From Nicene Council
One of the most  dramatic moments in my life for the shaping of my theology took place in a  seminary classroom. One of my professors went to the blackboard and wrote these  words in bold letters: "Regeneration Precedes Faith."
  
These words were a  shock to my system. I had entered seminary believing that the key work of man to  effect rebirth was faith. I thought that we first had to believe in Christ in  order to be born again. I use the words in order here for a reason. I was  thinking in terms of steps that must be taken in a certain sequence. I had put  faith at the beginning. The order looked something like this:
   
"Faith - rebirth  -justification."
  
I hadn’t thought that  matter through very carefully. Nor had I listened carefully to Jesus’ words to  Nicodemus. I assumed that even though I was a sinner, a person born of the flesh  and living in the flesh, I still had a little island of righteousness, a tiny  deposit of spiritual power left within my soul to enable me to respond to the  Gospel on my own. Perhaps I had been confused by the teaching of the Roman  Catholic Church. Rome, and many other branches of Christendom, had taught that  regeneration is gracious; it cannot happen apart from the help of God.
   
No man has the power  to raise himself from spiritual death. Divine assistance is necessary. This  grace, according to Rome, comes in the form of what is called prevenient grace.  "Prevenient" means that which comes from something else. Rome adds to this  prevenient grace the requirement that we must "cooperate with it and assent to  it" before it can take hold in our hearts.
  
This concept of  cooperation is at best a half-truth. Yes, the faith we exercise is our faith.  God does not do the believing for us. When I respond to Christ, it is my  response, my faith, my trust that is being exercised. The issue, however, goes  deeper. The question still remains: "Do I cooperate with God's grace before I am  born again, or does the cooperation occur after?" Another way of asking this  question is to ask if regeneration is monergistic or synergistic. Is it  operative or cooperative? Is it effectual or dependent? Some of these words are  theological terms that require further explanation.
  
A monergistic work is  a work produced singly, by one person. The prefix mono means one. The word erg  refers to a unit of work. Words like energy are built upon this root. A  synergistic work is one that involves cooperation between two or more persons or  things. 
The prefix syn - 
means "together  with." I labor this distinction for a reason. The debate between Rome and Luther  hung on this single point. At issue was this: Is regeneration a monergistic work  of God or a synergistic work that requires cooperation between man and God? When  my professor wrote "Regeneration precedes faith" on the blackboard, he was  clearly siding with the monergistic answer. After a person is regenerated, that  person cooperates by exercising faith and trust. 
But the first step is the work  of God and of God alone.
  
The reason we do not  cooperate with regenerating grace before it acts upon us and in us is because we  can- not. We cannot because we are spiritually dead. We can no more assist the  Holy Spirit in the quickening of our souls to spiritual life than Lazarus could  help Jesus raise him for the dead.
  
When I began to  wrestle with the Professor's argument, I was surprised to learn that his  strange-sounding teaching was not novel. Augustine, Martin Luther, John Calvin,  Jonathan Edwards, George Whitefield - even the great medieval theologian Thomas  Aquinas taught this doctrine. Thomas Aquinas is the Doctor Angelicus of the  Roman Catholic Church. For centuries his theological teaching was accepted as  official dogma by most Catholics. So he was the last person I expected to hold  such a view of regeneration. Yet Aquinas insisted that regenerating grace is  operative grace, not cooperative grace. Aquinas spoke of prevenient grace, but  he spoke of a grace that comes before faith, which is regeneration.
   
These giants of  Christian history derived their view from Holy Scripture. The key phrase in  Paul's Letter to the Ephesians is this: "...even when we were dead in  trespasses, made us alive together with Christ (by grace have you been saved)"  (Eph. 2:5). Here Paul locates the time when regeneration occurs. It takes place  'when we were dead.' With one thunderbolt of apostolic revelation all attempts  to give the initiative in regeneration to man are smashed. Again, dead men do  not cooperate with grace. Unless regeneration takes place first, there is no  possibility of faith.
  
This says nothing  different from what Jesus said to Nicodemus. Unless a man is born again first,  he cannot possibly see or enter the kingdom of God. If we believe that faith  precedes regeneration, then we set our thinking and therefore ourselves in  direct opposition not only to giants of Christian history but also to the  teaching of Paul and of our Lord Himself. 
(from the book, The  Mystery of the Holy Spirit, Tyndale House, 1990
 

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