Theological Term: Prevenient Grace
The grace of God that, according to synergistic (or Arminian or Wesleyan) teaching, counteracts the spiritual death that resulted from the fall, sufficiently restoring lost human freedom so that a person is able to choose to cooperate or not cooperate with saving grace; also called preventing grace.
- Scripture used to support the idea of prevenient grace:
The true light, which enlightens everyone, was coming into the world (John 1:9 ESV).
And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself (John 12:32 ESV).
- From On Working Out Our Own Salvation by John Wesley:
For allowing that all the souls of men are dead in sin by nature, this excuses none, seeing there is no man that is in a state of mere nature; there is no man, unless he has quenched the Spirit, that is wholly void of the grace of God. No man living is entirely destitute of what is vulgarly called natural conscience. But this is not natural: It is more properly termed preventing grace. Every man has a greater or less measure of this, which waiteth not for the call of man. Every one has, sooner or later, good desires; although the generality of men stifle them before they can strike deep root, or produce any considerable fruit. Everyone has some measure of that light, some faint glimmering ray, which, sooner or later, more or less, enlightens every man that cometh into the world. And every one, unless he be one of the small number whose conscience is seared as with a hot iron, feels more or less uneasy when he acts contrary to the light of his own conscience. So that no man sins because he has not grace, but because he does not use the grace which he hath.
Learn more:
- Got Questions: What is prevenient grace?
- R. C. Sproul: Prevenient Grace
- Sam Storms: The Arminian Doctrine of Prevenient Grace
- Tom Schreiner: Does Scripture Teach Prevenient Grace in the Wesleyan Sense?
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