CHAPTER TWO
Calvinism's View Of God Is Not Completely Right
I have not joined the Calvinists because they have
taken something for granted that they should not have. They presuppose
some things about God that they have no authority for doing. They
are not completely right about God.
It's true that we all have been wrong about him and
even as believers we continue to get things in our thinking cleared
up about God. Even my Christian brother, the Calvinist, may be able
to show me aspects of my thinking that are even now wrong about God.
If he does and if I find my whole system of belief hangs on these
beliefs, then I will have to change and believe the truth.
Until that happens, I intend to show why Calvinists
should reform their essential view of salvation because so much of
it hangs on wrong presuppositions about God.
PRESUPPOSITIONS
Everything that we believe and take action on is based
on something that we take for granted as true; on something that we
don't necessarily have to prove; on something that we presuppose.
For example, I believe God has created an orderly world, therefore,
I can make plans. if I presupposed a chaotic world I would have no
reason to make plans.
For the Christian, the things that we presuppose are
first, that there is a God and second that the Bible is true; that
it is God's decisive way of revealing the truth about himself. There
is no necessity for you to have to prove the first things you presuppose.
You just operate on the assumption that is made until (if ever!) you
find that it is inconsistent to continue basing your beliefs and actions
on that assumption. And the fact is that everyone begins by believing
in God (and consequently His authority over us), but everyone immediately
and wrongfully suppresses this truth ( Rom. 1:18,19).
I and the Calvinist have the same first presuppositions.
First, that there is a God, and second, that the Bible is true. We
both believe that what the Bible says about God is true. But, we both
interpret what the Bible says about God and come up with two exclusive
meanings. If the interpretations exclude one another, then at least
one of them is wrong. [1]
The presuppositions that guide our interpretation of
the Bible should themselves be taken from the Bible. If you don't
do this then you're making your interpretation independently of the
Bible and what you believe is then built upon something other than
the Bible. I think my interpretations about God as revealed in the
Bible are more nearly based on Bible-derived presuppositions. And,
I think there are presuppositions that have guided the Calvinist that
are not Biblical presuppositions. The presuppositions one has about
God will serve as a pattern or paradigm for basing the interpretation
of all other scripture. That is why I will deal with specific "problem"
texts last; after we have sifted through our presuppositions. One
extreme example (not a Calvinist example) of how a wrong, non-Biblical
presupposition affects the interpretation of other scripture is seen
in Mormonism. They take it as a given (giving priority to Joseph Smith's
revised visions which are a rejection of Bible teaching) that God,
the Father, has a body like humans. Because they presuppose this non-Biblical
notion they interpret scripture which says "God is a spirit ...
" to mean that the Father's spirit is clothed in a "personage",
with the Holy Ghost being the shared mind of the Father and Son. [2]
ORIGIN OF PRESUPPOSITIONS
Certain ideas invite acceptance because they seem to
have great explanatory powers. When we hear our perplexities explained
in a manner that relates cause and effect handily, we may be prone
to believe such ideas. In the first chapter I showed how that Augustine
was perplexed over the problems that seemed to arise over the traditional
view of election based on foreknowledge. In response Augustine decided
that election was based on the mystery of God's unsearchable will
rather than on His foreseen choices of men. [3] Augustine, it appears,
saw that certain non- Biblical ideas of the Greek philosophies would
enable him to explain things.
AUGUSTINE'S PRESUPPOSITIONS
The case with respect to Augustinianism and Calvinism
is not merely one of guilt by association with "isms", but
like the adulterous preacher who constantly preaches against immorality,
the Augustinian and Calvinist writers continually warn against the
dangers of accepting any teaching as our authority, outside of the
Bible, while at the same time letting classical Greeks like Plato,
the Stoics, or Aristotle help shape God's revelation of himself. The
Calvinist is supposedly committed to "sola scriptural" (only
scripture) and "sola gratia" (only grace), but so subtle
has been the Greek influence in Calvinist thought, that most do not
recognize it as such. Some who do understand the sway the Greeks had,
fail to see that it has reshaped their interpretation of the Bible.
Benjamin Writ Farley, for example, says that,
the rudiments of a reformed doctrine of the providence
of God lie deeply embedded in the western philosophical tradition.
There is little point in debating this. Wisdom and truth consist in
acknowledging the fact and in showing how Christian and later Reformed
doctrines differ significantly from the older, inherited, philosophical
views.
Farley reflects further,
Has Reformed theology wed itself too closely to the
classical world's concepts of God's perfection, omnipotence, omniscience,
and immutability in its attempts to witness to the God of Scripture?
To be certain, such concepts have their place in guiding the church's
reflection on the biblical God of providential activity. They enable
the church to avoid the pitfalls of defining God in ways that make
him subservient to other factors in the universe; they call the church's
attention to glaring inconsistencies in its assertions about deity.
But they need not 'control' our understanding of God's interaction
with his world. [5] The unadmitted fact is that "classical" definitions of God when accepted, of necessity do control our understanding
of God's interaction with His world.
FROM PLATO
In the following brief examples of Greek philosophy
we will see the likely source of some present day Calvinist teachings:
From Plato comes the concept of "the forms" or perfect ideals.
This gave students of philosophy (one being Augustine) the notion
that God does not change in any way because he is perfect. What is
perfect, it is argued, does not change because by definition "perfect" means the level beyond which nothing can exceed. Nothing is more perfect
than flawless, A+, or 100%. For a Platonist, things which change are
inferior to things which do not change.
The Bible presents God as changeless, but the Christian
tradition being shaped by Augustine and others, had to interpret what
that meant. They had to decide if it meant that God did not change
in character or if it meant that he did not change in some stronger
sense. I shall argue in due course for the former sense alone.
Calvinists, however, chose to interpret God's changelessness
as Aquinas, Augustine and the Greeks had defined it. Aquinas argued
that God is totally unchangeable because "anything in change
acquires something through its change, attaining something not previously
attained. Now God...embracing within himself the whole fullness of
perfection of all existence cannot acquire anything. [6] "Being
perfect already he can lack nothing," seems to be his argument.
I will show later how perfection may not consist of being in a static
condition, but for a perfect being, His perfection does have a place
for a _certain_ process of change. I don't mean to imply just any
process of change; certainly not an "evolutionary-type" process of becoming! Part of what makes God flawless, all good and
complete is His ability to change other than in His character. I will
expound more on this in chapter four.
FROM ARISTOTLE
Plato inspired Aristotle's thinking about the superiority
of things that do not change. We see it expressed in Aristotle's idea
of the "Unmoved Mover." God is thus "the eternal self-mover;
pure actuality, for any potentiality and change would suggest imperfection;
hence this god must also be incorporeal and without perishable qualities.
Thus the Prime Mover is without sensation or desire." [7]
From ideas such as this Augustine and others took the
Biblical concept of God's immutability (unchangeableness) and gave
it new non-Biblical meanings. From the Bible comes the revelation
that God cannot change in character. From the Greeks came the idea
that God cannot change at all.
FROM THE STOICS AND PHILO
Besides the nature of God's changelessness, other things
about the way God had ordered things seemed to have been given non-Biblical
senses because of Greek influence. The Stoic philosophy among other
influences may have given rise to the notion that no action in man
can arise uncaused. The Stoics were predeterministic in their thinking.
They reasoned that every event had its set of causes. To them there
were no uncaused events; every event was predetermined by preceding
events. They taught that chance was only a name for undiscovered causes,
and that God was the only uncaused thing. [8]
In opposition to this philosophy the Bible seems to
imply that man was created with the ability to act in response to
God in some uncaused or self-caused ways. A Jewish student of the
Greek philosophies, Philo of Alexandria, promoted the idea that though
God causes all things that happen; things that do happen have a primary
and a secondary cause. Since God is good, he reasoned, and causes
no evil, God is not at fault for some things that result from a secondary
cause. From something like this seems to have come the Calvinist rhetoric
concerning "proximate" (near) and "remote" (further
removed) causes with remote causes being less blameworthy than proximate
causes. This may not be the way the Calvinist says it, but the meaning
cannot be far from what I have written. In the need to resolve the
problem of removing God's responsibility for appointing the origin
of sin, Calvinists have looked to the Greeks for help.
It's plain to see that even if a man freely does something
by a choice that is caused by factors over which he does not have
final control, he cannot be held responsible for doing the action;
the controller is responsible. That man could not, as a matter of
necessity, have made other than the choice he made. The case is like
one hitting billiard ball A which then hits B, and then B hits C.
We cannot say that B is really blameworthy for hitting C. [9]
CONCLUSION
The Bible does not teach that God appointed that Adam
should sin, but because of certain presuppositions about God the Calvinist
must cast about for a suitable explanation for holding that everything
that actually happens is caused by God. Non-Biblical concepts seem
to have been chosen to find ways of minimizing the emphasis on God's
responsibility for moral evil and of maximizing the emphasis on man's
responsibility for having faith.
In the following chapters I will try to show where
non- Biblical presuppositions about God have worked to undermine the
correct view of other doctrines. To begin with I will show how their
faulty assumptions cannot help but give them a wrong view of me.
NOTES
It might occur to you that they are both right as in
light being modeled by waves and by particles, or by reason of the "antinomy" argument of which, in due course, I will urge
discounting.
_Doctrine and Covenants_, 1835 edition, pp53,54
In later chapters I will urge that the truth of "election" is based on slightly different circumstances than either of these.
Benjamin Writ Farley, _The Providence of God_ (Baker,
Grand Rapids) p.47,226
_Summa Theologiae_ , vol. II, 1a.9.1
Op. Cit., Farley
To the extent that their concept of "the word" was an impersonal force, to that extent was their view fatalistic.
John Frame, _Apologetics to the Glory of God_ (Baker
Book House, Grand Rapids, p.166)