Trinity and Christian Life

The Regenerate Heart: Reformed vs. Wesleyan Views on Sanctification

44 min · 26. april 2026
episode The Regenerate Heart: Reformed vs. Wesleyan Views on Sanctification cover

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In today’s episode, we tackle the theological epicenter of Protestant soteriology: the state of the regenerate heart. Is the Christian simply "undivided in principle" but practically mixed, locked in a perpetual war against the flesh? Or does the gospel promise an "actually undivided heart" free from willful sin in this present life? We break down the historical, dogmatic, and exegetical roots of the massive divide between the Reformed and Wesleyan-Arminian traditions. We'll guide you through John Owen's highly sober warnings about the relentless presence of indwelling sin, contrasting them with John Wesley's therapeutic vision of the Great Physician healing every spiritual sickness of our nature. Key topics discussed in this episode: The Problem of Indwelling Sin: Why the Reformed tradition views the Christian life as a constant, agonizing state of simul iustus et peccator (simultaneously justified and a sinner) driven by the aggressive necessity of mortification. Entire Sanctification: How Wesleyans argue for a decisive "second work of grace" that totally circumcises the heart, enabling believers to fulfill the command to "be perfect" without claiming absolute angelic sinlessness. Speaking Different Theological Dialects: How the entire debate hinges on fundamentally different definitions of "sin"—is it an ontological corruption of the desires, or strictly a willful transgression of a known law? The Biblical Battlegrounds: We look at how these traditions fiercely debate the meaning of the emphatic "I" in Romans 7, the conflict of the flesh and Spirit in Galatians 5, and the promise of complete sanctification in 1 Thessalonians 5:23. Finding a Synthesis: We explore the modern insights of Simon Chan's Trinitarian Spiritual Theology, examining how the church can hold the eschatological tension between the Reformed emphasis on "conflict" and the Wesleyan emphasis on "victory". Join us as we explore whether the normal Christian life is defined by managing spiritual dysfunction or by expecting radical holiness.

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