Thoughts of a Reforming Pelagian
I believe in … the holy catholic church,…
Apostles’ Creed
…and we believe in the one holy catholic and apostolic church;…
Nicene Creed
Whosoever will be saved, before all things it is necessary that he hold the catholic Faith.
Athanasian Creed
Protestants don’t often view themselves as catholic. There are several reasons: Rome claims it is exclusively catholic and today’s Protestants have largely lost the memory of yesterday, to name but two. However I propose Protestants would greatly benefit by regaining their sense of being part of the Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. Let us explore what catholicity is and is not.
Catholic and universal are synonyms. Historically, the church has always considered itself a unity. Although the Western Church after the Great Schism treated unity as requiring organizational unity, the Eastern Orthodox Churches held such was unnecessary, having several autocephalous churches in communion with each other. During and after the Protestant Reformation, despite organizational multiformity, the Reformers stress the catholicity of the church. ‘The church is called “catholic,” or “universal,” because there could not be two or three churches unless Christ be torn asunder — which cannot happen!’ Calvin’s Institutes 4.1.2. Granted this is sometimes obscured by the lack of organizational unity.
Yet, it is this catholic Church that Protestants ought to regain a sense of belonging. Our standards declare both the invisible and visible church is catholic. An understanding of catholicity would enhance Protestant knowledge and piety that it is Christ who has called one church. The visible catholic Church is mother to the faithful and ordinarily there is no salvation outside of the Church.
While reciting the creeds fell on hard times in the late 20th century (although it is undergoing a revival of sorts in the 21st century), an excellent way to encourage us that we stand in a tradition going back 2000 years and that the liturgy is not reïnvented anew each Lord’s Day. I love my own church in this regard that we frequently recite the creeds and the confessions of the Reformed faith.
Additionally, the Church of Rome misappropriates catholic. Leaving aside that Roman Catholic is a contradiction in terms, Rome left catholicity in the Council of Trent when it emphatically denied forensic justification. Abusus non tollit usum. With such a great Christian heritage and history of thought on the meaning of catholic, we should not shy away from the term but rather embrace it. The result can only be an increase in piety: greater love for Christ’s Church and the Christ of the Church.
We believe and confess one single catholic or universal church — a holy congregation and gathering of true Christian believers, awaiting their entire salvation in Jesus Christ being washed by his blood, and sanctified and sealed by the Holy Spirit.
Belgic Confession — Chapter 27: On the Holy Catholic Church
Q. 54. What believest thou concerning the “holy catholic church” of Christ?
A. That the Son of God from the beginning to the end of the world, gathers, defends, and preserves to himself by his Spirit and word, out of the whole human race, a church chosen to everlasting life, agreeing in true faith; and that I am and forever shall remain, a living member thereof.
The Heidelberg Catechism
We, therefore, call this Church catholic because it is universal, scattered through all parts of the world, and extended unto all times, and is not limited to any times or places.
Second Helvetic Confession 17.2.(126)
The catholic or universal Church, which is invisible, consists of the whole number of the elect, that have been, are, or shall be gathered into one, under Christ the Head thereof; and is the spouse, the body, the fulness of Him that fills all in all.
The visible Church, which is also catholic or universal under the Gospel (not confined to one nation, as before under the law), consists of all those throughout the world that profess the true religion; and of their children: and is the kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ, the house and family of God, out of which there is no ordinary possibility of salvation.
Westminster Confession 25.1–2
In The Institutes, Calvin mainly addresses assurance in 3.2. Here are some quotes from that chapter. Brackets are mine except the Scripture references which are Calvin’s editor, John T. McNeill.
No man is a believer, I say, except him who, leaning upon the assurance of his salvation, confidently triumphs over the devil and death; as we are taught from that masterly summation of Paul: I have confessed that “neither death nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come … [Calvin’s ellipsis] can separate us from the love of God which embraces us in Christ Jesus” [Rom. 8:38–39 p.]. Thus, in the same manner, the apostle does not consider the eyes of our minds well illumined, except as we discern what the hope of the eternal inheritance is to which we have been called [Eph 1:18]. And everywhere he so teaches as to intimate that we cannot otherwise well comprehend the goodness of God unless we gather from it the fruit of great assurance.
For because they [the half-papists] cannot defend that rude doubt which has been handed down in the schools [mediaeval scholasticism], they take refuge in another fiction: that they may make an assurance mingled with unbelief. When ever we look upon Christ, they confess that we find full occasion for good hope in him. But because we are always un-worthy of all those benefits which are offered to us in Christ, they would have us waver and hesitate at the sight of our unworthiness. IN brief, they so set conscience between hope and fear that it alternates from one to the other intermittently and by turns….But what kind of confidence will that be, which now and again yields to despair? If, they say, you contemplate Christ, there is sure salvation: if you turn back to yourself, there is sure damnation. Therefore unbelief and good hope must alternately reign in your mind. As if we ought to think of Christ, standing afar off and not dwelling in us! For we await salvation from him not because he appears afar off, but because he makes us, ingrafted into his body, participants not only in all his benefits but also in himself. So I turn this argument of theirs against them: if you contemplate yourself there is sure damnation. But since Christ has been so imparted to you with all his benefits that all this things are made yours, that you are made a member of him, indeed one with him, his righteousness overwhelms your sins; his salvation wipes out your condemnation; with his worthiness he intercedes that your unworthiness may not come before God’s sight. Surely this is so: We ought not to separate Christ from ourselves or ourselves from him. Rather we ought to hold fast bravely with both hands to that fellowship by which he has bound himself to us.
Not content with trying to undermine firmness of faith in one way alone, they [the Schoolmen] assail it from another quarter. Thus, they say that even though according to our present state of righteousness we can judge concerning our possession of the grace of God, the knowledge of final perseverance remains in suspense. A fine confidence of salvation is left to us, if by moral conjecture we judge that at the present moment we are in grace, but we know not what will become of us tomorrow!
Traducianism—The soul is propagated along with the body by natural generation. I.e., we received our souls from our parents.
Creationism—God creates each soul specially for the fœtus in utero.
(Pre-existentianism—All souls existed in a previous state before birth, often coupled with the belief in a fall of humans in this spirit state before Adam in Eden. This is listed a note of historical interest. Origen [d. 254], who was the principal proponent of this view was anathematized in the Second Council of Constantinople in 553.)
A Brief History
This question has been debated since the early church. Tertullian (d. c. 220) first proposed traducianism to explain the transmission of original sin (by inheritance). Traducianism became popular in the western regions of the Church (including northern Africa) but the eastern regions of the Church held to creationism. As noted, Origen held to the preëxistence of souls, but is not widely received outside of Alexandria. Augustine (d. 430) was undecided on the issue. The Scholastics (1100-1500) all held creationism although some of the earlier Schoolmen viewed creationism as more probable but not certain. In the Reformation, Luther favoured traducianism, but Calvin espoused creationism. As covenant theology developed, the notion of inherited original sin was replaced with the concept of the federal headship of Adam acting on behalf of humanity in the covenant of works.
Some Proponents of Each Position:
Traducians:
Creationists:
Cited for traducianism:
Genesis 2:2
Cited for creationism:
A Brief Overview of the Debate
Arguments for traducianism:
1. God largely ceased from his creative work after the creation week, now working ordinarily through secondary causes.
2. Explains of how original sin is transmitted without invoking God directly creating souls for evil.
Rebuttals against traducianism:
1. Regeneration is a new creative process which does not depend on secondary causes
2. The imputation original sin does not require the inheritance model of transmillion.
Objections to traducianism:
1. It is against the philosophical doctrine of the simplexity of the soul. To avoid arguing that the soul is divided from or a composite of the parents’ souls, traducians sometimes propose a. the soul is potentially present in the seed of the man and/or the woman which is materialism or b. the soul is brought forth by the parents, which makes the parents creators in a sense.
2. Traducianism is usually believed together with a form of (Platonic) realism. This accounts for the original guilt via the numerical unity of man and the inheritance of original sin. However this cannot explain why men are only held responsible for the first sin of Adam and not his later sins or the sins of all their ancestors
3. Realism leads to problems with Christology. If human nature as a whole sinned in Adam (who at that time contained the whole of human nature) and this sin is the actual sin of every part of that human nature ‘then the conclusion cannot be escaped that the human nature of Christ was also sinful and guilty because it had actually sinned in Adam.’ (Berkhof)
Rebuttals to objections to traducianism:
1. Simplexity properly belongs to God. Shedd argues by analogy that the lighting of a second candle by the first is similar to psychical propagation. A. the potentiality may be present with but not in the seed and b. in other aspects humans in some sense are creators working with existing materials to bring forth new things.
2. Realism is not a necessary component of traducianism but if one holds to it then it may be argued the sins of Adam and Eve before and after the fall are of a different type. Whereas before the fall sin was against the probationary statute, after they were transgressions of the moral law. Also the subsequent sins of men were not committed by the entire race in and with Adam; after propagation Adam was not the whole of the human race but only a fraction.
3. The sinless nature of Christ is not problematic if a miraculous conception is held. Shedd argues that ‘So far, then, as the guilt of Adam's sin rested upon that unindividualizcd portion of the common fallen nature of Adam assumed by the Logos, it was expiated by the one sacrifice on Calvary. The human nature of Christ was prepared for the personal union with the Logos, by being justified, as well as sanctified.’
Arguments for creationism:
1. It is more consistent with the Scriptural idea of the body being of the earth and the spirit being of God.
2. It preserves better the distinction of the immaterial nature of the soul.
Rebuttals against creationism:
1. and 2. It is incorrect to associate propagation with materialism; it is not outside of God’s power to propagate the spirit.
Objections to creationism:
1. Creationism makes God the author of evil either a. directly by creating a soul with evil tendencies or b. by united a pure soul with a body with will inevitably corrupt it.
2. It makes the parents the progenitors of only the body of the child and limits the race of men to just the flesh. By contrast the animals reproduce after their kind. Creationism does not account for the observation that not just physical characteristics are inherited but personality traits and peculiarities which run in families, even when the parents do not raise their children.
Rebuttals to objections to creationism:
1. While this is a difficult problem, however the creationist does not regard original sin entirely as a result of inheritance. ‘The descendants of Adam are sinners, not as a result of their being brought into contact with a sinful body, but in virtue of the fact that God imputes to them the original disobedience of Adam. And it is for this reason that God withholds from them original righteousness, and the pollution of sin naturally follows.
2. God can create souls adapted to particular situations or perhaps the union with the body influences the soul. Also we are not certain the extent of the role environment plays.
Conclusion
The arguments on both sides of the debate are well-balanced and Scripture gives no clear support to either position. Perhaps Deuteronomy 29.29 speaks best to this discussion, “The secret things belong to the Lord our God, but the things that are revealed belong to us and to our children forever, that we may do all the words of this law.”
Trivia:
The word traducian has a shared root with tradition and traitor. Each of these words deals with the concept of something being handed over.
Bibliography
Berkhof, Systematic Theology
Shedd, Dogmatic Theology
Williamson, The Westminster Confession: A Study Guide
Further reading:
Turretin, Creationism or Traducianism?
Clark, Traducianism
Today marks the 500th anniversary of John Calvin's birth. Born Jean Cauvin, in a small town in northern France, he became the most well known and influential theologian of the second generation of Reformers.
As many of my readers already know, Calvin fever is high this year in both popular and scholastic circles. Conferences are running in Geneva (and elsewhere) as many undertake a Protestant pilgrimage. A few new biographies have come out this year (John Calvin: A Pilgrim's Life, John Calvin: Pilgrim and Pastor, etc.) as well as studies, coffee table books (The Piety of John Calvin: A Collection of His Spiritual Prose, Poems, and Hymns, and a historical fiction novel (Betrayal). Undoubtedly, Calvin himself would be embarrassed by this publicity; his will directed he be buried in an unmarked grave.
However, there is good reason to study John Calvin; he systematized Protestant theology in his The Institutes of Christian Religion; he (along with other Reformers) helped create the 'Protestant work ethic' with his teachings on vocation. Like Luther, he expounded the sovereignty of God in all things and our absolute dependence on grace for our salvation. His definition of justification in his Institutes is classic:
Now he is justified who is reckoned in the condition not of a sinner, but of a righteous man: and for that reason, he stands firm before God's judgment seat while all sinners fall....Thus, justified before God is the man who, freed from the company of sinners, has God to witness and affirm his righteousness. In the same way, therefore, he in whose life that purity and holiness will be found which deserves a testimony of righteousness before God's throne will be said to be justified by works, or else he who, by the wholeness of his works, can meet and satisfy God's judgment. On the contrary, justified by faith is he who, excluded from the righteousness of works, grasps the righteousness of Christ through faith, and clothed in it, appears in God's sight not as a sinner but as a righteous man.
Although John Calvin is known primarily as a great theologian, he considered himself primarily a pastor. His letter-writing was prolific, offering godly counsel and practical advice. Likewise, his sermons have also been overlooked. (Fortunately, some previously untranslated sermons are now available in English.) As we remember Calvin, let us not only remember his great contributions to systematic theology or the logic of his description of salvation; let us also remember his piety, his zeal for godliness, and passion to see Christ preached.
As for myself, I'll read a Calvin biography this year and probably pick up a copy of his sermons on Genesis.