In my last thread, I
provided quotes from five Reformed theologians who affirmed (to one degree or
another) that Calvin's elucidations on the doctrine of Trinity marked, "an epoch
in the history of the doctrine of the Trinity" (link). In this post, I provide two Reformed contributions
which present a substantially different view, a view that basically conforms to
the notion that Calvin's take on the Trinity, "carefully avoided anything that could have been considered
an innovation". Those who adopt this view, have a difficult task before
them, and I say this for three important reasons: first, from a strictly
historical perspective, the extant evidence presents considerable opposition to
such a view. Brannon Ellis has provided an excellent summary of the early
historical responses to Calvin's reflections:
In the years after Calvin's death his
autothean stance garnered sustained criticism, not only from antitrinitarians, but
from the great majority of quite orthodox fellow trinitarians as well.
Controversy over his views spread to include Roman Catholics from the 1560s and
Lutherans from the 1590s. After the turn of the seventeenth century, Arminius
and his Remonstrant successors joined the general opposition to this
language...Each of these trajectories rejected Calvin's advocacy of the aseity
of the Son, remaining in polemic with the Reformed who universally took it up.
(Calvin, Classical Trinitarianism, and the Aseity of the Son, p. 3.)
Second, even though the early
Reformed camp, "universally" embraced Calvin's teaching on, "the
aseity of the Son", they were divided into two opposing positions
concerning the doctrine of eternal generation, with one of the two clearly being
a novel development—i.e. those who taught that that God the Father did not
communicate the divine essence to the Son via eternal generation.
Third, Warfield's exhaustive
treatment on Calvin's doctrine of the Trinity presents substantial evidence
that his read on Calvin's thought is the correct one—that Calvin added
something important to the historical development of the doctrine of the
Trinity—and that it, constituted "an epoch in the history of the
doctrine of the Trinity." (It is important to keep in mind that it is a
separate issue whether or not this "epoch" was a positive or negative
development.)
Adherents of the position that
Calvin's take on the doctrine of the Trinity did not entail any real
innovation/s, begin with the presupposition that those who oppose their view
have grossly misunderstood what Calvin himself taught. This is the only
recourse they have when the early historical opposition to Calvin's position is
brought into play; they maintain that the Catholic, Lutheran and Remonstrant Trinitarians
had incorrectly read Calvin—i.e. they all got it wrong.
This supposed incorrect reading of Calvin
apparently has also been a major problem among "several" Reformed
folk, for one fairly recent (2012) proponent of non-innovation view, has
published an online critique of three "modern" Reformed theologians
(Robert Reymond, Gerald Bray and Roger Beckwith) who:
...have claimed that the Calvinistic
or Reformed doctrine of the Trinity represents a distinctive break with, and
perhaps an advancement of, the Nicene tradition. They assert that Calvin’s attribution of
the term autotheos to the eternal Son, as well as his statements about
the “unbegotten” essence of God, represent a correction to implicit
subordinationism within the long-standing tradition. (Steven Wedgeworth, "Is There a Calvinist Doctrine of the
Trinity?" - LINK.)
Wedgeworth
continues with:
In
this paper, we will investigate how these claims arise in the history of
Reformed theology and respond by examining the context in which Calvin made his
(now) controversial statements. We will argue that the recent thinkers who
suggest that there is a distinctively Calvinistic doctrine of the trinity have
misunderstood Calvin’s context, and thus wrongly assumed his theology to be
creative on this point. We will thus contend that rather than creating a new
theological construction, Calvin was instead working within an old Western
tradition.
Later in the paper,
Wedgeworth attempts to defend the views that not only was Calvin, "working
within an old Western tradition", but also that Calvin's position was
virtually identical to that of Peter Lombard and the 4th Lateran Council !!!
Though Wedgeworth's paper
is certainly interesting, and worth reading, I believe that a number of his
conclusions are problematic. (In part 3 of this ongoing series I will provide
some reasons why I believe this to be so.)
Another online paper
delves into the division between Reformed folk who believe that Calvin
maintained a non-innovative, historical view of eternal generation and those
who adamantly deny this—i.e. Calvin introduced a novel concept which
advanced/corrected the historical understanding of eternal generation. Benjamin
W. Swinburnson, sets the tone for his extensive essay with the following:
A central issue that arose from these 16th century
polemics was the doctrine of the eternal generation of the Son of God. What
precisely were Calvin’s views on the subject? Did it represent a distinctive
break with Patristic and Medieval orthodoxy? If so, what is the precise nature
of Calvin’s distinctiveness?
Different answers have been given to these questions over the past
four hundred years. Broadly speaking, two schools of interpretation have
emerged. One school views Calvin’s teaching on eternal generation as being in
substantial continuity with his Patristic and Medieval predecessors and
Reformation successors, while the other tends to view him as making some kind
of distinctive break with past interpretations of the doctrine—a break (it is
argued) that was not always consistently implemented by his successors. Both
schools of thought tend to agree that Calvin embraced a form of the doctrine of
the eternal generation of the Son, but they disagree as to how he defined it.
Specifically, the main area of dispute concerns Calvin’s acceptance or
rejection of the idea of communication of essence in eternal generation.
("John Calvin, Eternal
Generation, and Communication of Essence: A Reexamination of His Views" -
HTML version here; PDF
here.)
Swinburnson endorses and
defends the view that Calvin taught, "the idea of communication of essence in eternal
generation", and maintains that Calvin's doctrine of the Trinity did not
introduce any novel concepts. (Warfield embraced the opposite view, and I lean
towards his assessment, but I remain somewhat open to the possibility Calvin had
no explicit position on this issue.)
I shall conclude this post
with a suggestion to those who are interested in this topic that they read both
of the online papers I linked to above, as well as Warfield's substantive
essay, which was linked to in the previous thread.
Part 3 coming soon...
Grace and peace,
2 comments:
Eagerly awaiting part iii.
Hi Don,
Thanks much for the interest in this series. Part 3 should be up by Wednesday (the Lord willing).
Grace and peace,
David
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