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Westminster Confession of Faith 9.1
“God hath endued the will of man with that natural liberty, that it is neither forced, nor, by any absolute necessity of nature, determined to good or evil.”
In this episode of Confessional Moments, we begin Chapter 9 of the Westminster Confession of Faith, turning our attention to the doctrine of free will. The divines carefully establish that man is not a puppet nor a machine, but a willing creature who acts voluntarily according to his own desires. Yet this natural liberty must be rightly understood. Though the will is not forced, it is not morally neutral, nor is it sovereign.
This paragraph guards the biblical balance between human responsibility and divine sovereignty. Man chooses freely, but always according to his nature. The will is free from compulsion, yet—after the Fall—not free from corruption. By clarifying what freedom truly means, the Confession prepares us to understand both the depth of human inability and the necessity of sovereign grace.
This doctrine is deeply pastoral. It removes the excuse of fatalism—“I couldn’t help it”—and the illusion of self-salvation—“I can fix myself.” It humbles the sinner and magnifies grace, showing that true spiritual freedom is not found in autonomy, but in the renewing work of the Spirit who makes sinners willing in the day of Christ’s power.
Scripture Reading & References
Puritan & Reformed Sources Referenced
Key Doctrinal Themes
Natural Liberty
Human Responsibility
Natural vs. Moral Ability
The Necessity of Grace
About the Host
Church Website
By confessionalmomentsWestminster Confession of Faith 9.1
“God hath endued the will of man with that natural liberty, that it is neither forced, nor, by any absolute necessity of nature, determined to good or evil.”
In this episode of Confessional Moments, we begin Chapter 9 of the Westminster Confession of Faith, turning our attention to the doctrine of free will. The divines carefully establish that man is not a puppet nor a machine, but a willing creature who acts voluntarily according to his own desires. Yet this natural liberty must be rightly understood. Though the will is not forced, it is not morally neutral, nor is it sovereign.
This paragraph guards the biblical balance between human responsibility and divine sovereignty. Man chooses freely, but always according to his nature. The will is free from compulsion, yet—after the Fall—not free from corruption. By clarifying what freedom truly means, the Confession prepares us to understand both the depth of human inability and the necessity of sovereign grace.
This doctrine is deeply pastoral. It removes the excuse of fatalism—“I couldn’t help it”—and the illusion of self-salvation—“I can fix myself.” It humbles the sinner and magnifies grace, showing that true spiritual freedom is not found in autonomy, but in the renewing work of the Spirit who makes sinners willing in the day of Christ’s power.
Scripture Reading & References
Puritan & Reformed Sources Referenced
Key Doctrinal Themes
Natural Liberty
Human Responsibility
Natural vs. Moral Ability
The Necessity of Grace
About the Host
Church Website