BECKWITH - Calvinist Doctrine of The Trinity
BECKWITH - Calvinist Doctrine of The Trinity
BECKWITH - Calvinist Doctrine of The Trinity
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being from another. He quotes Augustine on this point, but appears to be giving his language a new sense, which he expresses again when refuting heretics (Section 25) as follows: we say then that the Godhead is absolutely from itself. And hence also we hold that the Son, regarded as God and without reference to Person, is from himself; though we also say that, regarded as Son, he is from the Father. What Calvin here expresses in a guarded fashion, he expressed much more boldly in his controversy with Peter Caroli, in which he declined to afrm (though without denying them) the Nicene and Athanasian Creeds, and even mocked the characteristic Nicene language God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God. He evidently regarded this as derogatory to the Son, because treating his divinity as derived (though eternally derived) from the Father.
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is a divine Person. He is one of the three Persons in the Godhead, and to think of him as God but not as Son is as unreal as it is to think of him as Son but not as God. Calvin seems unable to bear the thought that the Son derives his divine being from the Father, and yet, understood as an eternal and personal relationship, it is what the New Testament appears to teach, in harmony with the Creeds. One can call this, if one wishes, subordinationism, but it is a subordinationism without any of the degrading connotations which Arians and Unitarians attached to the idea. The only real alternative to it is to do the unthinkable, and to make the three Persons independent of one another, as three gods not one.
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not eternally three), and its theory of a merely economic Trinity? Or need we try to avoid doing this? So, if the error into which Calvins theology of the Trinity risked falling was Tritheism, the error into which Professor Helms theology of the Trinity runs much greater risk of falling is the opposite one of Sabellianism. His proposal is, indeed, so radical that it seems doubtful whether it would be proper to describe it as in any sense a variation on the theology of Calvin (whose characteristic teaching on this matter was indeed censured by the lecturer as an obscure and unilluminating doctrine). An argument in favour of the lecturers proposal might be the fact that many commentators on John 15:26, from which the language of procession comes, think that the verse refers to the coming of the Spirit to the church, not to his eternal activity. But if the very name of the Spirit implies being breathed out, as seems probable (Job 27:3; 33:4; Ezek. 37:5f., 14), the idea of proceeding from God is essential to his nature. In the case of the Father and the Son, we have much more evidence to go on. Far from this relationship having begun at the incarnation, we are taught that God created the world through his Son (Col. 1:16; Heb. 1:2), and not simply through his Word or through Jesus Christ (John 1:3; Rev. 3:14), though that refers to the same Person. Nor did this relationship between Father and Son begin only at creation: it already existed in eternity, before the world was or before the foundation of the world, as Jesus expresses it in his prayer to his Father at the Last Supper (John 17:5, 24); and the latter of these verses shows that it existed in eternity as a relationship of love between Father and Son (cf. John 1:18). The language which Jesus uses about his incarnation likewise implies an already existing relationship in heaven between the Father and the Son. He says, I am come down from heaven, not to do mine own will but the will of him that sent me (John 6:38), and later he makes it explicit that the one who sent him into the world was the Father, describing himself as him whom the Father sanctied and sent into the world (John 10:36). To the same effect he says, I came out from the Father, and am come into the world; again, I leave the world and go unto the Father (John 16:28). Mysterious as all this language is, it is doubtless intended to instruct us, and not to be ignored as unintelligible. That being so, it follows that we do not have any a priori grounds for ruling out other aspects of the analogy of Father and Son, in its eternal setting, such as the begetting of the Son by the Father. This is central to the teaching of the
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Creeds, and has been traditionally understood to mean an eternal impartation of the divine being and nature by the Father to the Son, whereby the Father is Father and the Son is Son. The fact that Professor Helm feels able to play down this amount of important biblical evidence, and to discourage what he wrongly regards as speculation about the eternal relations of the three Persons, concentrating instead on their saving activities in the world to the exclusion of everything else, calls for an explanation. Does he, like some other Christian philosophers, believe in a hidden God, who is essentially different from how his activities make him appear to us? If he does, he is forgetting that, according to Scripture, God is revealed in his works and in the Person of his Son, not disguised. There is no truth that the Bible insists on more than this.
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used, traditionally translated only-begotten. These are all, with the exception of one, in the writings of John John 1:14, 18; 3:16, 18; 1 John 4:9, together with Hebrews 11:17. All the Johannine passages refer to Jesus, but the passage in Hebrews refers to Isaac. It is widely held today that the term should simply be translated only, not only-begotten, and when (outside the New Testament) it is used without reference to children this is certainly so; but because of the extreme frequency of the language of begetting and being born (the same term in Greek) in the Johannine literature, it is held by some that only-begotten is, in this case, a better translation. It certainly seems to make better sense in John 1:14, where the word is used without a noun, and also in John 1:18, if God and not Son is the noun in question (as some maintain, following a variant reading). In the former verse, glory as of the only-begotten from the Father is more meaningful than glory as of the only one from the Father, and in the latter verse the only-begotten God can more meaningfully be said to make the Father known than the only God can. Furthermore, if 1 John 5:18 refers to Jesus as he that was begotten of God, which is what most commentators believe, it is hard not to see this as relevant to the interpretation of the ve passages containing mono genes, especially the three in which (as in this verse) the Father is called God. The third and fourth classes of passage contain only one passage each, John 5:26 and 1 John 5:18. Of John 5:26, Reymond claims that it refers to the Sons incarnate role, as Messiah. It is noteworthy, however, that the passage uses the eternal names of the two Persons, the Father and the Son. If, then, it does mean that the Father has given the incarnate Son to have life in himself, this might well be because he had already given him, as the eternal Son, to have life in himself. And this would conform with John 1:4, which says of the Word or Son of God, not just from the time of the incarnation but from the time of the creation In him was life. Much less doubt attaches to 1 John 5:18. Although its interpretation is not beyond question, the difference of tense between whosoever is begotten of God (perfect) and he that was begotten of God (aorist) leads most commentators to see the latter phrase as referring to a different person from the former, namely Christ. And the time when Christ was begotten of God would have to be the time when the relationship of Father and Son commenced, namely, in eternity.
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The biblical basis of the credal doctrine of the Trinity appears, therefore, to be secure. We can be thankful that the Fathers embodied in Creeds the exegetical conclusions which they had so patiently worked out, since this enables churches that use the Creeds to keep those conclusions constantly before their minds. The positive contribution which Calvin made to the exposition of the doctrine, by emphasising the three Persons and their equality, as each being God, was a valuable one, but the doubt cast by some later Calvinists on the eternal impartation of the divine being and nature by one Person to another has been a regrettable development and, insofar as Calvin was responsible for it, he has had a negative inuence also. This negative development has involved an attenuation of trinitarian doctrine and a reductionist approach to the biblical evidence on which it rests, and of these tendencies Professor Helms lecture is a rather extreme example. ROGER BECKWITH is former Warden of Latimer House, Oxford.