ARTICLES AND ESSAYS
Blake T. Ostler
The concept of grace and its relation to individual salvation is probably the most debated issue in the history of Christian thought. The
list of combatants is virtually a Who's Who in Christian thought:
Augustine versus Pelagius, Banez versus Molina, Luther versus
Erasmus, Calvin versus Pighius, and Whitefield versus Whitely. These
debates have always centered on the same issue: whether God's saving
grace is compatible with human freedom. Discussions of grace in Mormon thought are too often carried out in almost complete ignorance of
the evolution of Christian thought on this topic.
Both Mormon and non-Mormon interpreters of Mormonism frequently assume that, at least so far as modern Christianity is concerned, Mormonism is alone in emphasizing free will and works over
salvation by grace alone. For example, Rev. William Taylor described
the Mormon position as a denial that grace has any role in salvation:
"Mormons deny grace, except as a way of saying that Jesus' atoning
sacrifice won resurrection and immortality for all men, regardless of
their worth." Catholics, he says, in contrast, "emphasize that this 'new
creation' is something we can never earn; it is God's gift, given out of
love, in Grace" (Taylor 1980, 44). We can hardly blame the good
Reverend for adopting this view of Mormon belief, for he quotes Bruce
R. McConkie's Mormon Doctrine which says that Mormons believe that
persons must achieve salvation by good works and that God's grace
consists in universal resurrection. Such a view misunderstands both
Mormon and traditional Christian thought.
BLAKE OSTLER is the husband of one and the father of three. He graduated from the University
of Utah with a juris doctorate and is a philosophy instructor at the Brigham Young University Salt
Lake Center and an attorney in private practice.
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The Concept of Grace in Christian
Thought
1 4 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon T hought
often overlooked the fact that there has been at least a significant, even
if a minority, view within traditional Christianity which has emphasized free will and works in conjunction with notions of grace. Moreover, Mormons have often oversimplified the notion of grace as if it
were a simple, unitary concept, namely that God arbitrarily confers
saving grace on those he wishes to save and that once grace is accepted,
one is saved regardless of what one does. God arbitrarily damns everyone else, not for any act of theirs, but by his "good pleasure." Grace
signifies the acceptance of the believer into the class of saved persons
independently of the human will or deeds. Yet this reductive understanding misconstrues virtually every thinker in the history of traditional Christian thought. In partial defense of these Mormon mis-
understandings, it may be noted that Christians from the
fundamentalist camp are often no more aware of the history and
nuances of the idea of grace than most Latter-day Saints. Indeed, most
of them would probably be surprised to learn that, historically, Baptists have emphasized free will and human endeavor in conjunction
with divine grace.
We Latter-day Saints have much to learn from those who preceded
us in attempting to understand the message and meaning of Jesus of
Nazareth. My purpose here is to explore the history of notions of grace
promulgated by the seminal thinkers in Christian history and thus
provide a prolegomena to further discussion of grace in my own tradi-
tion. Some of the world's brightest and kindest thinkers have devoted
their best efforts to elucidating the relationship of grace to works, and
of both to salvation. We ought to take advantage of their efforts and
learn from them. At the very least, such a study will increase our
awareness of the complex and interesting tensions inherent in the con-
cept of grace as it relates to other Christian beliefs such as free will,
deification, and salvation.
The Historical Problematic
Paul and Pauline Thought
A review of the Apostle Paul's thought is necessary both to put the
later debate over grace and free will into proper context and because
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I suspect that the Mormon emphasis on good works to the almost
total exclusion of grace in the process of salvation evolved in reaction
against the more radical fundamentalist Christian notions of salvation
by grace alone. Yet have we overreacted? Which doctrines of grace
should we guard against in Mormon thought, if any? Are some notions
of grace congruent with the Mormon view of salvation? Mormons have
Ostler: Concept of Grace 15
Moses to the gospel of Jesus Christ came only through faith in Christ,
not through any observances. In this context, Paul often spoke of free-
dom (Gal. 5:1, 13). However, Paul did not mean that the individual
will was free; Paul never explicitly addressed the issue of the role of
the free will in salvation nor whether the will is free as opposed to
being in bondage to sin. Paul spoke only of "freedom from" the require-
ments of the Law of Moses - a freedom that should not lead to self-
indulgence (Gal. 5:14). Freedom of will should not be confused with
"freedom from" the requirements of the Law of Moses. As Krister
Stendahl, the present chaplain and former dean of the Harvard Divinity
School, has convincingly argued, Paul was not preoccupied with
his bondage to sin as were Augustine and Luther who erroneously
interpreted Paul's letters as addressing the subject of original sin
(1976, 78-96). As Morna Hooker put it, "We see Paul through the
eyes of Augustine or Luther or Wesley when we see him as a man
struggling- and failing - to keep the Law and so convicted of sin"
(1980, 40).
Paul adopted several key terms difficult to translate into English
because of their cultural richness. He taught that individuals have
been "washed clean . . . have been sanctified . . . have been justified
in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ" (Rom. 6:1i).1 Every term in
this phrase is pregnant with meaning peculiar to Paul. While "to justify"
( dikaiod or dikaiosyńe) in Greek meant literally to "declare innocent" or
"acquit" in the sense of a jury verdict of "not guilty" (Thayer 1979,
150), in Galatians and Romans, "to justify" or "justification" almost
always referred to entering into a proper relationship with God the
1 All references to biblical quotations are from the New Jerusalem Bible, 1986
edition.
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his writings and those attributed to him are a part of the Mormon
canon. Paul's notion of justification by grace therefore forms a part of
the Mormon concept of grace.
The primary problem Paul confronted was that some Christians
who had been (and in many ways still were) Jews believed that observing the Law of Moses was necessary for Christian salvation (Gal. 2;
Acts 15). (For a general discussion of the debate, see Brown and Meier
1982, 111-27). Paul's discussions of grace and works were set forth
almost exclusively in Galatians and Romans where Paul addressed
issues raised by the "Judaizers," those claiming that the Law of Moses
must be observed (Brown and Meier 1982, 118-20). In Romans and
Galatians, Paul argued that observance of the Law of Moses was not
necessary because Christians have transferred from serving the Law to
serving Christ Jesus. Paul argued that the transfer from the Law of
1 6 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon T hought
Father through the saving action of Christ Jesus (Goppelt 1976, 137-41).
any works. The only condition to entering the relationship was faith in
Jesus (Romans 5:1-2; 11:6). The relationship could not be earned by
obeying the Law of Moses; in fact, trying to earn the relationship
through such works only showed that one had betrayed Christ and
transferred back to the regime of the Law of Moses (Gal. 5:2-5). 2
Augustine, Luther, and Calvin interpreted Paul as placing a wedge
between Christian grace and moral works, between law and faith.
They, together with almost all Protestants (with the exception of some
recent Protestant scholars), understood Paul to denigrate all works and
to teach that salvation comes through grace alone - sola gratiae. However, this view does not do justice to the richness of Paul's thought. It
is clearly true that Paul disapproved of reliance on works (ergon) of the
Law (nomos) of Moses. However, Paul did not denigrate all works or all
laws (Sanders 1983, 32-34). In fact, Paul taught that there are conditions to remaining in the covenant relationship with Christ Jesus (Romans
1 1 :22). The conditions were observance of the "law (nomos) of the spirit
of life in Christ Jesus" (Romans 8:2); or "the law of Christ" (Gal. 6:2);
or "Christ's law (nomos)" (1 Cor. 9:21), or "the law (nomos) of faith"
(Romans 3:27 KJV). The only faith that justified was "faith which
worketh (energoumene) by love" (Gal. 5:6; 13. See Gal. 6:4; 1 Cor. 13:2;
2 Cor. 9:8; Eph. 4:17; and Col. 3:5-7). The law of Moses had been
replaced by the law of love which summarized the Torah in a single
command. Whenever Paul used the terms "works" or "law" in a sense
disapproved, he referred to them in connection with the Law of Moses.
However, Paul also used the terms "law" and "works" in a sense
approved - in connection with the law of Christ and works of love.
It is important not to read into Paul's view the contradiction between
works and grace seen by Augustine, Luther, and Calvin. As E. P.
Sanders concludes, Paul did not perceive a tension between being saved
by grace and being judged by works (1977, 516-18). In particular,
Paul recognized that persons could "fall from grace" if they rejected
Christ by failing to trust in him or by conduct inconsistent with the
law of love - conduct injurious to the covenant relationship - such as
2 Unless otherwise indicated, chapter and verse designations are identical to the
KJV.
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Just as Israel had been elected to the covenant relationship with God
without regard to whether Israel deserved such a relationship, so the
covenant relationship was now offered to Christians without any conditions (Romans 11:1-6; Sanders 1977, 470-72). The central notion is
a loving relationship which is unconditional. The covenant relationship was therefore a grace that was not and could not be earned by
Ostler : Concept of Grace 17
murder, fornication, or sodomy (Gal. 5:5-6; 19-21). Though the covenant relationship is entered (i.e., persons are justified) by grace through
faith in Christ, all persons will be judged according to their own works
(1 Cor. 3:12-15; 11:29-32; 2 Cor. 5:8-10; Romans 2:6-7). According
1:8; 7:34; 15:58; 16:13; 2 Cor. 4:16; 11:3; Phil. 1:27; 2:15; Gal. 6:9).
Many earlier interpretations of Paul have failed to understand that
Paul's teachings about salvation by grace did not differ significantly
from Judaic teachings. Both viewed salvation by grace as consistent
with judgment by works (Sanders 1977 and 1983). Numerous documents present the Jewish view of grace, including the Old Testament,
the Jewish pseudepigrapha, Rabbinic literature (the Mishna, Tosefta,
Sifra, Palestinian Talmud, Babylonian Talmud, and the Midrash
Rabbah), and the Dead Sea Scrolls. Nevertheless, studies of Paul have
suffered from the misconception that Christianity was a religion of
grace while Judaism was a religion of works. This view of Judaism is
simply wrong. For Jews, the Law itself was a grace which justified
persons. For example, no group was more strict or more adamant than
the Qumran Covenantors in their observance of the Law of Moses.
Yet, the initiates at Qumran would sing:
As for me,
if I stumble, the mercies of God
shall be my eternal salvation.
If I stagger because of the sin of flesh,
my justification shall be
by the righteousness of God
which endures forever.
When my distress is unleashed
He will deliver my soul from the Pit
and will direct my steps in the way.
He will draw me near by His grace,
and by His grace will he bring my justification.
He will judge me in the righteousness of his truth
and in the greatness of His goodness
He will pardon all my sins.
Through His righteousness He will cleanse me
of the uncleanness of man. (Vermes 1968, 93-94)
The Jews at Qumran were convinced that they would be justified
through God's grace and righteousness. Nevertheless, God required
them to obey the Law of Moses. For the author of the Qumran hymn,
God's grace was offered within the system of the Law of Moses. Though
the covenant relationship was offered as a grace, God demanded obe-
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to Paul, only those who endure "in grace," or "in the Spirit," or "in
Christ"- that is, only those who belong to Christ on the Day of the
Lord (i.e., the day of judgment) - will be saved (1 Thess. 5:23; 1 Cor.
1 8 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon T hought
through the election of Israel - could they enter the divine-human rela-
tionship, but disobedience could sever that relationship. There is no
notion in Judaism or in Paul's teachings that God's love is earned or
merited, for no one could do enough to merit God's election and freely
offered covenant relationship; but once entered, one had to be faithful
to the demands of the divine relationship.
Paul's view of grace differed only in one particular, that persons
were justified - that is, entered into a covenant relationship with God -
through the saving action of Christ Jesus, not through works of the
Law of Moses. Paul's notion of grace in no way implied that persons
were free to do whatever they pleased - and it is unlikely that those
who understood Paul to teach libertinism were Jewish Christians since
they would have understood that the covenant relationship offered
by grace required conduct in conformance with the terms of the covenant, namely those requirements stipulated by the new law of love
delivered by Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount (Piper 1979, 100-33).
Paul taught that one's covenant relationship to God was not offered on
conditions - it has always been offered in unconditional love or by
grace. Nevertheless, one had to observe the terms of the covenant
relationship once entered (Hooker 1980, 38-40).
Paul and James
Because the letters of Paul and James apparently contradict each
other, they have exerted a tremendous influence on later discussions
of grace and works. James's letter may have been a direct response to
Paul, though if so, he did not understand Paul's teachings, for he alters
the meaning of every key term used by Paul. However, it is more
likely, though not entirely certain, that James was responding to
persons who misunderstood Paul's teachings. The latter interpretation is more probable because Paul himself noted that what he said
had sometimes been misconstrued to mean that "we are free from sin
now that we are not under the Law but under grace" (Rom. 6:20).
Paul retorts, "What then? Shall we sin, because we are not under
the law, but under grace? God forbid" (KJV Rom. 6:15). And else-
where Paul complained, "Some persons are spreading slanderous
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dience to the Law. Those who breached the covenant by disobeying
the law of Moses would be cut off from the covenant relationship (1QS
2.2-8 1QH in Vermes 1968, 153-54). Both the Qumran covenantors
and most Jews in Paul's day did not perceive justification by grace as
opposed to works of the Law. Similarly, they did not perceive obedience to the Law as somehow nullifying grace. Only through grace -
Ostler: Concept of Grace 19
reports that we teach that one should do evil that good may come from
it. In fact such persons are justly condemned" (Rom. 3:7-8). The anti-
nomians (those who taught that freedom from law meant
freedom to sin) appear to have derived their (mis)understandings from
also that persons are "justified by faith alone" (pistis morion). In Romans
and elsewhere Paul asserted that "a man is justified by faith without
the deeds of the law" (Rom. 3:28 [KJV]; 9:32; Gal. 2:16). Compare
James's position: "You see then how that by works a man is justified,
and not by faith alone" (James 2:24 [KJV]). Yet James is responding
not to Paul, but merely to a slogan derived from Paul (Jeremias
1954-55, 368-71). The key to understanding James is that he vigorously rejects the notion of faith alone (Davids 1982, 50). He insists that
"faith works together with (synergei) deeds . . . works perfect and fulfill
faith (pistis synergei tois ergois ... ton ergon he pistis eteleiothe kai eplerothe )"
(James 2:22). The term used here by James, synergei , became the catch-
word for the later position known as "synergism," roughly the notion
that God's grace and human works are both necessary for salvation.
However, James uses the term not to refer to the subject of this later
debate (the role of human free will and works in salvation), but only
to clarify the necessary connection between faith and works in the
Christian life.
Both James and Paul approved of "law" in the sense of the law of
liberty, or the royal law, as James terms it (2:8, 12). For James, the
law binding on Christians was the law of love taught by Jesus in the
Sermon on the Mount, which fulfilled the law of Moses because it
summed up the Law in a single commandment (James 2:8; Davids
1982, 16, 114-16). Paul, as we have seen, condemns the term law
when used in the sense of the law of Moses, but approves law in the
sense of the "law of Christ" or "law of grace" or "law of life in Christ
Jesus" (Luck 1971, 161-79).
James argued that God will justify (dikaioutai) or declare one righteous by virtue of his works (ex ergon). As Davids points out, James did
not use the term "justified" in the forensic sense of justification of
sinners as Paul did (1982, 51). Paul referred primarily to present
justification - the transfer from the regime of the law of Moses to the
lordship of Christ Jesus (Hooker 1980, 32-33) - whereas James referred
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the writings of Paul, for they adopted Pauline slogans; but they
distorted them in a way that Paul would have rejected. (See Davids
1982, 47-51).
James appears to be combatting the same distortion of Paul's teachings (Reicke 1974, 34-35). James's opponents argued: "You say you
have good deeds, but we have faith" (see James 2:14). They argued
20 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
James (Gal. 6:7-10; Rom. 14:11-12; Sanders 1977, 515-18).
When James condemns the notion of "faith alone," he is targeting
a mere intellectual assent to proper doctrine. He approves profession
of faith only when it produces deeds of love. Faith alone will not do.
James was emphatic that faith does not really exist without deeds of
love. It is inaccurate to interpret James to say that if one has faith,
then works will naturally follow; rather, faith and works are two aspects
of the same act of accepting Jesus's law of love. Faith neither follows
from nor precedes works because, for James, faith apart from works is
a false dichotomy - like a body without a spirit. Paul would agree totally
with James that faith must be manifest in works. Paul would not argue
that faith could exist apart from works in the sense of deeds of love;
rather, he would ask if faith not manifest in deeds of love were faith in
any genuine sense (cf., Gal. 5:6; 6:4; 1 Cor. 13:2; 2 Cor. 9:8). The
diatribe against a mere profession of faith in James finds its closest
New Testament parallel in Matthew: "Not everyone who says to me,
'Lord, Lord,' shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the
will of the Father" (Matt. 7:21).
Finally, it must be noted that James did not deny that faith has a
role in justification; it was simply that faith that justifies is consummated in brotherly love, not mere profession (James 2:14, 17-22, 26).
Paul and James both addressed a distortion of Paul's teachings, and
they both agreed that justifying faith entails a life which manifests
deeds of love. Neither accepted the slogan that man is justified by faith
alone (Schillebeeckx 1983, 161-64).
In summary, Paul's condemnation of works referred to ceremonial
works of the law of Moses; whereas James referred to works only in
the sense of works of love. James's condemnation of faith referred to
mere intellectual assent that was not manifest in works of love; whereas
Paul referred to faith in the sense of faith manifest in love. Moreover,
James did not deny faith a role in justification, but found a synergy
between faith and works which justifies a person (James 2:22). However, James used "justified" to mean "is finally judged righteous"
(Goppelt 1976, 208-11). Paul did not use "justification" in this sense
(Reicke 1974, 34). Nevertheless, Paul would agree that judgment is
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to Goďs act in the final judgment of declaring a person righteous.
James spoke solely of eschatological justification. Though there is a
sense in Paul in which justification is already accomplished in Christ,
presently available to Christians and yet to be accomplished through
participation in Christ's glory with the Father, judgment by works is
always in the future. Whenever Paul did speak of judgment, he also
spoke of judgment according to Christian "works" or deeds, as did
Ostler: Concept of Grace 21
"according to deeds" (Rom. 2:6; 4:10; 1 Cor. 3:12-17; 9:23-27;2 Cor.
5:10; 6:1; Phil. 2:12; 3:8, 14).3
The following chart shows approved and disapproved senses of key
terms for James (J) and Paul (P):
works (J) works of love
(ergon)
(P) works of love works of the law of Moses
law (J) royal law
(nomos) (P) law of Christ, law of Moses
faith (J) faith manifest in love mere intellectual assent
(pistis) (P) faith manifest in love
justified (J) by faith and works of love through mere profession
(dikaiusyne) (P) by faith/by grace through the law of Moses
final
judgment (J) by deeds
(krisis)
(reward) (P) by deeds
Christian Thought Before Augustine
After Paul and before Augustine, Paulinism had little influence on
Christian thought outside the canon. As Elaine Pagels has shown, mainstream Christians from Justin Martyr and Ireneaus through Tertullian, Clement, and the brilliant teacher Origen "regarded the proclamation of moral freedom, grounded in Genesis 1-3, as effectively
synonymous with 'the gospel' " (1989, 79). These same church leaders
unanimously denounced the gnostics for denying what the orthodox
considered to be humanity's essential God- given attribute - free will.
For Justin Martyr (ca. 165 C.E.), free will was a fundamental tenent of
Christianity:
Unless the human race have the power of avoiding evil and choosing good
by free choice, they are not accountable for their actions, of whatever kind they
be. But that it is by free choice they both walk uprightly and stumble, we thus
3 Yet Paul and James certainly understood the example of Abraham in Genesis
15:6 differently. James and Paul both accept Genesis 15:6 as establishing justification
by faith, but James sees such an interpretation as a distortion unless it is put in the
context of Abraham's deeds of obedience in the arrested sacrifice of Isaac.
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Term Sense Approved Sense Disapproved
22 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
demonstrate. We see the same man making a transition to opposite things. . . .
But this we assert is inevitable fate, that they who choose the good have worthy
rewards, and they who choose the opposite have their merited rewards. ( Apologia
pro Chństianis Bk. 1, Ch. 43, in Roberts and Donaldson 1977, 1 : 177)*
explained:
It was possible for God Himself to have made man perfect from the first, but
man could not receive this [perfection], being as yet an infant. . . . Man has
received the knowledge of good and evil. . . . [S]ince God, therefore, gave [to
man] such mental powers man knew both the good of obedience and the evil of
disobedience, that the eye of the mind, receiving experience of both, may with
judgment make choice of the better things . . . learning by experience that it is
an evil thing which deprives him of life. . . . Wherefore he has also had a twofold
experience, possessing knowledge of both kinds, that with discipline he may make
a choice of the better things. But how, if he had no knowledge of the contrary,
could he have had instruction in what is good? ( Adversus Haereses , Bk. 4, Ch.
38-39)
According to Irenaeus, humans, as originally created by God, did
not have either an evil or a good nature, but were capable of both:
"Since all men are of the same nature, able both to hold fast and to do
good; and, on the other hand, having power to cast it from them and
not do it - some do justly receive praise even among men who are
under the control of good laws" ( Adversus Haereses , Bk. 4, Ch. 37, 2).
As for Adam and Eve, in his Proof of the Apostolic Preaching (ch.
16), Irenaeus pictured them in the Garden of Eden as innocent children not yet fully aware of evil. Their transgression did not call for
divine judgment, but rather for Goďs compassion on account of their
weakness and innocence. Irenaeus thus viewed our present life as an
opportunity for spiritual growth, with human deification as the ultimate goal:5
4 Tatian (ca. 175 A.D.) taught that God did not make humans already good, but
made them free to become good aor evil according to free choice ( Oratio 7, in Migne
1877, 90, 6). Theophilus (ca. 175 A.D.) also regarded Adam and Eve as children,
placed in mortality so that they might mature and become perfect ultimately through
sharing in God's divinity through free will (Ad Autolycus 2, 24-25 in Migne 1877-90, 7).
5 By "deification" Irenaeus meant that humans shared fully as heirs in the divine
gift and immortality and not that humans were uncreated like God.
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For Irenaeus (ca. 200 C.E.), the story of Adam and Eve proclaimed
"the ancient law of liberty because God made man a free [agent] from
the beginning, possessing his own power ... to obey the commands
of God voluntarily and not by compulsion of God" ( Adversus Haereses
Bk. 4, Ch. 37, 1 in Migne). Irenaeus thought of humankind as originally immature and requiring mortal experience to grow. As Irenaeus
Ostler : Concept of Grace 23
By this arrangement, therefore, and these harmonies, and a sequence of this
nature, man, a created and organized being, is rendered after the image and
Irenaeus saw the true meaning of human life revealed in what
Jesus became and what humans may become as a result: "It was for
this reason that the Son of God, although He was perfect, passed
through the state of infancy in common with the rest of mankind, par-
taking of the infantile stage of man's existence, in order that man
might be able to receive him" ( Adversus Haereses , Bk. 4, Ch. 38, 2). We
therefore cannot blame God for not making us perfect, because we are
yet in an immature stage of existence and need to experience both
good and evil: "For we cast blame upon Him, because we have not
been made gods from the beginning, but at first merely men, then at
length gods" (p. 4).
Ultimately we will be deified if we properly use our freedom accord-
ing to Irenaeus: "Our Lord Jesus Christ, who did, through his transcendent love, become what we are, that He might bring us to be even
what He is Himself' (Bk. 5, preface). Irenaeus's doctrine of deification
was a development on Paul's concept that persons become reconciled
to God by sharing in what Christ did and ultimately become what
Christ is: "He was rich, but he became poor for your sake, to make
you rich out of his poverty" (2 Cor. 8:9); "For your sake God made the
sinless one to enter sin, so that in him we might become the goodness
of God" (2 Cor. 5:21). Indeed, Morna Hooker has stated that Irenaeus's
notion of deification is "the neatest summary" available of Paul's thought
(1980, 46).
Virtually all mainstream Christians until Augustine believed that
persons are morally responsible because they have a choice between
good and evil (Kelly 1978, 348-52). As J. N. D. Kelly noted:
A point on which [the Greek Fathers] were all agreed was that man's will
remains free; we are responsible for our acts. . . . Augustine's starting point was
not theirs. . . . The orbit within which they worked was quite different, being
marked out by the ideas of participation in the divine nature, rebirth through the
power of the Spirit, adoption as sons, new creation through Christ - all leading to
the concept of deification (theopoiesis). Their attitude is illustrated by the statement attributed to Athanasius, "The Son of God became son of man so that the
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likeness of the uncreated God - the Father planning everything well and giving
his commands, the Son carrying these into execution and performing the work of
creating, and the Spirit nourishing and increasing [what is made], but man making progress day by day, and ascending towards the perfect, that is, approximating to the uncreated one. . . . Now it was necessary that man should in the first
instance be created; and having been created, should receive growth; and having
received growth, should be strengthened; and having been strengthened should
abound; and having abounded, should recover [from the effects of Adam's sin];
and having recovered, should be glorified; and having been glorified, should see
his Lord. ( Adverses Haereses , Bk. 4, Ch. 38, 3)
24 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
sons of men, that is, of Adam, might become sons of God . . . partakers of the
life of God. . . . Thus He is Son of God by nature and we by grace." Cyril of
Alexandria made the same point: "We are made partakers of the divine nature
and are said to be sons of God, nay, we are actually called divine, not only
because we are exalted by grace to supernatural glory, but also because we have
God dwelling in us." Grace thus conceived is a state of communion with God , and if a man
Augustine and Pelagius
Aurelius Augustine (354-430), bishop of Hippo, fundamentally
altered the Christian understanding of grace. Augustine read the story
of Adam and Eve very differently from the Greek fathers. Instead of
viewing them as imperfect, immature creatures who were to undergo
moral development and growth and finally be brought to the perfection planned by God, Augustine held that the man Adam was created
finitely perfect and then incomprehensibly destroyed that perfection
through the sin of pride.6 Instead of viewing Adam's action as something in accordance with God's plan which occurred during the immature stage of the race and an understandable choice due to human
weakness, Augustine viewed Adam's action as a "Fall"- an utterly sinful
and malignant act which completely disrupted God's plan due to a
moral crime. Instead of seeing our world as a divinely appointed period
of probation, mingling good and evil and allowing human development towards divine perfection, Augustine maintained that human
trials are a divine punishment. Most important, instead of regarding
humankind as confirmed in free will (as a necessary condition to moral
responsibility and growth), Augustine emphasized that the human will
had been fatally injured and, as a result, humans could will only evil
in accordance with their depraved nature (see especially Hick 1978,
214-15). Furthermore, Augustine transported these ideas into Paul's
letters, including Augustine's own teaching of the human will's moral
impotence and his sexualized interpretation of sin (see Pagels 1989,
xxv).
Augustine unfortunately developed his doctrine of the Fall from a
faulty text of Romans 5:12. In the Greek, Paul's text reads: "so death
passed to all men in that (heth ho) all sinned." However, the old Latin
6 I will follow Augustine in using the terms "man" and "Adam" without reference
to Eve. Augustine was not a modern feminist and did not speak of both Adam and
Eve, but only of Adam, when describing the defection of the human will from its
original goodness as a result of pride. Though less sensitive to issues of gender, his
writings nevertheless clearly relate to women.
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must use his free will to attain it , there can be no question but that the blessedness in which it
consists is wholly the gift of God. (Kelly 1978, 352; emphasis added)
Ostler: Concept of Grace 25
version used by Augustine read "in whom (in quo) all sinned." The
notion of original sin derives all too easily from this faulty text. (It is of
early work, De deversis quaestionibus ad siplicianum (Williams 1927, 327).
Augustine held that all persons were seminally present ("in whom all
sinned") and actually participated in the sin of Adam - a position known
as traducianism. Therefore, Augustine reasoned that after the Fall all
descendants of Adam and Eve were captives of an evil nature through
genetic inheritance and by actually being present with Adam when he
sinned.
As a corollary to his view of original sin, Augustine asserted that
God created humankind with the power both to sin and to refrain
from sinning. Thus, before the Fall Adam was in a state of moral freedom (posse non peccare). After the Fall, however, all persons were unable
to avoid sin (non posse non peccare). Augustine reasoned that persons
were nevertheless free even if they could not choose good because they
could do precisely as they desired - they could act evilly in accordance
with their depraved nature. This notion of free will modified the
commonly held view that free will required choices among genuine
alternatives of good and evil. All Christian writers prior to Augustine
who addressed the issue maintained that a person could not be truly
free unless the person was able to also refrain from sinning. In contrast, Augustine taught that persons are "free" to choose to sin but
not free to choose not to sin. Further, any escape from sin is wholly
dependent on God. Augustine's theory of grace was, then, entirely
monergistic - in other words, salvation was ultimately up to God alone
(in Enchiridion, 104; see Dodds 1871-76).
Augustine also held that grace was bestowed in several stages which
marked the transition of the human will from total servitude to sin
and depravity to blessedness. The first stage was prevenient grace (gratia
praeveniens). The Holy Spirit was the efficient cause which brought the
human soul to a sense of sin and moved it to faith. In other words,
God, not the believer, was responsible for initiating redeeming faith in
Christ. Augustine called the second stage operative grace (gratia operans).
Another mode of grace was extended from God who justified and
restored to the human will the power to do good. The regenerated will
was not, however, restored to freedom wherein one might will to choose
good or evil (libero arbitrio ), but to liberty (libertas), by which the human
will was made unable to sin (non posse peccare).
Clearly not all persons received operative grace. However, since
the depraved soul is incapable even of choosing to accept grace,
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singular importance to understand that Augustine's dramatic break
with Greek Christianity resulted in part from his poor understanding
of Greek.) The term "original sin" was first used by Augustine in his
26 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
Augustine reasoned that the difference between those who accept grace
stated that "predestination is the preparation for grace, but grace is the
gift itself. . . . God elected us in Christ before the foundation of the
world, predestinating us to the adoption of sons, not because he saw
that we should become holy and sinless of ourselves, but he elected and
predestinated us that we might become so. But he did this according to
the good pleasure of his will; that man might not glory in his own will,
but in the will of God towards him" (De Predestinatione , 100.18). Thus,
God arbitrarily chose to save some and to leave others to damnation.
Those who actually accepted operative grace did so because of
"irresistible grace" (gratia irresistibilis) by which God is able to overcome the resistance of even the most obstinate sinner so that the regen-
erated sinner willingly (and thus voluntarily in Augustine's thought)
accepted divine grace. "It is not to be doubted," said Augustine, "that
the human will cannot resist the will of God" (De Corroptione et Gratia ,
14; Enchiridion , 100.2). Thus Augustine hypothesized a double predestination: God decreed the sinful soul's salvation both by preparing the
will to receive grace and by ultimately moving the human will to
"voluntarily" accept the grace offered. God decided to leave the rest of
humankind to flounder in its naturally evil state and sink to ultimate
damnation.
Augustine defended what may seem inequitable treatment. There
is nothing wrong in God's damning some people, he argued, because
all persons deserve to be damned as a result of their sinful nature
inherited from Adam; but God in his "mercy" has predestined some to
be saved from their just deserts. Augustine viewed infant baptism as
necessary to regenerate depraved human nature. Unbaptized infants
were lost according to Augustine (De Civitate Dei Bk. 5, Chs. 21, 13);
Contra Julianum Bk. 4, Ch. 3). His position on infant baptism followed
directly from his views of original sin and depraved human nature
(Cooper 1984, 93-113).
Finally, Augustine altered the notion of human deification, though
not even Augustine fully rejected the notion because it was simply too
well established in Christian thought. Augustine held that persons are
deified through adoption, not through a process of maturing from child-
hood to fully mature humanity as Irenaeus had taught. In his commentary on Psalm 49, Augustine quoted: " T have said, Ye are gods;
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and are saved and those who reject grace must be determined solely
by God. Hence, Augustine held that some, but not all were predestined by Goďs absolute decree ( decretum absolutum). God decided to
save some (but not all) from the fallen mass of humankind (; massa
perditionis ). The divine decision was not made on the basis of foreseen
faith or human works, but simply by "God's good pleasure." Augustine
Ostler: Concept of Grace 27
and ye are the children of the Highest. But ye shall die like men: and
fall like one of the princes' then explained, "It is clear that He calls
men Gods through their being deified by His grace and not born of His
participation in God's nature through a long process of growth in grace
as Irenaeus had maintained. As Gerald Bonner noted: "It must be
kept in mind that, for Augustine, deification is the privilege of the
elect, a small minority, while the great majority of the human race
pertains to the massa damnata " (1986, 385).
Augustine's redefinition of Christian doctrine scandalized the British monk Pelagius. Pelagius was concerned primarily with the corrupt
Roman society which he had experienced while visiting Rome and felt
that Augustine's theology of grace without responsibility would make
matters worse. In contrast, his theological starting point was the traditional affirmation of free will and moral responsibility. God set before
Adam and Eve a choice which he also posed to all persons: a choice
between "life and death, and good and evil" (Deut. 30:15 [KJV]). He
then commanded them to choose life (Deut. 30:19). The final decision, however, was up to Adam and Eve's free will, for Pelagius maintained that the possibility of freely choosing the good entails the possibility of choosing evil (1877-90, 30:16f).
Pelagius maintained that when God created human beings, he
bestowed upon them, by grace, the power {posse ) to not sin {posse non
peccare). Though the power derived from God, the will {velie) and actualization of decisions {esse) derived solely from the human soul. Further,
God had implanted in the hearts of all persons the natural law, or
knowledge of right and wrong. Thus, human beings, who enjoy freedom of alternative choices as a result of God's grace, are nevertheless
ultimately responsible for their free choices. Further, Pelagius rejected
the Augustinián view that "sin" is an inherited state of being and held
that sins arise only from specific acts which violate God's law.
Pelagius rejected the notions of original sin and the view that persons are captives of depraved nature because he held that the Fall did
not affect the human will. Instead, God created each soul immediately
at birth, so the soul could not inherit Adam's original sin. Only Adam
could be guilty of Adam's sin. Pelagius pointed out that if the offspring
of Adam and Eve inherited original sin, then the offspring of sanctified
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substance. . . . Now he who justifies, Himself deifies, because by justifying He makes [them] sons of God. Tor them gave he power to
become the Sons of God.' If we are made sons of God, we are also made
gods; but this is done by grace of adoption, and not by generation"
(Enar. in Ps. 49.Í.2.).
In essence, Augustine asserted that human deification was identical to being adopted as sons and daughters of God rather than full
28 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
Little children therefore do not need baptism, for they are just as God
created them prior to any free decisions.
Pelagius also rejected Augustine's notion of double predestination,
believing that God, no respecter of persons, offers his grace equally
to all, leaving all thus to share equally in moral responsibility {De
Castigiis , 13). Pelagius held that God predestines, but he does so based
upon the works he foresees that persons will perform and they are
therefore saved on the basis of merit {In Romanos 9,10; Augustine, De
gestis Contra Pelagii 16). Finally, Pelagius argued that persons could, in
theory, live a sinless life. However, Pelagius did not envision perfection obtained in a single moment, but rather through continued efforts
of free will throughout life {Ad Demetrius 30, 42).
Some of Pelagius's disciples, such as Coelestius, sharpened Pelagius's
arguments against Augustine. The more general tendency, however,
was to moderate both the positions of Pelagius and Augustine into a
view which came to be known as semi-Pelagianism. The essence of
this view was that salvation is effected by a combination of two efficient agencies, both human will and divine grace. Semi-Pelagians held
that the Fall had not obliterated free will but had only weakened it.
They tended to contrast the Augustinián view that the will had been
"mortally wounded" with the position that the "will is only injured."
The role of grace is essentially to strengthen the human will. Grace of
itself is not sufficient because it cannot force the human will; but the
human will of itself is also insufficient because it is unable, unaided, to
exercise grace-accepting faith. Though semi-Pelagianism was a good
attempt to reconcile the opposing positions of Augustine and Pelagius,
it lacked the theological rigor of either position.
In later discourse, positions maintaining that the decision whether
to accept grace is ultimately solely up to God have been called
"monergism." Positions which hold that divine grace and human will
must both cooperate have been called "synergism." The view that
humans can save themselves without divine grace has been viewed as
"heterodox" or improper thinking (though not even Pelagius ever
adopted such a position).
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parents ought to inherit their sanctification. Of course, proponents of
original sin could not adopt this view - though it seemed to follow
from their position. Adam's transgression of Goďs law had introduced
death and spiritual alienation from God into the world. However,
Pelagius clarifies, an individual's spiritual death results from individual actions and not from an evil nature: "Before willing there is only
in man what God has created" {In Romanos 5, 16; ad Demetrius 8, 17).
Ostler: Concept of Grace 29
Medieval Positions
could create.
In contrast, God knows which of these truths will obtain in the
actual world because God has determined by his free knowledge which of
these logically possible worlds he will bring about. Thus, by his natural
knowledge, God knows that a world with cows and with mermaids is
logically possible. By his free knowledge, he knows that the actual
world will include cows but not mermaids because he has chosen to
create cows but not mermaids. Moreover, God's free knowledge is
postvolitional or a result of God's sovereign will. God can thus determine
which world is actual by knowing which world he will cause to exist.
Neither natural nor free knowledge, however, extends to free human
acts. God cannot know free acts by his natural knowledge because,
given free will, each of the following types of worlds is logically possible:
(A) If Molina is created in circumstances C , then he will freely accept the
grace offered by God.
(B) If Molina is created in circumstances C , then he will freely refrain from
accepting the grace offered by God.
Let's call a possible world in which (A) occurs an "A-world" and a
world in which (B) occurs a "B-world." Now, by his natural knowledge
God knows that both A-world and B-world are logically possible, but
God does not know which world is actual because such truths are contingent on human freedom; that is, it is logically possible for each
proposition to be either true or false. Or, to put it another way, God
could know by his free knowledge that "Molina will accept his grace
when offered" in the world he creates, but he can't know whether Molina
will freely accept God's grace, for a free act is one that is not caused by
antecedent events or circumstances. So not even God can cause free
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I find the notion of middle knowledge developed by the sixteenthcentury Jesuit Luis de Molina to be one of the most sophisticated and
powerful theological notions in Christian thought. It also provides a
strong basis for the notion of a type of predestination consistent with
human freedom. Conceptually, middle knowledge fits between natural
knowledge and free knowledge. Molina affirmed that God has natural
knowledge , which is knowledge of all necessary and possible truths, as
in assertions such as "all red apples are red" or "mermaids possibly
exist." Such truths are prevolitional or true prior to God's providential
activity. That is, God does not bring such truths and possibilities into
existence; rather, they are true independently of God's volitional creative activity because they are true in all possible worlds that God
30 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
ever, middle knowledge is of contingent truths - truths which might or
might not happen. Moreover, if (B) is true, then God cannot create an
A-world because Molina will freely reject God's grace if circumstancesC are created. If B is true, then God cannot bring about an A-world
without coercing Molina to accept his grace. And Molina held that
such coercion is not consistent with free will. Thus, God discovers, so
to speak, when he reviews all of the possible worlds, that he cannot
create some possible worlds which contain free beings. God could create a different possible world which does not contain circumstance C
but instead includes a situation S in which Molina will freely accept
God's grace if it is offered, but situation S is different from circumstance C which exists in an A-world. Let us call those worlds which
contain free creatures that God can create, feasible worlds.
It follows that it is not entirely up to God whether Molina accepts
God's grace when it is offered because Molina is free; it is only up to
God to offer his grace. Nevertheless, because any given person's salvation depends on which among all feasible worlds God has chosen to
create, God in effect chooses to save some and not others. For example, if God chooses to create an S-world (the world in which Molina
will be in situation S), then Molina is predestined to be saved. If, on
the other hand, B is true and God decides to create a world in which
Molina will be in circumstance C, then Molina is predestined to not
be saved. Thus, Molina's salvation depends, in this sense, entirely on
God's decision. God ultimately controls who will and who will not be
saved because he knows what any given person would do if placed in
any given situation. Thus, we can schematize God's providential act of
salvation as follows:
God finds himself in a creation situation consisting of:
1 . Natural Knowledge God knows all logically necessary truths and all
logical possibilities
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human acts consistently by allowing human freedom, according to
Molina. Thus, God cannot know whether he has created an A-world
or B-world unless he also knows the truth of conditional propositions
("if . . . then" statements) such as whether (A) is true and (B) is false.
Molina claimed that God knows the truth of conditional propositions like (A) and (B) by his middle knowledge , or knowledge in between natural and free knowledge. That is, God knows by his middle
knowledge what any free, possible person X would do in any possible
circumstance if God chooses to create X. An interesting fact emerges,
however, when such truths are held to obtain prior to God's creative
activity, namely, that whether or not such a proposition is true is not
up to God. Like natural knowledge and unlike free knowledge, middle
knowledge precedes God's creative activity. Like free knowledge, how-
Ostler : Concept of Grace 31
2. Middle Knowledge God knows that if Molina were created in C,
then Molina will reject grace; and if Molina is
created in S, then Molina will accept grace when
it is offered.
God views feasible worlds and decides to create C -world
acts are true - God knows that Molina will reject
grace when it is offered because Molina is in
circumstance C.
Yet Molina held also that whether persons are saved or not depends
on their free choice to accept or reject Goďs grace even though God
foresees via his middle knowledge which they will do; but God does
not offer his grace or choose to create any given world because he fore-
sees that persons will accept or reject the grace when offered. God
may have chosen to create a given possible world because it contained
the greatest balance of good in relation to evil, but God cannot eliminate all evil because every feasible world which includes significantly
free creatures may also contain some evil. Remember, whether feasible
worlds contain evil is not within God's control; rather, it is a fact
dependent upon which conditional propositions are true prior to God's
decision to create.
Molina thus maintained that God is not responsible if some persons are not saved, even if God is ultimately responsible for which
feasible world he creates and thus which persons are in fact saved.
Molina could hold this view because he also maintained that God
offers actual grace to all persons, or grace which provides the supernat-
ural assistance needed to perform those acts that God has ordained
will allow persons to merit eternal life. Actual grace is divided into
prevenient (or antecedent ) grace, which precedes the human will and pre-
pares it to freely accept God's grace when offered, and cooperating (or
consequent ) grace by which the human will concurs with God's actual
grace.
Luis de Molina also emphasized that God desired all persons to be
saved. It follows that God offers sufficient cooperating grace to all per-
sons to merit salvation. That is, everyone receives sufficient grace, or
the grace which empowers one to perform saving acts. Molina was, of
course, aware that some persons do not accept cooperating grace. When
persons do accept cooperating grace, it is called efficacious grace. For
Molina, efficacious grace is, so far as God's offer of grace is concerned,
identical to sufficient grace - it is merely termed efficacious grace when
it is actually accepted. The key point is that whether or not God's
grace becomes efficacious depends on us relative to the world God has
chosen to create, not on God. Further, it may be that no matter what
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3. Free Knowledge God knows which propositions about free human
32 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
possible world God creates, Molina will refuse Goďs saving grace. If
Molina is incorrigible in all circumstances, in all feasible worlds, then
God cannot save him unless God can coerce salvation. Since salvation
requires a free response to Goďs offer of grace, however, there may be
Thomas Aquinas, who predates Molina by over 300 years
(1225-1274), had argued that God's foreknowledge arises from his all-
encompassing causal activity. The Thomist God is pure actuality
{actus purus) who knowingly causes, direcdy or indirecdy, all that occurs
(Aquinas, Questiones disputate de ver it ate, Qu. 5, Art. 1). In contrast to
Molina, Aquinas had maintained free will is possible even if God moves
the will to accept grace. He also maintained that IF God did not move
the will, then grace would not be accepted. According to Thomist s,
God gives to some efficacious grace , or grace which moves their will to
"freely" accept God's operative grace to salvation. Aquinas admitted
that "God does reprobate some persons. . . . [A]s predestination
includes the will to confer grace and glory, so also reprobation includes
the will to permit a person to fall into sin, and to impose the punishment of damnation because of that sin" {Summa Theologica Pt. 1, Qu.
23, Art. 3).
Molinists quizzed Thomists as to why God did not grant efficacious
grace to all, because he could have saved all persons without violating
the Thomist notion of free will. Thomists responded in essentially the
same way that Augustine had: all persons deserve by nature to be
damned, and God is not required to save all since salvation is an act of
unmerited grace. Moreover, it is better that not all are saved, according to Aquinas; thereby not only God's grace and mercy are made
manifest in the elect whom he saves, but also his justice, both vindictive and retributive, is manifest by permitting some to remain in sin
and subsequently punishing them with damnation {Summa Theologica ,
Pt.l, Qu. 23, Art. 5).
Finally, the Thomists argued that God in fact has bestowed
sufficient grace on all persons, though he has not bestowed efficacious
grace on all. However, God's goodness is not impugned, Thomists
claimed, because the rejection of sufficient grace by reprobates was up
to them, just as the Molinists themselves claimed. Some Thomists
(like some Calvinists) have conceded that God's salvific action displays an apparent harshness and arbitrariness. Aquinas himself stated:
"Yet why He chooses some for glory, and reprobates others, has no
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persons whom God simply cannot save. Molina believed that he had
developed a system which accounts for both human freedom, and a
strong notion of predestination, and salvation by grace. Indeed, one
cannot help but be struck by the sheer genius and theological power of
Molina's vision.
Ostler: Concept of Grace 33
reason, except the divine will" ( Summa Theologica Pt.l, Qu. 23, Art. 5,
Reply 3).
Calvinism and Arminianism
free to do good. In his 1551 treatise entitled Concerning the Eternal Predestination of God , Calvin attempted to salvage a notion of human free
will at least in name (1961, 53-56). Luther, on the other hand, made
no pretense to preserve the notion of free will (Urban 1971, 113-39).
He freely admitted in his De Servo Arbitrio , published in 1524, that per-
sons are not free unless their wills, which have been destroyed as a
result of original sin, are regenerated and enabled to choose to accept
Goďs grace. In the absence of regenerating grace, persons are in servitude to sin because they are capable only of choosing evil but not
good. "This bombshell knocks 'free- will' flat, and utterly shatters it . . .
that all we do, however it may appear to us to be done mutably and
contingently, is in reality done necessarily and immutably in respect
of Goďs will" (1957, 615).
Luther's pivotal contribution was to transform the medieval view
that Goďs righteousness consisted in retributive justice to the notion
that Goďs righteousness consisted in his mercy. The crucial question
for Luther was how sinful humanity could stand before the holy God.
Though Luther's early view was that grace combined with their good
works to render some believers sufficiendy righteous to stand before
God, his later view was that God's grace alone is decisive. Luther maintained that God's grace - his righteousness - consists of treating human-
ity as righteous no matter what they do as long as they accept Christ.
Luther declared that God's righteousness is imputed to humanity. In
other words, saved persons are not judged according to their own deeds,
but according to Christ's merits alone. Though works follow naturally
from faith in Christ, according to Luther, works - in the sense of moral
conduct - have no place in securing salvation. Luther essentially
replaced the notion that all persons will be judged according to their
own works with thé view that the elect are judged on the basis of
Christ's merits.
Luther's view of original sin was reflected in the Augusburg confession: "The hereditary evil is guilt {culpa) and crime {reatus)' whence
it results that all men, on account of the disobedience of Adam and
Eve, are odious in the sight of God, and are by nature children of
wrath. Moreover, this inborn sickness and hereditary sin is truly sin
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Martin Luther (1483-1535) and John Calvin (1509-64) essentially
adopted the Augustinián notion of regenerative grace. Both accepted
the Augustinián view that, due to human depravity, persons are not
34 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
and condemns to the eternal wrath of God all those who are not born
again through Baptism and the Holy Spirit" (in Leith 1963, 68; Latin
text in Beute 1955). Given Luther's conviction that all persons are loath-
that free will without the grace of God is not free will at all, but is the
permanent bond-slave and servant to evil, since it cannot turn itself
to good" {De Servo Abitrio 1542, 632, 634, 636). The most renowned
Catholic thinker contemporary with Luther, Erasmus, argued that
Luther's scheme made God unjust: "By the light of grace, it is inexplicable how God can damn him whom by his own strength can do
nothing but sin and become guilty. . . . [T]he fault lies not in the
wretchedness of man, but in the injustice of God" {Diatribe seu collatio
de libero arbitrio , 19).
In a desire to show unity, both Lutherans and Calvinists agreed
with Augustine that the Fall had dealt a mortal blow to human will:
"Before man is illuminated, converted, regenerated, and drawn by the
Holy Spirit, he can no more operate, co-operate, or even make a beginning towards his conversion or regeneration, with his own natural
powers, than can a stone, a tree, or a piece of clay" {Formula Concordiae
in Hall 1877, 389-90). The First Helvetic Confession , adopted by conventional Calvinists in 1536, established a similar formula:
We attribute free will to man in this sense, viz: that when in the use of our
faculties of understanding and will we attempt to perform good and evil actions,
we are able to perform the evil of our own accord and by our own power; but to
embrace and follow out the good, we are not able, unless illuminated by the
grace of Christ and compelled by the Spirit. For it is God who works in us to will
and to do, according to his good pleasure; and from God is salvation, from ourselves perdition. (Latin text in Niemayer 1870, 281-82)
The Second Helvetic Confession , drawn up by Heinrich Bullinger in
1561 and widely espoused thereafter by reformed churches, was even
more explicit with respect to the status of free will in three states:
before the fall and after the fall, unregenerate and regenerate:
Man before the fall was righteous (rectus) and free; he was able to remain holy
or to become evil. Man gave in to evil, and involved in sin and death both himself and the whole race of man.
Next we consider the condition of men after the Fall. The intellect of man was
not taken away by the Fall, neither was he robbed of his will . . . but his intellect
and will were so changed and weakened (imminuta), that they cannot any longer
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some creatures, it followed that persons could be saved only if God
ignored their unrighteousness and replaced it with his righteousness:
"The elect who fear God will be regenerated by the Holy Spirit. The
rest will perish unregenerated. . . . For if it is not we ourselves, but
God only, who works salvation in us, it follows that nothing we do
before his working in us avails unto salvation. . . . Hence it follows
Ostler: Concept of Grace 35
perform what they could before the Fall. The intellect is darkened and the will
has been changed from a free to an enslaved faculty. For it is the servant of
sin. . . . Wherefore there is no free will to good in an unrenewed man; no strength
for acting holy.
In the third place, we are to consider whether the regenerate have free will and how
far [an regenerati sint liben arbitrii , et quatenus]. In regeneration, the intellect is enlight-
ened . . . and the will is not only changed by the Spirit, but is strengthened in its
abilities so that it spontaneously wills and performs the good. . . . [T]he will of
the regenerate in choosing to do what is good, not only is acted upon but also acts
itself [regenerados in boni electiones et operatione, no tantum agere passive, sed active ]. For
they are acted upon by God, so that they can act for themselves [aguntur enim a
Deo, ut agant ipsi, guod agant] . . . but no one can be helped unless his own will
becomes active [neiquit antem adjuvarsi, hisi is, qui alquid agit], (in Cochrane 1966,
291-92; Latin text in Niesel 1893, 1521)
The sole dissenter from the Augustinián doctrine of original sin
among the Protestant Reformation leaders was Zwingli, who stated his
views at Augusburg in 1530. Zwingli's Fidei Ratio argued that Adam
and Eve could not truly sin because the sin was not against law: "I
think this regarding original sin - that is properly sin only that which
is a transgression of the law; for where there is no law there is no
transgression, and where there is no transgression there is no sin prop-
erly so called. . . . Hence, whether we will or no, we are compelled to
admit that original sin, as it is in the posterity of Adam, is not truly
sin, in the sense spoken of, for it is not a crime against law" (1953,
221; see also Locher 1965, 10-12).
Jacobus Arminius (1560-1609), the seventeenth-century Dutch
reformer, rejected the Calvinist views of original sin and human will.
Arminius modified the doctrines of original sin and grace in the direction of the Greek fathers and Semi-Pelagians, though he diverged from
them in some respects. Arminians agreed that Adam's act resulted in
physical and spiritual death but held that "there is no ground for . . .
imputing Adam's sin to his posterity in the sense that God actually
judged the posterity of Adam to be guilty of, and chargeable with, the
same fault which Adam had committed. . . . God threatened punishment to Adam alone, and inflicted it upon Adam aloné ' ( Apologia pro
Confessione Remonstrantium, Cap. VII, in Schaff 1887, 3:508-9). Armin-
ians viewed the Fall as a misfortune and not a fault. In particular,
Adam and Eve's sin was not passed on to their descendants nor did it
merit eternal reprobation so that God could justly damn the human
race for inheriting an evil nature. The key argument adopted by Armin-
ians was that, whatever consequences Adam's sin entailed, Christ has
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The confession went on to specify, however, that after regeneration
the will is strengthened and free from its numbing bondage to sin:
36 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
destine to eternal torment any infants who die without actual and indi-
vidual sins" (Arminius, Opera : Delcaratio Sentimentii, in Darby and
Auburn 1956, 2:374). Further, Arminians maintained that even nonChristians were granted a common grace sufficient to save them.
Arminians adopted a two-stage theology of grace. In the first stage,
God grants grace that is efficacious to restore persons to the pre-Fall
ability to choose between good and evil. In other words, God restored
all persons to free will at birth automatically. The popular nineteenthcentury Arminian theologian, Nathan Banks, argued: "Those gentlemen who urge the doctrine of total depravity against the truth of [man's
free will] seem to forget one very important trait in the Gospel system,
viz., the atonement of Christ, and the benefits which universally flow
from it to mankind, by which they are graciously restored to the power
of action" (1815, vii).
The second stage of grace involved God's granting sufficient grace to
all persons, who are then free to accept or reject it. The Arminian
Declaration stated: "Sufficient grace for faith and conversion is allotted
not only to those who believe and are converted, but also to those who
do not actually believe and are not in fact converted ... so that there
is no decree of absolute reprobation" ( Confessio sive Declaration Cap.
XVII). This view of grace was clearly synergistic. Every person who
hears the gospel receives a degree of grace sufficient for conversion. If
a person is not converted, it must be for the want of some human
agency to cooperate with the Divine Grace; and therefore the differences between the saved and the damned are ultimately referable to
the individual human free will. The Calvinistic view, in contrast, was
monergistic. For Calvinists, no person received grace that was sufficient for regeneration who did not also receive such divine influence as
overcomes the hostile will. In this way, divine regeneration was not
conditioned on any human agency, but due only to irresistible divine
grace. For Calvinists, if a person is not saved it is because God did not
will to save that person.
Arminians also taught that God's election of some to salvation is
conditional - the election is conditioned on human faith foreseen by
God. Arminius claimed that God's election "has its foundation in the
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since redeemed humankind, so "the doctrine must be held that the
most benevolent God has provided for all a remedy for that general
evil which was derived by us from Adam, free and gratuitous in his
beloved Son Jesus Christ ... so that the hurtful error of those [misguided theologians] is plainly apparent, who are accustomed to found
upon that [original] sin the decree of absolute reprobation, invented
by themselves" ( Confessio Remonstratium, Cap. VII). Thus, as for the
status of infants, Arminians held that "God neither will nor can justly
Ostler: Concept of Grace 37
foreknowledge of God, by which he foreknew from all eternity those
individuals who would believe through his preventing grace (i.e., grace
which prevents persons from falling from grace), and through his
Sentimentii , 247). Later Arminians rejected even the notions of prevent-
ing grace and persevering grace on the ground that if persons were
unable to reject Christ, they are not free. They argued that there is
nothing praiseworthy in a person's enduring in Christ if he or she is
not free to do otherwise.
The Calvinists were not slow in responding to the Arminian arguments. Jonathan Edwards, the great eighteenth-century Calvinist theo-
logian, argued that if free will is understood as the ability to do what
one pleases without external constraint, then "a universal determining
Providence ... is not at all repugnant to moral agency" (1754, 351).
Free will could be squared even with divine coercion on this view
because if a person desired to do what God coerced that person to
desire, that person was still free! Such a view of free will does not
require a choice between good and evil as the Arminians claimed.
However, such a view seems quite inadequate and does not capture
the ability to avoid sin, which the Arminians insisted on. Edwards
acknowledged that Calvinism was losing ground to Arminian theology
and sought to buttress the austere doctrine of the Reformers. Edwards
deftly argued that he had defeated the entire catalogue of Arminian
objections against Calvinism:
It is easy to see, how the decision of most points in controversy, between
Calvinists and Arminians , depends on the determination of . . . Freedom of the Will
requisite to moral agency ; and that by clearing and establishing the Calvinistic doctrine in this point, the chief [Arminian] arguments are obviated [including] . . .
objections of Arminians against the Calvinistic doctrine of the total depravity and cor-
ruption of man's naiurei whereby his heart is wholly under the power of sin, and he
is utterly unable, without the interposition of sovereign grace, savingly to love
God, believe in Christ, or do anything that is truly good and acceptable in Goďs
sight. {Freedom of the Will , Pt. 4, Section 14 [emphasis in original])
Edwards unleashed two salvos against Arminians. He argued that
the Arminian notion of free will conceived as indifference and selfdetermining power was incoherent. Arminians believed that the will
could be free only if it was equally inclined or "indifferent" to good
and evil. His second argument was that God's infallible foreknowledge
rendered human acts necessary in precisely the same way the Calvinist notion of necessity of the will did; Arminians would therefore have
to accept the Calvinist notion of free will as absence of external
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subsequent grace would persevere . . . and he likewise foreknew
those who would not believe and persevere" ( Opera : Declaratio
38 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
coercion or else reject their own notion of Goďs foreknowledge. Recent
reexaminations in the philosophy of religion have sustained Edwards'
arguments for the incompatibility of foreknowledge and free will.7
Yet the Arminians regarded the Calvinist notion of free will as
inadequate - for how could a will that has no choice but to be evil truly
free will with grace.
Conclusion
The concept of grace is a rich and multifaceted notion arising out
of the most profound of religious experiences. The apostle Paul adopted
the term grace (charis) to describe this experience - being declared not
guilty even when one is aware of profound imperfection. Grace is in
essence an experience of acceptance by unconditional and unfathomable love from the being who knows us better even than we know ourselves. Grace is an undeserved gift. It is acceptance into God's covenant-
love even before we have chosen to obey the covenant.
Grace also describes much more - it describes the decisive redemptive activity of God on our behalf and what we must do in response to
God's offer of salvation. The debate over grace has clearly divided
those who emphasize God's omnipotence and sovereignty at the expense
of human freedom (such as Augustine, Luther, and Calvin) from those
who emphasize human freedom and moral responsibility despite God's
knowledge and power (such as Pelagius, Luis de Molina, and
Arminius).
The system of salvation by grace alone promulgated by Augustine,
Aquinas, Calvin, Luther, and modern fundamentalist Christians, even
if not univocal and monolithic, has had tremendous appeal throughout
Christian history. This system of grace expresses well the experiences
of those who, like Augustine, feel that they are incapable of freely
choosing to accept God on their own; rather, an inexplicable change
7 The argument for the incompatibility of foreknowledge and free will from the
necessity of the past has been supported by Nelson Pike, in "Divine Omniscience and
Voluntary Action" (1965, 27-46); by John Martin Fisher in "Freedom and
Foreknowledge" (1983, 67-69), and "Ockamism" (1985, 80-100); and by William
Hasker in "Foreknowledge and Necessity" (1985, 121-157).
The argument for the incoherence of freedom of indifference is discussed by
Anthony Kenny in The God of the Philosophers (1979, 51-71) and in Freewill and
Responsibility (1978, 30-33). I have tried to respond to arguments similar to those
raised by Edwards by modifying both divine omniscience and the notion of human
freedom. See "The Mormon Concept of God," Dialogue 17:2 (Summer 1984,
65-93).
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be free? Arminians could not accept such an obviously inadequate
notion of free will and Calvinists could not square a stronger notion of
Ostler: Concept of Grace 39
of heart and movement of the human will seems to be controlled totally
explanatory power are impressive. Every event in human history comes
down to just one thing: God's will. Moreover, this position provides
considerable comfort. The most trivial event is weighted with divine
significance, for each event is an expression of the divine will. Also an
advantage, the perils of contingency are eliminated in such a system.
Augustine felt that salvation left up to humans even in the least degree
would be in peril. If Goďs salvation depends in any way on us, how
can we be certain that Goďs plan for us will be fulfilled? Any view of
salvation which is premised on any exercise of free will admits a weak
link in the chain of divine assistance - a chain which is sure to fail if
we are left to our evil nature apart from God. The absolute assurance
of salvation can be found only in a God who has assumed complete
responsibility for the entire process of our salvation. Perhaps the question that "born again" Christians who ask, "Have you been saved?"
actually mean us to consider is, "How can you be sure of your salvation if it depends in any way on you?"
Yet thinkers from Pelagius to Luis de Molina, from Erasmus to
Arminius and Whitely, have been unsatisfied with a God who is able
to save all persons but who chooses not to do so. They reject notions of
grace which eviscerate any notion of free will toward salvation in the
sense of freedom to do otherwise or to refrain in the circumstances.
These persons were morally outraged by a God who would damn persons from all eternity whether by permission or specific divine decree
and double predestination. Compounding the offense was the equally
outrageous view that persons suffer from an evil nature not because of
themselves, but as a result of forces outside their control. How can a
loving Father damn persons for evil acts resulting from circumstances
outside their control? Erasmus was quite correct to point out that the
problem of sin is not with those reprobated from all eternity, but with
God. The God of those who adopt such views is impaled on the problem of evil - an evil which God specifically created for his mysterious
purposes.
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by Goďs mysterious good pleasure. Just as a baby undergoing birth,
such persons do not contribute anything of their own to the labor of
being "born again." Either God chooses them or they are lost. Either
God accomplishes their salvation or they are damned. Converts like
Augustine experienced salvation despite the opposition of their naturally evil will. Such persons feel as if they are the beneficiaries of
Goďs relentless pursuit and irresistible grace which overcomes their
obstinacy. Surely there is room in Mormonism for such experiences so long as God is not made into an arbitrary tyrant in the process.
The theocentricity of this view is appealing; its simplicity and
40 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
But do those who reject the strong notion of divine predestination
and salvation by grace alone have anything acceptable to put in its
place? I think that they do. I prefer the Arminian notion that free will
ship committed to the growth and happiness of those involved. It seems
that any genuine relationship must be entered freely. Moreover, in what
else could Goďs offer of grace consist if not in a loving relationship of
mutual commitment to happiness of the other? This view of grace is
more consonant with the ancient revelation that proclaimed God as
love. I think that Molina's system of grace premised on middle knowledge is especially worthy of consideration - though I believe that it too
is ultimately incompatible with genuine free will.
My heart lies with those who have seen God as committed inexorably to the salvation of all persons. I cannot worship a God who is
able but chooses not to bring all persons into a loving and saving relationship. I cherish the view that sees humans as cooperating in salvation with God. My predilection is that there is much greater room in
Mormon thought for a notion or notions of grace consistent with its
commitment to human free will. Finally, my admiration, respect, and
deep gratitude go to Aquinas as well as Molina, to Luther as well as
Erasmus, in other words to all those who have attempted to explicate
God's grace in a way faithful with their most profound religious
experiences.
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