UNDERSTANDING DEPRAVITY
By Dr. M. R. Dowler
According to a 2013 poll of the
Ten Most Evil Men in History, not surprisingly Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin
were listed as numbers one and two. But the last man mentioned is a name I had
never heard of---Friedrich Jackeln, a Nazi SS commander responsible for the
death of over 100,000 Jews, Russians and other undesirables during World War 2.
His mobile extermination unit was so efficient in their mass murder that their
method was named the Jeckeln System. Evil? Yes. Depraved? On a human level; most
definitely.
Depravity is an often
misunderstood theological concept, even among Calvinists who hold total
depravity as a major tenet of their doctrine. The word depravity comes from the
Latin word “depravare” meaning totally corrupt or completely bent. The Bible
emphatically declares that all of humanity are sinners (Ecclesiastes 7:20 ; Romans 3:10 -12,
23; 5:12 ), helpless and hopeless
without Jesus Christ (John 14:6; 15:5). And Paul in Romans 1 outlines the
downward slide of individuals and cultures devoid of God. But is all of
unregenerate humanity depraved?
There are three details about
depravity to consider---first, an unsaved person (no matter how wicked they may
be) is not completely insensitive to conscience and matters of right and wrong
(Romans 1:19 , 21; 2:15 ). Second, a depraved person is not continually
wicked. Jesus, in the midst of His harshest condemnation, commended the
religious Pharisees for their altruistic works (Matthew 23:23 ), and history tells us that Hitler loved dogs, fine
art, sweet pastries and children (German children of course). Lastly, total
depravity does not mean a person engages in every possible form of sin.
So is all of unsaved humanity
totally depraved? Not in the theological sense. There is coming a tragic day
when many morally-upright people will stand in judgment before a holy and
righteous God. They will cite many of the good works done during their lifetime
(Matthew 7:21 -23). But their eternal
fate has already been determined by their neglect of salvation through faith in
the Lord Jesus Christ (Hebrews 2:3; Ephesians 2:8-9). Think about it.