Enough is enough. Attacking the New Atheists is like shooting a man giving himself a lethal injection. ( Faith and Theology: Another pile of doodlings )
Category Archives: Bible & Theology
We might say that the Psalmist reminds himself of his baptism. Baptism is the seal of the God who is a water brook, the God who slakes our thirst, the Rock of Israel who gave water in the wilderness. Baptism is a promise in water that God will never leave us to dry up in the desert. Baptism is the currency of the marketplace where God offers waters to everyone who thirsts. Hope in baptism is hope in God, the God whose life bursts out always and again like a flower springing from dry ground. ( Peter J. Leithart » Blog Archive » Baptismal meditation)
When is an ox not an ox?
Once upon a time, proving the authority of Old Testament commands, even obscure ones, was really important to me. (Still is, but in a slightly different way). One of my favorite prooftexts was First Timothy 5.17-18:
Let the elders who rule well be considered worthy of double honor, especially those who labor in preaching and teaching. For the Scripture says, “You shall not muzzle an ox when it treads out the grain,” and, “The laborer deserves his wages.”
“You see that?” I would ask, with rhetorical flourish. Paul appeals to an “obscure” case law in Deuteronomy (25.4) to prove that pastors should be paid.
But I felt a little bit guilty about it, because I knew there was another NT passage that made the same point with the same law. I avoided it because it raised issues that I found wholly mysterious and weird. Thus, we read in First Corinthians 9:
This is my defense to those who would examine me. Do we not have the right to eat and drink? Do we not have the right to take along a believing wife,as do the other apostles and the brothers of the Lord and Cephas? Or is it only Barnabas and I who have no right to refrain from working for a living? Who serves as a soldier at his own expense? Who plants a vineyard without eating any of its fruit? Or who tends a flock without getting some of the milk?
Do I say these things on human authority? Does not the Law say the same? For it is written in the Law of Moses, “You shall not muzzle an ox when it treads out the grain.” Is it for oxen that God is concerned? Does he not certainly speak for our sake? It was written for our sake, because the plowman should plow in hope and the thresher thresh in hope of sharing in the crop. If we have sown spiritual things among you, is it too much if we reap material things from you? If others share this rightful claim on you, do not we even more?
This caused me all sorts of problems. I wanted a simple argument that a law about oxen should mean something for human beings. But Paul’s enthusiastic appeal to Deuteronomy 25.4 said more than that: it said that oxen really weren’t God’s primary concern in the law at all. I assume that the Israelites were, indeed, really and literally not supposed to muzzle an ox while using him to thresh grain, but Paul seems clear to me that more is going on. Perhaps even the treatment of the ox is itself a lesson pointing to ethical obligations we have towards fellow humans.
This bothered me. It complicated my exegetical training and hermeneutical assumptions. I didn’t know what to do with the passage so I avoided it.
Another complication in the passage: How does Paul jump from oxen to a specific kind of human work such as plowmen and threshers. While Paul rhetorically implies God is not really concerned about oxen in the passage, he doesn’t say precisely that God was writing about pastors. Rather, it seems God was writing about farmers, from which Paul extrapolates to pastors and evangelists. (This part doesn’t seem so hard since Jesus preached a great deal using parables in other analogies that moved from agriculture to preaching.)
Much later, thanks to something I heard somewhere by Jim Jordan, I was able to look at Deuteronomy 25.4 in context and notice the connections.
You shall not muzzle an ox when it is treading out the grain. If brothers dwell together, and one of them dies and has no son, the wife of the dead man shall not be married outside the family to a stranger. Her husband’s brother shall go in to her and take her as his wife and perform the duty of a husband’s brother to her. And the first son whom she bears shall succeed to the name of his dead brother, that his name may not be blotted out of Israel. And if the man does not wish to take his brother’s wife, then his brother’s wife shall go up to the gate to the elders and say, “My husband’s brother refuses to perpetuate his brother’s name in Israel; he will not perform the duty of a husband’s brother to me.” Then the elders of his city shall call him and speak to him, and if he persists, saying, “I do not wish to take her,” then his brother’s wife shall go up to him in the presence of the elders and pull his sandal off his foot and spit in his face. And she shall answer and say, “So shall it be done to the man who does not build up his brother’s house.” And the name of his house shall be called in Israel, “The house of him who had his sandal pulled off.”
So why wouldn’t the brother want to do his duty. Perhaps he just despises his sister-in-law, but that seems handled by the condition: “If brothers dwell together.” If there was going to be a problem it should have come out before and agreements made. We have this law mentioned in two places that I know of. The first is in Genesis 38 (the law seems to be reiterated and redefined by Moses in Deuter0nomy, but not created new by him or by God at that point). The second is in Ruth 4. In the first place a brother spills his seed so that the widow remains childless and he will inherit his brother’s property. In the second the man is not a brother who lived with the deceased husband so he is not under the same level of obligation (though in the providence of God the exchange of a shoe is used to make the declaration and the man’s name is totally forgotten in the Biblical record while Boaz’s is remembered).
What is the common issue in all these stories and laws. It seems there is a worry about who gets to profit from the land. If a man only has one son, the son for his dead brother, then the dead brother’s name and inheritance all go to the son named after the brother. Unless there is a second son by that woman or another wife, there will be no inheritance for the surviving brother who is doing his duty for his dead brother’s widow.
But isn’t there another issue that might be a consideration? What about the question of who gets to profit from the dead brother’s land before it passes on to the son and heir of the dead brother?
The ESV puts a subhead separating the law prohibiting the muzzling of the ox in Deuteronomy 25.4 and the law of the brothers and the widow in Deuteronomy 25.5ff. I think Paul is rejecting that subhead. The first principle established is that while the surviving brother is working or renting out the dead brother’s property, and is raising his brother’s son by his brother’s widow, that he has a right to profit from the land. “It was written for our sake, because the plowman should plow in hope and the thresher thresh in hope of sharing in the crop.”
So the ox stood for the surviving brother laboring ultimately for the inheritance of his dead brother’s heir, but having a right to still enjoy the fruits of his labor.
The question this raises for me is: Are there other places in the Law in which animals are understood to stand for people.
Adam should have lived by faith alone
I have stated with other pastors:
We affirm that Adam was in a covenant of life with the triune God in the Garden of Eden, in which arrangement Adam was required to obey God completely, from the heart. We hold further that all such obedience, had it occurred, would have been rendered from a heart of faith alone, in a spirit of loving trust. Adam was created to progress from immature glory to mature glory, but that glorification too would have been a gift of grace, received by faith alone.
I stated this because the Fall of Adam was based on a lie that claimed God was unfaithful to his promises:
But the serpent said to the woman, “You will not surely die. For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.” (from Genesis 3)
So Adam’s obedience depended on faith–trust in God’s promises. Only God’s gracious promise to Adam could be the basis for Adam claiming anything from God as he continued to obey God about the prohibition on the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. Since God created Adam ex nihilo it would be a violation of the creator/creature distinction to pretend that Adam by his obedience could have intrinsically merited anything from God. His obedience could have only been from faith alone.
There is no other way to relate to the true God except by trusting in his grace. Paul witnessed to the pagan Athenians what it would mean to repent of false finite gods and acknowledge the true God:
The God who made the world and everything in it, being Lord of heaven and earth, does not live in temples made by man, nor is he served by human hands, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives to all mankind life and breath and everything.
Some people think that, before sin entered the world, man was in a position to earn or merit blessing from God. But, while it is true that sin corrupts everything we do now, even apart from sin our works could never put God in our debt. The older Protestant theologians knew this. One of them, James Fisher, authored a “catechism”–a series of question and answers for the purpose of teaching children Christian doctrine–which included a question about the first human being: “Was there any proportion between Adam’s obedience, though sinless, and the life that was promised?” The answer is: “There can be no proportion between the obedience of a finite creature, however perfect, and the enjoyment of the infinite God.”
The catechism goes on: “Why could not Adam’s perfect obedience be meritorious of eternal life?” and answers, “Because perfect obedience was no more than what he was bound to, by virtue of his natural dependence on God, as a reasonable creature made after his image.” Finally, the questions is asked: “Could he have claimed the reward as a debt, in case he had continued in his obedience?” The answer is that all rewards are of God’s grace, his unmerited favor: “He could have claimed it only as a pactional debt, in virtue of the covenant promise, by which God became debtor to his own faithfulness, but not in virtue of any intrinsic merit of his obedience, Luke 17:10.” By “pactional” the author means that it was a only by an gracious decision to bind himself to a promise that God could be obligated in the first place.
This last answer is accompanied by a Scripture text, Luke 17.10: “Will any one of you who has a servant plowing or keeping sheep say to him when he has come in from the field, ‘Come at once and recline at table’? Will he not rather say to him, ‘Prepare supper for me, and dress properly, and serve me while I eat and drink, and afterward you will eat and drink’? Does he thank the servant because he did what was commanded? So you also, when you have done all that you were commanded, say, ‘We are unworthy servants; we have only done what was our duty.’”
James Fisher was only one of many who understood the true God and therefore rejected all human merit. Reformed theologian John Ball writes the common consensus, appealing to the same text that Fisher uses:
In this state and condition Adam’s obedience should have been rewarded in justice, but he could not have merited that reward. Happiness should have been conferred upon him, or continued unto him for his works, but they had not deserved the continuance thereof: for it is impossible the creature should merit of the Creator, because when he hath done all that he can, he is an unprofitable servant, he hath done but his duty (A Treatise of the Covenant of Grace).
Unworthy servants are what we are, even when we have done all our duty! How much less can we ever rightfully claim to obligate God to reward us when we both fail to do our duty and actively violate God’s commands every day?
The fact is, when human beings are attracted to the idea of dealing with God on the basis of their merits, they are not only denying their own sinfulness before a Holy God, but they are denying who God is. Make no mistake, the issue here is not merely the sinfulness of sin but the deity of God. As the Westminster Confession states in chapter 2, paragraph 2:
God hath all life, glory, goodness, blessedness, in and of himself; and is alone in and unto himself all-sufficient, not standing in need of any creatures which he hath made, nor deriving any glory from them, but only manifesting his own glory in, by, unto, and upon them. He is the alone fountain of all being, of whom, through whom, and to whom are all things; and hath most sovereign dominion over them, to do by them, for them, or upon them whatsoever himself pleaseth.
For Adam to claim that he could earn glory from God, that he could intrinsically merit from him some reward, would be truly insane–an exchanging of the creature for the Creator. We might as well worship beasts as pretend that we could ever, under any circumstances, offer God works that are truly meritorious before him when he himself has enabled and ordained for us to do every good deed we produce.
Thus, our the Westminster Confession goes on to affirm that we can never merit anything from God, not only because of our sinfulness in comparison to God’s holiness, but also because of our finitude in comparison to God’s transcendance:
We cannot by our best works merit pardon of sin, or eternal life at the hand of God, by reason of the great disproportion that is between them and the glory to come; and the infinite distance that is between us and God, whom, by them, we can neither profit, nor satisfy for the debt of our former sins, but when we have done all we can, we have done but our duty, and are unprofitable servants: and because, as they are good, they proceed from his Spirit; and as they are wrought by us, they are defiled, and mixed with so much weakness and imperfection, that they cannot endure the severity of God’s judgment (16.5; emphasis added).
Happily, God is gracious. Before sin entered the world, God established a gracious relationship with humanity in Adam whereby he would inherit eternal glory if he persevered in faith and obedience.
But Adam did not remain in the vine (John 15.1ff). In the words of the sixteenth-century Protestant French Confession of Faith, “by his own guilt he fell from the grace which he received.” Rather than destroying Adam and Eve in condemnation, God gave exponentially greater grace to deal with sin and restore man to the glory that he had failed to inherit. He sent His own Son to die in our condemnation on the cross in order to give Jesus the exaltation for us that Adam had failed to trust Him to give him.
There have been recently some attempts to deny this basic aspect of creaturely existence and the true God, as if a creature could hypothetically keep a covenant with God by trusting in his own merits rather than in God’s grace and faithfulness to His graciously-given promises. Furthermore, this false teaching is specifically claimed to be some special insight of Reformed Theology.
The French Confession, quoted above, was approved by John Calvin who himself taught the same thing. In 1536 he wrote in his first edition of the Institutes of the Christian Religion,
In order for us to come to a sure knowledge of ourselves, we must first grasp that Adam, parent of us all, was created in the image and likeness of God. That is, he was endowed with wisdom, righteousness, holiness, and was so clinging by these gifts of grace to God that he could have lived forever in Him, if he had stood fast in the uprightness God had given him. But when Adam slipped into sin, this image and likeness of God was cancelled and effaced, that is, he lost all the benefits of divine grace, by which he could have been led back into the way of life (emphasis added).
Twenty-four years later, Calvin still taught the same thing in his final version of the Institutes,
If man had no title to glory in himself, when, by the kindness of his Maker, he was distinguished by the noblest ornaments, how much ought he to be humbled now, when his ingratitude has thrust him down from the highest glory to extreme ignominy? At the time when he was raised to the highest pinnacle of honor, all which Scripture attributes to him is, that he was created in the image of God, thereby intimating that the blessings in which his happiness consisted were not his own, but derived by divine communication. What remains, therefore, now that man is stripped of all his glory, than to acknowledge the God for whose kindness he failed to be grateful, when he was loaded with the riches of his grace? Not having glorified him by the acknowledgment of his blessings, now, at least, he ought to glorify him by the confession of his poverty (2.2.1; italics added).
Indeed, it is a matter of Confessional orthodoxy for those in the continental Reformed tradition to affirm that upright, sinless creatures only live by the grace of God:
He also created the angels good, to be His messengers and to serve His elect; some of whom are fallen from that excellency in which God created them into everlasting perdition, and the others have by the grace of God remained steadfast and continued in their first state (The Belgic Confession, Article 12).
If even sinless angels are preserved by the grace of God for eternal life, why should Adam be any different? It is one thing to disagree with the Belgic Confession here, but it is altogether different to claim that it is a heretical compromise of the Gospel. Nor is this a simply a pragmatic matter of how we speak theologically. Luke 2.52 explicitly says that the grace of God was upon Jesus. Any claim that grace only refers to blessing shown to a sinner is an attack on the holiness of our Lord.
But there is more: William Ames writes in his Marrow of Theology of God’s covenant with Adam that, “In this covenant the moral deed of the intelligent creature lead either to happiness as a reward or to unhappiness as a punishment. The latter is deserved; the former is not” (1.10.11).
Likewise, Zacharias Ursinus teaches in his Commentary on the Heidelberg Catechismthat,
even if our works were perfectly good, yet they could not merit eternal life, inasmuch as they are due from us. A reward is due to evil works according to the order of justice; but not unto good works, because we are bound to do them as the creatures of God; but no one can bind God, on the other hand, by any works or means to confer any benefit upon him. Evil works, again, in their very design oppose and injure God, whilst good works add nothing to his felicity (p. 335).
Francis Turretin agrees with this overwhelming testimony. In the first place he defines “merit” in a way that rules out the possibility that a creature could merit anything from the Creator:
To be true merit, then, these five conditions are demanded: (1) that the “work be undue”–for no one merits by paying what he owes (Luke 17.10), he only satisfies; (2) that it be ours–for no one can be said to merit from another; (3) that it be absolutely perfect and free from all taint–for where sin is there merit cannot be; (4) that it be equal and proportioned to the reward and pay; otherwise it would be a gift, not merit. (5) that the reward be due to such a work from justice—whence an “undue work” is commonly defined to be one that “makes a reward due in the order of justice.” (17.5.4; p. 712).
This would lead one to expect that Turretin would deny that sinless “legal obedience” could ever be meritorious in God’s sight. Turretin explicitly meets this expectation. Even if sinless, “there is no merit properly so called of man before God” (Ibid). “Thus, Adam himself, if he had persevered, would not have merited life in strict justice” (Ibid). And, for a sinless being “the legal condition has the relation of a meritorious cause (at least congruously and improperly)” (12.3.6; p. 186; emphasis added). In other words it was emphatically not “merit properly so called.” Joel Garver summarizes:
Having been educated at several prominent Reformed institutions on the Continent, Turretin returned to Geneva where he remained a professor of theology from 1653 onward. While there he published his greatest work, Institutio theologiae elenctiae from 1679-1685. Regarding prelapsarian grace in general, he writes that Adam’s “original righteousness can properly be called ‘grace’ or a ‘gratuitous gift’ (and so not due on the part of God, just as the nature itself also, created by him)” (Institutes 5.11.16).
Regarding the gratuitous promise of life held forth in the prelapsarian covenant of nature, Turretin argues that God promises not only bodily immortality, but also a transformed heavenly life. Had Adam persevered in obedience, the immortality of his body would only have been “through the dignity of original righteousness and the power of God’s special grace” (5.12.9). Moreover, Adam’s elevation to heavenly life would not have been a matter of mere justice, but also “the goodness of God” who is “plenteous in mercy” and by whom Adam would “be gifted” with heavenly life (8.6.6, 8).
For Turretin, not only was grace involved in Adam’s creation, in God’s promise, and in its reward, but Adam was also given “sufficient grace” by which to remain obedient to that first covenant, a grace that Turretin describes as “habitual and internal” (9.7.14-17).
Turretin’s nephew, Benedict Pictet, reiterated this Reformed Orthodox position. His Christian Theology was translated by Frederick Reyroux and it was published by the Presbyterian Board of Publication in Philadelphia before January of 1846. At that time, the issue of the Princeton Review announced the publication and declared,
In this small but compact volume, we have a comprehensive epitome of Theology; from the pen of one of the most distinguished theologians of Geneva. The great excellence of Pictet, is simplicity and perspicuity. He is, even in his large work, much less scholastic, than his predecessors, and less disposed perhaps to press his statements beyond the limits of certain knowledge. We are glad to see so sound and readable a book placed within the reach of all classes of readers (vol 18, issue 1, “Short Notices,” p. 180).
Pictet wrote regarding God’s covenant with Adam that it involved both promise and warning. The warning involves a rather straightforward exposition of the text of Genesis. Proving that a promise was also involved, however, requires some extrapolation, because the future reward is not stated in the text. Pictet reasons from God’s character saying:
With regard to the promise of the covenant, though it is not expressly laid down, it is sufficiently clear from the threatening of death, which is opposed to it; for although God owes nothing to his creature, yet as the whole scripture sets him forth to us as slow to anger and abundant in mercy, it is not at all probable, that God denounced upon man the threat of eternal punishment, and at the same time gave him no promise (p. 141).
Pictet also deals with the principle of the possibility of meritorious works later in his book. In dealing with the good works of a believer, and proving “the necessity of good works,” he goes on to point out that such necessary good works are not meritorious before God. In doing so he gives four reasons (pp 332, 333). At least two of these would apply to all creatures regardless of sin or innocence. First “a meritorious work must be one that is not due, for no one can have any merit in paying what he owes; but good works are due; ‘When ye shall have done all those things which are commanded you, say, We are unprofitable servants: we have done that which it was out duty to do’ (Luke 17.10).” Second, there must be a “proportion” between “the good work and the promised reward; but there is no proportion between the two in the present case; not even when the good work is martyrdom, the most excellent of all. For (all) ‘the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed,’ (Romans 8.18).”
But Pictet not only speaks of good works in general, but specifically addresses the issue of how good works would have related to Adam’s vindication and glorification if he had continued in faith and obedience rather than falling into unbelief and disobedience. He writes that “if the first man had persevered in innocence, he would have been justified by the fulfillment of the natural law which God had engraven on his heart, and of the other commandments which God might have enjoined on him; in short, by perfectly loving God and his neighbor” (p. 312). Thus, if Adam had persevered he would have been declared righteous and “acquired a right to eternal glory, not indeed as if he had properly merited it, for the creature can merit nothing from the Creator, but according to the free promise and Covenant of God” (Ibid.).
As can be seen by the fact that Pictet was translated, American theologians did not reject Turrettin’s faithful summary of the Reformed heritage; far less did they condemn it as a subversion of the Gospel. A. A. Hodge’s Outlines of Theology, published in 1860, say of the covenant of works: “It was also essentially a gracious covenant, because although every creature is, as such, bound to serve the Creator to the full extent of his powers, the Creator cannot be bound as a mere matter of justice to grace the creature fellowship with himself.” Also in his Evangelical Theology: A Course of Popular Lectures (1890), he writes, “God offered to man in this gracious Covenant of Works the opportunity of accepting his grace and receiving his covenant gift of a confirmed holy character” (167).
How does one receive a gift and accept grace? Only by faith.
It is true that faith is more emphasized in the New Covenant for good reason. There is more to trust God for, just as the Covenant of Grace is a good names since there is more grace involved. Not only does God give apart from merit but he gives in the presence of, and to eradicated, positive demerit, after the fall. Also, the content of the faith is different, involving now the work of a mediator, in whom we must believe and trust.
Finally, it is sophistry to claim that because the Westminster Confession states that the Covenant of Works made promises “upon condition of perfect and personal obedience” that this obedience could therefore be meritorious. The same language of “condition” is used to refer to faith in the Covenant of Grace in the Westminster Larger Catechism
Q. 32. How is the grace of God manifested in the second covenant?
A. The grace of God is manifested in the second covenant, in that he freely provideth and offereth to sinners a mediator, and life and salvation by him; and requiring faith as the condition to interest them in him, promiseth and giveth his Holy Spirit to all his elect, to work in them that faith, with all other saving graces; and to enable them unto all holy obedience, as the evidence of the truth of their faith and thankfulness to God, and as the way which he hath appointed them to salvation.
Faith is not meritorious but it is a condition of the covenant. As mentioned before, here the content of the faith is different than Adam’s, so naturally it is emphasized. But that doesn’t mean that unfallen men and angels are supposed to imagine they can earn or merit blessing from God. They can only live by his gifts and promises, trusting in his faithfulness.
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Four Rivers and OT History
A river flowed out of Eden to water the garden, and there it divided and became four rivers. The name of the first is the Pishon. It is the one that flowed around the whole land of Havilah, where there is gold. And the gold of that land is good; bdellium and onyx stone are there. The name of the second river is the Gihon. It is the one that flowed around the whole land of Cush. And the name of the third river is the Tigris, which flows east of Assyria. And the fourth river is the Euphrates.
So Genesis 2 sums up the geopolitical/spiritual history of the entire Hebrew Scriptures.
Two of these four rivers are gone, but if they had a common source up near the present sources of the Tigris and Euphrates then we know that the Gihon traveled south through Egypt to Ethiopia (Cush) and the Pishon must have gone down through Canaan to get to Arabia (Havilah). This, incidentally, puts the garden on a plateau near Mt. Ararat.
These riverbeds apparantly maintained some garden-of-eden-like properties, even if the rivers after the flood flowed in different directions. In Genesis 13 we read:
And Lot lifted up his eyes and saw that the Jordan Valley was well watered everywhere like the garden of the Lord, like the land of Egypt, in the direction of Zoar.
So the circle of the Jordan was comprable to the Garden of Eden and to Egypt. The situation drastically changes in the Jordan Valley a little later in the book of Genesis and Lot must be rescued by angels from it (after eating unleavened bread with them and having his door protected from destroyers). Later, while the Israelites are sent to prosper in Goshen temporarily, they too have to leave to go to an entirely new place. Abram had initially be led from Mespolamia and later his desendants are housed there. But, again, eventually they must leave. The old creation has to be left behind, even when it seems like it is blessed. At best these are temporary garden-shelters, at worst (and eventually) false Eden-sanctuaries.
Note that when the people of Israel are led back to the Promised Land, there is no more circle of the Jordan. Moses emphasizes that in there new home there will be no more seeming provision through a river, but rather they will have to trust God daily and yearly for their food:
“You shall therefore keep the whole commandment that I command you today, that you may be strong, and go in and take possession of the land that you are going over to possess, and that you may live long in the land that the Lord swore to your fathers to give to them and to their offspring, a land flowing with milk and honey. For the land that you are entering to take possession of it is not like the land of Egypt, from which you have come, where you sowed your seed and irrigated it, like a garden of vegetables. But the land that you are going over to possess is a land of hills and valleys, which drinks water by the rain from heaven, a land that the Lord your God cares for. The eyes of the Lord your God are always upon it, from the beginning of the year to the end of the year (Deuteronomy 11.8-12).
So they are not only leaving the “down-river” land of Goshen, but are returning to a land whose connection to the old Eden has been severed. Eventually, when they fail to trust God, they have to be put back in Mesopotamia for awhile.
In the New Testament world Eden finally gets left behind. The Kingdom spreads West from the world of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Israel.
Love and wrath are no more equally ultimate than good and evil
I recently listened through Augustine’s Confessions, and thus have had reason to think more about Manicheanism.
Evil, Augustine came to realize, cannot be a thing in itself. It can only be a privation–a corruption of what is created which all must be originally good because it was created by a good God.
And if that is true, then we have to say the same about God’s character regarding God’s love and wrath. Wrath is not a primary attribute but rather a derived one.
God is not dependent on creation. This is why the Trinity must be true (or, if we were to be speculative rather than Scriptural, why there must be some sort of plurality in God). A unitarian God would have no one to love unless he created. He would be dependent on creation or love would not be an essential attribute.
But while love can exist in the Trinity from all eternity; wrath cannot. Wrath is not essential to God’s being. It is a secondary response, an application of God’s integrity and his love to the issue of sin and hatred.
The Father loves the Son and the Spirit and wishes to vindicate them both from their enemies. The same (in some unique way appropriate to them) is true of the Son and Spirit in their relations to the other two persons in the Trinity. The wrath on the enemies is a secondary issue. The essential attribute is God’s love.
God is love.
If “equal ultimacy” between love and wrath were really possible, then there could be no logical problem with Manicheanism. If there can be equal ultimates, then why not two “gods” who are true deity?
The triune God is the archetype of all covenantal relations
We affirm that the triune God is the archetype of all covenantal relations. All faithful theology and life is conducted in union with and imitation of the way God eternally is, and so we seek to understand all that the Bible teaches—on covenant, on law, on gospel, on predestination, on sacraments, on the Church—in the light of an explicit Trinitarian understanding.
This is, of course, the understanding of Reformed Covenant theology. Dr. Ligon Duncan, for example, teaches:
Covenant theology flows from the trinitarian life and work of God. God’s covenant communion with us is modeled on and a reflection of the intra-trinitarian relationships. The shared life, the fellowship of the persons of the Holy Trinity, what theologians call perichoresis or circumincessio, is the archetype of the relationship the gracious covenant God shares with His elect and redeemed people. God’s commitments in the eternal covenant of redemptive find space-time realization in the covenant of grace.
Dr. Duncan is restating the common Reformed truth articulated by Dr. Louis Berkhof in his Systematic Theology (p. 263):
The covenant idea developed in history before God made any formal use of the concept in the revelation of redemption. Covenants among men had been made long before God established His covenant with Noah and with Abraham, and this prepared men to understand the significance of a covenant in a world divided by sin, and helped them to understand the divine relation, when it presented man’s relation to God as a covenant relation. This does not mean, however, that the covenant idea originated with man and was then borrowed by God as an appropriate form for the description of the mutual relationship between between Himself and man. Quite the opposite is true; the archetype of all covenant life is found in the trinitarian being of God, and what is seen among men is but a faint copy (ectype) of this. God so ordered the life of man that the covenant idea should develop there as one of the pillars of social life, and after it had so developed, He formally introduced it as an expression of the existing relation between Himself and man.
So in Reformed Covenant Theology: God’s very being, as trinity, is covenantal.
We see this is true from several passages, not least the creation of humanity in the first chapter of the Bible:
So God created man in his own image,
in the image of God he created him;
male and female he created them (Genesis 1.27).
Marriage is not explicitly called a covenant until Malachi, but it is implied in Genesis. And we see here that marriage, as a covenantal relationship, reflects the image of God. God is a community. God is a covenant relationship between persons.
Likewise the Church reflects the unity of the Father and the Son in the Spirit. As Jesus prays:
Holy Father, keep them in your name, which you have given me, that they may be one, even as we are one… I do not ask for these only, but also for those who will believe in me through their word, that they may all be one, just as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they also may be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me. The glory that you have given me I have given to them, that they may be one even as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may become perfectly one, so that the world may know that you sent me and loved them even as you loved me.
This unity is a unity in covenant. Thus, the Trinity is the foundational source and the church covenant reflects the Trinitarian unity in diversity.
Thus we see the concrete reality behind the affirmation “God is love” (First John 4.8, 16).
In the world today, embrace by Darwinian materialism, the most fundamental reality is violence. According to Christianity, the most fundamental reality is love in community. Unlike what is the case in unitarian religions, God was in loving relationship as an essential part of his nature. He did not need to create in order to have community and love. He created as an overflowing expression of community and love–Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Related: Affirming Justification by Faith Alone According to the Westminster Standards.
The prayer of a crucified criminal has great power
Is anyone among you sick? Let him call for the elders of the church, and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord. And the prayer of faith will save the one who is sick, and the Lord will raise him up. And if he has committed sins, he will be forgiven. Therefore, confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous person has great power as it is working. Elijah was a man with a nature like ours, and he prayed fervently that it might not rain, and for three years and six months it did not rain on the earth. Then he prayed again, and heaven gave rain, and the earth bore its fruit (James 5.14-18).
I wrote about this passage here, pointing out that “righteous” is not some great moral attainment, but any believing Christian. Having written about the criminal on the cross asking Jesus to remember him, I now realize that the story of his request and Jesus’ answer is a perfect example of what James is describing.
Does that surprise you?
John Calvin and Peter Leithart take on Trent on Baptism
Trent states: “Whosoever affirms that new-born infants are not to be baptized, even though they are the children of baptized parents, or says that they are indeed baptized for the remission of sins, but derive no original sin from Adam, which requires to be expiated by the laver of regeneration in order to obtain eternal life — whence it follows, that in them the form of baptism for the remission of sins is not true but false, let him be anathema; seeing that the words of the Apostle, ‘By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin, and so death passed upon all men, inasmuch as all have sinned,’ cannot be understood in any other sense than that in which the Church everywhere diffused has always understood them. By reason of this rule of faith, according to the tradition of the Apostles, even infants who of themselves could not have committed sin, are truly baptized for the remission of sins, in order that what they have contracted by generation may be cleansed by regeneration. For ‘unless a man be born of water and of the Holy Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.’”
Calvin responds: “As to these there will be no dispute, and therefore it was obviously malicious in them to premise that their object was to settle the dissensions which have arisen at this time,” and adds: “We assert that the whole guilt of sin is taken away in baptism, so that the remains of sin still existing are not imputed. That this may be more clear, let my readers call to mind that there is a twofold grace in baptism, for therein both remission of sins and regeneration are offered to us. We teach that full remission is made, but that regeneration is only begun and goes on making progress during the whole of life. Accordingly, sin truly remains in us, and is not instantly in one day extinguished by baptism, but as the guilt is effaced it is null in regard to imputation.”
“Nothing,” Calvin further asserts, “is plainer than this doctrine.”
via Peter J. Leithart » Blog Archive » Baptism for remission.
And yes, I just re-posted the entire thing. Not even ashamed about it.
Can we not show the boldness of a guilty killer?
In Luke’s Gospel we read:
Two others, who were criminals, were led away to be put to death with him. And when they came to the place that is called The Skull, there they crucified him, and the criminals, one on his right and one on his left. And Jesus said, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” And they cast lots to divide his garments. And the people stood by, watching, but the rulers scoffed at him, saying, “He saved others; let him save himself, if he is the Christ of God, his Chosen One!” The soldiers also mocked him, coming up and offering him sour wine and saying, “If you are the King of the Jews, save yourself!” There was also an inscription over him,“This is the King of the Jews.”
One of the criminals who were hanged railed at him, saying, “Are you not the Christ? Save yourself and us!” But the other rebuked him, saying, “Do you not fear God, since you are under the same sentence of condemnation? And we indeed justly, for we are receiving the due reward of our deeds; but this man has done nothing wrong.” And he said, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” And he said to him, “Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise.”
I have been familiar with this text since childhood. All that time I somehow assumed that the thief did not believe he had any hope but wanted Jesus to, literally and only, remember him in Heaven while he suffered in Hell. Jesus surprised him by promising to forgive and exalt him.
But that is nonsense. The “thief” (really, rebel outlaw) had the courage and faith to ask for pardon and a share in Christ’s kingdom. Consider the Scriptural precedents for the request:
When Joseph in Egypt tells Pharaoh’s cupbearer that he will be re-instated rather than condemned, he makes the same request: “Only remember me, when it is well with you, and please do me the kindness to mention me to Pharaoh, and so get me out of this house” (Genesis 40.14). “This house,” remember, was the prison.
Samson does not ask for as much, in a sense, but his request is still concrete:
Then Samson called to the Lord and said, “O Lord God, please remember me and please strengthen me only this once, O God, that I may be avenged on the Philistines for my two eyes” (Judges 16.28).
Again, the plea to be remembered is a plea for God to hear and take action of a specific kind. Hannah shows us the same thing as she begs God for a son:
And she vowed a vow and said, “O LORD of hosts, if you will indeed look on the affliction of your servant and remember me and not forget your servant, but will give to your servant a son, then I will give him to the Lord all the days of his life, and no razor shall touch his head” (First Samuel 1.11).
In Nehemiah’s case, he is not making as specific a request, but he is asking for a future of blessedness:
And I appointed as treasurers over the storehouses Shelemiah the priest, Zadok the scribe, and Pedaiah of the Levites, and as their assistant Hanan the son of Zaccur, son of Mattaniah, for they were considered reliable, and their duty was to distribute to their brothers. Remember me, O my God, concerning this, and do not wipe out my good deeds that I have done for the house of my God and for his service….
Then I commanded the Levites that they should purify themselves and come and guard the gates, to keep the Sabbath day holy. Remember this also in my favor, O my God, and spare me according to the greatness of your steadfast love….
And one of the sons of Jehoiada, the son of Eliashib the high priest, was the son-in-law of Sanballat the Horonite. Therefore I chased him from me. Remember them, O my God, because they have desecrated the priesthood and the covenant of the priesthood and the Levites.
Thus I cleansed them from everything foreign, and I established the duties of the priests and Levites, each in his work; and I provided for the wood offering at appointed times, and for the firstfruits. Remember me, O my God, for good (from Nehemiah 13).
Notice that Nehemiah here is contrasting his own behavior toward the covenant, Temple, and priesthood with those of others. So our “thief” is demonstrating loyalty to Jesus while others are desecrating him. Quite obviously, Nehemiah is not asking for a merely mental “remembering”; he is asking God to not neglect to reward him.
Job asks to be remembered in a prayer that is obviously a request for healing and deliverance; it may even be a plea for death and resurrection:
Oh that you would hide me in Sheol,
that you would conceal me until your wrath be past,
that you would appoint me a set time, and remember me! (Job 14.13).
In Psalm 25 we see a prayer to be remembered that also asks God for a selective memory. This too would be directly relevant to the request of “the thief on the cross.”
Remember not the sins of my youth or my transgressions;
according to your steadfast love remember me,
for the sake of your goodness, O Lord! (Psalm 25.7)
Psalm 106 not only gives us the same request for selective remembering, but also involves a plea in the exaltation of others, just like the “thief” asking to share in Jesus’ future glory:
Remember me, O Lord, when you show favor to your people;
help me when you save them,
that I may look upon the prosperity of your chosen ones,
that I may rejoice in the gladness of your nation,
that I may glory with your inheritance.Both we and our fathers have sinned;
we have committed iniquity; we have done wickedness.
Our fathers, when they were in Egypt,
did not consider your wondrous works;
they did not remember the abundance of your steadfast love,
but rebelled by the sea, at the Red Sea.
Yet he saved them for his name’s sake,
that he might make known his mighty power.
He rebuked the Red Sea, and it became dry,
and he led them through the deep as through a desert.
So he saved them from the hand of the foe
and redeemed them from the power of the enemy.
And the waters covered their adversaries;
not one of them was left.
Then they believed his words;
they sang his praise (from Psalm 6).
Jeremiah was a righteous prophet. You wouldn’t think that the “thief” would compare himself. Maybe he wasn’t thinking of Jeremiah when he made the request. But the “thief” was now publicly testifying to God’s will, so I don’t see why this situation is not comparable:
O Lord, you know;
remember me and visit me,
and take vengeance for me on my persecutors.
In your forbearance take me not away;
know that for your sake I bear reproach (Jeremiah 15.15).
So now the “thief” in addition to bearing his own reproach, which he willingly acknowledges, also take a share in Jesus’ reproach and bears it for his sake.
What shall we say to these things?
The “thief,” guilty and condemned, is asking for nothing less than a share in the kingdom and deliverance from all his adversity. No abasement or false humility here. He is not asking for nothing in the hope that Jesus is impressed and gives him more. He wanted what Jesus promised him from the moment he opened his mouth to Jesus. That is what he wanted and he said it in such a way so that Jesus and everyone who heard him knew what he was requesting. He is asking for forgiveness and, what is more, is boldly acting on the belief that Jesus will listen to him. “The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord, but the prayer of the upright is acceptable to him” (Proverbs 15.8). Which one is our thief acting like?
He is boldly regarding the cross as the throne of grace:
Let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace, that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need (Hebrews 4.16).
Yes, indeed, let us! How can we read about this dying murderer and his confident faith and not be encouraged to ask God in Christ for everything we need and want! How could we ever allow shame to mute our voices to our Father?