In Offense to Theological Polemics: With Reference to Calvinism and Jargon

The polemics surrounding the age-old Calvinist-Arminian debate are putrid. I was just involved in such antics, once again, on Twitter. It reminded me, actually of the (now) old theoblogosphere. Much of the blogosphere was populated by the same people who now populate theological Twitter. There is a lot of noise made, but without understanding. As such said debate[s] end up being interminable, and soul-rotting. There is an endless exchange of uninformed, unresearched, and unread jousting that never leads to light, only heat. I have participated, over the decades, in untold exchanges like this. They are never edifying, and always reduce to name-calling.

The Apostle Paul engaged with the pseudo-Apostles in Corinth, and at a certain point, in order to counter them, he went down to their level, and said: if I must speak as a fool, here are my accolades; top that! Did this ultimately shut the pseudos up? No, it probably enflamed them even more. But it made an important point: actual knowledge, experience, and even training do in fact matter; even if such training is not an end, but only an instrument. Even so, it is an instrument to be used for the edification, and not the tearing down of the saints. That’s why Paul was willing to speak as a fool: he had his opponents ā€œbeatā€ at the lowest common denominator; the denominator that his would-be opponents had elevated to the sine-qua-none of their relative chops. Paul was not phased by that, in fact, at that level, ā€œthe intellectual chops level,ā€ he had no challengers. But Paul wasn’t compelled by that, he was compelled by the love of Christ.

Paul was so Christ concentrated that he wouldn’t be sidetracked by the pedantics surrounding him. He would engage, for a moment, for a reason, and then keep moving as he was energized by the resurrection power of Christ. He knew what the goal was, and he consummately pressed onward, forward to the high and heavenly goal of the prize and reward in Christ Jesus. I want to imitate Paul as he imitates Christ. There is foolishness, en masse, out there in the interweb. I’m not immune to such foolishness; I’m not ā€œsmarterā€ than said foolishness; I’m not on the outside looking in at the foolishness. I’m just as much a participant as anyone else. But by the Spirit I pray to have some semblance of perspective, even while in the heat of the foolishness. That I have enough Spirit induced wherewithal to repent, afresh anew, from Christ’s repentance for me, and keep moving forward to that final reward of consummate beatific vision.

As an aside though, let me press something I have pressed many times prior: the usage of so-called theological jargon is not inherently wicked. That is to say, that jargon, or precision language, when used contextually and meaningfully, is a help to the task of theological communication. Jargon is pregnant language waiting to be unpacked for various audiences. Jargon is like the handle on a drawer. Those who can recognize what a particular handle opens don’t necessarily need all of its contents exhaustively explicated. But in other audiences maybe they have never even seen the room where the chested drawers are. Maybe they need to become acquainted with the room, before they ever get to the chested drawers, and its various handles. That said, some people actually live in those rooms; they are familiar with its parts; they know what is in each drawer. Being sensitive to audiences is important, indeed. But the internet has a way of equalizing everything, such that the teachers and students look exactly the same. As such, I’ve found, at least in open metas, it is not ideal to try and be a teacher. A person can selectively be a student, if they have the proper critical apparatus in place. But often there is so much unchecked anonymity online that an actual pedagogical environment is not fostered, it is really nowhere to be found. Everybody is an expert online, especially on Twitter.

But this is kind of why I have always operated the way I have, even here at the blog. I used to have other blogs (like actual sites, not posts) where I was attempting to speak and write as a teacher. But that takes a lot of effort, time, and energy, that unless I’m getting paid to do it, I don’t have the wherewithal to in fact do that. Plus, the audiences are all over the place. I have scholars, students, lay people, and everyone in-between reading here. I ultimately, and this years ago, decided to just write the way I process things at an initial or raw level. That is to say, I write, typically, here at the blog in a way that is intended to help ME learn. I understand I am writing for the ā€œpublic,ā€ but I don’t actually let that curtail the way I am engaging with whatever topic or theologian that I am. So, I do have the jargon in my posts; but the jargon is used contextually, and in a way that makes sense to me (usually). If I had more time and energy, I would like to break things down further; actually, open the drawers and talk about its contents in more detailed and accessible ways. And sometimes I think I achieve that, even here at the blog. But if I do, it isn’t necessarily intentional. I’m typically trying to break things down in a way that make sense to me. Hopefully, in so doing, they, over time, begin to make sense to others as well.

Anyway, just some streamy thinking on polemics, jargon, and rationale, once again, with reference to the philosophy of my blogging. I’m really no longer interested in jousting within the never-ending Calvinist-Arminian debates (but that doesn’t mean I won’t use that debate as a springboard to go deeper with it, and behind it). I genuinely seek to be Christ concentrated in all that I do. Even if I get sidetracked, I always seek to get back on the Christ concentrated road, all the way to glory. And I’m sure the jargon will continue in my posts, but hopefully in such a way that will challenge others to expand their own lexicons, and learn along with me as I write.

There is no “Calvinism” Behind the Back of the Athanasian Reformed

There is a reason why I changed the name of blog to: Athanasian Reformed (from The Evangelical Calvinist). By the standards of what counts as Calvinism today, I am not a Calvinist. By historic standards, though, I am Reformed. By national standards I am Swiss and Scottish Reformed (let the reader understand). And both nationalities are largely shaped by a Greek rather than Latin orientation (so, Athanasius) Selah. I just wrote the aforementioned for Twitter and Facebook. I want to expand, briefly, on this.

Clearly, for anyone who reads me you know that I am Calvinian, Barthian, Torrancean, Athanasian, Luther[an]. But of course, the tradition I think after is Barthian. We all think from this or that tradition, most evangelicals, though, are totally unconscious of this informing reality. I don’t want to function like most evangelicals. Instead, I want to be self-conscious and intentional, which is why I stand back and have moments like this every now and then.

Beyond this, I want folks to understand that the way we use Calvinism is as shorthand for Reformed. Like I noted, we are not Calvinists if that is understood from the popular frame of the 21st century (which exclusively entails either Federal/Covenantal theology and/or Five Point ā€œBaptistā€ Calvinism). I am historically Reformed, and that from an Eastern orientation as noted. When I attempt to enter the popular fray, particularly among the apologetically minded, when they see that I am ā€œEvangelical Calvinistā€ they immediately presume that I am simply Evangelical + Calvinist, which of course couldn’t be further from the reality. What I am trying to bear witness to, when I enter such communities (online), is that there is a better and catholic way to think as a Christian. Even if we come with various informing traditions there is only one centraldogma to the Christian reality; that is, that Jesus is Lord. But this ā€˜Lordness’ is bounded up with 2000 years of history and catholicity behind it. Most in the popular evangelical sector have no sense of this. If they did much of the sectarian spirit would be elided, and then genuine non-binary theological disputation could unfold. But this requires greater work than sitting down in front of the webcam and claiming yourself to be something. This requires the work of a priest of Christ; of the sort that is willing to sacrifice other ventures in order to spend time with the fathers and mothers of the Church. If this becomes the person’s mode they will begin to experience a distanciation, at which point a sense of catholicity and the Cosmic Christ (see Maximos the Confessor) will so pervade their visio that they will be able to move onto the meatier things of the Evangel.

This is what stands, some, behind the blog name change. I want folks to understand that there is something deeper and greater going on behind things; greater than the evangelical debates between the Calvinists (so-called) and Arminians (and Provisionists). Soli Deo Gloria

Sola Theobloga! A Word About Online Theologizing

Just a word with reference to ā€œonline theology.ā€ I’ve been doing it now since I first started theoblogging in 2005. It has been fruitful in manifold ways. I have made connections with many a theologian on an international and domestic plane. Two edited books, an article for Christianity Today and other work, editorships for a peer reviewed theological journal, and a host of other pluses have resulted from my decision to sit down and start typing back in 2005. But there are manifold dangers as well. That’s primarily what this post will be about.

Some dangers of doing theology online are:

  1. Too much transparency, which can result in giving too much away to the world. I am already a very transparent person, in person; but when that’s coupled with the sense of anonymity, even when you use your real name, online, it can produce things you’d rather not produce.
  2. At points you can subject yourself to people who don’t have your best interests in mind. In other words, there are people out there, I know it’s hard to believe!, that would simply engage with you in order to promote their own online presence; and they don’t care if that’s from negative or positive exposure.
  3. Online theology can suffer from audience drift. In other words, you’re not always sure who you’re writing for as an online theologian; or why. This can cause the quality of your work to wane, in ways that if done offline might not happen.
  4. Probably the greatest downfall to online theologizing is getting caught in the weeds with people you’d rather not. This happens all the time. Although since the quasi-death of the theoblogosphere this doesn’t happen as much; at least not on blogs—happens more on Twitter and Facebook now.
  5. Online theologizing can cause said theologian to move too quickly. Although in a sense that’s also the benefit of online theoblogging. For me, my blogging has been mostly a place for me to think out lout and to speak freely. But the downside to this is if it only stays in the bloggy-stage. I have all kinds of work I’ve proposed here on the blog that has the potential of being developed into a PhD dissertation; into theological essays (with the potential for publication); into books; or into more thoughtful papers that carry a greater sense of substance and development. If the theoblogger gets stuck in the mire of ā€œjust-bloggingā€ the downside is that this rut might become a lifestyle. This is probably where I have fallen most (for a variety of life and logistical reasons).

These are just some thoughts off the top; there is more to be said, of course, about the dangers of online theologizing, but I think the above captures some of the concerns well.

My goals are to start turning the years (the decade and a half) of blogging I’ve done into things of greater substance. I have hours upon hours of research right here at the blog. Like I noted, much of it could be turned into a PhD dissertation, books, or theological essays. This is where I need to go next. Rather than get caught in the gutterland of online theological jousting, as I’m prone to do (although not as much as I used to be), I need to turn my work (for that’s what it is!) into greater works. I am writing this post, partly, as a signpost for me to refer back to, in the days to come, so that I will remember what my goal is.

To be sure, I will always be a theoblogger at heart. Many a theologian out there sneers at such endeavor. They think it cheapens theological discourse by making it too pedestrian; maybe giving away too many of the insider secrets, or something. I’ve experienced this sort of sneering from the ā€œguildersā€ more than once; and very directly and intentionally. But I write to learn, and so this blog has been of great benefit to me that way (and in other ways as already noted). In fact, ironically, I never would have come into contact with the theologians who have sneered at me without my theoblogging Laugh Out Loud! Soli Deo Gloria and Sola Theobloga! Ā 

Why We Shouldn’t Get Our Theology From Social Media: Like Twitter and Facebook

Why you shouldn’t get your theology from social media; particularly Twitter and Facebook. I have been continuously theoblogging since 2005 (at a variety of urls, this is my most steady); as such I have had all sorts of exposure, as I’m sure many of us have, to various Christian traditions outside of my own. This can result in persuading us away from what we once confessed as our own belief structure as Christians. For example: we might have grown up a straight low church evangelical who affirms a dispensational reading of the Bible with a non-liturgical frame for how we do church and thus think God. This in fact is my background, as I’m sure it is many of our backgrounds. Once we enter the fray of social media this background gets immediately thrown into relief. We come up against Anglicans, Presbyterians, Lutherans, Catholics, Orthodox, and other traditions that have a much deeper connection to the arc of the historical church than what we have grown up with as Free Church evangelicals. When exposed to such traditions we might sense a notion of novelty relative to our own understanding and experience of the Church. In fact we might become open to things we otherwise would have never entertained outwith this exposure.

What I want to suggest is that unless we are willing to do a deep dive into these various traditions, beyond the simple exposure we receive from social media, that it is best if we do not allow this exposure to cause us to question all that we have held dear before; that is in regard to the way we understand Church and doctrine. What I am suggesting is that if we are going to allow social media to cause us to question our own traditional backgrounds as Christians that we should do our due diligence, as far as pressing into these traditions, and see what in fact stands behind them. I have had this ā€œtemptationā€ myself many times. I have been tempted, for example, to become Orthodox and Presbyterian (of a certain ilk) because of my exposure to these traditions online. But when I pressed deeper into these traditions it become evidently clear that they are not in line with my own basic commitments as a Christian. Certainly, there are doctrinal contours in these traditions that I find amenable to my own Free Church traditional commitments, but that’s it; there is an amenability, but not space for a wholesale ā€œconversionā€ to these traditions for me.

As I write this I’m not even sure this is a real issue for others, but it has been one for me; and I can’t imagine that I’m alone in this sort of ā€œtemptationā€ to move into other Christian traditions from my own. Yet this begs an important question: what in fact defines my Christian tradition? For me, I am largely baptistic in orientation. This means that I believe in the autonomy of the local church under the authority of the Word of God; that I affirm believer’s baptism; that I am low church in regard to following liturgy and the Christian calendar; that my heritage is rooted in the Reformation side of the Protestant Reformation, with inklings toward the Radical Reformation (but not in lock-step with that movement). This is why, for me, Karl Barth has been such a cornerstone for theological development. He offers a narratival theology that seeks, in principle, to find its theological zest in the Bible’s reality in Jesus Christ. He is okay with challenging the so called Great Tradition of the catholic Church when Scripture seems at odds with what this Great Trad seems to communicate (sometimes by implication only).

Full disclosure: I was turned onto Barth in seminary under the teaching of Paul Metzger. We spent a whole semester with Barth’s theology, and this had a lasting impact on me. It wasn’t till after I graduated seminary in 2003 that I began to take up and read Barth in earnest. It was at this point that I realized I had found someone who was deeply resonate with almost all of my prior Free Church theological commitments and predilections. I didn’t become ā€œBarthianishā€ from my online exposure, instead that came from substantial time spent with Barth’s theology outside and prior to engagement on social media.

Maybe you can sense some contradiction in what I’m getting at. I seem to be saying that we shouldn’t get our theology from social media, and at the same time I also might seem to be saying that if we are exposed to a theological tradition that piques our interest online we should pursue that beyond any sort of superficiality that often attends the online game. Indeed, I am saying all of the above. We shouldn’t simply read our theology off of social media and at the same time I think it is possible to pursue, in depth, various traditions that we might have been alerted to by social media. I am simply saying that we need to be zealous and rigorous in the way we approach the theological when interacting online. We need to be steadfast in our commitment to our prior theological tradition and background, and not simply throw it away for the sake of novelty.

Don’t Get Your Theology from Twitter, Facebook, or the Blogosphere

Getting our theology from Facebook or Twitter is unadvisable. I think at best these ā€œsocialā€ mediums have the capacity to give us suggestive lines of theological thought to consider, but that should be their maximum capacity. I have been influenced, no doubt, to read various theological thinkers, over the years, because of the exposure I have received on social media. But as I reflect: my theological trajectory was really set from in-person influences that I had as a result of bible college and seminary; mostly seminary. My love for historical theology, and Barth’s theology, in particular, were given impetus by personal mentors and former profs of mine; none of this has come from Twitter, Facebook, or the Blogosphere.

Why am I saying this? Because what I have noticed is that theological social media is so rife with a litany of theological perspectives, and from so many varied motivations and contexts, that it doesn’t seem viable for such contextless, people-less (other than virtual instantiations) theological offerings to have the sort of concrete and real impact that only flesh and blood in-formers should have. In other words, when we are dealing with the weightiness of what theology portends to be, it seems to me that that should spring from real life communally oriented situations wherein a living breathing human being can speak meaningfully into our lives. Social media, by nature, is too random and ad hoc to offer this sort of context for personal theological development. I have seen younger guys and gals, as far as theological development, get chewed up and spit out by social media; in regard to the theological trajectory they open themselves up to. In other words, social media, to rip off of Rahner in a rhetorical way, allows for us to be ā€˜anonymous’ Christians in a way that can be damaging to our theological souls. We can get the whole panoply of theological traditions and iterations by a single swipe of the finger on our Twitter or FB feeds. Without a concrete ground, prior to this ā€˜swiping,’ we might be swept away with every wind or breath of theological teaching available to us in the worldwide web of the interweb. At the very least, without personalist concrete grounding, prior to our logging-in to theological social media, we open ourselves up to influences that may well confuse us, or marginalize the concrete work that the Lord would seek to do in our lives.

Don’t get me wrong, there is relative value to theological social media; at least my blogging for fourteen years ought to indicate to you that I really do believe this. But it all must be taken in with discernment, and a theological penchant for grains of salt. We should be getting the heft of our theological in-formation from fellowshipping at our local churches around Word and Sacrament (even though, as a Free church evangelical I know the sacraments as ordinances šŸ˜‰ ); through reading developed works of theological importance; and most importantly through prayerfully reading and meditating on Holy Scripture. Surely, we can be aided in our development by interacting with others via social media outlets; but these can only be, at best, supplements that have marginal value in regard to their ability to spark critical angles that we might not have come to on our own (left to our own studies and devices). But my point in this post is to say: We shouldn’t be getting our theologies from social media! I don’t, and I don’t think you should either.

The Covenant of Works, The Covenant of Grace; What Are They? The evangelical Calvinists Respond

As evangelical Calvinists we stand within an alternative stream from classical Calvinism, or Federal/Covenantal theology; the type of Calvinism that stands as orthodoxy for Calvinists today in most parts of North America and the Western world in general. The blurb on the back of our book Evangelical Calvinism: Essays Resourcing the Continuing Reformation of the Church makes this distinction clear when it states:

In this exciting volume new and emerging voices join senior Reformed scholars in presenting a coherent and impassioned articulation of Calvinism for today’s world. Evangelical Calvinism represents a mood within current Reformed theology. The various contributors are in different ways articulating that mood, of which their very diversity is a significant element. In attempting to outline features of an Evangelical Calvinism a number of the contributors compare and contrast this approach with that of the Federal Calvinism that is currently dominant in North American Reformed theology, challenging the assumption that Federal Calvinism is the only possible expression of orthodox Reformed theology. This book does not, however, represent the arrival of a ā€œnew-Calvinismā€ or even a ā€œneo-Calvinism,ā€ if by those terms are meant a novel reading of the Reformed faith. An Evangelical Calvinism highlights a Calvinistic tradition that has developed particularly within Scotland, but is not unique to the Scots. The editors have picked up the baton passed on by John Calvin, Karl Barth, Thomas Torrance, and others, in order to offer the family of Reformed theologies a reinvigorated theological and spiritual ethos. This volume promises to set the agenda for Reformed-Calvinist discussion for some time to come.

A question rarely, if ever addressed online in the theological blogosphere, and other online social media outlets, is a description of what Covenant theology actually entails. Many, if acquainted at all with Reformed theology, have heard of the Covenant of Works, Covenant of Grace, and Covenant of Redemption (pactum salutis); but I’m not really sure how many of these same people actually understand what that framework entails—maybe they do, and just don’t talk about it much.

In an effort to highlight the lineaments of Federal theology I thought it might be instructive to hear how Lyle Bierma describes it in one of its seminal formulator’s theology, Caspar Olevianus. So we will hear from Bierma on Olevianus, and then we will offer a word of rejoinder to this theology from Thomas Torrance’s theology summarized for us by Paul Molnar; and then further, a word contra Federal theology from Karl Barth as described by Rinse Reeling Brouwer. Here is Bierma:

When did God make such a pledge? [Referring to the ā€˜Covenant of Grace’] We will be looking at this question in some detail in Chapter IV, but it should be mentioned here that for Olevianus this covenant of grace or gospel of forgiveness and life was proclaimed to the Old Testament fathers from the beginning; to Adam after the fall (ā€œThe seed of the woman shall crush [Satan’s] headā€); to Abraham and his descendents (ā€œIn your seed shall all nations of the earth be blessedā€); to the remnant of Israel in Jeremiah 31 (ā€œI will put my laws in their minds . . . and will remember their sins no moreā€); and still to hearers of the Word today. To be sure, this oath or testament was not confirmed until the suffering and death of Christ. Christ was still the only way to Seligkeit, since it was only through His sacrifices that the blessing promised to Abraham could be applied to us and the forgiveness and renewal promised through Jeremiah made possible. Nevertheless, even before ratification it was still a covenant — a declaration of God’s will awaiting its final fulfillment.

In some contexts, however, Olevianus understands the covenant of grace in a broader sense than as God’s unilateral promise of reconciliation ratified in Jesus Christ. He employs some of the same terms as before — Bund, Gnadenbund, foedus, foedus gratiae, and foedus gratuitum — but this time to mean a bilateral commitment between God and believers. The covenant so understood is more than a promise of reconciliation; it is the Ā realization of that promise — reconciliation itself — through a mutual coming to terms. Not only does God bind Himself to us in a pledge that He will be our Father; we also bind ourselves to Him in a pledge of acceptance of His paternal beneficence. Not only does God promise that He will blot out all memory of our sins; we in turn promise that we will walk uprightly before Him. The covenant in this sense includes both God’s promissio and our repromissio.

This semantical shift from a unilateral to a bilateral promise is most clearly seen in two passages in Olevanius’s writings where he compares the covenant of grace to a human Bund. In Vester Grundt, as we have seen, he portrays the covenant strictly as a divine pledge. While we were yet sinners, God bound Himself to us with an oath and a promise that through His Son He would repair the broken relationship. It was expected, of course, that we accept the Son (whether promised or already sent) in faith, but Olevianus here does not treat this response as part of the covenant. The emphasis is on what God would do because of what we could not do.

In a similar passage in the Expositio, however, Olevianus not only identifies the covenant with reconciliation itself but describes it as a mutual agreement (mutuus assensus) between the estranged parties. Here God binds Himself not to us ā€œwho were yet sinnersā€ but to us ā€œwho repent and believe,ā€ to us who in turn are bound to Him in faith and worship. This ā€œcovenant of grace or union between God and usā€ is not established at just one point in history; it is ratified personally with each believer. Christ the Bridegroom enters into ā€œcovenant or fellowshipā€ with the Church His Bride by the ministry of the Word and sacraments and through the Holy Spirit seals the promises of reconciliation in the hearts of the faithful. But this is also a covenant into which we enter, a ā€œcovenant of faith.ā€ As full partners in the arrangement we become not merely God’s children but His Bundgesnossen, His confoederati.

When he discusses the covenant of grace in this broader sense, i.e., as a bilateral commitment between God and us, Olevianus does not hesitate t use the term conditio [conditional]. We see already in the establishment of the covenant with Abraham that the covenant of grace has not one but two parts: not merely God’s promissio [promise] to be the God of Abraham and his seed, but that promise on the condition (qua conditione) of Abraham’s (and our) repromissio [repromising] to walk before Him and be perfect. Simply put, God’s covenantal blessings are contingent upon our faith and obedience. It is to those who repent, believe, and are baptized that He reconciles Himself and binds Himself in covenant.[1]

What we see in Olevianus’s theology, according to Bierma, is a schema of salvation that is contingent upon the elect’s doing their part, as it were. In other words, what binds salvation together in the Federal scheme is not only the act of God, but the act of the elect; an act that is ensured to be acted upon by the absolute decree (absolutum decretum). The ground of salvation involves, then, God’s act and humanity’s response; the objective (or de jure) side is God’s, the subjective (or de facto) side is the elect’s—a quid pro quo framework for understanding salvation. What this inevitability leads to, especially when getting into issues of assurance of salvation, is for the elect to turn inward to themselves as the subjective side of salvation is contingent upon their ā€˜faith and obedience.’

Thomas F. Torrance, patron saint of evangelical Calvinists like me, rightly objects to this type of juridical and transactional and/or bilateral understanding of salvation. Paul Molnar, TF Torrance scholar par excellence, describes Torrance’s rejection of Federal theology this way and for these reasons:

Torrance’s objections to aspects of the ā€œWestminster theologyā€ should be seen together with his objection to ā€œFederal Theologyā€. His main objection to Federal theology is to the ideas that Christ died only for the elect and not for the whole human race and that salvation is conditional on our observance of the law. The ultimate difficulty here that one could ā€œtrace the ultimate ground of belief back to eternal divine decrees behind the back of the Incarnation of God’s beloved Son, as in a federal concept of pre-destination, [and this] tended to foster a hidden Nestorian Torrance between the divine and human natures in the on Person of Jesus Christ, and thus even to provide ground for a dangerous form of Arian and Socinian heresy in which the atoning work of Christ regarded as an organ of God’s activity was separated from the intrinsic nature and character of God as Loveā€ (Scottish Theology, p. 133). This then allowed people to read back into ā€œGod’s saving purposeā€ the idea that ā€œin the end some people will not actually be savedā€, thus limiting the scope of God’s grace (p. 134). And Torrance believed they reached their conclusions precisely because they allowed the law rather than the Gospel to shape their thinking about our covenant relations with God fulfilled in Christ’s atonement. Torrance noted that the framework of Westminster theology ā€œderived from seventeenth-century federal theology formulated in sharp contrast to the highly rationalised conception of a sacramental universe of Roman theology, but combined with a similar way of thinking in terms of primary and secondary causes (reached through various stages of grace leading to union with Christ), which reversed the teaching of Calvin that it is through union with Christ first that we participate in all his benefitsā€ (Scottish Theology, p. 128). This gave the Westminster Confession and Catechisms ā€œa very legalistic and constitutional character in which theological statements were formalised at times with ā€˜almost frigidly logical definitonā€™ā€ (pp. 128-9). Torrance’s main objection to the federal view of the covenant was that it allowed its theology to be dictated on grounds other than the grace of God attested in Scripture and was then allowed to dictate in a legalistic way God’s actions in his Word and Spirit, thus undermining ultimately the freedom of grace and the assurance of salvation that could only be had by seeing that our regenerated lives were hidden with Christ in God. Torrance thought of the Federal theologians as embracing a kind of ā€œbiblical nominalismā€ because ā€œbiblical sentences tend to be adduced out of their context and to be interpreted arbitrarily and singly in detachment from the spiritual ground and theological intention and contentā€ (p. 129). Most importantly, they tended to give biblical statements, understood in this way, priority over ā€œfundamental doctrines of the Gospelā€ with the result that ā€œWestminster theology treats biblical statements as definitive propositions from which deductions are to be made, so that in their expression doctrines thus logically derived are given a categorical or canonical characterā€ (p. 129). For Torrance, these statements should have been treated, as in theScots Confession, in an ā€œopen-structuredā€ way, ā€œpointing away from themselves to divine truth which by its nature cannot be contained in finite forms of speech and thought, although it may be mediated through themā€ (pp. 129-30). Among other things, Torrance believed that the Westminster approach led them to weaken the importance of the Doctrine of the Trinity because their concept of God fored without reference to who God is in revelation led them ultimately to a different God than the God of classical Nicene theology (p. 131). For Barth’s assessment of Federal theology, which is quite similar to Torrance’s in a number of ways, see CD IV/1, pp. 54-66.[2]

And here is how Brouwer describes Barth’s feeling on Federal theology, with particular reference to another founder of Federal theology, Johannes Cocceius. Brouwer writes of Barth:

Barth writes ā€˜For the rest you shall enjoy Heppe’ s Locus xiii only with caution. He has left too much room for the leaven of federal theology. It was not good, when theĀ foedus naturaeĀ was also called aĀ foedus operum’. In Barth’ s eyes, the notion of a relationship between God and Adam as two contractual partners in which man promises to fulfil the law and God promises him life eternal in return, is a Pelagian one that should not even be applied to theĀ homo paradisiacus. Therefore,

one has to speak of theĀ foedus naturaeĀ in such a way that one has nothing to be ashamed of when one speaks of theĀ foedus gratiaeĀ later on, and, conversely, that one does not have to go to the historians of religion, but rather in such a way that one can say the same things in a more detailed and powerful way in the new context of theĀ foedus gratiae, which is determined by the contrast between sin and grace. For there isĀ re veraĀ only one covenant, as there is only one God. The fact that Cocceius and his followers could not and would not say this is where we should not follow them – not in the older form, and even less in the modern form.

Ā In this way paragraph ends as it began: the demarcation of sound theology from federal theology in its Cocceian shape is as sharp as it was before. Nevertheless, the attentive reader will notice that the category of the covenant itself is ā€˜rescued’ for Barth’ s own dogmatic thinking.[3]

For Barth, as for Torrance, as for me, the problem with Federal theology is that it assumes upon various wills of God at work at various levels determined by the absolute decree. The primary theological problem with this, as the stuff we read from Torrance highlights, is that it ruptures the person and work of God in Christ from Christ; i.e. it sees Jesus, the eternal Logos, as merely an instrument, not necessarily related to the Father, who carries out the will of God on behalf of the elect in fulfilling the conditions of the covenant of works ratifying the covenant of grace. Yet, even in this establishment of the Federal framework, salvation is still not accomplished for the elect; it is contingent upon the faith and obedience of those who will receive salvation, which finally brings to completion the loop of salvation in the Federal schema.

These are serious issues, that require sober reflection; more so than we will be able to do in a little blog post. At the very least I am hopeful that what we have sketched from various angles will be sufficient to underscore what’s at stake in these types of depth theological issues, and how indeed theology, like Federal theology offers, can impact someone’s Christian spirituality if in fact said theology is grasped and internalized; i.e. it is understood beyond academic reflection, and understood existentially as it impacts the psychology and well being of human beings coram Deo.

 

[1] Lyle D. Bierma, German Calvinism in the Confessional Age: The Covenant Theology of Caspar Olevianus, 64-68.

[2] Paul D. Molnar,Ā Thomas F. Torrance: Theologian of the Trinity, Ā 181-2 fn. 165.

[3] Rinse H Reeling Brouwer,Ā Karl Barth and Post-Reformation OrthodoxyĀ (Farnham: Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2015), 112-13.

On Becoming Theologically Numb and Blogging: Describing the Disorder Known as ‘Virtual-Glaze’

I, like many of you, have been blogging consistently for many years (me since the Spring of 2005), and it has many benefits. But, as we all know, blogging also has some dangers associated with it. One of those dangers can become what I might call a virtual-glaze.Ā I would define the disorder ‘virtual-glaze’ as the disposition that begins to occur as a sentient agent engages in massive amounts of exposure to the virtual on-line world; in particular, in the case I am glazedsketching here, virtual-glaze happens to bloggers when said bloggers engage with various theological and biblical topics over sustained periods of time,Ā viaĀ corresponding, arguing, and debating with others relative to fine points of theological nuance and biblical exegesis. The net result, of being deluged by large amounts of theological encounters, can be a glazed and thus desensitized feeling towards the reality of the very positions a blogger might be continuously arguing for. So this kind of virtual-glazing can begin to put a person into a dispassionate (which I think is a terrible thing!), pandering kind of posture wherein the reality of their theological and biblical position no longer has contact with real life. In short, virtual-glazing places the blogger into an absolute kind of suspension to all things (even if they can argue their position with air-tight ease and sophistication), such that the vigor, the zeal that initially propelled them to argue for their position in the first place loses its edge, and more importantly loses its real life impact in their personal life and daily Christian spirituality.

Let me try and make what I am getting at more concrete. I can remember when the LORD radically grabbed my life in profound ways while in Las Vegas, Nevada in and around 1995 (what happened in Vegas, fortunately, did not stay in Vegas for me!); I was a very luke-warm to nominal Christian at that point (and had been in that state at that point for a few years or so). Through various experiences (which I have talked about before), the LORD just showed me how real he was, and how unreal the world was. My life hung on every page of Scripture from that day forward. What I believed had such an acute implication for me, one way or the other, that my sanity, it seemed hung in the balances. Whether or not God was Triune or not, massive import for me. Whether Jesus was the God-man or just a man had palpable feeling for me; and I knew that if God was not Triune, if he had not revealed Himself that way in His dearly beloved Son, thus as the God-Man in Christ, my life would effectively be over—these things mattered to me! And because I didn’t have the depth or sophistication at that point, because I didn’t have the exposure I now have (through formal training, blogging, and personal fellowship with other Christians), if there was even a twinge of uncertainty as to who God is, or who he had/has revealed Himself to be in Christ, my life, my sanity seemed to be over (which I will have to elaborate on further some at some other time).

Obviously, what I am describing above reflects the deep and painful growing pains of an inchoate depth growing in the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ; and so there is some immaturity involved with the above description, that some maturation (relatively speaking) can go along ways in curing (at least the existential angst I was experiencing for that long season of life). But I highlight the above to underscore my description of what I have called virtual-glaze.Ā Yes, by way of degree, there should be at least some semblance of security in regard to the reality of who God is, and who God is for me (for us). But what I think can get easily lost by way of large amounts of virtual theological exposure is the sense of urgency that was attendant to my early growing pain days that started back in 1995; the sense of need, and reality that if God is not who he has claimed himself to be in Christ, that our sanity, and capacity to know God and subsequently minister to others could all be lost. I think blogging has the capacity of making this reality, who God is, into a kind of game. It has the capacity to remove everything we are discussing over and over again into an abstract legoland hodgepodge of our own making, and always keeping what we are talking about at least an arms-length distance from our real life selves in this real life world with real life relationships in tact.

I think if our sanity, our being is not always hanging in the balances (in regard to this kind of sense of urgency) in regard to knowing and loving God, and others, then we may well have succumbed to the disorder known as virtual-glaze.

The Sin of Blogging

Theo-blogging is the ultimate form, in theological writing, of Instant Gratification (versus Delayed Gratification). Thus, based on the Seven Deadly Sins, it could probably be argued that theo-blogging represents a form of sloth or acedia. Unless of course said theo (or biblio) blogger can somehow balance their blogging with things more in line with the Apostle Paul’s concept of Redeeming The Time! In other words, theological blogging can be something that satisfies the rush that comes from writing something that others might praise you for; or more innocent, it can be something that simply satisfies the writer’s sense of pride when he or she accomplishes a written composition (no matter how obtuse it might actually be). I am simply asserting (self-critically, somewhat); that all of us who blog should be thoughtful and prudent about it. It is okay to relax (which is another use of the blog), but when relaxing becomes a lifestyle it becomes at least sloth, if not acedia.

Some Dangers Associated With Theo-blogging

1) I know more than you do . . .

2) I know something different and thus better than you . . .

3) I’ve read more than you . . .

4) I can argue better than you . . .

There’s certainly more dangers to blogging. But in general, these seem to be almost inherent turns built into the reality of this medium itself; at least, ironically, in the realm of theo-blogging. I mention these, because at one point or another I’m sure that I’ve exemplified all of them to one degree or another to my shame. I think blogs are made for certain kinds of personalities. Blogs are made for people who like to read, write, and argue (in general). I actually think all of the above are great virtues, but like with anything if they aren’t, of course, motivated and shaped by a love of Christ, then we know what Paul has to say about that (cf. I Cor. 13).

The LORD has used blogging in my life, over-all, I believe, for the good! I’ve met amazing people, been exposed to different books and authors, and have the frequent opportunity to argue ideas (even if it’s really not arguing but counter-asserting šŸ˜‰ ). So while theoblogging has some inherent dangers (given the medium itself, it’s flat), I think the positives actually out-weigh the negatives. Those four points I mention above, are emphasizing the negative side and potential of blogging; but I think, if we blog as unto the Lord, those can be mitigated and even altogether vanquished. I need to continue to make sure my speech is always seasoned with grace. Just some thoughts.