Calvin's Mystery of The Trinity
Calvin's Mystery of The Trinity
Calvin's Mystery of The Trinity
Relationships: DivineHuman
INTRODUCTION
This study surveys John Calvins view of the the sublime mystery of (which is) the Trinity, the reasons for his views and their articulation, historical setting, and pastoral implications. We will concentrate on Calvins Institutes of the Christian Religion, complemented by his other writings (commentaries and sermons, etc.), and seek to isolate his particular concerns or contributions, theological methodology and pastoral praxis. Brief comments on contemporary Trinitarian theology conclude our investigation.
Melanchthon, in the Introduction to the Loci, Library of Christian Classics, XIX, (SCM: 1953ff.), page 21.
Calvin's Mystery of the Trinity by Rev. Dean Carter introduced, liturgy revised, and a university founded. By 1555 he had become the leader of the community, offered shelter to English and Scottish Protestant refugees, and supported the French Protestants. Throughout this period, the bulk of his New Testament commentaries were published, together with writings on the reformation and predestination. From 1555 until his death he dominated the community by his moral insight and wisdom, established an education system for young people, arranged for the care of the aged and poor, and continued the revision of the communitys laws. Multitudes of refugees found Geneva a safe haven: students flocked to his academy lectures, to return home as missionaries to England, Scotland, and most European countries. He completed many Old Testament commentaries (on 23 books), preached frequently, offered wise counsel through many letters and personal contacts, and rewrote the Institutes (final French edition in 1560). Racked by constant pain from a stomach ulcer, haemorrhoids (also bouts of malaria and possibly rheumatism or sciatica), simple in life style (yet enjoying lawn bowls, darts, quoits and la clef, the Genevan jig, and good wine and food), the influential reformer died on 27 May 1564.
Calvin's Mystery of the Trinity by Rev. Dean Carter 1559 (Latin)-1560 (French)the thoroughly revised final edition, the Institutio Christianae Religionis, now first arranged in four books, and distinguished by chapters, by the best method; and so greatly enlarged by new material that it can almost be regarded as a new work. Before, the plan followed the outline of the Catechism, now it was shaped by the quatripartite Apostolic Creed (Book IGod, Book IIJesus Christ, Book IIIthe Holy Spirit, and Book IVthe Church): before, providence and predestination were linked, now they were separated, with the latter being treated as a correlative of salvation: before, ecclesiastical authority was considered under the rubric of faith, now under the article of the Church: before, the Christian life as a conclusion to the work, now incorporated within the work of the Holy Spirit. Finally, two other features stand out, with the section on the resurrection placed in the article of the Spirit, and the critical issue of forgiveness deliberately linked with Christ and the Holy Spirit, to avoid either an implicit or explicit dependence on the Church (contra Roman Catholicisms instrumental/sacramental view of forgiveness).
James Orr, The Progress of Dogma (James Clarke & Co.: n.d.), page 283.
Calvin's Mystery of the Trinity by Rev. Dean Carter in the unity of God there is a trinity of persons, is known only by revelation, and issues in worship. Such an affirmation was not derived from the Church Fathers, but from the Scriptures as the written form of Gods Word, and apostolic teaching. The Fathers sought to express in contemporary language and terms the revealed realities of the Christian faith, yet were hampered by the deficient categories, grammar and vocabulary of their language to adequately convey such truth. While Jews bear witness to the revelation of the unity of God, the covenant LORD ( in the ShemaDeut. 6:4ff.), the early Christians also confessed the Christ to be Lord and God. They distinguished between the God and Father of the Lord Jesus Christ, and also acknowledged the Spirit as God: they came to perceive that the God of the Old Testament and the Father of the New, together with the Son, are one and the same God. Coming to affirm the incarnation of God the Son as Jesus Christ, the early Church was soon forced to articulate its understanding of the Trinity. So, the formulation of the revelation concerning of the Trinity, as such, was dependent on the Churchs views of the incarnation. Depending on whether Jesus is accepted as the incarnation of God the eternal Son, or simply a human being divinely equipped and energised for ministry (Adoptionism), or even the human form of a created or derived existence (Subordinationism, Arius), views of the Trinity were considered, rejected, or overhauled. Within all of the debates, derision and decisionsissuing in the Creeds of the Churchvariant views of the incarnation compromised or contributed to a clear articulation of the Trinity. Along the broad spectrum, different groups stressed the unity of God (and thereby exclusive of any internal relations), while others the internal multiplicity of God (and the complexity of relations): the constant and twin dangers of unitarianism (also positions of Sabellius, the Subordinationists and all strict monotheists) and tritheism confronted the Church. Athanasius rejected Arius view that the Son was not of the same substance as the Father (Arius argued that the Son was created as Logos from the non-existent), but affirming that the Son was homoousios with the Father. His equivocal statement meant that the Church could articulate its belief in one God, yet with the Son having the same (not merely similar, or like) substance as the Father. In fact, he argued that only if Christ is truly God become man can and do humanity have any (ontological) contact with God. That is, within the full humanity of Christ, we have the incarnation of God the Son, who freely incorporates fallen humanity into the very communion of the Godhead. Most of the discussion so far has concentrated on the Father and the Son, since up to this time the question of the Spirit had not been considered as critical, although various divergent views had been expressed. In the Eastern Church, the Cappodocians followed the insights of Athanasius, and defended the three full hypostases of the persons of the Godhead. This meant that they maintained the full homoousios of the Spirit, with that of the Father and Son. Yet the East did part company with the Western Church over the filioque clause, that is, that the Spirit proceeds from the Father, and the Son, the Western Churchs final formulation was expressed in Augustines work, De Trinitate. He emphasizes the unity of essence and the trinity of persons, each of whom possesses the entire essence, and thus is identical with the other two persons. None of the persons may be considered in isolation from the others, since they relate by mutual dependence on the others, with interpenetration and indwelling. Like his forebears, Augustine had misgivings about the term for person, but felt obliged to use it rather than remain mute. While the aim of this paper is to concentrate on the contribution of Calvin to our understanding of the Trinity, one further issue requires attention before we arrive at the Reformation period, and so, Calvin himself. It is the Latin heresy.1 By Calvins time a subtle wedge had been driven between the ontological relations of the Trinity, especially between Christ and God the Father. On the one hand, the formal orthodox creeds were retained, but on the other hand, everyday thinking and daily life had compromised such formulations. The nexus or link between Christ and God was breached, and considered, to all intents and purposes, as an artificial, instrumental and external relation, rather than ontological, reflecting the
1 See T F Torrance, The Deposit of Faith, in the Scottish Journal of Theology,Vol. 36, No. 1, 1983, pages 1-28; Karl Barth and the Latin Heresy SJT, Vol. 39, No. 4, 1986, pages 289-309, and George Yule, Luther Attack on the Latin Heresy in Christ in our Place, ed. by T Hart & D Thimell, (Peternoster Press: 1989), pages 224-252.
Calvin's Mystery of the Trinity by Rev. Dean Carter authentic internal relations of the Trinity. As a consequence, grace came to be seen as a commodity, albeit donated to man, often argued as contingent on the winsome merits of Christ and instrumentally dispensed to man via the Churchs sacramental system. This meant that rather than God giving Himself to man, the divine gifts and giver were detached from each other, and God provided no selfexpression through the Son and Spirit. And the disjunction between the giver and gifts resulted in another dichotomy, with the incarnation and atonement seen as separated, and so requiring the multiplicity of theories of the atonement to provide some logical explanation for thenow dividedperson and work of Christ. Further, we have noted that Athanasius insisted that since the Son is self-existent as God, the incarnation is the ontological union of the Word/Son of God and man. This means that, for Athanasius, the thought (Logos) and action of God are one: the self-giving inner relations of God are expressed in the incarnation of the Son, who by the Spirit, employs parables and works to signify and reveal and realise the reconciliation promised by God, and the redemption and recapitulation of man to participate in the communion of God. But what Athanasius perceived as ontological, and inseparably linked, others had failed to discern, either in its initial form, or implications. For example, the converted Carthaginian lawyer, Tertullian, had earlier brought a Latin dialectic way of thinking to bear on this matter (he was, however, the first to introduce the term Trinity into theology). In so doing, he had abstracted the knowledge (or truth) of God from its concrete actualisation in Christ as incarnate Son, and taking this position to its logical conclusion, ended with the truth being (i.) detached from Christ, (ii.) composed of propositions perceived to be revelation by itself, and (iii.) a fixed or static set of doctrines as prescriptive or regulative beliefs (ie. we believe that rather than believing in God). Therefore the legacy which Calvin, and the other Reformers inherited, was a mixture of lipservice to orthodox creeds, and confused pastoral practice (and its theological justification): into such chaos they were called to defend and declare the truth of the one Trinitarian God, retrieve the initiative taken by Athanasius and Augustine, and express both orthodoxy and orthopraxy. While Luther maintained the formal credal articulations of the Trinity, and felt constrained to concentrate more on the great principle of justification by faith in Christ alone, Calvin may be regarded as the key Reformation figure to have recovered and rehabilitated the Churchs understanding of the Trinity. But before we examine and evaluate his contribution, we will briefly mention some of his chief opponents and their views.
Calvin's Mystery of the Trinity by Rev. Dean Carter Perhaps it also contributed to Calvins determinedeven obsessiveattitude towards Michael Servetus, and to a lesser extent, Valentinus Gentile. 3:2:2 Michael Servetus (1511-53) Michael Servetus, physician and heretic, a native of Navarre, student (of mathematics, philosophy, theology and law) in Spanish university cities, travelled throughout Italy and Germany, and met Melanchthon and Bucer. His Biblical studies evidently led him to repudiate or modify the doctrine of the Trinity, especially as he sought to convert both Jews and Moors. He rejected the notion of an eternal Son in his De Trinitatis Erroribus Libri VII (1531). This work disturbed his friends, so he fled to Paris, where he studied medicine, becoming the personal physician of the Archbishop of Vienne. Resuming his theological studies, he covertly corresponded at length with Calvin, who finally exposed his anti-Trinitarian views. In 1553 his main work Christianismi Restitutio was anonymously published. He denied the Trinity and full divinity of Christ, whose humanity he regarded as a triplex compound, of (i.) the Word, which while not divine was the ideal reason for all created beings, (ii.) the soul and (iii.) the human body. His authorship was exposed, he was condemned by the Inquisition in Vienne, and while escaping en route to Italy via Geneva, was recognised, arrested, and denounced. Refusing to recant, he was burnt as a heretic (Calvin favoured a less barbarous method of execution) on October 27, 1553. 3:2:3 Valentinus Gentilis Valentinus Gentilis, an Italian refugee who fled to Geneva, and in 1558 refused to subscribe to a confession of faith imposed on the Italian Church to reconcile divergent views of the Trinity and Christology. After being arrested, he appeared to retract his position, was then accused of blasphemy, and on further recanting (and thereby avoiding being beheaded), was required as an act of public penance to incinerate his own books. On fleeing from Geneva, he resumed his anti-Trinitarian stance in Lyons, was ejected from Poland, and crossed the authorities in Bern. Unlike their Genevan counterparts, they had no hesitation in executing him, by beheading, on September 10, 1566. What Calvin encounteredand more than matchedin his opponents was their superficial appreciation and interpretation of the Scriptures, which exposed their fundamental framework as being that of Renaissance philosophy and humanistic ethics. We are now ready to turn to Calvins exposition of God the Trinity.
Calvin's Mystery of the Trinity by Rev. Dean Carter iv. Adversaries (esp. Valentinus Gentilis) improperly appeal to Irenaeus [27] v. Further appeal to Tertullian [28] vi. The unanimous affirmation by Church doctors to the orthodox view of Trinity [29]
Calvin's Mystery of the Trinity by Rev. Dean Carter and all prophecies go forth. After citing I Peter 1:10-11, cf II Peter 1:21; Heb. 1:2-3; Proverbs 8:2ff. and John 1:1-3, Calvin argues that unchangeable, the Word abides everlastingly one and the same with God, and is God himself. 8. The eternity of the Word: while some dare not openly deprive him of his divinity, [yet] secretly filch away his eternity, by stating that the Word began when God opened his mouth to create the universe. Rather, Calvin commenting on Genesis 1:3, John 17:5, and John 1:1-3, states that the Word, conceived beyond the beginning of time by God, has perpetually resided with him. By this, his eternity, his true essence, and his divinity are proved. 9. The deity of Christ in the Old Testament: postponing the treatment of the person of the Mediator (until redemption in Bk. II.xii-xvii), we are here concerned with the multiple testimony affirming Christs deity (so in Psalm 45:6, 44:7Vg). Opinions by medieval Jewish commentators (possibly Rashi, Abraham Ibn Ezra and David Kimchi) are to be rejected, since they fail to consistently interpret their own Scriptures (notably Isaiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel) where the Christ is identified as the object of faith, as is God himself. 10. The Angel of the Eternal God: these Jews also fail to perceive that Jehovah himself is frequently identified as an/the Angel (ie. in Judges 6; 7; 13). Servetus is cited (here for the first time in the Institutes) as impiously asserting that God never disclosed himself to Abraham and other patriarchs, and that they worshipped an angel in his place. However, in concert with the orthodox doctors, we interpret that chief angel to be Gods Word, already fulfilling the office of Mediator. Citing Hosea 12 and Zechariah 2, Calvin concludes that he [Christ] is the same God who had always been worshiped among the Jews. 11. The divinity of Christ in the New Testament: witness of the apostles: Paul (Rom. 9; 14; Ephesians 4:8) employs citations from the Psalms and Isaiah to show that Christ is the God who will never share his glory with another; John asserts that Isaiah saw the majestic God in the Temple, and that person was Christ (John 12; cf. Isaiah 6); and further references in Hebrews (to Psalms), and those cited by Paul and John confirm that Christ is no second god but is rather the one true God, to whom worship is properly afforded. 12. The divinity of Christ is demonstrated in his works: Christ has been intimately participating in the governance of the world (with the Father, as in John 5:17), as well as having the power and authority to search the hearts and minds of men, and remit sins. 13. The divinity of Christ is demonstrated by his miracles: while it must be conceded that prophets and apostles worked miracles, and thereby distributed the divine donations in their ministry, Christ exhibited his own power. Further, genuine salvation, goodness and justice are of and from God himselfsince Christ obviously had these, it must follow that he is God. Such good things are bestowed upon us as we invoke Christ that we seen in the Old Testament as the domain of God. We are instructed not only that by the Sons intercession do those things which the Heavenly Father bestows come to us but that by mutual participation in power the Son himself is the author of them. . . . There, indeed, does the pious mind perceive the very presence of God, and almost touches him, when it feels itself quickened, illumined, preserved, justified, and sanctified. (The eternal deity of the Spirit, 14-15) 14. The divinity of the Spirit is demonstrated in his work: a corresponding proof of the Spirit is sought in the same source. It affirms that the Spirit was active in tending that chaotic mass (so Gen. 1:2) and adorning creation with its beauty and order: that the Spirit participated with God in the commissioning of the prophets; that our experience confirms the witness of Scripture to the Spirits work as the giver of essence, life and movement to all created things, as the author of regeneration (by his own power) and future immortality, as the bestower of wisdom and speech, giver of justification, power, sanctification, truth, grace, and every good thing, and the one through whom we enter into the very communion of God. Therefore, the Spirit participates in the divine power, and resides hypostatically in God.
Calvin's Mystery of the Trinity by Rev. Dean Carter 15. Express testimonies for the deity of the Spirit: by reason of the indwelling of the Spirit we have become the designated and chosen temples of God: therefore, the Spirit is God (Calvin cites Augustine as arguing for the Spirits divinity on the basis of I Cor. 3:16ff.; 6:19; II Cor. 6:16). Again, where the prophets speak of the Lord of Hosts, the New Testament declares that these words are the utterance of the Spirit: therefore the Spirit is God. Finally, to sin against the Spirit is to sin grievously, and such blasphemy will never be remitted. (Distinction and unity of the three Persons, 16-20) 16. Oneness: the apostle Paul insists on one God, faith and baptism (Eph. 4:5), yet the name by which we are baptised is of the One God, but with equal clarity is expressed as Father, Son and Holy Spirit (Matt. 28:19). Hence it is quite clear that in Gods essence reside three persons in whom one God is known. Baptism therefore confirms the unity of God: with one faith we believe in the Father, the Son and the Spirit. Arians mistakenly deny (they prate most foolishly) the common essence of both the Father and the Son; Macedonians (with a like madness tormented following Macedonius, a semiArian bishop of Constantinople, who rejected the deity of the Spirit) deny the full deity of the Spirit, supposing the Spirit to merely be divine gifts. 17. Threeness: while the Scripture does indeed see a distinction of the Father from the Word, and the Word from the Spirit, we must be cautious and reverent in considering such distinctions. Gregory of Nazianzus is quoted with approval: I cannot think on the one without quickly being encircled by the splendour of the three: nor can I discern the three without being straitway carried back to the one. The words Father, Son and Spirit denote a real distinction, not a division. Calvin cites a number of passages from Johns Gospel (1:3; 5:32; 8:16; 15:25; 17:5; 14:16) to confirm the Scriptures witness to the distinction of the Father and Son, and Son and Spirit. 18. Difference of Father, Son and Spirit: Calvin doubts the expediency of human comparisons or analogies to express these distinctionsat the best they are, as even the church fathers acknowledged, inadequate. Calvin refrains for two reasons, (i.) giving occasion to the malicious, and (ii.) deluding the ignorant. Those provided by the Scripture, however, are to be received. To the Father is attributed the beginning of activity, as the fountain and wellspring of all things; to the Son, wisdom, counsel and the orderly disposition of creation; to the Spirit is assigned the power and efficacy of that activity. While there is no distinction of time, there is one of order: there is neither before or after in eternity, and the human mind, in contrast to the experience of faith, contemplates God first, then considers the wisdom as coming from God, and finally the power whereby he executes the decrees of his plan. Calvin cites Romans 8 as further evidence for the dual procession of the Spirit, as the Spirit of the Father, and of the Son (following the Western form of the Nicene Creed). 19. The relationship of Father, Son and Spirit: in each hypostasis the whole divine nature is understood . . . [yet] to each belongs his own peculiar quality. Calvin approves Augustines view:
Christ with respect to himself is called God; with respect to the Father, Son. Again, the Father with respect to himself is called God; with respect to the Son, Father. In so far as he is called Father with respect to the Son, he is not the Son; in so far as he is called the Son with respect to the Father, he is not the Father; in so far as he is called both Father with respect to himself, and Son with respect to himself, he is the same God.
Calvin's Mystery of the Trinity by Rev. Dean Carter Augustines position, which may be tabulated thus1
God (in Himself) Father (in relation to the Son) God (in Himself) Son (in relation to the Father) God (in Himself) Holy Spirit (in relation to Father and Son)
is developed expansively in his fifth book On the Trinity. Finally Calvin cautions, it is far safer to stop with that relation which Augustine sets forth than by too subtly penetrating into the sublime mystery to wander through many evanescent speculations. 20. The triune God: when we profess to believe in one God, under the name of God is understood a single, simple essence, in which we comprehend three persons, or hypostases. Hence, when the name God is mentionedwithout differentiationall three persons are designated. Yet this same name also often applies particularly to the Father, as beginning and source, without any compromise to the full deity of the Son or Spirit. Further, the names Father, Son and Spirit all indicate a relationship among the persons. Hence, the whole essence of God is spiritual, comprehending Father, Son and Spirit. (Refutation of anti-Trinitarian heresies, 21-29) 21. The ground of all heresy: a warning to all: Satan, as he has done in the past, continues to stir up ungodly spirits to harry orthodox teachers over this matter and today also is trying to kindle a new fire from the old embers. That in question is the divine essence of the Son and the Spirit, and the distinction of persons. While Calvins initial intention was didactic and declarative to the teachable, he must now turn to the defence of the truth. Such a great task calls for soberness, due to mans limited knowledge of God, and fidelity to the revealed word of God, not idle and inordinate curiosity. 22. Servetus contention against the Trinity: to recite the catalogue of past errors and heresies would waste time and exhaust patience. Instead, our current task is to hold fast to what the Scripture has clearly disclosedthat is, the unity of essence and the distinction of persons. One contemporary erroneous view is that of Servetus, who evidently accused Trinitarians of being atheists. Calvin summed up Servetus position as, (i.) the Trinity is tripartite when three persons are said to to reside in his essence (yet such a triad impugns Gods unity), (ii.) Persons are certain external ideas which do not truly subsist in Gods essence, but represent God to us in one manifestation or another. Servetus theogony (from + = God as parent: for Servetus there was no interval between the generation of the Son and the human birth of Jesus Christ)2 sees no distinction in God, at the beginning, since the Spirit and the Word were one and the same; but when Christ came forth as God from God, the Spirit proceeded from him as another God. Further, God is in both the Son and Spirit, and, the Spirit being substantially in us and also in wood and stone, is a portion of God. Hence, the Son and Spirit are indiscriminately mingled with all created things generally. Finally, the spirits of believers are coeternal and consubstantial with God, although he elsewhere assigns a substantial deity not only to the soul of man but to other created things. 23. The Son is God even as the Father: further errors are now alluded to, with the views of Valentinus Gentile and others who at least avoid Servetus impiety, and confessed the three persons, but then qualified this by arguing that the Father is truly and properly the sole God, the essentiator (= essence giver), who infused his deity into the Son (it therefore being a
1 2
Ford Lewis Battles, Analysis of the Institutes of the Christian Religion of John Calvin (Baker: 1980), page 60. Battles, op. cit., page 61. 10
Calvin's Mystery of the Trinity by Rev. Dean Carter derivative or abstracted from, Gods own essence). This led to a distinction between the essence of God (ie. Father) on the one hand, and that of the Son and Spirit on the other. Calvin counters this by arguing that some differentiation in order is required for the Father to not be the Son. And without true essence, Christs supposed deity is annihilated, and he is a God in name but not reality. 24. The name God in Scripture does not refer to the Father alone: the opponents object that all unqualified references to God in the Scriptures must apply solely to the Father since unless the Father alone were truly God, he would be his own Father. Calvin counters this absurdity with the fact that from the time that Christ was manifested in the flesh, he has been called the Son of God, not only in that he was the eternal Word begotten before all ages from the Father, but because he took upon himself the person and office of the mediator, that he might join us to God. Further objections are answered by citations from Philippians 2:6-10 and John 4:23-24. 25. The divine nature is common to all three Persons: while others divide the divine essence between Father, Son and Spirit, we assert, with the Scripture, that God is one in essence. Their claim that we hold to a quarternity (that is, of divine essence + three persons) is unfounded, since for us the unity lies in the essence, while Trinity in the persons. Taken to its logical conclusion, their position would be a Trinity comprised of the conjunction of the one God with two created things. 26. The subordination of the incarnate Word to the Father is no counterevidence: our opponents cannot fathom why Christ, if properly God, should be called Son. When Christ addressed God in John 17:3 as Son to Father, he was speaking as Mediator: this in no way compromised his own divinity, for it was included within the name God. The highest rank afforded to the Father does not subordinate the Son to an secondary or inferior rank of deity beneath the Fathers glory or essence: rather, because endowed with heavenly glory he gathers believers into participation in the Father. . . . Christ descended to us, to be us up to the Father, and at the same time to bear us up to himself, inasmuch as he is one with the Father. 27. Our adversaries falsely appeal to Irenaeus: since Irenaeus asserted that the Father of Christ was the sole and eternal God of Israel, our opponents falsely presume that he rejected orthodoxy. Rather, he was combatting heretics who denied that the Old Testament God and the Father of Christ were one and the same. Our current dispute is with those who deny the same essential deity to Christ which they readily attribute to God the Father. Finally, there is overwhelming evidence in Irenaeus work to prove that he acknowledged Christ as one and the same God as His Father. 28. The appeal to Tertullian also is of no avail: nor is Tertullian to be adopted as an advocate for our opponents. For Tertullian holds to the essential unity of the Godhead, but also allows within the divine dispensation or economy the distinction among the persons. And Tertullians alleged subordination of the Sonas second to the Fatheris not related to substance or essence, but economy. 29. All acknowledged doctors of the church confirm the doctrine of the Trinity: the claim by our opponents that Justin and Hilary support their cause is as baseless as their dependence on Irenaeus. Further, the alleged supportive citation from Ignatius is almost unanimously regarded as spurious. Augustine (toward whom these rascals are most hostile) was conversant with the aforementioned fathers, approving their views: he also called the Father the beginning of all deity because he is from no one; and wisely considers that the name of God is especially ascribed to the Father because if the beginning comes not from him, the simple unity of God cannot be conceived. Calvin concludes that this completes his refutation of the chicaneries by which Satan has endeavoured to pervert the truth of the doctrine. I trust that the whole sum of this doctrine has been faithfully explained, if my readers will impose a limit upon their curiosity, and not seek out for themselves more eagerly than is proper troublesome and perplexed disputations.
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6. CALVIN, CALVINISTS AND THE CONTEMPORARY CHURCH 6:1 THE TWIN DANGERS OF UNITARIANISM AND TRITHEISM
The Medieval Church faced the constant dangers of formal or functional unitarianism and tritheism. Calvin and his fellow reformers recovered the balanced and consistent view of the Trinity. But within a short time their followers had lapsed back into one or other extreme, or simply took for granted their view of the Trinity. In fact, to all intents and purposes, Trinitarian theology was eclipsedagain.2
Trevor Hart, Humankind in Christ and Christ in Humankind: Salvation as participation in Our Substitute in the Theology of John Calvin in SJT, Vol. 42, No. 1, 1989, pages 67-84. See, for example, M Charles Bell, Calvin and Scottish Theology (The Handsel Press: 1985), for a discussion of the doctrine of assurance, and the wider theological framework of covenant see James B Torrance, Covenant or Contract? A Study of the Theological Background of Worship in Seventeenth-Century Scotland in SJT, Vol. 23, No. 1, 1970.
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Calvin's Mystery of the Trinity by Rev. Dean Carter on the other, a sterile scholasticism (with a displaced obsession with theological systems, almost believed to have quasi-hypostatic significance) gradually overtook and froze and fossilized much of the Reformed Churches into objectivism. Against such extremes few clarion calls were heard. Among them may be named, in Scotland, for example, John McLeod Campbell, PT Forsyth and James Denney (but note that both Forsyth and Denney lacked a high view of the incarnation, and saw it simply as instrumental). All three stood for the objective revelation of God, the divine self-giving in Christ, the reconciliation and redemption accomplished and applied by the Trinity. In doing so, they rejected both the liberals loss of the objective action of God in human history, as well as the evangelicals cold orthodoxy, which had confused its formulations of the Gospel (also its soteriological obsession), often making the permanent and absolute message of the Church contingent on prevailingbut temporary and relativistic philosophical systems. When the evangelicals did speak out, they failed to gain much of a hearing. For example, in one of their most significant publishing venturesentitled The Fundamentalsthere is no treatment of the Trinity! But in 1917 the theologians self-indulgence and complacency was shattereda bomb exploded in their playground! Karl Barth gave notice that the agenda was to be changed, and the Trinity was again at the head of items for consideration.
Since Barth and Brunner brought the truth of the Trinity back into the limelight, a number of major treatments have been offered the Church. For a survey of recent Trinitarian trends, we recommend the reader consult the illuminating article by John Thompson (himself a student of Barth, and fan of PT Forsyth!). In passing, we note that Process theology has little place for the Trinity, and Liberation, Black, Feminist, Death of God (that is, by the Cross, God died in/as Christ) theologies stray from, and target Calvins view of the Trinity as irrelevant, outmoded, naive, or incomprehensible. Nevertheless, at the end of the twentieth century, the Church is being forced to reconsider this critical issue, and hopefully, return to a consistent understanding of the Trinity. Certainly such a return would necessitate a reformation of thought and praxis within the Church: such a reformation would receive the acclamation of the great ReformerJohn Calvin.
1
Emil Brunner, The Christian Doctrine of God Dogmatics: Vol. 1 (Westminster Press: 1950), pages 206-207, 217.
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CONCLUSION
John Calvins contribution to the Churchs understanding of the Trinity was significant and salutory, and finally secured the orthodox position within the life and ministry of the Church. Hearing and heeding the testimony of the Scriptures, guided by the confirmatory witness of the Church Fathers, Calvin retrieved the truth of the Trinity from heresy and re-established the Trinity as central to the Churchs experience and exposition of the Gospel of the self-giving of God in Christ. While many both before and since Calvinhave failed to acknowledge the triune God whom he worshipped and served, we are called with the Church to know the triune God, and in our knowing, offer our glad response to the Father, through (and with) the incarnate Son, by the Spirit. Finally, just as Calvin was ready to invoke and approve the witness of others (especially Gregorys comment noted above), so we echo the words and sentiment of Jonathan Edwards, I would not be understood to pretend to give a full explication of the Trinity; for I think it still remains an incomprehensible mystery, the greatest and the most glorious of all mysteries.1
LITERATURE:
APRIMARY SOURCES: Calvin: Institutes of the Christian Religion, THE LIBRARY OF CHRISTIAN CLASSICS Vols. XX-XXI, ed. JT McNeill, (SCM: 1960); Calvin: Theological Treatises, LIBRARY OF CHRISTIAN CLASSICS Vol XXII, ed. JKS Reid (SCM: 1954); Calvin: Commentaries, THE LIBRARY OF CHRISTIAN CLASSICS Vol. XXIII, ed. J Haroutunian (SCM: 1958);
BSECONDARY SOURCES: Baillie, DM God was in Christ (Faber & Faber: 1968); idem. The Doctrine of the Trinity in Out of Nazareth (St Andrew Press: 1958), pages 179-211; Bavinck, H Our Reasonable Faith (Baker: 1977); Benot, J-D The History and Development of the Institutio: How Calvin Worked in John Calvin, ed. GE Duffield (Eerdmans: 1968); pages 102-117; Berkhof, L The History of Christian Doctrines (Banner of Truth Trust: 1969); Berkouwer, GC The Return of Christ (Eerdmans: 1972); Bloesch, DG Essentials of Evangelical Theology Vol. 1 (Harper & Row: 1978); idem., The Battle for the Trinity (Servant Publications: 1985); Brown, HOJ Heresies (Baker: 1988); Brunner, E The Christian Doctrine of God DOGMATICS: VOL. I (Westminster Press: 1950); Crawford, RG Is the Doctrine of the Trinity Scriptural? in Scottish Journal of Theology Vol 20 No. 3 (1967), pages 282-294; Dakin, A Calvinism (Duckworth: 1949); Dillenberger, J & Welch, C Protestant Christianity (Charles Scribners Sons: 1954); Doyle, RC The Preaching of Repentance in John Calvin in God Who is Rich in Mercy, eds. PT OBrien & DG Peterson (Lancer: 1986), pages 287-321; Forstman, HJ, Word and Spirit (Stanford University Press: 1962); Gunton, CE The Promise of Trinitarian Theology (T & T Clark: 1991); Hart, T Humankind in Christ and Christ in Humankind: Salvation as Participation in our Substitute in the Theology of John Calvin in Scottish Journal of Theology Vol. 42 (1989), pages 67-84; Heppe, H Reformed Dogmatics, ET GT Thomson (Baker: 1978); Heron, AIC A Century of Protestant Theology (Lutterworth Press: 1985); Hodgson, L The Doctrine of the Trinity (James Nisbet & Co.: 1960), esp. pages 165ff.; Houston, JM Spirituality and the Doctrine of the Trinity in Christ In Our Place: ESSAYS PRESENTED TO JB TORRANCE, ed T Hart & D Thimell (Paternoster Press: 1989), pages 48-69; Jenson, RW The Triune Identity (Fortress Press: 1982); Kimel, A F Jr. Speaking the Christian God (Eerdmans: 1992); Knig, Adrio The Eclipse of Christ in Eschatology (Eerdmans: 1989); Kraus, C Norman Jesus Christ our Lord (Herald Press: 1990); Mackey, JP The Christian Experience of the Trinity (SCM: 1983); McNeill, JT The History and Character of Calvinism (Oxford University Press: 1973); Miscellany 308 Trinity: in The Philosophy of Jonathan Edwards from His Private Notebooks, ed. H G Townsend (Greenwood Press: 1977); Niesel, W The Theology of Calvin (Baker: 1980); Orr, J. The Progress of Dogma (James Clarke: nd); Osterhaven, ME The Faith of the Church (Eerdmans: 1982); Parker, THL, John Calvin in A History of Christian Doctrine, ed. H Cunliffe-Jones (Fortress: 1980), pages 387-399; idem., John Calvin (JM Dent & Son: 1975); Pelikan, J Reformation of Church and Dogma (1300-1700) THE CHRISTIAN TRADITION Vol 4 (Chicago: 1984), esp. pages 322-333; Prestige, GL God in Patristic Thought (SPCK: 1969); Quick, OC Doctrines of the Creed (Collins Fontana: 1963); Ritschl, D The Logic of Theology (SCM: 1986); Rolston, H III John Calvin versus the Westminster Confession (John Knox Press: 1972); van Buren, P Christ in our Place (Oliver & Boyd: 1957); Thompson, J Modern Trinitarian Perspectives in Scottish Journal of Theology Vol. 44 (1991), pages 349ff.; Torrance, TF Kingdom and Church (Oliver & Boyd: 1956); idem., Karl Barth and the Latin Heresy in Scottish Journal of Theology Vol. 39 (1986), pages 461-482; Van Til, C Calvin as a Controversialist in Soli Deo Gloria: FESTSCHRIFT FOR JOHN GERSTNER, ed. RC Sproul (Presbyterian & Reformed: 1976), pages 1-10; Wainwright, AW The Trinity in the New Testament (SPCK: 1975); Wallace, RS, Calvins Doctrine of the Word and Sacrament (Oliver & Boyd: 1953); idem, Calvins Doctrine of the Christian Life (Eerdmans: 1961); Warfield, BB Calvins Doctrine of the Trinity in Calvin and Augustine (Presbyterian & Reformed: 1971), pages 189-284; idem., The Biblical Doctrine of the Trinity in Biblical and Theological Studies (Presbyterian & Reformed: 1952), pages 22-59; Weber, O Foundations of Dogmatics Vol. 1 (Eerdmans: 1981); Welch, C In This Name (Charles Scribners Sons: 1952); Wendel, F Calvin (Collins: 1963); Yule, G Luthers Attack on the Latin Heresy in Christ In Our Place: ESSAYS PRESENTED TO JB TORRANCE, ed T Hart & D Thimell (Paternoster Press: 1989), pages 224-252; Zizioulas, JD Being as Communion (St Vladimirs Seminary Press: 1985).
Miscellany 308 Trinity: in The Philosophy of Jonathan Edwards from His Private Notebooks, ed. H G Townsend (Greenwood Press: 1977), page 260. 15