Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Calvinism & Evangelical Arminianism

Rate this book
Written by John L. Girardeau

Thorough but graceful refutation of Wesley's Arminianism.

Brown cloth with bright gilt lettering on spine. 574 pages.

574 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1890

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

John Lafayette Girardeau

15 books4 followers
John Lafayette Girardeau (14 November 1825 – 23 June 1898) was a Reformed theologian and minister in the Presbyterian Church in the United States. He is notable as a Calvinist defender of libertarianism, the teaching that people have free will to choose between alternatives, and that they could have chosen differently than they actually did, rather than a determinist or compatibilist view.

He was a professor of systematic theology at Columbia Theological Seminary in South Carolina.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
4 (28%)
4 stars
5 (35%)
3 stars
2 (14%)
2 stars
3 (21%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Sydney Jacques.
166 reviews15 followers
August 23, 2018
It’s not necessarily that I even thought the book was bad - I didn’t. I even enjoyed myself through parts of it. But Giradeau’s style was just not for me and I was confused more often than not.
Profile Image for Travis Daggett.
223 reviews3 followers
March 6, 2023
Best I've read on the subject. The only reason I didn't give it five stars is that there is some repetition that could have been eliminated. Essential for distinguishing between Calvinism and the mainstream Arminianism that is the default today.
Profile Image for Andy.
220 reviews13 followers
August 14, 2017
Girardeau builds an irrefutable Scriptural case against every form of Arminianism.

Right at the outset, he highlights something that, I'm sure, swells this volume unnecessarily: which is the non-confessional nature of Arminianism. Calvinism is defined and explained in the Confessions of the Reformation. If you want to learn the “official” Reformed position on Election, Reprobation, the Atonement, Justification, etc., you can go to the Belgic Confession, the Canons of Dordt, the Heidelberg Catechism, The Westminster Confession of Faith, The Larger and Shorter Catechsims, etc. If you want the “official” Arminian position on these doctrines: good luck. No confessional statements exist, and the leading proponents of Arminianism are all over the map – for this very reason. As a result, Girardeau has to take on each doctrinal point and refute Wesley, Fletcher, Pope, Raymond, Ralston, Watson, etc.

Another issue that, in my estimation, takes away from the force of the volume is his constant vindication of his Infralapsarianism against Supralapsarianism. I understand why he thinks he has to do so. He notes that the early Arminians geared their anti-Calvinist arguments against Supralapsarianism. True or not, it is beside the point. There is enough common ground in the overall scheme of doctrine between the Infra and Supra positions, that he would have been better employed decimating all Arminian cavils, not just the anti-Infra ones. If Infralapsarians want to avoid the accusation of making God the author of sin, they need another tack than distancing themselves from Supralapsarianism. If what Infralapsarianism teaches is correct, namely that God is free from eternity to create or not to create, and that he created knowing with infallible certainty (decreeing that man should fall), then God should not have created. Thus we see that the Infralapsarians do not escape the reproach of those who want to say that God is the cause of perdition of man and the author of sin. Berkhoff said it best: “Infralapsarianism really wants to explain reprobation as an act of God’s justice. It is inclined to deny either explicitly or implicitly that it as an act of mere good pleasure of God. This really makes the decree of reprobation a conditional decree and leads into the Arminian fold. But infralapsarians on the whole do not want to teach a conditional decree, and express themselves guardedly on this matter. Some of them admit that it is a mistake to consider reprobation purely as an act of divine justice. And this is perfectly correct. Sin is not the ultimate cause of reprobation any more then faith and good works are the cause of election, for all men are by nature dead in sin and trespasses. When confronted with the problem of reprobation, infralapsarians, too, can find the answer only in the good pleasure of God. Their language may sound more tender than that of the Supralapsarians, but is also more apt to be misunderstood, and after all proves to convey the same idea”

I said all that to say this: Girardeau spends an inordinate amount of time defending his Infralapsarianism against Supralapsarianism. This is absolutely unnecessary. His opponent couldn't care less which view one takes. In fact, at the Synod of Dordt, Arminians purposely stirred this very pot in order to deflect attention from themselves.

The strength of Girardeau's book is his treatment of the doctrine of Justification. It is interesting to see the case he builds for the Reformed doctrine, especially in light of the current controversies about this subject in Reformed and Presbyterian circles today. There is absolutely no doubt that he would class all of the New Perspective and Federal Vision folk squarely in the Arminian camp.

Girardeau has an incredible talent for stacking proof upon proof to show that the Arminian position is not only illogical, self-refuting, and internally inconsistent with itself, but (more important that all this combined) completely and utterly unscriptural.

This is a volume all Reformed ministers should have. It can serve as a resource for the most representative Arminian arguments, and the strongest Scriptural refutations of them.
Profile Image for G Walker.
240 reviews29 followers
December 19, 2012
Ehhh. Overall, from the Southern Presbyterian tradition, this is a great presentation of their understanding of Calvinism (and the weaknesses of anyone who is not), but I found it to be somewhat uncharitable and to make a lot of leaps that were necessary. Girardeau on Federal Theology is better... but this is a standard text from the American Calvinistic tradition.
Profile Image for Benjamin Glaser.
184 reviews38 followers
March 19, 2013
Girardeau is in many ways the brightest light of the major Southern Presbyterian authors and for whatever reason is the least well-known of the the big 4 of Dabney, Thornwell, Palmer, and himself. This refutation of Wesleyanism is a must read especially in our day. The things Girardeau notes in this work about "Evangelical Arminianism" are prevalent in our own Presbyterian circles.
Profile Image for Nate.
106 reviews3 followers
January 12, 2015
Though a fairly long read (574 pages) and a bit academic (dry), non-the-less I recommend this one. The author does a great job of comparing and contrasting these two doctrines in light of what the Bible says, he also follows the two doctrines to their logical (or illogical) conclusion.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews