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Westminster Confession of Faith 9.3
“Man, by his fall into a state of sin, hath wholly lost all ability of will to any spiritual good accompanying salvation: so as, a natural man being altogether averse from that good, and dead in sin, is not able by his own strength to convert himself, or to prepare himself thereunto.”
In this episode of Confessional Moments, we continue our study of Chapter 9 of the Westminster Confession of Faith by examining the condition of the human will after the fall. The Confession teaches that humanity did not merely lose innocence when Adam sinned — we lost our spiritual ability. Fallen man still possesses a will, but that will is corrupted, enslaved to sin, and unable to pursue the spiritual good that leads to salvation.
Drawing from Scripture and the insights of the Puritan tradition, this episode explains why fallen humanity is described in the Bible as “dead in sin,” why sinners cannot convert themselves, and why salvation must begin with the sovereign work of God in regeneration. The Confession rejects the idea that man can prepare himself for grace, emphasizing instead that even the first movement toward God is the result of divine mercy.
Though this doctrine humbles us, it also fills us with hope. The God who commands sinners to come to Christ is the same God who raises the spiritually dead and liberates the will through the power of the Holy Spirit.
Scripture Reading & References
Puritan & Reformed Sources Referenced
Key Doctrinal Themes
Total Depravity
The Bondage of the Will
Spiritual Death
Regeneration and Sovereign Grace
About the Host
Church Website
By confessionalmomentsWestminster Confession of Faith 9.3
“Man, by his fall into a state of sin, hath wholly lost all ability of will to any spiritual good accompanying salvation: so as, a natural man being altogether averse from that good, and dead in sin, is not able by his own strength to convert himself, or to prepare himself thereunto.”
In this episode of Confessional Moments, we continue our study of Chapter 9 of the Westminster Confession of Faith by examining the condition of the human will after the fall. The Confession teaches that humanity did not merely lose innocence when Adam sinned — we lost our spiritual ability. Fallen man still possesses a will, but that will is corrupted, enslaved to sin, and unable to pursue the spiritual good that leads to salvation.
Drawing from Scripture and the insights of the Puritan tradition, this episode explains why fallen humanity is described in the Bible as “dead in sin,” why sinners cannot convert themselves, and why salvation must begin with the sovereign work of God in regeneration. The Confession rejects the idea that man can prepare himself for grace, emphasizing instead that even the first movement toward God is the result of divine mercy.
Though this doctrine humbles us, it also fills us with hope. The God who commands sinners to come to Christ is the same God who raises the spiritually dead and liberates the will through the power of the Holy Spirit.
Scripture Reading & References
Puritan & Reformed Sources Referenced
Key Doctrinal Themes
Total Depravity
The Bondage of the Will
Spiritual Death
Regeneration and Sovereign Grace
About the Host
Church Website