Brief Statement of the Doctrinal Position 
of the Missouri Synod.[Adopted 1932]
(St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, N.D.) Pt. 7 

Of Conversion

10. We teach that conversion consists in this, that a man, having 
learned from the Law of God that he is a lost and condemned 
sinner, is brought to faith in the Gospel, which offers him 
forgiveness of sins and eternal salvation for the sake of Christ's 
vicarious satisfaction, Acts 11:21; Luke 24:46, 47; Acts 26:18. 

11. All men, since the Fall, are dead in sins, Eph. 2:1-3, and 
inclined only to evil, Gen. 6:5; 8:21; Rom. 8:7. For this reason, 
and particularly because men regard the Gospel of Christ, 
crucified for the sins of the world, as foolishness, 1 Cor. 2:14, 
faith in the Gospel, or conversion to God, is neither wholly nor 
in the least part the work of man, but the work of God's grace and 
almighty power alone, Phil. 1:29; Eph. 2:8; 1:19; -- Jer. 31:18. 
Hence Scripture call the faith of men, or his conversion, a 
raising from the dead, Eph. 1:20; Col. 2:12, a being born of God, 
John 1:12, 13, a new birth by the Gospel, 1 Pet, 1:23-25, a work 
of God like the creation of light at the creation of the world, 2 
Cor. 4:6.

12. On the basis of these clear statements of the Holy Scriptures 
we reject every kind of synergism, that is, the doctrine that 
conversion is wrought not by the grace and power of God alone, but 
in part also by the co-operation of man himself, by man's right 
conduct, his right attitude, his right self-determination, his 
lesser guilt or less evil conduct as compared with others, his 
refraining from willful resistance, or anything else whereby man's 
conversion and salvation is taken out of the gracious hands of God 
and made to depend on what man does or leaves undone. For this 
refraining from willful resistance or from any kind of resistance 
is also solely a work of grace, which ``changes unwilling into 
willing men,'' Ezek. 36:26; Phil. 2:13. We reject also the 
doctrine that man is able to decide for conversion through 
``powers imparted by grace,'' since this doctrine presupposes that 
before conversion man still possesses spiritual powers by which he 
can make the right use of such ``powers imparted by grace.'' 

13. On the other hand, we reject also the Calvinistic perversion 
of the doctrine of conversion, that is, the doctrine that God does 
not desire to convert and save all hearers of the Word, but only a 
portion of them. Many hearers of the Word indeed remain 
unconverted and are not saved, not because God does not earnestly 
desire their conversion and salvation, but solely because they 
stubbornly resist the gracious operation of the Holy Ghost, as 
Scripture teaches, Acts 7:51; Matt. 23:37; Acts 13:46. 

14. As to the question why not all men are converted and saved, 
seeing that God's grace is universal and all men are equally and 
utterly corrupt, we confess that we cannot answer it. From 
Scripture we know only this: A man owes his conversion and 
salvation, not to any lesser guilt or better conduct on his part, 
but solely to the grace of God. But any man's non-conversion is 
due to himself alone; it is the result of his obstinate resistance 
against the converting operation of the Holy Ghost. Hos. 13:9. 

15. Our refusal to go beyond what is revealed in these two 
Scriptural truths is not ``masked Calvinism'' (``Crypto- 
Calvinism'') but precisely the Scriptural teaching of the Lutheran 
Church as it is presented in detail in the Formula of Concord 
(Triglot, p. 1081, paragraphs 57-59, 60b, 62, 63; M. p. 716f.): 
``That one is hardened, blinded, given over to a reprobate mind, 
while another, who is indeed in the same guilt, is converted 
again, etc. -- in these and similar questions Paul fixes a certain 
limit to us how far we should go, namely, that in the one part we 
should recognize God's judgment. For they are well-deserved 
penalties of sins when God so punished a land or nation for 
despising His Word that the punishment extends also to their 
posterity, as is to be seen in the Jews. And thereby God in some 
lands and persons exhibits His severity to those that are His in 
order to indicate what we all would have well deserved and would 
be worthy and worth, since we act wickedly in opposition to God's 
Word and often grieve the Holy Ghost sorely; in order that we may 
live in the fear of God and acknowledge and praise God's goodness, 
to the exclusion of, and contrary to, our merit in and with us, to 
whom He gives His Word and with whom He leaves it and whom He does 
not harden and reject...And this His righteous, well-deserved 
judgment He displays in some countries, nations and persons in 
order that, when we are placed alongside of them and compared with 
them (quam simillimi illis deprehensi, i.e., and found to be most 
similar to them), we may learn the more diligently to recognize 
and praise God's pure, unmerited grace in the vessels of 
mercy...When we proceed thus far in this article, we remain on the 
right way, as it is written, Hos. 13:9: `O Israel, thou hast 
destroyed thyself; but in Me is thy help.' However, as regards 
these things in this disputation which would soar too high and 
beyond these limits, we should with Paul place the finger upon our 
lips and remember and say, Rom. 9:20: `O man, who art thou that 
repliest against God?'" The Formula of Concord describes the 
mystery which confronts us here not as a mystery in man's heart (a 
``psychological'' mystery), but teaches that, when we try to 
understand why ``one is hardened, blinded, given over to a 
reprobate mind, while another, who is indeed in the same guilt, is 
converted again,'' we enter the domain of the unsearchable 
judgments of God and ways past finding out, which are not revealed 
to us in His Word, but which we shall know in eternal life. 1 Cor. 
13:12.

16. Calvinists solve this mystery, which God has not revealed in 
His Word, by denying the universality of grace; synergists, by 
denying that salvation is by grace alone. Both solutions are 
utterly vicious, since they contradict Scripture and since every 
poor sinner stands in need of, and must cling to, both the 
unrestricted universal grace and the unrestricted ``by grace 
alone,'' lest he despair and perish.

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Rev. Robert E. Smith
Walther Library
Concordia Theological Seminary

E-mail: smithre@mail.ctsfw.edu

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