Romans draws attention to this and shows that it is not
only among Modernists and Ritualists that this attitude prevails;
it is evident too among some who are evangelicals by repute.
Dr C. H. Dodd, for some 14 years professor of Divinity at
Cambridge and chairman of the panel of translators of the New English Bible [New
Testament section], deals in his Commentary on Romans with the
phrase ‘the wrath of God’ in Romans 1.18. He speaks of it as ‘an
archaic phrase’ which ‘suits a thoroughly archaic idea’. In other
words, he looks on the idea of God’s wrath as out-of-date,
antiquated. Early in 1931 there was a dialogue in the pulpit of
Elmwood Presbyterian Church, Belfast, two prominent ministers Drs
Frazer-Hurst and Hyndman taking part. The former quoted from a
Catechism he was taught in his boyhood. The question was: ‘What
are you by nature?’ and the answer: ‘I am an enemy of God, a child
of Satan and an heir of hell’. Dr Frazer-Hurst described such
teaching as monstrous and Dr Hyndman supported him by saying:
‘These ideas belong to the mentality and outlook of bygone ages.’
It would seem as if these men believed that we come into the world
as little cherubs sprouting wings. To adopt such views one would
have to repudiate a large part of Scripture from Genesis through
to Revelation. In Genesis 3 we find Adam and Eve thrust out of the
garden for their sin and a flaming sword set to keep them from the
tree of life. Not only were they affected, but the sentence of
condemnation fell upon the race [Romans 5.12, 18, 19]. In Genesis
6 we find God saying: ‘I will destroy man whom I have created from
the face of the earth’ -- and the deluge ensued. Then in Genesis
19 we have the destruction of the cities of the plain by fire and
brimstone from heaven.
I might go on citing countless examples of the manifestation of
divine wrath right through the Bible. Dr Leon Morris says of the
Old Testament in his The
Apostolic Preaching of the Cross: ‘There are more than 20
words used to express the wrath conception as it applies to
Jehovah’ and ‘these are used so frequently that there are over 580
occurrences to be taken into consideration’ [p 131]. He adds that
this conception ‘cannot be eradicated from the Old Testament
without irreparable loss’ [p 156]. So the Old Testament is full of
the concept of the wrath of God.
In his Commentary on Romans
Dr Dodd says that the wrath of God ‘does not appear in the
teaching of Jesus’. One is reminded of John Newton’s reply to Dr
Taylor of Norwich when the latter said: ‘I have collated every
word in the Hebrew Scriptures 17 times, and it is very strange if
the doctrine of the atonement you hold should not have been found
by me.’ Newton’s reply was: ‘I am not surprised at this; I once
went to light my candle with the extinguisher on it.’ He meant
that prejudices from education, learning, etc., often form an
extinguisher which must be removed and which only God can remove.
Dr Dodd speaks of the thought of anger as an attitude of God to
men as disappearing and adds: ‘His love and mercy become
all-embracing’. This really smacks of universalism. One suspects
that universalistic presuppositions are really in many cases
responsible for the rejection of the concept of the wrath of God.
Jesus spoke of the rich man in the torments of hell and He warned
again and again of ‘the weeping and the gnashing of teeth’ and of
hell fire and the unquenchable fire and the undying worm and the
outer darkness. Describing how He would act as King at His coming
one day to sit on the throne of His glory He pictures Himself as
saying: ‘Depart from me, ye cursed, into the everlasting fire
which is prepared for the devil and his angels.’ Surely the
extinguisher is functioning when Dr Dodd claims that the idea of
the wrath of God is absent from the teaching of Jesus.
Nor is the wrath of God absent from the teaching of the apostle
Paul. He pictured that wrath as like a dark cloud overhanging a
guilty world and he proclaimed Jesus as the only deliverer from
this coming wrath [I Thess. 1.10]. He also describes this wrath as
evident in the heathen world of his day -- evident in God’s giving
them up in the lusts of their hearts to uncleanness and vile
passions and a reprobate mind [Romans 1.24, 26, 28]. And in Romans
chapter 2 he warns of ‘wrath in the day of wrath and revelation of
the righteous judgment of God’. These are but a few of the
citations which might be given from Paul’s teaching.
We have the same testimony from John, the apostle of love. What a
tremendous picture he gives of Christ coming as King of kings and
Lord of lords ‘treading the winepress of the fierceness and wrath
of God the Almighty’ [Rev. 19.151! How can anyone that has read
Jonathan Edwards’ comment on this verse ever forget it? ‘The
words’, he says, ‘are exceeding terrible. If it had only been said
‘the wrath of God’, the words would have implied that which is
infinitely dreadful: but it is ‘the fierceness and wrath of God’.
The fury of God! the fierceness of Jehovah! O how dreadful must
that be! Who can utter or conceive what such expressions carry in
them? But it is also ‘the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God’ --
as though there would be a very great manifestation of His
almighty power in what the fierceness of His wrath would inflict,
as though omnipotence should as it were be enraged and exerted as
men are wont to exert their strength in the fierceness of their
wrath.’
Many more Scriptures could be appealed to, but sufficient evidence
has been produced to show that the witness to the idea of the
wrath of God is pervasive in the Scriptures.
When the doctrine of the wrath of God is denied, other great
truths are affected by this denial. First among these is the
historic doctrine of the inspiration of the Scriptures.
I. THE INSPIRATION OF THE SCRIPTURES
Anyone who denies the wrath of God strikes a blow at divine
revelation -- for, as we have seen, God’s wrath is plainly
revealed in His Word. His holy indignation against sin is one of
the great ‘burdens’ of Scripture, one of the Bible’s great
oracles; and he who denies this holy indignation is flouting the
verdict of the Judge of all the earth, a verdict repeated times
without number in His Word. Professor T. J. Crawford was right
when he said: ‘A great part of the Bible would need to be written
over again before we can expunge from it the broad and palpable
evidence of God’s holy displeasure against sinful men and of His
righteous purpose to inflict judgment for their iniquities.’ The
effect then of the denial of the divine wrath then would be
devastating in its effect upon the doctrine of the inspiration of
the Scriptures.
II. THE DOCTRINE OF GOD
If we preach the wrath of God, we are sometimes accused of
representing God as a Being of fitful passion and vindictive fury.
In other words, we are accused of blackening the character of God.
But we plead ‘Not guilty’. The God of the Bible is not subject to
sudden and irrational fits of anger. His wrath is His settled
indignation against sin. Dr Leon Morris rightly speaks of it as ‘a
burning zeal for the right coupled with a perfect hatred for
everything that is evil’.
When men reject the idea of the wrath of God, it is evident that
they really do not believe in the perfect holiness of God, for
that holiness involves a settled and burning indignation against
sin. Moses could say of the adversaries of Israel: ‘their rock is
not as our Rock’ and we can say the same of men who reject the
divine wrath. Their god is a flabby sort of being, not the God who
is holy in all His ways and righteous in all His works.
III. THE DOCTRINE OF SIN
There is a close connection between the denial of God’s wrath and
a light view of sin, as Dr J. G. Machen said: ‘The modern
rejection of God’s wrath proceeds from a light view of sin which
is totally at variance with the teaching of the whole New
Testament and of Jesus Himself’. It is the sight of the infinite
holiness of God which leads a man to a true sense of his sin and
depravity. When Isaiah viewed God as sitting on a throne high and
lifted up, and worshipped as the perfectly Holy One by the
seraphim, then he cried ‘Woe is me, for I am undone’. When men see
God’s righteousness and His wrath, it is then that they become
earnest seekers after grace.
Once when Whitefleld was preaching at Norwich, a thoughtless youth
was led by a gipsy’s forecast of his future to go and hear the
great preacher. The sermon was based on John the Baptist’s appeal
to the Sadducees to flee from the wrath to come. As he preached
Whitefleld burst into a flood of tears and then cried with all his
might: ‘O my hearers, the wrath is to come, the wrath is to come’.
The words sank into the young man’s heart; they followed him for
days and weeks and he could think of little else but ‘the wrath to
come’. He later became, as Andrew Fuller tells us, ‘a considerable
preacher’. Such conviction of sin followed by genuine conversion
is not likely to occur where the note of divine wrath is muted;
sin is no longer regarded as ‘the abominable thing which God
hates’.
IV. THE DOCTRINE OF THE ATONEMENT
In his commentary on Romans chapter 1, Dr Dodd denies divine
wrath. It is small wonder that he proceeds in his commentary on
chapter 3, verse 25-26, to repudiate the idea of ‘the propitiation
of the wrath of God’ and of ‘the satisfaction demanded by His
justice and afforded by Christ’s vicarious endurance of the
penalty of sin.’ Small wonder too that the word ‘propitiation’ was
removed from the New English Bible as well as from the Revised
Standard Version. One of the RSV translators, Dr C. T. Craig of
Oberlin School of Theology, commenting on the omission of the word
‘propitiation’, said: ‘Any attempt to show that there was
something in the essential nature of God that demanded
satisfaction for sin ends only in blackening the character of
God.’ So the doctrine of the atonement must go in the interests of
the Modernist view of a flabby deity!
Dr Dodd admits that in classical Greek and in the Koiné [or
Hellenistic Greek] the word ‘propitiate’ has the idea of placating
or appeasing wrath. But he seeks to argue from the Septuagint [the
Greek translation of the New Testament made a few centuries before
Christ] that a change had taken place in the meaning of the word.
Dr Roger Nicole of Gordon Divinity School has produced 21
arguments against Dr Dodd’s line of reasoning [see the Westminster
Theological Journal, Vol. XVII, No. 2]. Dr Nicole’s article is
simply devastating in its force; he seems to have shot Dr Dodd
down entirely.
Dr Leon Morris in his The
Apostolic Preaching of the Cross says that Dr Dodd
‘totally ignores the fact that in many passages there is explicit
mention of the putting away of God’s anger, and accordingly his
conclusions cannot be accepted without serious modification.’
Indeed, Dr Morris produces arguments to show that ‘it is
manifestly impossible to maintain that the verb [propitiate’] has
been emptied of its force.’
One must be supremely thankful for the labours of these two fine
scholars of a younger generation for their labours in putting up
such a capable defence of, and devastating argument for, the
historic Christian doctrine of the atonement as a propitiation of
divine wrath and a satisfaction to divine justice.
V. THE DOCTRINE OF THE LOVE OF GOD
Those who reject the wrath of God often plead that their rejection
is in the interests of the love of God; but actually their
rejection of divine wrath inificts a grievous wound on the
doctrine which they profess ardently to espouse. This is so
because Christ’s propitiatory sacrifice to satisfy divine justice
and propitiate God’s wrath is the greatest exhibition of divine
love. We read in Scripture: ‘Herein is love, not that we loved
God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation
for our sins’ [1 John 4.10].
Dr James Denney said: ‘If the propitiatory death of Jesus is
eliminated from the love of God, it might be unfair to say that
the love of God is robbed of all meaning, but it is certainly
robbed of its apostolic meaning’ [Denney’s Death of Christ, p 152]. And
this is the meaning that supremely matters.
VI. THE DOCTRINE OF THE JUDGMENT
If there is no wrath of God, then the tremendous terrors of the
judgment are eliminated. Then that ancient hymn loses its
significance which says:
Take away the concept of the wrath of God and we strip the great
day of assize of much of its tremendous awe.
VII. THE DOCTRINE OF HELL
In 1930 there was a book issued with the title What is Hell? There
were twelve contributors. Among them were two novelists, a
Spiritist, a Theosophist, a pagan, a Roman Catholic, a
Congregationalist who became a Roman Catholic two years later, an
Anglican bishop and an Anglican dean. The dean, Dr W. R. Inge,
though not thoroughly orthodox, could be quite caustic and
penetrating in his comments on the Modernists and he had many true
words to say about hell. Indeed, he was the one in this volume who
came closest to the Scripture doctrine. He said that ‘heaven and
hell stand and fall, together’ and pointed out that our Lord spoke
in perfectly plain language about its duration. He added:
‘Modernist Protestantism, though it may be reluctant to admit it,
believes in Purgatory, but not in hell.’ When Dr Inge ceased to be
dean of St. Paul’s in 1934, his successor was Dr W. R. Matthews
and it is interesting to note that he says in his book The Hope of
Immortality that to him purgatory ‘has great attractions’; he also
says that he believes it ‘right to pray for the dead’ and it would
seem that universalism also has ‘attractions’ for him. So it again
appears, as we have already noted, that many of the objectors to
the concept of God’s wrath are really universalistic in their
outlook. A distinguished theologian of the Presbyterian Church,
U.S., who is a member of his Church’s Permanent Theological
Committee stated in a church paper: ‘God does not have two
different purposes for men -- that is, punishment for some and
reward for others -- but only one’. This is just brazen
universalism.
In conclusion, I would point out that when men deny the wrath of
God, they are cutting one of the vital nerves of evangelism. It
was the thought of the wrath of God, as well as His love, that
lent such earnestness to the pleadings of the preachers of the
gospel. The thought of the overhanging cloud of God’s wrath lent
earnestness to the preaching of Paul. Knowing the fear of the
Lord, he persuaded men. It was the same with Whitefield and
Brownlow North and R. M. M’Cheyne and Henry Martyn. Of North his
biographer wrote: ‘The immortality of the human soul and its
endless existence in a state of holiness and blessedness, or of
corruption and misery, were subjects constantly on his lips.’
Listen to M’Cheyne also as he says: ‘As I walked in the fields,
the thought came over me with almost overwhelming power, that
every one of my flock must soon be in heaven or hell. 0 how I
wished I had a tongue like thunder, that I might make all hear; or
that I had a frame like iron, that I might visit every one and
say, ‘Escape for thy life’. Ah, sinners! you little know how I
fear that you will lay the blame of your damnation at my door.’
And it was he who said that the preacher should never speak of
everlasting punishment without tears.
What gratitude should surge in our hearts because God has not
appointed us unto wrath but to the obtaining of salvation through
our Lord Jesus! R. M. M’Cheyne stressed this too when he wrote:
By nature we were once ‘children of wrath’ -- exposed to the
dread wrath of God [Eph 2.3]. But we have been saved by grace
through faith, that we might do the good works which God has
before ordained for us [Eph 2.8, 10]. We are under a tremendous
obligation. This was how Paul saw himself. He said: ‘I am debtor
both to Greeks and barbarians . . . So, as much as in me is, I am
ready to preach the gospel to you also . . . . for I am not
ashamed of the gospel: for it is the power of God unto salvation .
. . . : for therein is revealed a righteousness of God from faith
unto faith . . . . for the wrath of God is revealed from heaven
against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men’ [Rom 1.14-18].
Note the four ‘for’s’, especially the last one -- ‘for the wrath
of God is revealed from heaven’. The divine wrath was revealed in
God’s judgments on the heathen world of that day and it overhung
that world like a dark cloud. That same wrath is evident in the
world of our day and overhangs it like a dark cloud. We too should
have the tremendous sense of obligation which Paul had. We too are
debtors -- debtors to men of every race and condition. May the
spirit of concern fill our hearts as it filled the heart of the
apostle -- that we may give an account of our stewardship one day
with joy and not with grief.
Amen.