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GABRIEL
?
- 1495 -
was born at -
is little-known w.r.t. his childhood, youth, or early adulthood. -
was ordained to the
priesthood in 1432 and entered -
distinguished himself
academically and became an instructor in the faculty of arts. -
did further study in
1442-1443 at the -
enrolled in 1453 in the
faculty of theology at -
immersed himself ( -
was engaged in mid-life
chiefly in day-to-day matters of church life. -
was cathedral preacher in
Mainz, and at this time associated himself with and thereafter remained a member
of the Brethren of the Common Life (BCL: a group that pursued devotional depth
-- what today we call "spirituality" -- and ethical rigour in a
communal setting, but found nothing at all disagreeable about the church's
theology.) -
was appointed in 1484
(Luther was born in 1483) professor of theology at the -
was appointed in 1489 rector
of -
died in 1495, having spent
his last years exclusively among the BCL. -
Note: one of his theological "grandsons", Johann Eck, was Luther's
principal opponent and formidable opponent in disputations at Presuppositions:
(i) the Nominalist understanding of God: chiefly in terms of will or
power.
(ii) the Nominalist understanding of grace: God is able to do anything
that is not simply contradictory; e.g., God cannot make a square circle.
(This is not "something" that God can't do; rather, it is by
definition a "no-thing", nonsense.
In the same way God cannot annihilate himself, since God exists
necessarily.) Note:
(i) the Nom't und'g of grace begins with philosophical speculation.
(ii) the
"
" of grace is
characterized by power.
The Prot. Reformers will have much to say on both
points. God
is the source of all power, concerning which there are two kinds:
potentia
absoluta: metaphysical freedom to do anything at all that isn't self-conradictory.
potentia
ordinata: a limited capacity, power, or freedom which God has because of
God's
self-limitation. By
PA God has willed to create. (He was
under no necessity to create.) But
once he has created a finite world, then God is bound ( E.g.,
God has willed that pain follow injury ( By
PO God has imposed upon himself a way or pattern of dealing with us his finite
creatures, and (more tellingly) with us his sinful creatures.
Therefore it is of utmost importance that we recognize his way of dealing
with us and conform ourselves to it. A
question that theology has always asked is, "How do sinners get right with
the all-holy God?" I.e., how do
people who are wrongly related to God come to be rightly related?
How are sinners "justified", set in the right with God? An
Overview of Our
role has to do chiefly with the nature of the human act. Any
human act can be evaluated w.r.t. its bonitas
or goodness. (Here "goodness" is a moral category not a theological
category. The Reformers will dispute
this and insist that "goodness" is the good, the Upon
such an act of bonitas God freely, gratuitously confers dignitas or reward. God
doesn't have to (PA), but he has willed himself ( The
good act, now elevated to dignitas by
grace (of Christ), gives the human agent a claim on salvation. In
other words, a morally good act merits grace by "congruent merit" ( As
already noted, the elevation of bonitas
is not strict justice on God's part, but is rather an instance of God's
generosity. Once
bonitas has been graced and therein
elevated to dignitas, however, strict
justice applies: God must grant eternal salvation to dignitas
(PA) or God contradicts himself, God denies himself -- and this is inherently
impossible. The
Presuppositions of In
a state of nature (i.e., outside the state of grace) humans, trying their
utmost, can love God more than anything else.
In other words, people can will themselves to love God above all
else. In
a state of nature humans have the capacity to choose both good and evil, without
which capacity we should cease to be human. The
will (will is this capacity for choice together with the act of choosing)
is blind and has to be guided by reason. Reason
is not impaired in the way that will is. Reason
presents the will alternatives for moral action: reason informs the will
and advises the will. The
will, acting on this information and advice, produces spontaneously (i.e., the
will is not moved by anything else) a morally good act (bonitas.) Yet
bonitas, however good, is never good
enough to meet the requirements of the holy God. God
gratuitously ( Plainly,
for When
we fail to act rightly, we fail because of improper cognition (i.e., ignorance):
reason did not bring forward the proper object of the will's willing. The
defect lies not in the will but in
reason. Conversely, not the good
will but reason (knowledge) is the foundation and root of all virtues. * Therefore the primary task of the church is not to be the herald
and "custodian" of God's grace (God will always add grace to bonitas),
but rather to provide people with the proper information about God and the human
good, information that assists people in moral improvement.
I.e., this information apprises people as to which acts genuinely are bonitas. How
is such information acquired? (i)
partly by a natural
knowledge of God and his will; (ii)
partly by a revealed
knowledge of God and his will, accepted on the authority of the church or on the
authority of a particular preacher. These two kinds of
knowledge together constitute "acquired faith", acquired faith being
the source of all virtue. Still, as
mentioned earlier, these virtues do not meet the requirements of God.
For this reason there is always needed grace, the middle term that
elevates bon. to dign.,
at which point the requirements of God are
met. Iustitia
("justice") is the metaphysical necessity of God's granting eternal
salvation to dignitas. (PA) It should be noted
in For this notion
Zechariah 1:3 -- "Return to me, says the Lord
of hosts, and I will return to you."
James 4:8: -- "Draw near to God, and he will
draw near to you."
Revelation 3:20
-- "Behold, I stand at the door and knock; if anyone hears my voice
and opens
the door, I will come in to him and eat with him and he with me." ( ·
For "Doing
one's best" (even if that "best" is highly deficient or
defective) is at the same a "begging for mercy"; such importunity the
gracious, merciful God never spurns. Then
for The
emphasis, of course, always falls on [B].
[A] is the rational, outer structure whose inner content is [B]. The
church preaches and teaches [B], leaving God to supply [A] Humankind's
motivation for moral act/aspiration is twofold: (i) fear of judgement
(ii) hope of salvation. Despite
Plainly
The
16th Century Reformers' Disagreements 1]
Outside the state of grace humankind cannot love God at all (never mind
love God above all.)
Humans can
certainly be religious, but religiosity as such is simply idolatry, a barrier
behind which people flee God in the guise of
seeking God.
In the wake of the fall our will is in
se curvatus. We are afflicted
with "concupiscence",
rendering ourselves the centre of ourselves and the
measure of everyone (-thing) else. 2]
Instead of reason guiding the will, the will (the human "heart") warps
reason.
With respect to God, reason is perverted and
largely of the order of rationalization.
We can never reason our way to God's truth or God's
way with us: the cross. 3]
While morally good act/aspiration is always possible (even actual), it is
neither a sign of grace nor a step toward grace.
Morality is not the vestibule to the kingdom.
The harlots and the tax-collectors enter the
kingdom ahead of the morally upright.
In the light of the kingdom (grace), morality has the same significance
as religion: an
abomination to God. 4]
The entire discussion of condign versus
congruent merit contradicts the logic of scripture.
The only "merit" is that of Jesus Christ.
His obedience to his Father is imputed to
(reckoned to) those who cling to him in faith. 5]
We do not fail to act rightly merely because of improper information/cognition.
The root human problem is not ignorance but
perverseness. Humankind wills to
make itself its own lord.
God's giving us what we want (this is also his
curse) -- "You shall be as gods, knowing good
and evil" (Genesis 3:5) -- means that we
extend ourselves into areas of life that God has
marked "off limits", and so marked for
our blessing. No amount of
information can overturn
the human predicament.
(This is not to denigrate the informational content of the gospel.
It is,
however, to deny that even the gospel as
information can rectify us.)
People ultimately need not information but
deliverance.
Our root problem is not that we are deprived
(lacking something) but rather depraved
(perverse.) 6]
The primary task of the church is NOT to provide people with proper moral
information about to attest Jesus
Christ in the totality of his reality as attested by prophet and apostle, to embody his
truth and reality amidst the world's life.
Plainly there is a truth-claim to the gospel and therefore a
truth-content as well. However, in
articulating the truth of the gospel the Reformers
do not provide that vehicle in terms of which
we achieve something meritorious before God.
The truth/reality of the gospel isn't naturally
intelligible, and therefore not the information on
the basis of which we initiate the process
of salvation. 7]
The grace of Jesus Christ does not pertain (only) to bonitas,
thereby elevating it, while the grace of God is that which fashions the overall
scheme of salvation.
There is no distinction between the grace of Christ
and the grace of God and God himself;
i.e., grace is God himself in his presence and
efficacy. Put differently, grace is
the effectual
presence of God. 8] Iustitia (justice) is NOT (i) that by which we are measured, an abstract standard or code, (ii) the metaphysical necessity of God's rewarding dignitas. Justice is the same as justification: God's putting us in the right with himself, and thereby vindicating himself and his people, relieving the oppressed, clearing the slander of opprobrium heaped on those deemed "beyond the pale." (I.e., all that HITZDIQ -- the hiphel of ZADAQ -- and DIKAIOUN entail in Isaiah, the psalms, and the NT) 9] "Doing one's best" is not synonymous with begging for mercy, but is rather disdaining and spurning the mercy that God has wrought in the Son (the cross) and visits upon his people through the Spirit. The greater the sincerity in moral effort, the stronger the bastion that our pride has built and to which we point in defiance of Jesus Christ. 10] Fallen humankind does not (because cannot) "unlock the door" to God. Any unlocking is possible only by grace. The Reformed tradition will invoke here a doctrine of election. The Wesleyan tradition will invoke here a doctrine of prevenient (pre=before; venire=to come) grace. 11] In the wake of the fall no one seeks God. We flee God. When we think we are seeking him we are in fact fleeing him. God is "sought" in faith, not in unbelief. The gospel is the declaration that the God (who never was lost or difficult to locate) has of his mercy found us. God seeks a rebellious race; that race does not seek him. 12] There is no natural knowledge of God. We pervert the "revelation" found in the creation (e.g., Romans 1) as fast as it is "beamed" upon us. The apprehension of God available through the creation serves only to condemn us. 13] There is no natural knowledge of sin. Since knowledge of sin is a predicate of knowledge of God, and since God is known only in Jesus Christ (this is bedrock for the Reformers), the existence and nature of sin have to be revealed to us. Only in the presence of Jesus Christ (the cure for sin) is the ailment seen for what it is. When the psalmist cries, "Against Thee only have I sinned" (Ps. 51:4) he isn't denying that sin violates others besides God. He is acknowledging, however, that sin is defined to be such by reference to God and revealed to be such by God's self-disclosure in Jesus Christ. In other words, the revelation of God entails revelation of the nature and disgrace of humankind. Until we know God (where such knowledge is always participation -- by faith -- in God's own life), we can't know the fact or nature of a defective relationship with God. For the Reformers, knowledge of sin is always a predicate of grace (knowledge of Christ.) Where this fact is not recognized, sin will always be misunderstood as immorality or vice or the violation of taboo. Jesus dies for the ungodly, not for the immoral. 14] "Acquired Faith", a compend of natural knowledge and revealed knowledge, is wholly wide of the mark. (i) faith is not knowledge in the sense of information (see #5), even as there is always a cognitive content to faith. (ii) faith, rather, is fellowship with Jesus Christ. He embraces us by grace, and in the power of his embrace we find ourselves both able to embrace him and eager to embrace him. Faith is always the grace-facilitated response to the action of the person of Christ. (iii) faith is never acquired in any case but is rather always a gift (exercised.) 15] To affirm that salvation is sola fide is not to scorn God's justice (i.e., his judgement), but rather to submit to that judgement and receive/affirm the provision of righteousness that the judging/rightwising God has made. God's justifying us always includes his judging us. God's judgement is the converse of his mercy (he bothers to judge us only because he longs to save us) and aims at our restoration. God's justifying us presupposes his judging us. Then sola fide, an acknowledgement that we can only receive what God has fashioned for us in our need, endorses God's judgement rather than scorning it. 16] The will is not free to choose but rather is bound. It isn't denied that we can choose among creaturely goods; e.g., to eat hotdogs rather than hamburgers, or to study rather than watch TV. But as fallen creatures we can't "choose" Jesus Christ; i.e., we can't will ourselves into the righteousness of God. What we most sorely need has to be wrought for us and pressed upon us; it isn't something that we can choose to effect in ourselves. We can choose ("embrace") JC only as a result of his having "embraced" us. 17] The distinction between an outer structure of grace and an inner content of (meritorious) work is unbiblical and therefore impermissible. 18] To embrace Jesus Christ in faith and therein become a beneficiary of his righteousness is at the same time to be the beneficiary of God's; i.e., JUSTIFICATION IN THE PRESENT FORMS THE STABLE BASIS AND NOT THE UNCERTAIN GOAL OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE. Victor
Shepherd
January 2000
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